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1.
Eur J Health Econ ; 25(3): 497-511, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37296350

RESUMEN

This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of informal care receipt by the French individuals aged 60 or older. The literature has focused on the community, leaving informal care in residential care settings in the shadow. We leverage data from a representative survey (CARE) conducted in 2015-2016 on both community-dwelling individuals and nursing home residents. Focusing on the 60+ with activity restrictions, we show that 76% of nursing home residents receive help with the activities of daily living from relatives, against 55% in the community. The number of hours conditional on receipt is yet 3.5 times higher in the community. Informal care represents 186 million hours per month and a value equivalent to 1.1% of GDP at least, care in the community representing 95% of the total. We investigate the determinants of informal care receipt. Using an Oaxaca-type approach, we disentangle between two mechanisms explaining that nursing home residents are more likely to receive informal care, namely the differences in population composition (endowments) and the differences in the association of individual characteristics with informal care (coefficients). Both are found to have a similar contribution. Our results imply that private costs make up for the majority (76%) of the costs associated with long-term care provision once informal care is taken into account. They also highlight that informal care is extremely common for nursing home residents. Existing evidence on the determinants of informal care receipt in the community has, however, limited relevance to understand informal care behaviors in nursing homes.


Asunto(s)
Actividades Cotidianas , Cuidadores , Humanos , Casas de Salud , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Vida Independiente
2.
J Health Econ ; 92: 102831, 2023 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37913647

RESUMEN

We assess whether informal care receipt affects the probability of transitioning to a nursing home. Available evidence derives from the US, where nursing home stays are often temporary. Exploiting linked survey and administrative data from the Netherlands, we use the gender mix of children to retrieve exogenous variation in informal care receipt. We find that informal care increases the chance of an admission within a three-year period for individuals with severe functional limitations, and increases the costs incurred on formal home care. For individuals with mild limitations, informal care substantially decreases total care costs, whereas its effect on nursing home admission is unclear. Further, informal care results in lower post-acute care use and hospital care costs, and does not increase mortality. Promoting informal care cannot be expected to systematically result in lower institutionalization rate and care costs, but it may nonetheless induce health benefits for its recipients.


Asunto(s)
Cuidadores , Servicios de Atención de Salud a Domicilio , Niño , Humanos , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Casas de Salud , Atención al Paciente , Atención Domiciliaria de Salud
3.
Health Econ ; 29(10): 1161-1179, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32643190

RESUMEN

We study horizontal inequity in home care use in the Netherlands, where a social insurance scheme aims to allocate long-term care according to care needs. Whether the system reaches its goal depends not only on whether eligible individuals have equal access to care but also on whether entitlements for care reflect needs, irrespective of socioeconomic status and other characteristics. We assess and decompose total inequity into inequity in (i) entitlements for home care and (ii) the conversion of these entitlements into actual use. This distinction is original and important, because inequity calls for different policy responses depending on the stage at which it arises. Linking survey and administrative data on the 65 and older, we find higher income elderly to receive less home care than poorer elderly with similar needs. Although lower income elderly tend to make greater use of their entitlements, need-standardized entitlements are similar across income, education, and wealth levels. However, both use and entitlements vary by origin and place of residence. The Dutch need assessment seems effective at restricting socioeconomic inequity in home care use but may not fully prevent inequity along other dimensions. Low financial barriers and universal eligibility rules may help achieve equity in access but are not sufficient conditions.


Asunto(s)
Disparidades en Atención de Salud , Servicios de Atención de Salud a Domicilio , Anciano , Niño , Determinación de la Elegibilidad , Femenino , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud , Humanos , Renta , Países Bajos , Factores Socioeconómicos
4.
Health Econ ; 29(4): 435-451, 2020 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31958885

RESUMEN

The Netherlands is one of the few countries that offer generous universal public coverage of long-term care (LTC). Does this ensure that the Dutch elderly with similar care needs receive similar LTC, irrespective of their income? In contrast with previous studies of inequity in care use that relied on a statistically derived variable of needs, our paper exploits a readily available, administrative measure of LTC needs stemming from the eligibility assessment organized by the Dutch LTC assessment agency. Using exhaustive administrative register data on 616,934 individuals aged 60 and older eligible for public LTC, we find a substantial pro-poor concentration of LTC use that is only partially explained by poorer individuals' greater needs. Among those eligible for institutional care, higher-income individuals are more likely to use-less costly-home care. This pattern may be explained by differences in preferences, but also by their higher copayments for nursing homes and by greater feasibility of home-based LTC arrangements for richer elderly. At face value, our findings suggest that the Dutch LTC insurance "overshoots" its target to ensure that LTC is accessible to poorer elderly. Yet, the implications depend on the origins of the difference and one's normative stance.


Asunto(s)
Servicios de Atención de Salud a Domicilio , Cuidados a Largo Plazo , Anciano , Determinación de la Elegibilidad , Etnicidad , Humanos , Seguro de Cuidados a Largo Plazo , Persona de Mediana Edad
5.
Health Econ ; 26(9): 1162-1174, 2017 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28660657

RESUMEN

Little is known about the price sensitivity of demand for home care of the disabled elderly. We partially fill this knowledge gap by using administrative data on the beneficiaries of the main French home care subsidy program in a department and exploiting interindividual variation in provider prices. We address the potential endogeneity of prices by taking advantage of the unequal spatial coverage of providers and instrumenting price by the number of municipalities served by a provider. We estimate a price elasticity of around -0.4 that is significantly different from both 0 and -1. This less than proportionate response of consumption to price has implications for the efficiency and redistributive impact of variation in the level of copayments in home care subsidy schemes.


Asunto(s)
Comercio , Personas con Discapacidad/estadística & datos numéricos , Necesidades y Demandas de Servicios de Salud , Servicios de Atención de Salud a Domicilio/estadística & datos numéricos , Anciano , Femenino , Financiación Gubernamental/economía , Francia , Humanos , Masculino , Factores Socioeconómicos
6.
Med Sci (Paris) ; 32(2): 204-10, 2016 Feb.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26936179

RESUMEN

Demographic ageing is often deemed responsible for the massive increase in health expenditures experienced by developed countries. As the elderly consume more medical care than the rest of the population, how could the increase in the share of the 60 + not lead to a marked expansion of healthcare public and private budgets? Despite its apparent logics, such reasoning is fallacious: it ignores that medical care consumption depends on many factors beyond age, which have tremendously evolved in the last decades and may change again in the future. Based on French stylized facts, this article provides an overview of the international literature that aimed at disentangling the respective roles of population ageing and of the non-demographic factors in explaining the dynamics of health expenditures. Paradoxically, technical medical progress has been a major contributor to the increase of healthcare spending. Results from economics research lead to qualify the impact of demographic trends and call for more attention to the public policies decisions that shape healthcare systems.


Asunto(s)
Envejecimiento/fisiología , Gastos en Salud/tendencias , Dinámica Poblacional/tendencias , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Unión Europea/estadística & datos numéricos , Femenino , Francia/epidemiología , Costos de la Atención en Salud/tendencias , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad
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