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      Cognitive Function and Acute Care Utilization

      , , ,
      The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          The US economic and social costs of Alzheimer's disease revisited.

          R Ernst, J Hay (1994)
          OBJECTIVEs. An earlier paper estimated the per-case and national incidence costs of Alzheimer's disease for 1983. This paper updates the estimates of costs per case to 1991 and presents new national prevalence estimates of the economic and social costs of the disease. All data for the cost estimates were taken from published sources or provided by other researchers. At midrange values of the estimated cost and epidemiological parameters, the discounted (at 4%) direct and total costs of Alzheimer's disease were $47,581 and $173,932 per case, respectively. The estimated 1991 national direct and total prevalence costs were $20.6 billion and $67.3 billion, respectively. Assuming conservatively that the prevalence of the disease remains constant, the estimated discounted present values of the direct and total costs of all current and future generations of Alzheimer's patients are $536 billion and $1.75 trillion, respectively. The $536 billion and $1.75 trillion figures are minimum estimates of the long-term dollar losses to the US economy in 1991 caused by Alzheimer's disease.
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            Accuracy of self-reported health services use and patterns of care among urban older adults.

            Understanding older adults' volume and patterns of health service use is fundamental to efforts to improve the quality and efficiency of services. To analyze the accuracy of older adults' self report of health services use and to determine the proportion of care obtained outside a defined urban academic health care system. Telephone survey of self-reports validated against data routinely archived in an electronic medical record system. Stratified random sample of 422 patients (> or = 60 years) who had contact with the health care system at least once in the previous 3 months. Self reports of hospitalizations, emergency room visits, physicians visits, extended care visits, and home care visits over the past 12 months, health status, physical activity, and sociodemographics factors. The sample population was more likely to report health services use and functional disability than was a community-based sample of older adults; 67% of the sample were women, 53.9% were African American, 71% were age 65 and over, 38.7% lived alone, and 24.6% reported poor financial resources. Based on data from the electronic medical record, 27.9% of the sample were hospitalized at least once in the prior 12 months, 54.6% had at least one emergency room visit, and the mean number of ambulatory visits was 8.1. Comparing self-report data to the electronic record data, 24.1% of older adults with a hospitalization in the prior 12 months failed to report the episode; 28.1% of those with an emergency room visit failed to report the episode as did 5.2% of those with an ambulatory care visit. The accuracy of the self reports of volume of these services were also substantially under reported. We were unable to identify any patient characteristics that were highly correlated with inaccuracy. We estimate that approximately 9.5% of health care costs are accrued outside this urban health care system. These older adults substantially under-report health services use, including hospital episodes over a 12-month period. Reliance on self-reported use data over the prior year to model patterns of health care use among older adults is not supported by these data.
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              Correlates of cognitive function in an elderly community population.

              In 1982 and 1983, brief, structured performance tests of selected areas of cognitive function were administered to 3,682 (82.1 per cent) of the residents aged 65 years and older of the geographically defined community of East Boston, Massachusetts, a center of the Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly program. There was a strong inverse relation between age and performance on all four cognitive tests in analyses adjusted for sex only as well as in those adjusted for the effects of other variables. Similarly, fewer years of formal education, increasing level of disability on the modified Katz Activities of Daily Living Scale, and less prestigious occupations, as measured by the modified Duncan Socioeconomic Index, were each independently related to lower performance on all four tests.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
                The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1079-5014
                1758-5368
                January 01 2003
                January 01 2003
                : 58
                : 1
                : S38-S49
                Article
                10.1093/geronb/58.1.S38
                f66aa078-a36f-4552-8fd7-3b13204ac9c4
                © 2003
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