Obesity-Related Healthcare Costs: Economic Burden, Drivers, and Policy Implications

Bizimana Rukundo T.

Faculty of Biological Sciences Kampala International University Uganda

ABSTRACT

Obesity imposes a substantial and growing economic burden on health systems, employers, and societies worldwide. This narrative review synthesizes current evidence on the direct and indirect costs attributable to overweight and obesity, highlighting the significant financial pressures created by rising prevalence, treatment patterns, comorbidity profiles, healthcare pricing, and access barriers. Direct medical expenditures, spanning inpatient and outpatient care, pharmaceuticals, procedures, and long-term care, constitute a major component of healthcare spending, while indirect costs such as absenteeism, presenteeism, premature mortality, and caregiver time often exceed medical expenditures. Demographic and geographic disparities further shape cost variability, underscoring the disproportionate burden borne by lower-income populations and specific age or ethnic groups. The review identifies major drivers of rising costs, evaluates the cost-effectiveness of obesity interventions, and examines policy approaches aimed at containment, including taxation, subsidies, preventive programs, and workplace wellness strategies. Persistent methodological challenges and data gaps, particularly regarding indirect costs, limit the precision of cost estimates and impede coherent policy formulation. Strengthening data systems, standardizing methodologies, and integrating equity considerations into policy design are essential for mitigating the long-term economic consequences of obesity and promoting sustainable health system financing.

Keywords: Obesity-Related Costs, Direct and Indirect Expenditures, Productivity Losses, Health Policy and Economic Burden.

CITE AS: Bizimana Rukundo T. (2026). Obesity-Related Healthcare Costs: Economic Burden, Drivers, and Policy Implications. IDOSR JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SCIENCES 12(1): 38-44. https://doi.org/10.59298/IDOSR/JES/06/1213844