Austin American-Statesman

Dementia’s costs eclipse heart disease, cancer, study says

Biggest cost just getting sufferers through daily life.

- By Marilynn Marchione

Alzheimer’s is the most expensive malady, costing the U.S. $157 billion to $215 billion a year.The biggest cost of Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia isn’t drugs or other medical treatments, but the care that’s needed just to get mentally impaired people through daily life.

Cancer and heart disease are bigger killers, but Alzheimer’s is the most expensive malady in the United States, costing families and society $157 billion to $215 billion a year, according to a new study that looked at this in unpreceden­ted detail.

The biggest cost of Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia isn’t drugs or other medical treatments, but the care that’s needed just to get mentally impaired people through daily life, the nonprofit RAND Corp.’s study found.

It also gives what experts say is the most reliable estimate for how many Americans have dementia — around 4.1 million. That’s less than the widely cited 5.2 million estimate from the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, which comes from a study that included people with less severe impairment.

Dementia’s direct costs, from medicines to nursing homes, are $109 billion a year in 2010 dollars, the new RAND report found. That compares to $102 billion for heart disease and $77 billion for cancer. Informal care by family members and others pushes dementia’s total even higher, depending on how that care and lost wages are valued.

“The informal care costs are substantia­lly higher for dementia than for cancer or heart conditions,” said Michael Hurd, a RAND economist who led the study. It was sponsored by the government’s National Insti- tute on Aging and will be published in today’s New England Journal of Medicine.

Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia and the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S. Dementia also can result from a stroke or other diseases.

For the new study, researcher­s started with about 11,000 people in a long-running government health survey of a nationally representa­tive sample of the population. They gave 856 of these people extensive tests to determine how many had dementia, and projected that to the larger group to determine a prevalence rate — nearly 15 percent of people over age 70.

Using Medicare and other records, they tallied the cost of purchased care — nursing homes, medicines, other treatments — including out-of-pocket expenses for dementia in 2010. Next, they subtracted spending for other health conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes or depression so they could isolate the true cost of dementia alone.

Even with that adjust- ment, dementia topped heart disease and cancer in cost, according to data on spending for those conditions from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.Finally, researcher­s factored in unpaid care two ways — foregone wages for caregivers and what the care would have cost if bought from a provider such as a home health aide. That gave a total annual cost of $41,000 to $56,000 per year for each dementia case, depending on which valuation method was used.

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