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Development and Validation of a Prediction Model for 6-Month Societal Costs in Older Community Care-Recipients in Multiple Countries; the IBenC Study

Authors :
Lisanne I van Lier
Judith E Bosmans
Henriëtte G van der Roest
Martijn W Heymans
Vjenka Garms-Homolová
Anja Declercq
Pálmi V Jónsson
Hein PJ van Hout
Source :
Health Services Insights, Vol 13 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2020.

Abstract

This study aims to develop and validate a prediction model of societal costs during a period of 6-months in older community care-recipients across multiple European countries. Participants were older community care-recipients from 5 European countries. The outcome measure was mean 6-months total societal costs of resource utilisation (healthcare and informal care). Potential predictors included sociodemographic characteristics, functional limitations, clinical conditions, and diseases/disorders. The model was developed by performing Linear Mixed Models with a random intercept for the effect of country and validated by an internal-external validation procedure. Living alone, caregiver distress, (I)ADL impairment, required level of care support, health instability, presence of pain, behavioural problems, urinary incontinence and multimorbidity significantly predicted societal costs during 6 months. The model explained 32% of the variation within societal costs and showed good calibration in Iceland, Finland and Germany. Minor model adaptations improved model performance in The Netherland and Italy. The results can provide a valuable orientation for policymakers to better understand cost development among older community care-recipients. Despite substantial differences of countries’ care systems, a validated cross-national set of key predictors could be identified.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11786329
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Health Services Insights
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.403dd31ba74bc9a8f92ae38695baa3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1178632920980462