Bilgrami Anam, Aghdaee Mona, Gu Yuanyuan, Cutler Henry, Numbers Katya, Kochan Nicole A, Sachdev Perminder S, Brodaty Henry
Macquarie University Centre for the Health Economy, Macquarie Business School & Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Macquarie Park, NSW, 2113, Australia.
Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), Discipline of Psychiatry & Mental Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
SSM Popul Health. 2024 Jul 2;27:101693. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2024.101693. eCollection 2024 Sep.
While the economic burden imposed by dementia is well-documented, findings are mixed on health care use for those with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Our objective was to analyse annual, non-hospital medical and pharmaceutical use patterns for older people with undiagnosed MCI and diagnosed dementia, living in the Australian community.
We analysed panel data from a community sample, the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (Australia), linked to administrative data on health care use, using two-part models to estimate the probability of using health care and the annual costs incurred by study participants.
People with MCI, unaware of their diagnoses, were significantly less likely to incur annual pathology and diagnostic imaging costs relative to cognitively normal individuals. This effect was concentrated in individuals with MCI who had non-amnestic symptoms, lived alone, or had limited carer support. Compared to cognitively normal individuals, people with MCI were predicted to have slightly lower annual costs for broad medical care categories related to the management and diagnosis of cognitive impairment, and people with dementia, substantially higher professional attendances, and pharmaceutical costs. These findings were consistent across estimation models adjusting for attrition over the study.
Diagnosis and symptom management in primary care may enable individuals with MCI to improve their quality of life and prevent more costly future health care use. However, our study found potential gaps in medical service use for people with undiagnosed MCI in the community, especially when they had less support or did not have memory symptoms. Primary care services may need to better diagnose and target these individuals.
虽然痴呆症所带来的经济负担已有充分记录,但关于轻度认知障碍(MCI)患者的医疗保健使用情况,研究结果却喜忧参半。我们的目的是分析澳大利亚社区中未被诊断出患有MCI和已被诊断出患有痴呆症的老年人的年度非住院医疗和药物使用模式。
我们分析了来自社区样本悉尼记忆与衰老研究(澳大利亚)的面板数据,并将其与医疗保健使用的行政数据相链接,使用两部分模型来估计使用医疗保健的概率以及研究参与者产生的年度费用。
相对于认知正常的个体,未意识到自己被诊断出患有MCI的人产生年度病理和诊断成像费用的可能性显著更低。这种影响集中在具有非遗忘症状、独居或护理支持有限的MCI个体中。与认知正常的个体相比,预计MCI患者在与认知障碍管理和诊断相关的广泛医疗保健类别方面的年度费用略低,而痴呆症患者的专业就诊次数和药物费用则大幅更高。在针对研究期间损耗进行调整的估计模型中,这些结果是一致的。
初级保健中的诊断和症状管理可能使MCI患者能够改善生活质量,并预防未来更高昂的医疗保健使用。然而,我们的研究发现社区中未被诊断出患有MCI的人在医疗服务使用方面存在潜在差距,尤其是当他们获得的支持较少或没有记忆症状时。初级保健服务可能需要更好地诊断并针对这些个体。