The burden of health care costs for patients with dementia in the last 5 years of life

Amy S Kelley, Kathleen McGarry, Rebecca Gorges, Jonathan S Skinner, Amy S Kelley, Kathleen McGarry, Rebecca Gorges, Jonathan S Skinner

Abstract

Background: Common diseases, particularly dementia, have large social costs for the U.S. population. However, less is known about the end-of-life costs of specific diseases and the associated financial risk for individual households.

Objective: To examine social costs and financial risks faced by Medicare beneficiaries 5 years before death.

Design: Retrospective cohort.

Setting: The HRS (Health and Retirement Study).

Participants: Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries, aged 70 years or older, who died between 2005 and 2010 (n = 1702), stratified into 4 groups: persons with a high probability of dementia or those who died because of heart disease, cancer, or other causes.

Measurements: Total social costs and their components, including Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, out-of-pocket spending, and informal care, measured over the last 5 years of life; and out-of-pocket spending as a proportion of household wealth.

Results: Average total cost per decedent with dementia ($287 038) was significantly greater than that of those who died of heart disease ($175 136), cancer ($173 383), or other causes ($197 286) (P < 0.001). Although Medicare expenditures were similar across groups, average out-of-pocket spending for patients with dementia ($61 522) was 81% higher than that for patients without dementia ($34 068); a similar pattern held for informal care. Out-of-pocket spending for the dementia group (median, $36 919) represented 32% of wealth measured 5 years before death compared with 11% for the nondementia group (P < 0.001). This proportion was greater for black persons (84%), persons with less than a high school education (48%), and unmarried or widowed women (58%).

Limitation: Imputed Medicaid, private insurance, and informal care costs.

Conclusion: Health care expenditures among persons with dementia were substantially larger than those for other diseases, and many of the expenses were uncovered (uninsured). This places a large financial burden on families, and these burdens are particularly pronounced among the demographic groups that are least prepared for financial risk.

Primary funding source: National Institute on Aging.

Figures

Figure 1. Out-of-Pocket Expenses and Implicit Costs…
Figure 1. Out-of-Pocket Expenses and Implicit Costs of Informal Care, by Dementia and Demographic Subgroups
Legend:

Figure 2. Adjusted and Unadjusted End-of-Life Spending,…

Figure 2. Adjusted and Unadjusted End-of-Life Spending, Dementia and Non-Dementia Cohorts

Figure 2. Adjusted and Unadjusted End-of-Life Spending, Dementia and Non-Dementia Cohorts
Figure 2. Adjusted and Unadjusted End-of-Life Spending,…
Figure 2. Adjusted and Unadjusted End-of-Life Spending, Dementia and Non-Dementia Cohorts

Source: PubMed

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