Katherine A Ornstein1, Carolyn W Zhu1,2, Evan Bollens-Lund1, Melissa D Aldridge1, Howard Andrews3, Nicole Schupf4, Yaakov Stern5. 1. Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. 2. James J Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY. 3. Departments of Biostatistics. 4. Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York. 5. Department of Neurology, Cognitive Neuroscience Division, Columbia University Medical Center, Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: While individuals live with dementia for many years, utilization and expenditures from disease onset through the end-of-life period have not been examined in ethnically diverse samples. METHODS: We used a multiethnic, population-based, prospective study of cognitive aging (Washington Heights-Inwood Columbia Aging Project) linked to Medicare claims to examine total Medicare expenditures and health care utilization among individuals with clinically diagnosed incident dementia from disease onset to death. RESULTS: High-intensity treatment (hospitalizations, life-sustaining procedures) was common and mean Medicare expenditures per year after diagnosis was $69,000. Non-Hispanic blacks exhibited higher spending relative to Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites 1 year after diagnosis. Non-Hispanic blacks had higher total (mean=$205,000) Medicare expenditures from diagnosis to death compared with non-Hispanic whites (mean=$118,000). Hispanics' total expenditures and utilization after diagnosis was similar to non-Hispanic whites despite living longer with dementia. DISCUSSION: Health care spending for patients with dementia after diagnosis through the end-of-life is high and varies by ethnicity.
INTRODUCTION: While individuals live with dementia for many years, utilization and expenditures from disease onset through the end-of-life period have not been examined in ethnically diverse samples. METHODS: We used a multiethnic, population-based, prospective study of cognitive aging (Washington Heights-Inwood Columbia Aging Project) linked to Medicare claims to examine total Medicare expenditures and health care utilization among individuals with clinically diagnosed incident dementia from disease onset to death. RESULTS: High-intensity treatment (hospitalizations, life-sustaining procedures) was common and mean Medicare expenditures per year after diagnosis was $69,000. Non-Hispanic blacks exhibited higher spending relative to Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites 1 year after diagnosis. Non-Hispanic blacks had higher total (mean=$205,000) Medicare expenditures from diagnosis to death compared with non-Hispanic whites (mean=$118,000). Hispanics' total expenditures and utilization after diagnosis was similar to non-Hispanic whites despite living longer with dementia. DISCUSSION: Health care spending for patients with dementia after diagnosis through the end-of-life is high and varies by ethnicity.
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