This is a blog for the Mental Health Policy Class at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.

Showing posts with label dementia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dementia. Show all posts

July 14, 2008

The coming burden of Alzheimer's disease

In 2005, Medicare paid out $91 billion for costs related to Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia. By 2015, those costs are expected to climb to $189 billion. Medicaid paid $21 billion in nursing home costs for Alzheimer's and dementia patients in 2005; by 2015, those costs will climb to $27 billion. It seems ironic that Alzheimer's-related costs are set to balloon as the billions of dollars pumped into treating and preventing other maladies are beginning to show results. In recent years, medical care has advanced to the point that deaths from cancers, heart disease and stroke, the leading causes of death in the U.S., have dropped dramatically. Very quietly though, deaths from Alzheimer's disease have climbed 44 percent, from 49,558 to 71,696. There is no cure for Alzheimer's. Its biggest risk factor is old age.

March 16, 2008

Double jeopardy in Alzheimer's families

One parent with Alzheimer's disease is tough enough, but imagine the memory-robbing illness striking both parents - and knowing chances are high you'll get it, too. A study of more than 100 families for the first time gauges the size of that risk. . . . The study, appearing in March's Archives of Neurology, found more than 22 percent of the adult children of 111 couples with Alzheimer's had the disease themselves. Risk grew with age. Among offspring older than 60, more than 30 percent were affected. In those older than 70, nearly 42 percent had the disease.
Prior studies have found a 6 to 13 percent prevalence of the disease in the U.S. population older than 65.

As Population Grows Older, Geriatricians Grow Scarce

While the U.S. population age 55 and older is growing rapidly, according to a 2005 census report, the number of medical school grads going into geriatrics has been slow to keep up. According to one estimate, the nation's teaching hospitals are producing one or two geriatricians for every nine cardiologists or orthopedic surgeons.
Low reimbursements and the allure of higher-paying specialties have been largely responsible. Then, too, the prospect of working long hours treating severely ill patients in their homes or at a hospital or nursing facility can be a turnoff, some physicians say. "These are hard patients to treat because they're usually burdened with multiple complex disorders like Alzheimer's, dementia and congestive heart failure, and are often at the end of life," says Pittsburgh geriatrician Judith Black. Geriatrics isn't sexy, Black says, "but it can be extremely rewarding."