Lamb Vicki L, Sloan Frank A, Nathan Anil S
North Carolina Central University, Department of Sociology, 1801 Fayetteville Street, Durham, NC 27707, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2008 Apr;43(2):714-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2007.00787.x.
To determine the effect of a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease or related dementias (ADRD), and the timing of first ADRD diagnosis, on Medicare expenditures at end of life.
Monthly Medicare payment data for the 5 years before death linked to the National Long-Term Care Survey (NLTCS) for decedents between 1996 and 2000 (N=4,899).
Medicare payment data for the 5 years before death were used to compare 5-year and 6-month intervals of expenditures (total and six subcategories of services) for persons with and without a diagnosis of ADRD during the last 5 years of life, controlling for age, gender, race, education, comorbidities, and nursing home status. Covariate matching was used.
On average, ADRD diagnosis was not significantly associated with excess Medicare payments over the last 5 years of life. Regarding the timing of ADRD diagnosis, there were no significant 5-year total expenditure differences for persons diagnosed with dementia more than 1 year before death. Payment differences by 6-month intervals were highly sensitive to timing of ADRD diagnosis, with the highest differences occurring around the time of diagnosis. There were reduced, non-significant, or negative total payment differences after the initial diagnosis for those diagnosed at least 1 year before death. Only those diagnosed with ADRD in the last year of life had significantly higher Medicare payments during the last 12 months of life, primarily for acute care services.
ADRD has a smaller impact on total Medicare expenditures than previously reported in controlled studies. The significant differences occur primarily around the time of diagnosis. Although rates of dementia are increasing per se, our results suggest that long-term (1+ year) ADRD diagnoses do not contribute to greater total Medicare costs at the end of life.
确定阿尔茨海默病或相关痴呆症(ADRD)的诊断及其首次诊断时间对临终时医疗保险支出的影响。
1996年至2000年间死亡者的每月医疗保险支付数据,与国家长期护理调查(NLTCS)相关联(N = 4,899)。
使用死亡前5年的医疗保险支付数据,比较在生命最后5年中有无ADRD诊断的人群在5年和6个月期间的支出(总支出和六个服务子类别),同时控制年龄、性别、种族、教育程度、合并症和养老院状况。采用协变量匹配。
平均而言,ADRD诊断与生命最后5年的医疗保险超额支付无显著关联。关于ADRD诊断时间,在死亡前1年以上被诊断为痴呆症的人群,5年总支出无显著差异。按6个月间隔的支付差异对ADRD诊断时间高度敏感,差异最大的时期出现在诊断前后。对于在死亡前至少1年被诊断的人群,初次诊断后总支付差异减少、无显著差异或为负。只有在生命最后一年被诊断为ADRD的人群在生命最后12个月的医疗保险支付显著更高,主要用于急性护理服务。
ADRD对医疗保险总支出的影响比之前对照研究报告的要小。显著差异主要出现在诊断前后。尽管痴呆症发病率本身在上升,但我们的结果表明,长期(1年以上)ADRD诊断不会导致临终时医疗保险总成本增加。