Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.

AIMS:We estimate the pure effect of ageing on total health and aged care expenditure in Australia in the next 20 years. METHODS:We use a simple demographic projection model for the number of people in older age groups along with a needs based estimate of changes in the public and private cost of car...

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Main Authors: Anthony Harris, Anurag Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6084938?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e9e0545da3684c89ae2b1101a8ba2e202020-11-25T01:33:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01138e020169710.1371/journal.pone.0201697Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.Anthony HarrisAnurag SharmaAIMS:We estimate the pure effect of ageing on total health and aged care expenditure in Australia in the next 20 years. METHODS:We use a simple demographic projection model for the number of people in older age groups along with a needs based estimate of changes in the public and private cost of care per person in each group adjusted for expected changes in morbidity. RESULTS:A pure ageing model of expenditure growth predicts an increase in health expenditure per elderly person from $7439 in 2015 to $9594 in 2035 and an increase in total expenditure from $166 billion to $320 billion (an average annual growth of 3.33%). If people live longer without additional morbidity, then total health expenditure only grows at an average annual rate of 0.48%. If only some of those additional years are in good health, then the average year on year growth is 1.87%. CONCLUSION:Ageing will have a direct effect on the growth of health spending but is likely to be dwarfed by other demand and supply factors. A focus on greater efficiency in health production and finance is likely to be more effective in delivering high quality care than trying to restrain the demand for health and aged care among the elderly.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6084938?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony Harris
Anurag Sharma
spellingShingle Anthony Harris
Anurag Sharma
Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anthony Harris
Anurag Sharma
author_sort Anthony Harris
title Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
title_short Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
title_full Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
title_fullStr Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in Australia with changes in morbidity.
title_sort estimating the future health and aged care expenditure in australia with changes in morbidity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description AIMS:We estimate the pure effect of ageing on total health and aged care expenditure in Australia in the next 20 years. METHODS:We use a simple demographic projection model for the number of people in older age groups along with a needs based estimate of changes in the public and private cost of care per person in each group adjusted for expected changes in morbidity. RESULTS:A pure ageing model of expenditure growth predicts an increase in health expenditure per elderly person from $7439 in 2015 to $9594 in 2035 and an increase in total expenditure from $166 billion to $320 billion (an average annual growth of 3.33%). If people live longer without additional morbidity, then total health expenditure only grows at an average annual rate of 0.48%. If only some of those additional years are in good health, then the average year on year growth is 1.87%. CONCLUSION:Ageing will have a direct effect on the growth of health spending but is likely to be dwarfed by other demand and supply factors. A focus on greater efficiency in health production and finance is likely to be more effective in delivering high quality care than trying to restrain the demand for health and aged care among the elderly.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6084938?pdf=render
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