Unveiling the Public Economic Burden of Migraine in Argentina
Zrinka Orlović, Lucila Rey-Ares, María Florencia Viozzi, Rui Martins, Juliana Villarreal Ramírez, Santiago Veiga, Mark P. Connolly

TL;DR
This study estimates the economic impact of migraine in Argentina, showing it costs the government millions annually due to lost productivity and healthcare expenses.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel fiscal framework to quantify migraine's public economic burden in Argentina, including absenteeism and tax revenue loss.
Findings
The migraine fiscal burden in Argentina is estimated at $6505 per individual and $1237 million annually.
Absenteeism and healthcare costs account for 78% of the total fiscal burden.
Women bear 76% of the migraine-related economic burden, highlighting gender disparities.
Abstract
Background: Migraine is a prevalent, underdiagnosed, highly debilitating neurological condition that affects individuals’ quality of life and often negatively influences normal daily activities. Objectives: The study objective is to estimate the economic burden of migraine to the Argentine government by assessing the impact of the disease on tax revenue, absenteeism, and social support transfers. Methods: The analysis combines a cross-sectional model utilizing national demographic data and published migraine prevalence rates to estimate the annual burden for the entire migraine-affected cohort, and a longitudinal model assessing the average burden per individual from the age of 40, over a 20-year horizon. A fiscal framework based on generational accounting evaluated the impact of migraine on government finances. Sources of revenue such as direct and indirect taxes were weighted against…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigraine and Headache Studies · Neurological Complications and Syndromes · Olfactory and Sensory Function Studies
