![]() Back to Annual Meeting
|
|
![]() Back to Annual Meeting
|
APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing |
José Luis Navarro Espigares, PhD, Prof, Mgr, Economic Department, University Hospital Virgen de las Nieves, Avenida de las Fuerzas Armadas 2, Granada, 18014, Spain, +34 958 020637, josel.navarro.sspa@juntadeandalucia.es, Elisa Hernandez Torres, Applied Economy, University of Granada, Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Empresariales, Campus de Cartuja, s/n, Granada, 18071, Spain, Pedro González de la Flor, MD, PhD, Preventive Medicine Department, University General Hospital of Jaén, Avda. del Ejército Español, 10, Jaén, 23007, Spain, and José Aureliano Martin Segura, Departamento de Organización de Empresas., Universidad de Granada., C/. Real 58 (Edificio Granada), Blq. C, 4ºG, Ceuta, 51001, Spain.
Background: There is known to be a statistically positive relationship between age, dependency, and per capita healthcare expenditure, although its impact on healthcare and long term care expenditure growth is not clear. Theories of compression and expansion of morbidity offer opposite approaches to this subject.
Objectives: To quantify individual healthcare expenditure by age, to study the evolution of both health status and dependency among the elderly, and finally to estimate the relationships among them.
Methodology: The scope of this study is the Spanish national territory during the years 1997 to 2003. The analyzed variables are age, sex, health status, healthcare consumption, healthcare expenditure, and degree of dependency. Relationships among variables were analyzed by means of a logistic regression analysis.
Results: Healthcare expenditure of individuals 65 and over is three times the expenditure of those of 5-14 years. Future projections suggest that healthcare expenditures will grow proportionally more than the population. Dependency prevalence among the elderly has increased during the analyzed period from 26% in 1997 to 31% in 2003. Individuals with mild or moderate degrees of dependency consume primary care and drugs more intensively than those who are not dependent, although people with high dependency degrees do not.
Conclusions: While some published analyses predict a “morbidity compression” for the year 2010, both the known association between dependency and certain increasingly prevalent diseases and the obtained results lead us to support the “morbidity expansion” theory in Spain for the period 1997-2003.
Learning Objectives:
Keywords: Elderly, Health Care Utilization
Presenting author's disclosure statement:
Any relevant financial relationships? No
Any institutionally-contracted trials related to this submission?
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.
The 135th APHA Annual Meeting & Exposition (November 3-7, 2007) of APHA