Background: Little information is available about the costs,
utilization patterns, and the delivery system used by Medicare beneficiaries
with chronic illnesses. This information will become increasingly important
as more Medicare beneficiaries with chronic illness enroll in managed care
plans and delivery systems must be developed to meet their needs.
Objectives: To analyze health care expenditures and utilization
patterns for Medicare beneficiaries with dementia of the Alzheimer type
(DAT) and compare them with those of all Medicare beneficiaries.
Design: A cross-sectional study.
Setting: Practices providing services to Medicare beneficiaries
in the U.S.
Subjects: Aged Medicare beneficiaries with DAT in fiscal year
(FY) 1992.
Measurements: Medical expenditures and utilization patterns.
Results: In FY 1992, per capita Medicare expenditures for 9323
patients with DAT were $6208, or 1.9 times the per capita expenditure for
all 1,221,615 beneficiaries in our sample. Inpatient care accounted for
62.7% of expenditures. Internal medicine was the specialty identified with
the largest proportion of expenditures, but no single specialty accounted
for the majority of care. Payments increased with comorbid conditions such
as heart failure, chronic pulmonary diseases, and cerebrovascular disease.
Conclusion: Current Medicare capitation payments to managed
care plans may not meet the higher expected annual costs of care for beneficiaries
with DAT. In turn, physicians (or physician groups) who accept capitation
for Medicare beneficiaries with DAT should also consider how capitation
rates are established by managed care plans and should learn ways to reduce
financial risk.