| Literature DB >> 26155794 |
Dominique A Cadilhac1,2,3, Lauren Sheppard4, Toby B Cumming5, Tharshanah Thayabaranathan6, Dora C Pearce7, Rob Carter8, Anne Magnus9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intimate partner violence (IPV) has important impacts on the health of women in society. Our aim was to estimate the health and economic benefits of reducing the prevalence of IPV in the 2008 Australian female adult population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26155794 PMCID: PMC4495849 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1931-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Demographics and days of high psychological distress due to ill health by age, sex and work force status for the 2008 female adult Australian population
| Females | High or very high distress | Moderate distress |
|---|---|---|
| Age summary | ||
| Age 15–64 y | 989,848 | 1,636,652 |
| N (95 % CI) | (927,959–1,051,738) | (1,556,018–1,717,285) |
| Age 65+ y | 153,190 | 300,836 |
| N (95 % CI) | (132,009–174,372) | (265,299–336,372) |
| Age 15+ y | 43.8 | 43.5 |
| Mean (95 % CI) | (42.7– 44.9) | (42.8– 44.2) |
| In Labour Force (15+ years)a | ||
| % (95 % CI) | 53 % (50–57 %) | 62 % (59–64 %) |
| Mean days off work (95 % CI) | 0.69 (0.52–0.85) | 0.28 (0.21–0.35) |
| Not in Labour Force | ||
| % (95 % CI) | 47 % (43–50 %) | 39 % (36–41 %) |
| Mean days of reduced activity: 15–64 y (95 % CI) | 3.03 (2.54–3.53) | 1.47 (1.15–1.79) |
| Aged 65+ years | ||
| % (95 % CI) | 13.4 % (11.7–15.3 %) | 15.5 % (13.9–17.3 %) |
| Mean days of reduced activity (95 % CI) | 3.62 (2.70–4.55) | 2.25 (1.75–2.75) |
Source: National Health Survey 2004–05 (ABS, 2006). Mean days measured over a two week period
CI confidence interval, N number
aincludes unemployed seeking work and 65+ years
Fig. 1Workforce participation rates of women with high levels of psychological distress compared to women with moderate levels of distress by age. Source: adapted from data obtained from National Health Survey 2004–05 [19]
Health status and production effects from reducing the prevalence of intimate partner violence
| Benefit | Feasible 5 percentage point absolute prevalence reduction target | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 95 % uncertainty interval | |||
| Mean (‘000 s) | Lower Limit (‘000 s) | Upper Limit (‘000 s) | |
| Disability adjusted life years | 5 | n/a | n/a |
| Incidence of intimate partner violence related disease | 6 | n/a | n/a |
| Mortality | 0.07 | n/a | n/a |
| Lifetime | |||
| Leisure (days) | 428 | 296 | 568 |
| Absenteeism (days) | 926 | n/a | n/a |
| Days out of home based production role (days) | 371 | 259 | 491 |
| Early retirement (persons) | 0.52 | n/a | n/a |
Incidence of disease and mortality calculated for all age groups. Leisure and home based production calculated for persons aged 15+ years. Absenteeism and early retirement calculated for persons aged 15–64 years. All estimates uncorrected for potential joint effects of multiple risk factors. Note the result for absenteeism has been updated since in the Full Technical Report this figure had not been discounted and was incorrect (http://www.vichealth.vic.gov.au/~/media/ResourceCentre/PublicationsandResources/Knowledge/Research%20Report_FINAL_July09.ashx, last accessed 13 June 2015)
n/a, not available, unable to be estimated based on the data that were available
Economic outcomes from reducing the prevalence of intimate partner violence
| Economic outcomes | Feasible reduction targeta | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 95 % uncertainty interval | |||
| Mean (AUD million) | Lower limit (AUD million) | Upper limit (AUD million) | |
| Health sector costs | 38 | n/a | n/a |
| Production Costs FCA | 88 | 29 | 185 |
| Recruitment and training costs | 6 | n/a | n/a |
| Taxation effects FCAb | 16 | 4 | 36 |
| Leisure based production | 98 | 61 | 144 |
| Home based production | 147 | 102 | 195 |
| Total production FCAc | 377 | 227 | 461 |
| Sensitivity analysis | |||
| Production Costs HCA | 434 | 253 | 621 |
| Taxation effects HCAb | 57 | 29 | 87 |
| Total production HCAc | 678 | 480 | 884 |
All estimates uncorrected for joint effects of the presence of multiple risk factors in individuals. Health sector, leisure and home based production based on females 15+ years. Production, recruitment and training and taxation effects based on females 15–64 years
HCA human capital approach, FCA friction cost approach (preferred conservative estimate), n/a not available, unable to be estimated based on the data that were available
aThese are not estimates of immediately realizable cash savings
bTaxation is treated as a transfer payment and should not be added to production effects
cTotal production is the sum of workforce production costs, household- and leisure-based production
Fig. 2Proportion of opportunity cost savings from reductions in various risk factors by economic category