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Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms

AIMS: Late-life depression has substantial impacts on individuals, families and society. Knowledge gaps remain in estimating the economic impacts associated with late-life depression by symptom severity, which has implications for resource prioritisation and research design (such as in modelling). T...

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Autores principales: Lu, Shiyu, Liu, Tianyin, Wong, Gloria H. Y., Leung, Dara K. Y., Sze, Lesley C. Y., Kwok, Wai-Wai, Knapp, Martin, Lou, Vivian W. Q., Tse, Samson, Ng, Siu-Man, Wong, Paul W. C., Tang, Jennifer Y. M., Lum, Terry Y. S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8057460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33526166
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796020001122
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author Lu, Shiyu
Liu, Tianyin
Wong, Gloria H. Y.
Leung, Dara K. Y.
Sze, Lesley C. Y.
Kwok, Wai-Wai
Knapp, Martin
Lou, Vivian W. Q.
Tse, Samson
Ng, Siu-Man
Wong, Paul W. C.
Tang, Jennifer Y. M.
Lum, Terry Y. S.
author_facet Lu, Shiyu
Liu, Tianyin
Wong, Gloria H. Y.
Leung, Dara K. Y.
Sze, Lesley C. Y.
Kwok, Wai-Wai
Knapp, Martin
Lou, Vivian W. Q.
Tse, Samson
Ng, Siu-Man
Wong, Paul W. C.
Tang, Jennifer Y. M.
Lum, Terry Y. S.
author_sort Lu, Shiyu
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Late-life depression has substantial impacts on individuals, families and society. Knowledge gaps remain in estimating the economic impacts associated with late-life depression by symptom severity, which has implications for resource prioritisation and research design (such as in modelling). This study examined the incremental health and social care expenditure of depressive symptoms by severity. METHODS: We analysed data collected from 2707 older adults aged 60 years and over in Hong Kong. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) and the Client Service Receipt Inventory were used, respectively, to measure depressive symptoms and service utilisation as a basis for calculating care expenditure. Two-part models were used to estimate the incremental expenditure associated with symptom severity over 1 year. RESULTS: The average PHQ-9 score was 6.3 (standard deviation, s.d. = 4.0). The percentages of respondents with mild, moderate and moderately severe symptoms and non-depressed were 51.8%, 13.5%, 3.7% and 31.0%, respectively. Overall, the moderately severe group generated the largest average incremental expenditure (US$5886; 95% CI 1126–10 647 or a 272% increase), followed by the mild group (US$3849; 95% CI 2520–5177 or a 176% increase) and the moderate group (US$1843; 95% CI 854–2831, or 85% increase). Non-psychiatric healthcare was the main cost component in a mild symptom group, after controlling for other chronic conditions and covariates. The average incremental association between PHQ-9 score and overall care expenditure peaked at PHQ-9 score of 4 (US$691; 95% CI 444–939), then gradually fell to negative between scores of 12 (US$ - 35; 95% CI - 530 to 460) and 19 (US$ -171; 95% CI - 417 to 76) and soared to positive and rebounded at the score of 23 (US$601; 95% CI -1652 to 2854). CONCLUSIONS: The association between depressive symptoms and care expenditure is stronger among older adults with mild and moderately severe symptoms. Older adults with the same symptom severity have different care utilisation and expenditure patterns. Non-psychiatric healthcare is the major cost element. These findings inform ways to optimise policy efforts to improve the financial sustainability of health and long-term care systems, including the involvement of primary care physicians and other geriatric healthcare providers in preventing and treating depression among older adults and related budgeting and accounting issues across services.
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spelling pubmed-80574602021-04-21 Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms Lu, Shiyu Liu, Tianyin Wong, Gloria H. Y. Leung, Dara K. Y. Sze, Lesley C. Y. Kwok, Wai-Wai Knapp, Martin Lou, Vivian W. Q. Tse, Samson Ng, Siu-Man Wong, Paul W. C. Tang, Jennifer Y. M. Lum, Terry Y. S. Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci Original Article AIMS: Late-life depression has substantial impacts on individuals, families and society. Knowledge gaps remain in estimating the economic impacts associated with late-life depression by symptom severity, which has implications for resource prioritisation and research design (such as in modelling). This study examined the incremental health and social care expenditure of depressive symptoms by severity. METHODS: We analysed data collected from 2707 older adults aged 60 years and over in Hong Kong. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) and the Client Service Receipt Inventory were used, respectively, to measure depressive symptoms and service utilisation as a basis for calculating care expenditure. Two-part models were used to estimate the incremental expenditure associated with symptom severity over 1 year. RESULTS: The average PHQ-9 score was 6.3 (standard deviation, s.d. = 4.0). The percentages of respondents with mild, moderate and moderately severe symptoms and non-depressed were 51.8%, 13.5%, 3.7% and 31.0%, respectively. Overall, the moderately severe group generated the largest average incremental expenditure (US$5886; 95% CI 1126–10 647 or a 272% increase), followed by the mild group (US$3849; 95% CI 2520–5177 or a 176% increase) and the moderate group (US$1843; 95% CI 854–2831, or 85% increase). Non-psychiatric healthcare was the main cost component in a mild symptom group, after controlling for other chronic conditions and covariates. The average incremental association between PHQ-9 score and overall care expenditure peaked at PHQ-9 score of 4 (US$691; 95% CI 444–939), then gradually fell to negative between scores of 12 (US$ - 35; 95% CI - 530 to 460) and 19 (US$ -171; 95% CI - 417 to 76) and soared to positive and rebounded at the score of 23 (US$601; 95% CI -1652 to 2854). CONCLUSIONS: The association between depressive symptoms and care expenditure is stronger among older adults with mild and moderately severe symptoms. Older adults with the same symptom severity have different care utilisation and expenditure patterns. Non-psychiatric healthcare is the major cost element. These findings inform ways to optimise policy efforts to improve the financial sustainability of health and long-term care systems, including the involvement of primary care physicians and other geriatric healthcare providers in preventing and treating depression among older adults and related budgeting and accounting issues across services. Cambridge University Press 2021-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8057460/ /pubmed/33526166 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796020001122 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re- use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Lu, Shiyu
Liu, Tianyin
Wong, Gloria H. Y.
Leung, Dara K. Y.
Sze, Lesley C. Y.
Kwok, Wai-Wai
Knapp, Martin
Lou, Vivian W. Q.
Tse, Samson
Ng, Siu-Man
Wong, Paul W. C.
Tang, Jennifer Y. M.
Lum, Terry Y. S.
Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title_full Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title_fullStr Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title_full_unstemmed Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title_short Health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
title_sort health and social care service utilisation and associated expenditure among community-dwelling older adults with depressive symptoms
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8057460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33526166
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796020001122
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