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Johns Hopkins Health Alert

A Pain in the Back ... A Drain on the Pocketbook

Johns Hopkins Health Alerts |

Back Pain - Osteoporosis | Pain in the Back - Drain on the Pocketbook

How much are you spending to treat your back pain?

Back pain can affect much more than just the back. Back pain may exacerbate other health problems or cause complications such as depression. Therefore, the amount of money spent specifically on back-pain care does not necessarily reflect the total costs of treating back pain.

In a recent study, researchers from Duke University and the University of North Carolina used data from a national survey to calculate the total annual medical costs of Americans without back pain compared with those who had back pain (see the graph below). The statistics shown here represent average overall health care costs during 1998.

Individuals with back pain had higher costs in all six categories than did those with no back pain. (Back pain was considered any back disorder, disk disorder, or back injury.) Combining costs from all six categories, people with back pain spent 60% more on medical care in 1998 than did those with no back pain ($3,498 vs. $2,178 per person). Extrapolating these data to the entire U.S. population, the researchers concluded that people with back pain spend about $91 billion annually on health care, only $26 billion of which is spent directly on treating back pain. But the true cost is even higher. In fact, back pain may be the most expensive health problem in the United States because this figure does not take into account indirect costs of back pain, such as loss of productivity.

Click here to download a PDF that shows the true cost of back pain.

Chart: The True Cost of Back Pain: Download

For more Alerts and Special Reports, please visit the Back Pain and Osteoporosis Topic page.

Johns Hopkins Health Alerts |

Back Pain - Osteoporosis | Pain in the Back - Drain on the Pocketbook

Posted in Back Pain and Osteoporosis on February 9, 2007
Reviewed June 2008

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