Adeline Delavande
University of Essex
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The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013
Michael D. Hurd; Paco Martorell; Adeline Delavande; Kathleen J. Mullen; Kenneth M. Langa
BACKGROUND Dementia affects a large and growing number of older adults in the United States. The monetary costs attributable to dementia are likely to be similarly large and to continue to increase. METHODS In a subsample (856 persons) of the population in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative longitudinal study of older adults, the diagnosis of dementia was determined with the use of a detailed in-home cognitive assessment that was 3 to 4 hours in duration and a review by an expert panel. We then imputed cognitive status to the full HRS sample (10,903 persons, 31,936 person-years) on the basis of measures of cognitive and functional status available for all HRS respondents, thereby identifying persons in the larger sample with a high probability of dementia. The market costs associated with care for persons with dementia were determined on the basis of self-reported out-of-pocket spending and the utilization of nursing home care; Medicare claims data were used to identify costs paid by Medicare. Hours of informal (unpaid) care were valued either as the cost of equivalent formal (paid) care or as the estimated wages forgone by informal caregivers. RESULTS The estimated prevalence of dementia among persons older than 70 years of age in the United States in 2010 was 14.7%. The yearly monetary cost per person that was attributable to dementia was either
American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2011
Ran Abramitzky; Adeline Delavande; Luis I Vasconcelos
56,290 (95% confidence interval [CI],
International Economic Review | 2008
Adeline Delavande
42,746 to
Demography | 2012
Adeline Delavande; Hans-Peter Kohler
69,834) or
Archive | 2008
Adeline Delavande; Susann Rohwedder; Robert J. Willis
41,689 (95% CI,
Demography | 2011
Adeline Delavande; Susann Rohwedder
31,017 to
Alzheimers & Dementia | 2013
Adeline Delavande; Michael D. Hurd; Paco Martorell; Kenneth M. Langa
52,362), depending on the method used to value informal care. These individual costs suggest that the total monetary cost of dementia in 2010 was between
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Adeline Delavande; Charles F. Manski
157 billion and
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization | 2015
Adeline Delavande; Basit Zafar
215 billion. Medicare paid approximately
Staff Reports | 2013
Adeline Delavande; Basit Zafar
11 billion of this cost. CONCLUSIONS Dementia represents a substantial financial burden on society, one that is similar to the financial burden of heart disease and cancer. (Funded by the National Institute on Aging.).