Abstract

This study estimated excess home healthcare use and expenditures among elderly Medicare beneficiaries (age ≥ 65 years) with Parkinson's disease (PD) compared to those without PD and analyzed the extent to which predisposing, enabling, need factors, personal health choice, and external environment contribute to the excess home healthcare use and expenditures among individuals with PD. A retrospective, observational, cohort study design using Medicare 5% sample claims for years 2006-2007 was used for this study. Logistic regressions and Ordinary Least Squares regressions were used to assess the association of PD with home health use and expenditures, respectively. Postregression nonlinear and linear decomposition techniques were used to understand the extent to which differences in home healthcare use and expenditures among elderly Medicare beneficiaries with and without PD can be explained by individual-level factors. Elderly Medicare beneficiaries with PD had higher home health use and expenditures compared to those without PD. 27.5% and 18% of the gap in home health use and expenditures, respectively, were explained by differences in characteristics between the PD and no PD groups. A large portion of the differences in home healthcare use and expenditures remained unexplained.

Highlights

  • Individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) experience substantially higher healthcare expenditures compared to those without PD [1,2,3,4]

  • Medicare beneficiaries with PD (21.97 ± 11.75) had a significantly higher number of comorbidities compared to those without PD (16.24 ± 9.76)

  • After adjusting for the predisposing, need, personal health choice, and external environmental factors, elderly Medicare beneficiaries with PD had 13.3% higher home healthcare use and 39% higher home healthcare expenditures compared to those without PD

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Summary

Introduction

Individuals with PD experience substantially higher healthcare expenditures compared to those without PD [1,2,3,4]. Home healthcare expenditures have been observed to be consistently and substantially higher among elderly individuals with PD compared to those without PD [1,2,3,4]. Home healthcare use has been shown to be higher among elderly individuals with PD compared to those without PD. Rates of home healthcare use have been observed to vary from twofold [1, 3] to more than threefold [2] higher among elderly individuals with PD compared to those without PD in the USA

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