Association of dementia diagnosis, cognitive impairment levels, and their combination with care costs among publicly funded long-term care recipients

  • Cheng SHI
  • , Gloria H Y WONG
  • , Jacky C P CHOY
  • , Jennifer Y M TANG
  • , Hao LUO
  • , Shiyu LU
  • , Adelina COMAS HERRERA
  • , Martin KNAPP
  • , Terry Y S LUM

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

Abstract

Background and Objectives
Most people with dementia are undiagnosed and rely heavily on long-term care. Little is known about the relationship between dementia diagnosis and care costs, and inconsistent evidence exists on the cost implications of cognitive impairment severity. We examined how formal and informal care costs are associated with a dementia diagnosis and cognitive impairment levels across care settings.

Research Design and Methods
We used representative data from publicly funded long-term care recipients in residential care settings and community care settings in Hong Kong (n = 1603). Staff time measurement was used to capture service utilization of both formal and informal care. Generalized linear model (log-link and gamma distribution) was used to estimate long-term care costs, controlling for covariates.

Results
A dementia diagnosis is associated with an additional 13% and 23% care costs in residential and community care settings, respectively. People with more severe cognitive impairment incur greater long-term care costs; the highest difference (a 168% increase) was found in informal care costs in community care settings among those with very severe cognitive impairment. In community care settings, formal care costs were insensitive to cognition status but were consistently higher with a dementia diagnosis; in contrast, informal care costs were less associated with a diagnosis but increased with cognitive impairment severity.

Discussion and Implication
Having a diagnosis of dementia and poorer cognition are associated with higher long-term care costs in both residential and community care settings. A dementia diagnosis is potentially a more important driver of formal care costs than cognitive impairment levels within the current care system, in contrast to what is observed with informal care costs. Practitioners and policymakers need to ensure that individuals with cognitive impairment without a dementia diagnosis receive the appropriate level of care.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberigaf088
Number of pages11
JournalInnovation in Aging
Volume9
Issue number9
Early online date9 Aug 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Gerontological Society of America.

Funding

This work was conducted as part of the “Tools to Inform Policy: Chinese Communities Actions in Response to Dementia” (TIP- CARD) project, supported by the Hong Kong Research Impact Fund of the Research Grants Council (Project Reference Number: R7017-18).

Keywords

  • Service utilization
  • Formal and informal care
  • Community care
  • Residential care
  • Care cost

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