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Arthritis Foundation Top 10: Quantification of Work Limitation and Earnings Losses

The Arthritis Foundation recently came out with its list of the top 10 arthritis events for the year 2007. This series will focus on those events.

#2: Quantification of Work Limitation and Earnings Losses

If you are afflicted with a form of arthritis you may be well aware of the limitations it can cause in your life. This includes your ability to hold a job and make a living.

In 2007 the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released results from 2 surveys taken to evaluate the cost of arthritis.

The first study indicates that 1 in 3 working-age adults in the U.S. are affected by arthritis-attributable work limitation (AAWL). The CDC estimates that AAWL among working-age adults with doctor-diagnosed arthritis ranged from 25.1% in Nevada to 51.3% in Kentucky. The median among all of the states was 33.0%.

The second study demonstrated that earnings losses attributed to arthritis and other rheumatic conditions range from $79 in Washington D.C. to almost $4.3 billion in California.

The CDC also estimated the total cost (medical expenses and lost earnings) that can be attributed to arthritis and other rheumatic conditions in the U.S. was approximately $128 billion in 2003. That is equivalent to 1.2% of the gross domestic product. Of the $128 billion, $80.8 billion were from direct costs, such as medical expenses, and $47 billion for indirect costs, such as earnings loss. This calculates to a $1,752 annual per person average for direct costs and $1,590 a year lost earnings per working-age adult.

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