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Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study

BACKGROUND: Dementia and frailty often accompany one another in older age, requiring complex care and resources. Available projections provide little information on their joint impact on future health-care need from different segments of society and the associated costs. Using a newly developed micr...

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Autores principales: Kasajima, Megumi, Eggleston, Karen, Kusaka, Shoki, Matsui, Hiroki, Tanaka, Tomoki, Son, Bo-Kyung, Iijima, Katsuya, Goda, Kazuo, Kitsuregawa, Masaru, Bhattacharya, Jay, Hashimoto, Hideki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9094718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35487231
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00044-5
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author Kasajima, Megumi
Eggleston, Karen
Kusaka, Shoki
Matsui, Hiroki
Tanaka, Tomoki
Son, Bo-Kyung
Iijima, Katsuya
Goda, Kazuo
Kitsuregawa, Masaru
Bhattacharya, Jay
Hashimoto, Hideki
author_facet Kasajima, Megumi
Eggleston, Karen
Kusaka, Shoki
Matsui, Hiroki
Tanaka, Tomoki
Son, Bo-Kyung
Iijima, Katsuya
Goda, Kazuo
Kitsuregawa, Masaru
Bhattacharya, Jay
Hashimoto, Hideki
author_sort Kasajima, Megumi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dementia and frailty often accompany one another in older age, requiring complex care and resources. Available projections provide little information on their joint impact on future health-care need from different segments of society and the associated costs. Using a newly developed microsimulation model, we forecast this situation in Japan as its population ages and decreases in size. METHODS: In this microsimulation modelling study, we built a model that simulates an individual’s status transition across 11 chronic diseases (including diabetes, coronary heart disease, and stroke) as well as depression, functional status, and self-reported health, by age, sex, and educational strata (less than high school, high school, and college and higher), on the basis of nationally representative health surveys and existing cohort studies. Using the simulation results, we projected the prevalence of dementia and frailty, life expectancy with these conditions, and the economic cost for formal and informal care over the period 2016–43 in the population of Japan aged 60 years and older. FINDINGS: Between 2016 and 2043, life expectancy at age 65 years will increase from 23·7 years to 24·9 years in women and from 18·7 years to 19·9 years in men. Years spent with dementia will decrease from 4·7 to 3·9 years in women and 2·2 to 1·4 years in men. By contrast, years spent with frailty will increase from 3·7 to 4·0 years for women and 1·9 to 2·1 for men, and across all educational groups. By 2043, approximately 29% of women aged 75 years and older with a less than high school education are estimated to have both dementia and frailty, and so will require complex care. The expected need for health care and formal long-term care is anticipated to reach costs of US$125 billion for dementia and $97 billion for frailty per annum in 2043 for the country. INTERPRETATION: Japan’s Government and policy makers should consider the potential social challenges in caring for a sizable population of older people with frailty and dementia, and a widening disparity in the burden of those conditions by sex and by educational status. The future burden of dementia and frailty should be countered not only by curative and preventive technology innovation, but also by social policies to mitigate the health gap. FUNDING: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Hitachi – the University of Tokyo Laboratory for a sustainable society, and the National Institute of Ageing.
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spelling pubmed-90947182022-05-11 Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study Kasajima, Megumi Eggleston, Karen Kusaka, Shoki Matsui, Hiroki Tanaka, Tomoki Son, Bo-Kyung Iijima, Katsuya Goda, Kazuo Kitsuregawa, Masaru Bhattacharya, Jay Hashimoto, Hideki Lancet Public Health Article BACKGROUND: Dementia and frailty often accompany one another in older age, requiring complex care and resources. Available projections provide little information on their joint impact on future health-care need from different segments of society and the associated costs. Using a newly developed microsimulation model, we forecast this situation in Japan as its population ages and decreases in size. METHODS: In this microsimulation modelling study, we built a model that simulates an individual’s status transition across 11 chronic diseases (including diabetes, coronary heart disease, and stroke) as well as depression, functional status, and self-reported health, by age, sex, and educational strata (less than high school, high school, and college and higher), on the basis of nationally representative health surveys and existing cohort studies. Using the simulation results, we projected the prevalence of dementia and frailty, life expectancy with these conditions, and the economic cost for formal and informal care over the period 2016–43 in the population of Japan aged 60 years and older. FINDINGS: Between 2016 and 2043, life expectancy at age 65 years will increase from 23·7 years to 24·9 years in women and from 18·7 years to 19·9 years in men. Years spent with dementia will decrease from 4·7 to 3·9 years in women and 2·2 to 1·4 years in men. By contrast, years spent with frailty will increase from 3·7 to 4·0 years for women and 1·9 to 2·1 for men, and across all educational groups. By 2043, approximately 29% of women aged 75 years and older with a less than high school education are estimated to have both dementia and frailty, and so will require complex care. The expected need for health care and formal long-term care is anticipated to reach costs of US$125 billion for dementia and $97 billion for frailty per annum in 2043 for the country. INTERPRETATION: Japan’s Government and policy makers should consider the potential social challenges in caring for a sizable population of older people with frailty and dementia, and a widening disparity in the burden of those conditions by sex and by educational status. The future burden of dementia and frailty should be countered not only by curative and preventive technology innovation, but also by social policies to mitigate the health gap. FUNDING: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Hitachi – the University of Tokyo Laboratory for a sustainable society, and the National Institute of Ageing. 2022-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9094718/ /pubmed/35487231 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00044-5 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.
spellingShingle Article
Kasajima, Megumi
Eggleston, Karen
Kusaka, Shoki
Matsui, Hiroki
Tanaka, Tomoki
Son, Bo-Kyung
Iijima, Katsuya
Goda, Kazuo
Kitsuregawa, Masaru
Bhattacharya, Jay
Hashimoto, Hideki
Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title_full Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title_fullStr Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title_full_unstemmed Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title_short Projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in Japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
title_sort projecting prevalence of frailty and dementia and the economic cost of care in japan from 2016 to 2043: a microsimulation modelling study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9094718/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35487231
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00044-5
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