2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2004.00248.x
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The Lifetime Distribution of Health Care Costs

Abstract: Given the essential demographic phenomenon of our time, the rapid aging of the population, our findings lend increased urgency to understanding and addressing the interaction between aging and health care spending.

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Cited by 328 publications
(238 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
(16 reference statements)
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“…3 Some studies fi nd that health care costs of patients aged 75-84 years are almost twice as large as the costs of 65-74 years old patients; and the expenses on patients of the 85+ age group increase by more than three times in comparison with the latter (Alemayehu & Warner, 2004 ;Fuchs, 1998 ). The cost of home care and short-term stay in the hospital also to a large degree depends on the patients' age (Liang et al, 1996 ).…”
Section: The Crisis and The Characteristics Of The Financial Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 Some studies fi nd that health care costs of patients aged 75-84 years are almost twice as large as the costs of 65-74 years old patients; and the expenses on patients of the 85+ age group increase by more than three times in comparison with the latter (Alemayehu & Warner, 2004 ;Fuchs, 1998 ). The cost of home care and short-term stay in the hospital also to a large degree depends on the patients' age (Liang et al, 1996 ).…”
Section: The Crisis and The Characteristics Of The Financial Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most human healthcare expenses are incurred in the last six months, and often the last six weeks, of life (Alemayehu and Warner 2004). In the case of elephants, we simply do not know the upper bounds to life-expectancy, given adequate late-life dentition.…”
Section: The Costs Of Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lifetime health care expense of women averages a third higher than that of men [1], and 33% of women's medical costs are incurred in their middle-aged years and 50% in their senior years. Meanwhile, one-third of women, especially among the elderly, die of chronic sicknesses, including cardiovascular disease, stroke, and cancer [2], which heavily impact personal medical costs and public health expenditures [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%