Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this article is to clarify the social burden of Japan’s three major diseases including Long-term Care (LTC) burden.Design/methodology/approachA modification of the Cost of Illness (COI)—the Comprehensive-COI (C-COI) was utilized to estimate three major diseases: cancer, heart disease, and cerebrovascular diseases (CVD). The C-COI consists of five parts: medical direct cost, morbidity cost, mortality cost, formal LTC cost and informal LTC cost. The latter was calculated by two approaches: opportunity cost approach (OC) and replacement approach (RA), which assumed that informal caregivers were substituted by paid caregivers.FindingsThe C-COI of cancer, heart disease and CVD in 2017 amounted to 10.5 trillion JPY, 5.2 trillion JPY, and 6.7 trillion JPY, respectively (110 JPY= 1 US$). The mortality cost was preponderant for cancer (61 percent) and heart disease (47.9 percent); while the informal LTC cost was preponderant for CVD (27.5 percent). The informal LTC cost of the CVD in OC amounted to 1.8 trillion JPY; while the RA amounted to 3.0 trillion JPY.Social implicationsThe LTC burden accounted for a significant proportion of the social burden of chronic diseases. The informal care was maintained by unsustainable structures such as the elderly providing care for the elderly. This result can affect health policy decisions.Originality/valueThe C-COI is more appropriate for estimating the social burden of chronic diseases including the LTC burden and can be calculated using governmental statistics.

Highlights

  • Japan is the world’s most aged nations

  • The original Cost of Illness (COI) method was not suitable for comparison of the three major diseases because it could underestimate the burden of cerebrovascular diseases (CVD), which has the aspect of chronic disease

  • It was suggested that the Long-term Care (LTC) burden should have been included when evaluating the social burden of chronic disease because LTC burden as a percentage of the total social burden of chronic disease was higher than that of acute disease

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Summary

Introduction

Japan is the world’s most aged nations. In 2017, the percentage of Japanese people at least 65 years old was 27.7 percent, with 13.8 percent at least 75 years old (United Nations, 2019). Aging is changing Japan’s disease structure (Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, 2015): the elderly people are likely to have multiple chronic diseases, which can carry a greater social burden of LTC than acute disease. In 2000, Japan introduced a public LTC insurance system (Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, 2002) in order to socialize the LTC against a background of increased elderly requiring LTC. This in turn reflects a decline in the caring ability of the elderly’s families due Public Administration and Policy Vol 24 No 2, 2021 pp. Patients (or their families) demanding public LTC insurance services can apply, and the local government will certify, based on the applicant’s data and the attending doctor’s assessment. Up to 90 percent of the cost of LTC services is paid by the public LTC insurance, within the predetermined limits of each level

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