Abstract

To explore formal and informal care costs in the last 3months of life for people with dementia, and to evaluate the association between transitions to hospital and usual place of care with costs. Cross-sectional study using pooled data from 3 mortality follow-back surveys. People who died with dementia. The Client Service Receipt Inventory survey was used to derive formal (health, social) and informal care costs in the last 3months of life. Generalized linear models were used to explore the association between transitions to hospital and usual place of care with formal and informal care costs. A total of 146 people who died with dementia were included. The mean age was 88.1years (SD 6.0), and 98 (67.1%) were female. The usual place of care was care home for 85 (58.2%). Sixty-five individuals (44.5%) died in a care home, and 85 (58.2%) experienced a transition to hospital in the last 3months. The mean total costs of care in the last 3months of life were £31,224.7 (SD 23,536.6). People with a transition to hospital had higher total costs (£33,239.2, 95% CI 28,301.8-39,037.8) than people without transition (£21,522.0, 95% CI 17,784.0-26,045.8), mainly explained by hospital costs. People whose usual place of care was care homes had lower total costs (£23,801.3, 95% CI 20,172.0-28,083.6) compared to home (£34,331.4, 95% CI 27,824.7-42,359.5), mainly explained by lower informal care costs. Total care costs are high among people dying with dementia, and informal care costs represent an important component of end-of-life care costs. Transitions to hospital have a large impact on total costs; preventing these transitions might reduce costs from the health care perspective, but not from patients' and families' perspectives. Access to care homes could help reduce transitions to hospital as well as reduce formal and informal care costs.

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