Healthcare costs hit the elderly hard,
diminish financial well being
Study finds out-of-pocket spending on
healthcare in old age puts significant
strain on finances
September 6, 2012--The protection of the
savings of the elderly—one of the primary
goals of Medicare—is under threat from a
combination of spiraling healthcare costs
and increased longevity.
As the government attempts to reduce
Medicare costs, one suggestion is that the
elderly could pay a larger proportion of the
costs of their healthcare. But exactly how
much would this be and what impact would it
have on their finances?
A new study by Amy Kelley at the Mount Sinai
School of Medicine and her colleagues,
funded by the National Institute on Aging,
aims to identify the portion of wealth
Medicare beneficiaries spend on healthcare
costs in the last five years of life.
Their work appears online in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, published by
Springer.
Medicare provides nearly universal health
care coverage to the population over 65.
However it does not pay for everything.
There are co-payments and deductibles, and
more importantly, homecare services and
non-rehabilitative nursing home care, which
are not covered. If proposals suggest the
elderly should make even larger
contributions to care, it is important to
know more about patients’ out-of-pocket
spending under the current Medicare program.
The authors analyzed data from 3,209
individuals with Medicare coverage included
in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS)
from 2002-2008. They measured total
out-of-pocket healthcare expenditures in the
last five years of life, and looked at these
costs as a percentage of total household
assets.
More than three quarters of households spent
at least $10,000, with spending for all
participants averaging $38,688 in the last
five years of life. Even more shocking was
the fact that a quarter of participants made
an average contribution of $101,791, and the
same number spent more than their total
household assets on healthcare.
Kelley and colleagues note that the amount
spent on healthcare varied widely with the
type of illness suffered, with dementia
costing the most money. Out-of-pocket
spending for individuals or their spouses
dying with dementia was more than twice the
average for dying from gastrointestinal
disease or cancer.
The majority of these costs are related to
nursing home expenses which accounted for 56
percent of average spending in those
suffering from Alzheimer's disease.
Thus far, attempts to promote legislation to
help with long-term care requirements have
all been deemed too expensive. Until someone
comes up with a financially viable scheme,
the authors speculate that the financial
outlook for the elderly in coming decades is
discouraging. They conclude that, "as more
baby boomers retire, a new generation of
widows or widowers could face a sharply
diminished financial future as they confront
their recently-depleted nest egg following
the illness and death of a spouse".
TAGS: ELDERLY HEALTH CARE COST
IMPACT, MEDICARE, ELECTION 2012