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Association of anxiety symptoms with health care use and costs in people aged 85 and over

Authors :
Lisa Miebach
Siegfried Weyerer
Michael Pentzek
Edelgard Mösch
Janine Stein
Steffi G. Riedel-Heller
Hans-Helmut König
Wolfgang Maier
Birgitt Wiese
André Hajek
Anke Oey
Kathrin Heser
Hendrik van den Bussche
Horst Bickel
Jochen Werle
Susanne Röhr
Johanna Katharina Hohls
Marion Eisele
Angela Fuchs
Martin Scherer
Source :
International journal of geriatric psychiatry 34(5), 765-776 (2019). doi:10.1002/gps.5089
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To analyze the association of anxiety symptoms with health care use and costs in people aged 85 and older. METHODS Baseline data from AgeQualiDe (N = 856), a multicenter prospective cohort study of primary care patients aged 85 and older, were analyzed. Anxiety symptoms (Geriatric Anxiety Inventory-Short Form) and health care use were assessed via questionnaires. Health care use was monetarily valued using German unit costs to obtain sectoral (inpatient, outpatient, nursing care, medical supplies, and medication) and total costs. Health care use and costs were analyzed in regression models as a function of anxiety symptoms, as well as relevant covariates (predisposing, enabling, and other need characteristics based on the Behavioral Model of Health Care Use). RESULTS On a descriptive level, people with increased anxiety symptoms (12% of the sample) incurred on average € 10 909 (SD: 16 023) in the last 6 months, 31% more than those without increased anxiety (€ 8303, SD: 11 175; P = 0.12). Adjusting for predisposing, enabling, and other need characteristics, anxiety symptoms were not significantly associated with health care use or costs. Specifically, need characteristics (morbidity, cognitive decline, and functional impairment) were associated with total or sectoral costs, depending on the cost category analyzed. CONCLUSION In a sample of people of the oldest-old age group, the severity of anxiety symptoms was not associated with health care use or costs, when adjusting for relevant covariates. A longitudinal analysis could assess whether a change in anxiety symptom severity is associated with health care use or costs in old age.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of geriatric psychiatry 34(5), 765-776 (2019). doi:10.1002/gps.5089
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a7756e16e42412de64885d1b7c6bc9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/gps.5089