D. Logiudice et al., HEALTH-CARE COSTS OF PEOPLE REFERRED TO AN AGED CARE ASSESSMENT TEAM - THE EFFECT OF COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT, Australian and New Zealand journal of public health, 21(3), 1997, pp. 311-316
The aim of this study was to determine the effect cognitive impairment
has on direct and indirect costs to elderly people, their carers and
the community over one year, by following prospectively a cohort of el
derly people referred to an aged care assessment team. The 78 subjects
were drawn from a random sample of people referred to the Northwest H
ospital team, and validated tools were used to assess their cognitive
state. Outcome measures included total costs of community services, re
sidential care, hospital bed use, carer burden and psychological morbi
dity. A comparison of outcome measures was made between those with cog
nitive impairment and those without. Use of community services and hos
pital beds was high overall. Those with cognitive impairment were subs
tantially greater users of residential care, accounting for the higher
expenditure in this group. Psychological morbidity and burden remain
high in carers of those with cognitive impairment despite a high rate
of institutionalisation in this group. The total costs for those refer
red to aged care assessment teams with cognitive impairment are double
those seen for those with normal cognition.