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Socioeconomic Costs of Dementia Based on Utilization of Health Care and Long-Term-Care Services: A Retrospective Cohort Study

Eun‐Jeong Han, Jung-Suk Lee, Eunhee Cho, Hyejin Kim

2021International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study examined the socioeconomic costs of dementia based on the utilization of healthcare and long-term care services in South Korea. Using 2016 data from two national insurance databases and a survey study, persons with dementia were categorized into six groups based on healthcare and long-term care services used: long-term care insurance users with home- and community-based services (n = 93,346), nursing home services (n = 69,895), and combined services (n = 16,068); and long-term care insurance non-users cared for by family at home (n = 192,713), living alone (n = 19,526), and admitted to long-term-care hospitals (n = 65,976). Their direct and indirect costs were estimated. The total socioeconomic cost of dementia was an estimated US$10.9 billion for 457,524 participants in 2016 (US$23,877 per person). Among the six groups, the annual per-person socioeconomic cost of dementia was lowest for long-term care insurance users who received home- and community-based services (US$21,391). It was highest for long-term care insurance non-users admitted to long-term care hospitals (US$26,978). Effective strategies are necessary to promote long-term care insurance with home- and community-based services to enable persons with dementia to remain in their communities as long as possible while receiving cost-efficient, quality care.

Topics & Concepts

Socioeconomic statusLong-term care insuranceDementiaLong-term careMedicineHealth careGerontologyEnvironmental healthNursingPopulationEconomic growthDiseaseEconomicsPathologyGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesIntergenerational Family Dynamics and CaregivingHealth disparities and outcomes