Researchers from Johns Hopkins University in the US found that a 20-year-old adult who goes from being obese to overweight would save an average of USD 17,655 in direct medical costs and productivity losses over their lifetime.
If the same person were to go from being obese to a healthy weight, an average savings of USD 28,020 in direct medical costs and productivity losses can occur, researchers said.
The study, published today in the journal Obesity, found that helping a 40-year-old adult go from being obese to overweight can save an average of USD 18,262. If the same person went from being obese to normal weight, an average savings of USD 31,447 can follow, they said.
"Productivity losses affect businesses, which in turn affects the economy, which then affects everyone," Lee said.
Also Read
When absenteeism occurs in the workforce, others, at times, have to take on a larger workload.
This all funnels downstream and adds to the societal costs of obesity. Health insurance premiums increase across the board, even for healthy patients, as insurers spread the cost of obesity and its associated conditions, researchers said.
The team found that cost savings peak at age 50 with an average total savings of USD 36,278.
After age 50, the largest cost savings occur when an individual with obesity moves to the normal weight category as opposed to the overweight category, emphasising the importance of weight loss as people age.
The finding is important because people aged 50 years and older make up more than 60 per cent incremental societal costs, which includes higher taxes to support government insurance and higher copays and other out-of-pocket expenses, researchers said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content