Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
UNLABELLED: OBJECTIVEs. An earlier paper estimated the per-case and national incidence costs of Alzheimer's disease for 1983. This paper updates the estimates of costs per case to 1991 and presents new national prevalence estimates of the economic and social costs of the disease. METHODS: All data for the cost estimates were taken from published sources or provided by other researchers. RESULTS: At midrange values of the estimated cost and epidemiological parameters, the discounted (at 4%) direct and total costs of Alzheimer's disease were 47, 581 and 173, 932 per case, respectively. The estimated 1991 national direct and total prevalence costs were 20. 6 billion and 67. 3 billion, respectively. Assuming conservatively that the prevalence of the disease remains constant, the estimated discounted present values of the direct and total costs of all current and future generations of Alzheimer's patients are 536 billion and 1. 75 trillion, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The 536 billion and 1. 75 trillion figures are minimum estimates of the long-term dollar losses to the US economy in 1991 caused by Alzheimer's disease.
Ernst et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: