Health & Medicine - Posted by David Orenstein-Brown on Tuesday, April 10, 2012 10:43 - 1 Comment
Hospital visits spike Alzheimer’s care costs

"It’s a real win-win if there can be research directed at ways to maintain people with ADRD at home and out of the hospital and keep them healthy and functioning for as long as possible," says health economist Judith Bentkover. (Credit: hospital bed via Shutterstock)
BROWN (US) — Medicare could save money by reducing the number of hospitalizations that occur between when Alzheimer’s patients are first diagnosed and when they become permanent nursing home residents.
In a study that tracked three distinct stages of patient care, researchers analyzed millions of nursing home and Medicare patient data from 1999-2007 and determined that between the time patients were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders (ADRD) and the time that they entered a nursing home, Medicare spent, on average, $29,743 per patient on ADRD-related hospitalizations.
That figure dropped below $19,000, over a much longer timeframe, once the patients became permanent nursing home residents.

Hospitalization costs during the PRE phase—from initial diagnosis until first nursing-home admission—are significantly higher than other phases of the disease. (Credit: David Orenstein/Brown University)
“We could save a lot of tax dollars, and a lot of everyone’s dollars, if we can keep people out of the hospital,” says health economist Judith Bentkover, adjunct professor of health services, policy, and practice at Brown University and lead author of a paper published today in The American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias.
“It’s a real win-win if there can be research directed at ways to maintain people with ADRD at home and out of the hospital and keep them healthy and functioning for as long as possible.
“That’s where the real breakthroughs have to be made. It is especially before the patient is admitted into the nursing home or in the final stages of the disease that there is a great opportunity for economic savings.”
Alzheimer’s disease alone in the United States costs $183 billion a year, according to the Alzheimer’s Association, with Medicare covering about 51 percent of the costs.
To obtain new insights about when such costs are the most intense and what services are used most at those times, the new study focuses on Medicare costs in a new way: by distinct phases based on the patient’s long-term care status.
The authors defined the PRE phase, which averaged 260 days, as the period after the ADRD diagnosis but before nursing home care. Next, the 360-day PERI phase covered the period between the first nursing home admission and permanent nursing home residency. Finally, the 829-day PERM period covered all the time patients then remained in the nursing home.
The study yielded several other findings, including:
- Overall Medicare spent $47,912 per patient in the PRE period, $67,625 in PERI, and $75,654 during PERM.
- Per day, ADRD-related reimbursements were $1,630 in PRE, $179 in PERI, and $51 in PERM.
- Overall outpatient visits cost $2,522 per patient in PRE, $4,334 in PERI, and $9,074 in PERM.
- More than 25 percent of patients in the PERM stage used the Medicare hospice benefit.
Containing cost guidance
Because the findings identify the timing of those costs which are the most intense per patient and per day, they can help guide the various players throughout the health care industry to develop appropriate ways of containing costs, Bentkover says.
Providers, especially those whose reimbursements will be grouped together within accountable care organizations, will have an incentive to reduce costly hospitalizations in the PRE phase.
The results can also help public health researchers focus their future efforts, notably on the PRE phase which will, in turn, provide deeper insights to efficient Medicare spending for ADRD patients, Bentkover says.
Researchers at Pfizer Inc. contributed to the study that was funded in part by the Alzheimer’s Immunotherapy Program of Pfizer Inc. and Janssen Alzheimer Immunotherapy.
More news from Brown University: http://news.brown.edu
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1 Comment
K. Sweetman
























I’m not sure I understand the point of this. Obviously, when people are diagnosed, and their family is trying to keep them home as long as possible, they may get hospitalized for a UTI or pneumonia, but return home because the family is able to piece together care, still. Once they are admitted to a nursing home there is 24/7 care available, if they need a nebulizer there is a nurse or RT to give it. Obviously, once they are end-stage there is usually palliative care or hospice and they are not taken to a hospital. But I don’t see what else could be expected? Put people in a nursing home as soon as they are diagnosed? Offer more home health aides?