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Past Research Relating to HCC

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expenditures will soon exceed the capacity of governments to pay for them. ... a residue of past events, sometimes akin to bones, sometime more akin to ashes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Past Research Relating to HCC


1
Past Research Relating to HCC

2
The Viability of a Universal Health Care System
in an Ageing Society
3
if provincial governments continue to pursue
policies that lead to the same rates of growth in
health spending and revenue expenditures will
soon exceed the capacity of governments to pay
for them.
Brett J. Skinner, Mark RoverePaying More,
Getting LessFraser Institute, 2006
4
The rates of growth in costs for elderly
careare in fact well within the normal rates of
growth of the Canadian economy.At the end of
the day, the health care costs of the community
must be paid for by the community, regardless of
the channel of payment.
  • Robert G. Evans, 1987
  • Hang Together or Hang Separately

5
Modelling Future Needs
6
Opinion-based perspectives
  • Increased longevity more chronically ill
    patients in need of prolonged medical care.
  • Ehrenfeld 1998
  • Shifting demographics - capturing an increasing
    grey vote.
  • Metz 2002

7
Economic-based perspectives
  • Cost effective manners of delivering HCC
    services.
  • Using home support and community services as an
    alternative to institutional care.
  • Hollander and Chappell 2002
  • Weissert, Cready, Pawelak 2005

8
Econometric methods
  • Standard approach for producing linear models
    using statistical analysis to determine
    parameters.
  • Quality and reliability varies. Statistics may
    be thought of as a residue of past events,
    sometimes akin to bones, sometime more akin to
    ashes.
  • Difficult to make good long-range forecasts from
    past evidence.

9
Modelling Residential Care
10
  • Berlin, Ramlo, Baxter 2006

11
Model developed to test divisions for long-term
care in the UK. Note Residential care here
would correspond to assisted living in B.C.,
nursing home care to residential care.
  • Xie, Chaussalet, Millard 2005, 2006

12
Age and the Elderly
13
Who is a senior citizen?
  • The age at which a person may be considered
    old is shifting.
  • The utilization of medical services by people
    aged 65 to 74 does not differ much from that by
    the remainder of the adult population. After 74,
    however, it increase rapidly.'
  • Rosenberg, Moore 1997

14
Which way to model these shifts?
  • Yang, Norton, Stearns 2003

15
Non-public Home and Community Care
16
  • 75-85 of home care services are provided by
    unpaid family members or friends.
  • About 20 of expenditures for home care services
    in Canada are paid privately.
  • MacAdam 2004
  • 20,000 privately funded beds in B.C. providing
    meals and 24 hour emergency health care support
    vs 20,820 publicly funded beds with at least this
    level of service.
  • Dodd 2007

17
Other Issues
18
Gender
  • From age 65, women have a life expectancy 4.18
    years longer than men.
  • Women over the age of 65 spend an average of 1.35
    years longer in an institutional environment that
    their male counterparts.
  • Hill, Forbes, Lindsay, McDowell 1997
  • (1991 data)

19
Marital status
  • The health status of single ageing adults,
    particularly men, tends to be lower than that of
    their married counterparts.
  • Lund, Holstein, Osler 2004
  • Single ageing adults tend to need more formal
    care.

20
Ethnicity
  • Immigration leads to substantial shifts in the
    ethnic mix of the population of B.C. Many
    immigrants come from societies where care for the
    elderly is substantially provided within families.

21
Geographic location
  • Population demographics, longevity and health
    status of seniors can vary dramatically from
    region to region.

22
Availability of housing
  • To what extent is residential care being used to
    provide accommodation for homeless seniors?
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