| Literature DB >> 20040233 |
Jack Homer1, Bobby Milstein, Kristina Wile, Justin Trogdon, Philip Huang, Darwin Labarthe, Diane Orenstein.
Abstract
Numerous local interventions for cardiovascular disease are available, but resources to deliver them are limited. Identifying the most effective interventions is challenging because cardiovascular risks develop through causal pathways and gradual accumulations that defy simple calculation. We created a simulation model for evaluating multiple approaches to preventing and managing cardiovascular risks. The model incorporates data from many sources to represent all US adults who have never had a cardiovascular event. It simulates trajectories for the leading direct and indirect risk factors from 1990 to 2040 and evaluates 19 interventions. The main outcomes are first-time cardiovascular events and consequent deaths, as well as total consequence costs, which combine medical expenditures and productivity costs associated with cardiovascular events and risk factors. We used sensitivity analyses to examine the significance of uncertain parameters. A base case scenario shows that population turnover and aging strongly influence the future trajectories of several risk factors. At least 15 of 19 interventions are potentially cost saving and could reduce deaths from first cardiovascular events by approximately 20% and total consequence costs by 26%. Some interventions act quickly to reduce deaths, while others more gradually reduce costs related to risk factors. Although the model is still evolving, the simulated experiments reported here can inform policy and spending decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20040233 PMCID: PMC2811513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Figure 1Simulation model for cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes. This diagram depicts major health conditions related to CVD and their causes. Boxes identify risk factor prevalence rates modeled as dynamic stocks. The population flows associated with these stocks — including people entering the adult population, entering the next age category, immigration, risk factor incidence, recovery, cardiovascular event survival, and death — are not shown.
Interventions Used in Simulation Model for Cardiovascular Health Outcomes, Organized by Topical Cluster
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| Access to affordable primary care |
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| Tobacco taxes and sales restrictions |
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| Access to affordable healthy foods |
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| Access to affordable weight-loss services for the obese |
Information Sources Used in Simulation Model for Cardiovascular Health Outcomes
| Topic | Source |
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| Population size, growth, and aging, and health care coverage | US Census |
| Rates of cardiovascular events and deaths | Reports from American Heart Association ( |
| Prevalence rates of smoking, obesity, and chronic disorders, and rates of diagnosis and control of chronic disorders | National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 1988-1994 and 1999-2004 |
| Fraction of 18-year-olds who smoke, are obese, or have chronic disorders | NHANES, Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System |
| Prevalence of psychosocial stress | Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) |
| Access to and use of good nutrition, physical activity, and primary care | BRFSS |
| Rates of smoking cessation | Mendez et al ( |
| Rates of people moving from obese to nonobese | Homer et al ( |
| Trend in fraction of workplaces allowing smoking | Surgeon General's report ( |
| Trend in small particulate matter (PM 2.5) air pollution | Dominici et al ( |
| Average quality of primary care | Asch et al ( |
| Medical costs, sick days, and years of life lost due to CVD events and deaths | Social Security actuarial life tables, Haddix et al ( |
| Noncardiovascular medical costs and sick days due to smoking, obesity, diabetes, and high blood pressure | Linked files of Medical Examination Panel Survey, National Health Interview Survey |
| Noncardiovascular mortality and years of life lost due to smoking, obesity, diabetes, and high blood pressure | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Smoking-Attributable Mortality, Morbidity, and Economic Costs (SAMMEC), World Health Organization Statistical Information System, Flegal et al ( |
Figure 2Estimated impacts of a 15-component intervention, with ranges based on sensitivity testing, simulation model for cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes. The 15 interventions are listed in Table 1 under the topical clusters of Care, Air, and Lifestyle.
Figure 3Projected changes in the death rate from first-time cardiovascular disease (CVD) events and in total consequence costs per capita when 15 interventions are combined, expressed in terms of clusters of interventions, simulation model for cardiovascular health outcomes.
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| Blue solid arrows: causal linkages affecting risk factors and cardiovascular events and deaths. |
| Brown dashed arrows: influences on costs. |
| Purple italics: factors amenable to direct intervention. |
| Black italics (population aging, cardiovascular event fatality): other specified trends. |
| Black nonitalics: all other variables, affected by italicized variables and by each other. |
| This diagram consists of word phrases (representing model variables) connected by one-way arrows (representing causal linkages). These words and arrows are in different colors and styles whose meaning is explained in the title and key accompanying the figure. |
| In the center of the diagram are several variables in plain black text, some in boxes representing dynamic stocks and all having both incoming and outgoing arrows. Proceeding from top to bottom and left to right, these variables are “psychosocial stress,” “healthiness of diet,” “extent of physical activity,” “utilization of quality primary care,” “diagnosis and control,” “obesity” (in a box), “smoking” (in a box), “chronic disorders” (with “high cholesterol,” “high blood pressure,” and “diabetes,” together in a box), “secondhand smoke,” “particulate air pollution,” and “first-time cardiovascular events and deaths.” |
| Concepts in purple italic text (representing interventions) lie around the top and left edges of the diagram, having no arrows coming into them, but all having outgoing blue arrows linking into the plain black text variables listed above. The links (moving clockwise from lower left to upper right) are as follows:
“Access to and marketing of weight loss services” links to “obesity.” “Access to and marketing of physical activity options” links to “extent of physical activity.” “Access to and marketing of healthy food options” as well as “junk food taxes and sales/marketing regulations” link to “healthiness of diet.” “Access to and marketing of mental health services” and “sources of stress” link to “psychosocial stress.” “Quality of primary care provision” and “Access to and marketing of primary care” link to “utilization of quality primary care.” “Anti-smoking social marketing,” “tobacco taxes and sales/marketing regulations,” “access to and marketing of smoking quit products and services,” and “smoking bans at work and public places” link to “smoking.” “Smoking bans at work and public places” also links to “secondhand smoke.” “Air pollution control regulations” links to “particulate air pollution.” |
| Blue-arrow links also indicate causal connections among the plain black text variables. The links are as follows:
“Extent of physical activity” and “utilization of quality primary care” link to “psychosocial stress.” “Utilization of quality primary care” links to “diagnosis and control.” “Psychosocial stress,” “healthiness of diet,” “extent of physical activity,” “utilization of quality primary care,” and “smoking” link to the “obesity” box. “Utilization of quality primary care” and “psychosocial stress” link to the “smoking” box. “Psychosocial stress,” “healthiness of diet,” “extent of physical activity,” “diagnosis and control,” “obesity,” and “smoking” link to the “chronic disorders” box. “Smoking” links to “secondhand smoke.” “Smoking,” “chronic disorders,” “secondhand smoke, and “particulate air pollution” link to “first-time cardiovascular events and deaths.” |
| To the right of “first-time cardiovascular events and deaths” and leading to it with blue arrows are 2 variables in black italic text with no incoming arrows: “downward trend in CV event fatality” and “population aging.” |
| In the lower right corner of the diagram, in plain brown text, is “costs from cardiovascular and other risk factor complications and from utilization of services.” Leading to this variable are brown arrows from “psychosocial stress,” “obesity,” “utilization of quality primary care,” “smoking,” “chronic disorders,” and “first-time cardiovascular events and deaths.” |
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| Blue line = base case results. |
| Black line = expected reduction in death rate or costs from the 15-component intervention when the uncertain parameters are all set to their baseline values. |
| Orange shaded area around the black line = envelope of plausible outcomes in the 15-component intervention outcomes based on sensitivity testing. Upper edge (least impact) results when all uncertain impact parameters are set to their lowest values, while lower edge (most impact) results when all uncertain impact parameters are set to their greatest values. |
| Gray line = the model’s calculation of what the death rate or costs would be if all of the risk factors in the model — smoking, small particulate matter (PM 2.5) air pollution, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity, poor nutrition, inactivity, and stress — were reduced to zero. |
| This figure consists of 2 line graphs that portray simulated death rate and cost outcomes for a 15-component intervention, showing the mean trajectory and upper and lower ranges based on sensitivity. |
| The graph on the left has an X axis labeled with the years 1990 to 2040 and a Y axis labeled “Deaths from CVD per 1,000.” The Y axis ranges from zero to 4. A blue line indicates the base case, with a death rate that starts at 3.70 deaths per 1,000 in 1990, dips to a low point of 2.37 in 2003, and rises gradually to 3.23 in 2040. A black line indicates the lower death rate that results from a 15-component intervention, implemented in 2009, with uncertain parameters all set to their baseline values. It quickly drops to 2.04 deaths per 1,000 in 2010 (compared with 2.50 in the base case), then gradually rises to 2.62 in 2040. The black line is surrounded by an orange shaded area that indicates a range of plausible death rate outcomes for the 15-component intervention. The upper edge (least impact — all uncertain impact parameters set to their lowest values) begins at 2.14 deaths per 1,000 in 2010 and rises gradually to a rate of 2.77 in 2040. The lower edge (most impact — all uncertain impact parameters set to their highest values) begins at 1.87 in 2010 and rises gradually to 2.41 in 2040. A gray line indicates a CVD death rate if all risk factors are set to zero. It begins at a rate of 1.32 deaths per 1,000 in 1990, declines to a low point of 0.96 in 2003, and rises gradually to 1.35 in 2040. |
| The graph on the right has an X axis labeled with the years 1990 to 2040 and a Y axis labeled “Total Consequence Costs per Capita (2005 Dollars per Year).” The Y axis ranges from zero to 3,000. A blue line indicates the base case, with a consequence cost per capita that starts at 2,934 in 1990, declines to 2,304 in 2004, and continues declining more gradually to 2,196 in 2040. A black line indicates the lower cost that results from the 15-component intervention, implemented in 2009, with uncertain parameters all set to their baseline values. It declines to 1,756 in 2020 (compared with 2,211 in the base case), then declines more gradually to 1,631 in 2040. The black line is surrounded by an orange shaded area that indicates a range of plausible cost outcomes for the 15-component intervention. The upper edge (least impact — all uncertain impact parameters set to their lowest values) declines to 1,883 in 2020 and 1,780 in 2040, while the lower edge (most impact — all uncertain impact parameters set to their greatest values) declines to 1,575 in 2020 and 1,474 in 2040. A gray line indicates the cost if all risk factors are set to zero. It starts in 1990 at 476, declines slightly to a low point of 371 in 2003, and rises slightly to 455 in 2040. |
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| Blue line = base case results. |
| Gray line = outcomes if all risk factors were reduced to zero. |
| Red line = implement the 3 interventions that improve the use and quality of primary care (Care). |
| Green line = add the 6 interventions related to air quality and smoking (Air). |
| Black line = add the 5 interventions related to improved nutrition and physical activity and the 1 intervention that would reduce sources of stress (Lifestyle). This scenario includes all 15 interventions and is identical to the black line in |