| Literature DB >> 31698872 |
Chin-Lon Lin1,2, Jen-Hung Wang3, Chia-Chen Chang3, Tina H T Chiu4, Ming-Nan Lin5,6.
Abstract
Vegetarian diets and lifestyle have been shown to reduce the risk of many chronic non-communicable diseases, which now accounts for the major global burden of diseases. We aimed to determine the contribution of vegetarian diets and lifestyle to the actual direct medical cost in a population-based study. Through linkage to the National Health Insurance Research Database of Taiwan, we compared the health care utilization and medical expenditure of 2166 vegetarians and 4332 age-sex-matched omnivores recruited from the Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation. Diet and lifestyle questionnaires were self-administered and prospectively collected. We used the general linear model to estimate the 5-year average medical expenditure in vegetarians versus omnivores while adjusting for age, sex, education, exercise habits, smoking, and alcohol drinking. Medical expenses related to non-diet associated lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol drinking, active community volunteering, and religious emotional support) were estimated through a comparison with the published population medical cost data standardized to match the age and sex characteristics of the cohort. Tzu Chi vegetarians had significantly lower outpatient visits. This translated into 13% lower outpatient (p = 0.007) and 15% lower total medical expenditures (p = 0.008) when compared with the Tzu Chi omnivores, who had an additional 10% lower medical expenditure when compared with the general population. No difference in dental visits and expenses were found between diet groups. Vegetarian diets are associated with significantly lower medical care expenditure and could be an effective strategy to alleviate the medical-economic burden in selected populations.Entities:
Keywords: Buddhist; lifestyle; medical expenditure; vegetarian diet
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31698872 PMCID: PMC6893615 DOI: 10.3390/nu11112688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The study protocol.
Demographic and lifestyle characteristics of vegetarians and omnivores.
| Item | Omnivores | Vegetarians |
|---|---|---|
| Number of subjects | 4332 | 2166 |
| Age | 50.5 ± 9.4 | 50.5 ± 9.3 |
| Age Group | ||
| <50 | 2035 (47.0%) | 1030 (47.6%) |
| ≧50 | 2297 (53.0%) | 1136 (52.4%) |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 1548 (35.7%) | 774 (35.7%) |
| Female | 2784 (64.3%) | 1392 (64.3%) |
| Marriage | ||
| No | 372 (9.9%) | 235 (10.8%) |
| Yes | 3905 (90.1%) | 1931 (89.2%) |
| Education | ||
| Elementary school or less | 1025 (23.6%) | 481 (22.2%) |
| Secondary school | 2277 (52.6%) | 1124 (51.9%) |
| College or higher | 1030 (23.8%) | 561 (25.9%) |
| Smoking | ||
| Never | 3672 (84.8%) | 1868 (86.2%) |
| Past | 594 (13.7%) | 290 (13.4%) |
| Current | 66 (1.5%) | 8 (0.4%) |
| Alcohol drinking | ||
| Never | 3713 (85.7%) | 1861 (85.9%) |
| Past | 523 (12.1%) | 292 (13.5%) |
| Current | 96 (2.2%) | 13 (0.6%) |
| Exercise habits | ||
| No | 810 (18.7%) | 464 (21.4%) |
| Yes | 3522 (81.3%) | 1702 (78.6%) |
Data are presented as n (%) or mean ± standard deviation.
Figure 2Heatmap of food intake in omnivores and vegetarians. Rows: food items; Columns: frequency of food intake in two groups. * Other internal organs include kidney, intestines, stomach, heart.
Comparison of annual total medical, outpatient, hospitalization, and dental expenditure between omnivores and vegetarians. (N = 6498) in New Taiwan Dollar (NT).
| Item | Crude | Adjusted † | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Omnivores | Vegetarians | Savings (%) | Omnivores | Vegetarians | Savings (%) | |||
| Total medical expenditure (NT/per year) | 27,841 ± 976 | 23,656 ± 1381 | 15% | 0.013 * | 25,222 ± 3060 | 20,949 ± 3300 | 17% | 0.011 * |
| Outpatient | ||||||||
| No. of visits (times/per year) | 19.8 ± 0.23 | 17.6 ± 0.28 | - | <0.001 * | - | - | - | - |
| Medical expenditure (NT/per year) | 20,333 ± 607 | 17,679 ± 858 | 13% | 0.012 * | 17,802 ± 1900 | 15,073 ± 2049 | 15% | 0.009 * |
| Inpatient | ||||||||
| No. of visits (times/per year) | 0.14 ± 0.01 | 0.12 ± 0.01 | - | 0.149 | - | - | - | - |
| Medical expenditure (NT/per year) | 7508 ± 617 | 5978 ± 872 | 20% | 0.152 | 7420 ± 1940 | 5876 ± 2092 | 21% | 0.149 |
| Dental | ||||||||
| No. of visits (times/per year) | 1.80 ± 0.03 | 1.83 ± 0.04 | - | 0.566 | - | - | - | - |
| Medical expenditure (NT/per year) | 1995 ± 30 | 2059 ± 42 | −3% | 0.217 | 1749 ± 94 | 1814 ± 101 | −4% | 0.209 |
Data are presented as mean ± standard error. * p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant after test. † Adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking, alcohol drinking, and exercise habits.
Comparison of annual total medical, outpatient, hospitalization, and dental expenditure between non-vegetarians and vegetarians after stratifying by age and sex in New Taiwan Dollars (NT).
| Item | <50 years of age (N = 3065) | ≧50 years of age (N = 3433) | Male (N = 2322) | Female (N = 4176) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adjusted † | Adjusted † | Adjusted ‡ | Adjusted ‡ | |||||||||
| Omnivores | Vegetarians | Saving (%) | Omnivores | Vegetarians | Saving (%) | Omnivores | Vegetarians | Saving (%) | Omnivores | Vegetarians | Saving (%) | |
| Total medical expenditure | 19,325 ± 3375 | 15,445 ± 3662 | 20% | 31,074 ± 5206 | 26,396 ± 5556 | 15% | 25,880 ± 3951 | 23,151 ± 4599 | 11% | 21,131 ± 6761 | 16,106 ± 6911 | 24% |
| Outpatient medical expenditure | 14,999 ± 2421 | 12,245 ± 2627 | 18% | 20,315 ± 2995 | 17,608 ± 3196 | 13% | 18,244 ± 2534 | 17,082 ± 2950 | 6% | 17,234 ± 4081 | 13,736 ± 4171 | 20% |
| Inpatient medical expenditure | 4325 ± 1784 | 3201 ± 1936 | 26% | 10,759 ± 3508 | 8788 ± 3744 | 18% | 7636 ± 2435 | 6069 ± 2834 | 21% | 3897 ± 4384 | 2369 ± 4482 | 39% |
| Dental medical expenditure | 1700 ± 122 | 1783 ± 132 | −5% | 1791 ± 146 | 1841 ± 156 | −3% | 1797 ± 109 | 1939 ± 127 | −8% | 1622 ± 223 | 1648 ± 228 | −2% |
Data are presented as mean ± standard error. * p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant after test. † Adjusted for sex, education, smoking, alcohol drinking, and exercise habits. ‡ Adjusted for age, education, smoking, alcohol drinking, and exercise habits.
Comparison of annual medical expenditure of common diseases between omnivores and vegetarians.
| Disease | Omnivores | Vegetarians | Savings (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 3819 ± 683 | 2762 ± 737 | 28% | 0.005 * |
| Diabetes | 2529 ± 643 | 2079 ± 694 | 18% | 0.209 |
| Dyslipidemia | 1333 ± 273 | 914 ± 295 | 31% | 0.006 * |
| Cerebrovascular disease | 561 ± 943 | 252 ± 1018 | 55% | 0.557 |
| Renal disease | 1831 ± 1568 | 305 ± 1692 | 84% | 0.081 |
| Coronary heart disease | 1995 ± 430 | 1553 ± 464 | 22% | 0.065 |
| Depression | 794 ± 254 | 410 ± 274 | 48% | 0.007 * |
Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Unit: NT/per year * p-value < 0.05 is considered statistically significant after the test. Model: Adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking, alcohol drinking, and exercise habits.
Figure 3Medical expenditure of vegetarians and omnivores in the Tzu Chi Vegetarian Study, and the age-sex-standardized population average. OPD: Outpatient Department, IPD: Inpatient Department, Dental: Dental Department, * Estimated sex and age-standardized population average.