The Hidden Costs of Being Unhealthy

The following is an analysis (aided by AI) of the cost associated with living with metabolic syndrome vs a healthy lifestyle over 20 years.

Bottom line: Did you know that maintaining a basic level of health and fitness can save you over $100K and add up to 10 quality adjusted life years (valued at $1MM)?!?

Cost-Benefit Analysis: Metabolic Syndrome vs. Healthy Lifestyle Over 20 Years

Prepared for Legacy Fitness & Nutrition, LLC
Date: March 13, 2025

Overview

This analysis compares financial costs and mortality risks over 20 years for a male with metabolic syndrome (MSM) versus a healthy male (HM) investing in fitness and nutrition. Costs include insurance, medical care, food, gym, and personal training. Figures are in 2025 USD, based on general U.S. data and assumptions.

Profiles

  • Metabolic Syndrome Male (MSM): Age 40, BMI 30-35, high cholesterol, hypertension, and/or diabetes, sedentary, standard American diet (SAD).

  • Healthy Male (HM): Age 40, BMI 18.5-24.9, no chronic conditions, eats whole foods, gym member, 2 years personal trainer ($2,000/year).

Annual Costs (2025 Dollars)

20-Year Cost Projections (2025 Dollars, No Inflation)

  • MSM: $11,420 × 20 = $228,400

  • HM:

    • Years 1-2: $11,790 × 2 = $23,580

    • Years 3-20: $9,790 × 18 = $176,220

    • Total: $23,580 + $176,220 = $199,800

  • Savings (HM vs. MSM): $28,600

  • With 2% Inflation (Estimate): MSM: ~$300,000; HM: ~$260,000 [8].

Mortality Risk

  • MSM:

    • 20% risk of death by age 60 (CVD, stroke, diabetes complications) [9].

    • 10-15 years reduced quality of life [10].

  • HM:

    • 10% risk of death by age 60 (50% lower than MSM) [9].

    • Higher quality of life, fewer sick days [10].

  • Risk Reduction: HM avoids ~10% mortality risk, gaining 5-10 QALYs (valued at $500K-$1M societally) [11].

Cost-Benefit Summary

  • Financial Savings: HM saves $28,600 over 20 years vs. MSM.

  • Health Cost Avoidance: HM avoids $50K-$100K in MSM complications (e.g., heart attack) [12].

  • Total Benefit (HM): $78,600-$128,600 (savings + avoided costs).

  • Intangible Gains: Better energy, mobility, legacy modeling—unquantified but significant.

Key Insights

  • Investment Pays Off: HM’s $4,000 trainer cost yields $28K-$128K+ in savings/risk reduction.

  • Limitations: Costs vary by location/health progression. MSM risks escalate with events like hospitalization ($20K-$50K) [12].

  • Takeaway: Proactive fitness/nutrition (HM) outperforms reactive costs/risks (MSM) over 20 years.

References:

  1. [Insurance Premiums]: Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) – “2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey” or similar annual report for average U.S. premiums and obesity-related surcharges.

  2. [Doctor Bills]: Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) – Data on outpatient visit costs/copays.

  3. [Medications]: GoodRx or CMS – Average prices for statins, antihypertensives, metformin (2025 estimates).

  4. [Food Costs]: USDA – “Cost of Food at Home” reports (e.g., Thrifty vs. Moderate plans).

  5. [Vitamins]: Retail data from Amazon/Walmart – Multivitamin and fish oil prices.

  6. [Gym Membership]: Statista – “Average U.S. Gym Membership Costs” (2025 projection).

  7. [Personal Trainer]: Legacy Fitness & Nutrition, LLC – Your specified $2,000/year rate.

  8. [Inflation]: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) – Consumer Price Index (CPI) for 2% estimate.

  9. [Mortality Risk]: American Heart Association (AHA) or CDC – “Metabolic Syndrome and Cardiovascular Mortality” stats.

  10. [Quality of Life]: National Institutes of Health (NIH) – Studies on metabolic syndrome morbidity.

  11. [QALY Value]: Health Affairs – Articles on QALY valuation ($100K-$200K/year).

  12. [Complication Costs]: American Diabetes Association (ADA) or AHA – Costs of CVD events/hospitalizations.

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