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The cost of diagnosing dementia in a community setting
Author(s)Erik Jedenius, Anders Wimo, Jan Strömqvist
Journal titleInternational Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, vol 25, no 5, May 2010
Pagespp 476-482
Sourcehttp://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/gps DOI: 10.1002/gps.2365
KeywordsDementia ; Diagnosis ; General practice ; Costs [care] ; Cost effectiveness ; Evaluation ; Sweden.
AnnotationIn order to cope with the increasing number of individuals with dementia, it is crucial to develop the diagnostic capacity in primary care in cooperation with dementia specialists. Further, in order to establish prerequisites for care and planning, it is important to identify the cost of dementia diagnosis. Part of the Kalmar Dementia Program, this Swedish study aims to evaluate the cost of establishing a dementia diagnosis. It is a prospective, time- and resource utilization study for the identification of the total cost associated with diagnosing dementia (from start of the diagnostic process to time for established or rejected dementia diagnosis) both at the specialist and primary care level. Dementia evaluation in primary care took between 2 weeks and 2 months before reaching diagnosis. The average cost for all patients evaluated at the primary care level was 477 Euro (Ç), whereas evaluations done on a specialist level reached a cost of 1115 Ç. Thus, the costs per true diagnosed case consist of the cost for all dementia investigations divided by the number of finalized diagnoses. In this study the cost for diagnosing dementia per true diagnosed patient is 849 Ç at the primary care level and 1334 Ç at the specialist level. Based on this result, the authors estimated that the cost of establishing a dementia diagnosis is 1% of the total cost of dementia. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-100827222 A
ClassmarkEA: LK7: L5: QDC: WEC: 4C: 76P

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