Time to change the blind men and the elephant approach to Parkinson disease?

Document Type

Article

Abstract

Parkinson disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that is associated with substantial morbidity and early mortality. Disease-related costs exceed $10 billion, not including medications, out-of-pocket expenses, or societal costs. Symptomatic treatment with levodopa, which has been available for over 30 years, and advanced therapies such as deep brain stimulation improve outcomes. Yet most new medications for PD provide a therapeutic benefit that is relatively modest compared to the benefits from levodopa. Despite dozens of neuroprotective clinical trials, there are no medications proven to slow the progression of the disease. Given these limitations, we provide evidence of the potential public health impact of a research agenda that emphasizes identification of risk factors to reduce disease burden through exposure mitigation. In addition, we emphasize health care policy that focuses on increasing health care expenditures for neurologic evaluation and management services to increase access to specialists to improve disease outcomes and reduce costs through better disease management.

Medical Subject Headings

Cost of Illness; Cost-Benefit Analysis; Female; Health Expenditures; Humans; Male; Parkinson Disease (diagnosis, therapy); Public Health (economics, legislation & jurisprudence, methods); Risk Factors

Publication Date

7-14-2015

Publication Title

Neurology

E-ISSN

1526-632X

Volume

85

Issue

2

First Page

190

Last Page

6

PubMed ID

26070339

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1212/WNL.0000000000001739

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