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Home > Cost of Chronic Disease |
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While medical innovations and public health gains in the past century have been measurable in leaps and bounds, significant progress against acute disease has revealed an equally enormous challenge--chronic disease on an unprecendented scale. People are living longer than ever before and are increasingly facing chronic conditions that often require ongoing, expensive medical care. The toll imposed by chronic disease is high and paid in both human and economic terms.
Those living with chronic disease often experience a significiant reduction in their quality of life as physical, emotional, and financial burdens take their toll. Even worse, almost half of those with a chronic condition have more than one. With chronic disease also often come functional limitations, dependency, and increased medical bills. Cardiovascular disease, cancer, neurological disease, and diabetes account for a hugely disproportionate share of the U.S. health care burden, and with chronic disease prevalence expected to grow at a faster rate than the population as a whole, the forecast is daunting.
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In 2002, more than 9 out of 10 community-living older individuals with cognitive impairment received daily activity assistance from family, friends or paid workers. Slightly less than 50% of those who had no cognitive impairment received assistance. ---
Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures 2007. 2007. [ Permalink ] |
In 2002, community-living older individuals who used paid services used almost double the number of hours monthly (200 hours) compared to those who had no cognitive impairment (108 hours). ---
Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures 2007. 2007. [ Permalink ] |
In 2005, 50% of Americans with Alzheimer's disease who were hospitalized for pneumonia or hip fracture died within 6 months. Patients without cognitive impairment were less likely to die after receiving the same treatments. ---
Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures 2007. 2007. [ Permalink ] |
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