Effects of Copayment in Long-Term Care Insurance on Long-Term Care and Medical Care Expenditure

被引:9
作者
Lin, Huei-Ru [1 ]
Imanaka, Yuichi [1 ]
机构
[1] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Healthcare Econ & Qual Management, Kyoto, Japan
基金
日本学术振兴会;
关键词
Copayment; long-term care insurance; policy; expenditure; difference-in-difference; SOUTH-KOREA; HOME-CARE; SERVICES; PROGRAM; HEALTH; POLICY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jamda.2019.08.021
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
Objective: This study aimed to clarify the difference in (1) long-term care (LTC) usage and expenditure and (2) medical care service usage and expenditure before and after the change in the copayment limit for qualifying individuals from 10% to 20%. Setting and Participants: This quasi-experimental longitudinal design used the database from 1 prefecture of Japan that included 570,434 person-month records of 23,879 insured individuals (in August 2014) who used LTC services between August 2014 and July 2015 and were aged 65 years and older on August 1, 2014. Methods: We conducted difference-in-difference estimations to compare "before" and "after" outcome differences between insured individuals whose LTC copayment increased to 20% and those whose copayment remained at 10%. Sex, age, Care Needs Level, subsidy, and public assistance were adjusted in the models, along with robustness checks. Results: Differences in both insurer's payment and insured's copayment indicated statistical significance between those whose copayment increased and those whose copayment did not increase. We found no significant difference in the number of minutes of home care service use, days of facility care service use, and LTC expenditures among those with copayment increases as well as those with no increase in copayment following the insured's copayment increase policy implementation. In contrast, the policy implementation caused significant differences in the number of days of hospitalization, medical care expenditures, and total expenditures. Conclusions and Implications: The increase in insured individuals' copayment decreased LTC insurer's payment. However, total LTC expenditure increased over time although the increase trend slowed down in the treatment group after the copayment increase policy implemented. Besides, medical care expenditure increased consistently among insured individuals whose copayment increased. As there appears to be a "balloon effect" between LTC and medical care services, it is important to discuss the medical care system while considering the LTC insurance system comprehensively. (C) 2019 AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:640 / +
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Long-term care needs and hospitalization costs with long-term care insurance: a mixed-sectional study
    Che, Tiantian
    Li, Jia
    Li, Jun
    Chen, Xiaobo
    Liao, Zangyi
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 12
  • [42] Last year of life care transitions between long-term care insurance services in Japan: Analysis of long-term care insurance claims data
    Kashiwagi, Masayo
    Kashiwagi, Kimikazu
    Morioka, Noriko
    Abe, Kazuhiro
    GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 24 (09) : 883 - 890
  • [43] Individual and regional determinants of long-term care expenditure in Japan: evidence from national long-term care claims
    Jin, Xueying
    Mori, Takahiro
    Sato, Mikiya
    Watanabe, Taeko
    Noguchi, Haruko
    Tamiya, Nanako
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 30 (05) : 873 - 878
  • [44] Modelling an entitlement to long-term care services for older people in Europe: projections for long-term care expenditure to 2050
    Pickard, Linda
    Comas-Herrera, Adelina
    Costa-Font, Joan
    Gori, Cristiano
    di Maio, Alessandra
    Patxot, Concepcio
    Pozzi, Alessandro
    Rothgang, Heinz
    Wittenberg, Raphael
    JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN SOCIAL POLICY, 2007, 17 (01) : 33 - 48
  • [45] Mapping the Global Landscape of Long-Term Care Insurance Research: A Scientometric Analysis
    Xia, Long
    Chai, Lulu
    Zhang, Hanyu
    Sun, Zhaohui
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (12)
  • [46] Can the government incentivize the purchase of private long-term care insurance? Evidence from the Partnership for Long-Term Care
    Greenhalgh-Stanley, Nadia
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2014, 21 (08) : 541 - 544
  • [47] Determinants of long-term care insurance applications in South Korea
    Park, Sunhee
    Kim, Heejung
    Park, Chang Gi
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 43 (03) : 604 - 610
  • [48] The Economic and Health Effects of Long-Term Care Insurance: New Evidence from Korea
    Kim, Hoolda
    Mitra, Sophie
    JOURNAL OF THE ECONOMICS OF AGEING, 2022, 23
  • [49] Social Insurance for Long-term Care: An Evaluation of the German Model
    Rothgang, Heinz
    SOCIAL POLICY & ADMINISTRATION, 2010, 44 (04) : 436 - 460
  • [50] Long-term care insurance in China: Current challenges and recommendations
    Chen, Simiao
    Li, Linye
    Jiao, Lirui
    Gong, Sen
    Wang, Zhuoran
    Liu, Haitao
    Geldsetzer, Pascal
    Yang, Juntao
    Barnighausen, Till
    Wang, Chen
    JOURNAL OF GLOBAL HEALTH, 2024, 14