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Home > Cost of Chronic Disease

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.

There are  1243  facts in all subcategories below this one. --     Category RSS Feed

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Parkinson's disease affects 1 in every 100 people over the age of 60.
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Alliance for Aging Research. "Aging Statistics".  [ Permalink ]

The average age of onset for Parkinson's is 60-years-old.
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Parkinson's Action Network. "What is Parkinson's Disease? ".  [ Permalink ]

The typical Alzheimer's care recipient is 78 years old, female, and widowed. A full third of Alzheimer's recipients (35%) are 85 years and older.
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Alzheimer's Association & National Alliance for Caregiving. "Families Care: Alzheimer's Caregiving in the United States 2004". 2004.  [ Permalink ]

15% of Americans with Parkinson's disease are diagnosed before the age of 50--incidence increases with age.
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Parkinson's Disease Foundation. "Parkinson's Disease: An overview". 2007.  [ Permalink ]

Advancing age is the greatest risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease. A majority of Americans that are diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease are 65 or older.
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Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures 2008. 2008. [ Permalink ]

Dementia prevalence was found to increase with age, from 5% of those Americans aged 71-79 years to 37.4% of those aged 90 and older.
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Anderson, Gerard. Chronic Conditions: Making the case for ongoing care. Johns Hopkins University. November 2007. [ Permalink ]

One in 8 people age 65 and older have Alzheimer's disease--13% of the 65 and older population.


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Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures 2010. 2010. [ Permalink ]

The average diagnosis age for Parkinson's disease in the U.S. is 70.5 years.
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Van Den Eeden, Stephen K., Caroline M. Tanner, Allan L. Bernstein, Robin D. Fross, Amethyst Leimpeter, Daniel A. Bloch, and Lorene M. Nelson. "Incidence of Parkinson’s Disease: Variation by age, gender, and race/ethnicity". Am J Epidemiol. Vol. 157, No. 11, pp. 1015-22. [ Permalink ]

The incidence of Parkinson's disease rapidly increases over the age of 60 years--with only 4% of cases occurring under the age of 50.
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Van Den Eeden, Stephen K., Caroline M. Tanner, Allan L. Bernstein, Robin D. Fross, Amethyst Leimpeter, Daniel A. Bloch, and Lorene M. Nelson. "Incidence of Parkinson’s Disease: Variation by age, gender, and race/ethnicity". Am J Epidemiol. Vol. 157, No. 11, pp. 1015-22. [ Permalink ]

The prevalence of Parkinson's disease increase dramatically with age. For every 100,000 Americans, 6,317 people age 80 and over have the disease, compared with 2,785 aged 70-80 and 704 aged 60-70.
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Strickland, Daniel, and John Bertoni. "Parkinson’s Prevalence Estimated by a State Registry". Movement Disorders. Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 318-23. [ Permalink ]

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