Background The proportion of the population made up of elderlypersons in the United States is projected to increase from 13percent of the population in 2000 to 20 percent by 2030. Theimplications for health care expenditures may be profound, becauseelderly persons use health care services at a greater rate thanyounger persons. We estimated total expenditures for acute andlong-term care from the age of 65 years until death and in thelast two years of life.
Methods We combined data from Medicare, the National MortalityFollowback Survey, and the National Medical Expenditure Surveyto estimate total national expenditures for health care accordingto the age at death. We also simulated expenditures with theuse of projected demographic characteristics of two cohorts:people turning 65 in 2000 and those turning 65 in 2015.
Results Total expenditures (in 1996 dollars) from the age of65 years until death increase substantially with longevity,from $31,181 for persons who die at the age of 65 years to morethan $200,000 for those who die at the age of 90, in part becauseof steep increases in nursing home expenditures for very oldpersons. Spending in the last two years of life also increaseswith longevity, but a reduction in Medicare expenditures ($37,000for persons who die at the age of 75 years and $21,000 for thosewho die at the age of 95) moderates the effect of the increasein nursing home expenditures ($6,000 for those who die at theage of 75 years and $32,000 for those who die at the age of95). Health care spending for women is consistently higher thanthat for men, after adjustment for the increased longevity ofwomen. Simulations show that increased longevity after the ageof 65 years has a relatively small effect on the anticipatedincrease in spending, especially for services covered by Medicare,from 2000 to 2015. The effects of the larger number of peopleborn in 1950 than in 1935 and the larger number of people survivingto the age of 65 years are much more important.
Conclusions In the United States, the effect of longevity onexpenditures for acute care differs from its effect on expendituresfor long-term care. Acute care expenditures, principally forhospital care and physicians' services, increase at a reducedrate as the age at death increases, whereas expenditures forlong-term care increase at an accelerated rate. Increases inlongevity after the age of 65 years may result in greater spendingfor long-term care, but the increase in the number of elderlypersons has a more important effect on total spending.
Source Information
From the Urban Institute, Washington, D.C. (B.C.S.); and the Office of Analysis, Epidemiology, and Health Promotion, National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, Md., and the Office of Strategic Planning, Health Care Financing Administration, Baltimore (J.L.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Spillman at the Urban Institute, Health Policy Center, 2100 M St., NW, Washington, DC 20037, or at bspillma{at}ui.urban.org.
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