Abstract

To determine whether Seoul’s dementia screening program increased the rate of diagnosis and the appropriate use of healthcare services for people with dementia, a retrospective data analysis was conducted based on administrative data from the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service. Two cohorts were constructed to represent the year before Seoul’s dementia screening program began (2007) (control group) and the year after the implementation of the program (2009) (treatment group). A difference-in-difference analysis was used to compare the diagnosis rates, number of clinic visits, and dementia-related drug prescription rates for 4 districts that implemented dementia screening programs between 2007 and 2009 and 14 areas that did not. After the introduction of the program, there was a 55.4% increase in physician-diagnosed dementia. The “average drug cost per patient” increased by 52.2% (Exp(β) = 1.522, p = 0.0264), the “average outpatient visits per patient” tended to increase by 13.5% (Exp(β) = 1.135, p = 0.1852), and the “average outpatient treatment fees per visit per patient” tended to increase by 24.4% (Exp(β) = 1.244, p = 0.0821). The implementation of dementia screening programs led to an increase in healthcare service utilization. Therefore, this program was found to be an effective strategy for reducing undiagnosed dementia cases and encouraging patients to use adequate healthcare services.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a condition in which multiple cognitive dysfunctions due to acquired brain diseases cause difficulties in one’s daily or social life [1]

  • The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of the dementia screening program (DSP)

  • We created a cohort of 13,981 dementia patients enrolled in 2007, which represents the year before the introduction of the DSP

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is a condition in which multiple cognitive dysfunctions due to acquired brain diseases cause difficulties in one’s daily or social life [1]. Dementia is the most important condition for an aging society in terms of its cost and impact, and its timely detection is a research, clinical, and political priority [3]. Observatory Report, in 2017, among the elderly population, the number of dementia patients was estimated at 705,473 (male: 254,676, female 450,797), and the prevalence of dementia was 10% [5]. The incidence of dementia increases rapidly with age, and the number of dementia patients is expected to increase dramatically due to the increase in life expectancy [6]. The number of patients with dementia in Korea is expected to double from 1,000,000 in 2024 to 2,000,000 in 2039, and eventually

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