Affiliation:
1. Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, Department of Medicine Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
2. Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York New York USA
3. Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundFor persons with diabetes, incidence of dementia has been associated with increased hospitalization; however, little is known about healthcare use preceding and following incident dementia. We describe healthcare utilization in the 3 years pre‐ and post‐incident dementia among older adults with diabetes.MethodsWe used the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS) linked to Medicare fee‐for‐service claims from 2011 to 2018. We included community‐dwelling adults ≥65 years who had diabetes without dementia. We matched older adults with dementia (identified with validated NHATS algorithm) at the year of incident dementia to controls using coarsened exact matching. We examined annual outpatient visits, emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalization, and post‐acute skilled nursing facility (SNF) use 3 years preceding and 3 years following dementia onset.ResultsWe included 195 older adults with diabetes with incident dementia and 1107 controls. Groups had a similar age (81.6 vs 81.7 years) and were 56.4% female. Persons with dementia were more likely to be of minority racial and ethnic groups (26.7% vs 21.3% Black, non‐Hispanic, 15.3% vs 6.7% other race or Hispanic). We observed a larger decrease in outpatient visits among persons with dementia, primarily due to decreasing specialty visits (mean outpatient visits: 3 years pre‐dementia/matching 6.8 (SD 2.6) dementia vs 6.4 (SD 2.6) controls, p < 0.01 to 3 years post‐dementia/matching 4.6 (SD 2.3) dementia vs 5.5 (SD 2.7) controls, p < 0.01). Hospitalization, ED visits, and post‐acute SNF use were higher for persons with dementia and rose in both groups (e.g., ED visits 3 years pre‐dementia/matching 3.9 (SD 5.4) dementia vs 2.2 (SD 4.8) controls, p < 0.001; 3 years post‐dementia/matching 4.5 (SD 4.7) dementia vs 3.5 (SD 6.1) controls, p = 0.04).ConclusionsOlder adults with diabetes with incident dementia have higher rates of acute and post‐acute care use, but decreasing outpatient use over time, primarily due to a decrease in specialty visits.
Funder
National Institute on Aging
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