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Alzheimer's Disease Claims 17 Billion Hours And $202 Billion In Unpaid Care In The U.S.

First Posted: 03/15/11 12:01 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:40 PM ET

Alzheimers

Nearly 15 million people in the United States take care of a loved one with Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia, amounting to 17 billion hours or more than $202 billion in unpaid care, Alzheimer's experts said on Tuesday.

If these caregivers all lived in one U.S. state, it would be the nation's fifth largest, according to the Alzheimer's Association's 2011 annual report on the disease.

The report illustrates the growing burden of Alzheimer's disease, a fatal brain-wasting disease that erodes memory, thinking, behavior and the ability to handle daily activities.

Alzheimer's affects more than 26 million people globally and can stretch on for years, slowly robbing patients of their mind and memories. And there are currently no drugs that can keep the disease from progressing.

"Alzheimer's disease doesn't just affect those with it. It invades families and the lives of everyone around them," Harry Johns, president and chief executive of the Alzheimer's Association, said in a statement.

The new report shows a 37 percent increase in Alzheimer's and dementia caregivers compared with a year ago, but much of that increase is because the year-ago figure had been based on nine-year-old estimates, Beth Kallmyer of the Alzheimer's Association said in a telephone interview.

Even so, the number of unpaid caregivers is staggering, Bill Thies, the association's chief medical and scientific officer said in a telephone interview.

'ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE'

"We are in the early stages of an epidemic and it is only going to get worse over the next four years, and these costs are going to continue to grow," Thies said.

The group estimates that 5.4 million people in the United States are now living with Alzheimer's disease, up from 5.3 million a year ago. That includes 5.2 million people over age 65 or about one in eight senior citizens.

A 65-year-old person diagnosed with Alzheimer's typically lives four to eight years after being diagnosed, but some patients live as long as 20 years after diagnosis.

That takes an emotional toll, Kallmyer said.

"It's hard to take care of somebody that you love who doesn't remember who you are."

Kallmyer said more than 60 percent of caregivers say they are stressed, and more than a third say they are depressed.

Treating the disease is expensive.

The $202 billion in unpaid care is on top of the $183 billion estimate for Alzheimer's care expected to be delivered in 2011 by healthcare workers in homes, hospitals and long-term care facilities, an increase of $11 billion over a year ago.

Medicare and Medicaid, the federal insurance programs for the elderly and poor, cover about 70 percent of these costs.

Thies said Alzheimer's patients on Medicare cost three times more than other patients, largely because they spend more time in hospitals and nursing homes. And Alzheimer's patients on Medicaid, which pays for the bulk of long-term care, cost nine times more than other Medicaid patients.

"The federal government is really paying for Alzheimer's research one way or another because the bulk of these people will be on Medicare or Medicaid," Thies said.

By 2050, Medicare costs for people with Alzheimer's and other dementias will increase nearly 600 percent and Medicaid costs will soar almost 400 percent.

The full report appears in the March 2011 issue of Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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Nearly 15 million people in the United States take care of a loved one with Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia, amounting to 17 billion hours or more than $202 billion in unpaid care, A...
Nearly 15 million people in the United States take care of a loved one with Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia, amounting to 17 billion hours or more than $202 billion in unpaid care, A...
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03:03 AM on 03/19/2011
Prevention is better than cure.
I hear it is a fact that ALL Altzheimers patients have brain plaques which ALL contain aluminium oxide substances...
As aluminium oxide is created in aluminium pans which are not Teflon* coated (a kind of `rust`), it seems that banning those products might be a good precaution. I appreciate that the aluminium industry may be doing what the tobacco industry did (denial).
NOTE; most Altzheimers patients were young when their parents used bare aluminium pans. The increase in altzheimers increased across the globe where populations began using this everyday object.
Maybe aluminium cans will be the next threat?
Oooops, too late? Or coated.
03:39 PM on 03/16/2011
We're all being poisoned by the chemical revolution where over 80,000 new chemical compounds have been developed and released since World War II. Without tosicity testing. And certainly without testing interactions.

If you're an average American between the ages of 55 and 90, new research shows your body is probably polluted with 700 synthetic chemicals as well as heavy metals like mercury, lead, cadmium, and arsenic. Just try to guess which ones you are carrying....

Even low levels of different chemicals interact with each other. The result is that a combination of only two chemicals together can have a much more toxic effect than either one alone. For example, when dioxin is mixed with PCBs, the combined toxicity is 800% greater than with either chemical alone. When you mix 4 popular food additives, the resulting mixture is 700% more toxic than any individual ingredient alone.

And then there is all the toxicity from the gas & oil industry, CO2 production, fracking, etc. It's a wonder anyone is well enough to walk....

Pay no attention to the chemical companies behind the curtain. Their profit margins are just fine.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
goy
my micro-bio continues to be empty.
08:30 AM on 03/16/2011
six yrs ago my dad passed on, but he did not recognize any of his loved ones the last 5 yrs when he was "alive".
03:06 AM on 03/19/2011
Sad, but try remember some of the good times.
07:37 AM on 03/16/2011
I think medical professionals are over diagnosing the elderly. Retirement communities are gold mines.
08:24 AM on 03/16/2011
Most practitioners do not see economic benefit from the diagnosis, so your cynical theory seems to be a little out of step.

You'll need to connect the dots in order to make it work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Natasha Zazhinne
Zeeva Natasha Zazhinne is Zeeva International
09:50 PM on 03/16/2011
are you KIDDING? The few real physicians (who turned to the profession to HEAL people) around admit there's no such things as "Alzheimer's"--it's a "catch-all diagnosis for a number of different conditions "we know little about yet..." Practitioners who've chosen to be legal drug dealers for Pharma & grew rich on having created the #1 most chronically diseased pharmaceutically managed nation on earth find HUGE benefit in all the DRYGS that our elders are on, provided by insurance fees, & TAX DOLLARS--since our so-called health-care system has been geared to be a SICK-CARE ADDICT THEM to DRUGS & CREATE MORE SYMPTOMS THAT NEED MORE DRUGS system.....the dots connect--from the diagnosis that benefits all those in the Chemical-Medical-Industrial-Pharmaceutical Cartel...you know--the Big Four That Failed America's Health in the time they've held sway--the ONLY ones at the tables during that JOKE of a "health care discussion" process...the ones who were wining & dining all of our DC deciders at a ration of 4 lobbyists to each decider that year...NO WONDER we're getting even less healthy & into more of a mess...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
few77
THE TIME IS NOW
07:26 AM on 03/16/2011
Wow, something's fishy here...There is fifteen Million people that suffer from this disease in the U.S. alone, the remaining eleven Million are dispersed around the rest of the globe? Does anyone else see something's wrong with this picture?
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spitfiredd
My micro-bio has got it going on.
09:32 AM on 03/16/2011
Ya we're slowly killing our population, either we're doing it to ourselves or it's some kind of control built into nature.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
few77
THE TIME IS NOW
02:43 PM on 03/16/2011
I'm not trying to get off topic here but I'm wondering if it could possibly be from Inoculations?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Natasha Zazhinne
Zeeva Natasha Zazhinne is Zeeva International
09:57 PM on 03/16/2011
let me see...can it have anything to do with the fact that we are the most chronically diseased pharmaceutically-managed nation on earth? Who use all KINDS of toxic chemicals in everything from our personal care products to eating FAKE foods to all the over-the-counter & prescription PILLS we pop? The fact that OUR Medical system decided to keep people chronic managed diseases instead of HEALTHY HUMAN BEINGS? GEE! That's guaranteeing a return customer for LIFE huh? Other parts of the world have lots of toxic problems (many caused by US) but NO country so willingly eats & drinks FAKE foods & frankenfoods as US...& NO one pops pills the blithe way we do--as long as we can call them "medications..."
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few77
THE TIME IS NOW
12:26 AM on 03/17/2011
You got that right Sister. Good post!
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05:19 AM on 03/16/2011
Oh but we're too poor to spend money on research that would save billions in health care costs and eliminate one of the most horrific deaths I've ever seen. Keep on building bombs, invading the middle east and rebuilding their towns after we blow them up. Maybe we could just ship all the old folks to Iraq to die.
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
04:53 AM on 03/16/2011
I may lose my mind to this one day, if I live that long, but there is no way on Earth that I'm stickin' around. I'll know, even if I don't know. I'll know because I'll insure in the early early stages that I got what it takes to simply fall asleep and slip away.

But like the Chinese saying goes: "We are born to know only life." So, one really has to have a solid plan, a ten-point dignity of life check list. When the levels fall to the pre-agreed level of dignity, it's time to bid a fond adieau.
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Strza
Paths of Glory - watch it.
04:05 AM on 03/16/2011
lot of comedians on a thread like this
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TxEarlyBird
Let's turn Texas Blue
04:04 AM on 03/16/2011
Should I ever be stricken with this dreadful disease, I ask the "Death Panel" to PLEASE take care of me.
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bogeychef
interchanging mind control
05:56 PM on 03/16/2011
I will make sure you go to the front of the line.
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MilesTougeaux
Embarrassed by my species
03:43 AM on 03/16/2011
Arent the death panels suppose to take care of this?
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02:55 AM on 03/16/2011
I suppose this horror touches just about every family. I had a great aunt who lived 20 years in a rest home with the disease. It really is a fate worse than death IMO.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
02:23 AM on 03/16/2011
we wouldn't have the Tea Party without it..

Seriously, I know how hard it is on everyone. My mother died with it. It was the hardest 12 years of our whole families lives seeing her dwindle into a completely helpless human. I would not wish this on the worst humans in the world. Nope, not even Wall Street Ivy Greed CEO's.
02:14 AM on 03/16/2011
But you are constantly meeting new friends! You can hide your own easter eggs too!
I know it is a tragic disease. My grandfather had it. I used to wheel him down the hallway and outside and he thought I was his driver. Kept telling me to turn left to take him to Dairy Queen. :)
He was 93 when he died. What a guy. Played the tuba too back in the day in an Ompa band.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
01:54 AM on 03/16/2011
And now the Libs want to put all of them in government run facilities...until they get too expensive.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
02:31 AM on 03/16/2011
what would you purpose? Soylent Green? It cost my father over 50k a year when my mother needed to be put in a home. That didnt include the medical care. No one expects this to happen, it just does. And then what? He was able to afford the care, although its made his later years most difficult, and he lost everything he worked and saved so hard to have. But he did it himself, for his wife.
My big question is, why is this such a major problem in this last century? Why didn we hear of this before? Even if it was called something else, we would have seen the large number of people with it before? This just seems to, sudden, of a problem. Many others and myself who with relatives inflicted with Alzheimer's, along with several scientist and doctors have wondered just what it is that causes this? And is it something to do with chemicals, hormone additives, or one of the tens of thousands of other non natural elements mankind has thrust upon the earth, into the waters and foods.
04:21 AM on 03/16/2011
The same question can be asked regarding the dramatic increase in the number of cases of autism. Anyone in the health field with the most basic skills in observation knows something is going on but.....hey, pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. Anyone else smell something "funny"?
04:42 AM on 03/16/2011
loki your question is a really good one. (you could ask the same thing about obesity - seems to me we used cars no less in 1975 than we do now and back then 5 lbs overweight was a serious issue. ah for those days!). And the numbers of people with Alzheimer's are in fact staggering. You have to wonder if there isn't something in the environment, in the food we eat (laced with antibiotics and growth hormones, grown on pesticide and herbicide prepared fields) that is driving this. But what? Can anyone point to anything in the peer-reviewed journals?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bogeychef
interchanging mind control
05:58 PM on 03/16/2011
No, libs want Dr. Kevorkian. "and now libs want" you have no idea what libs want.
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malander
01:32 AM on 03/16/2011
If you have aging parents, get ready for this. Insurance and Medicare don't cover many of the care needs, unless you have deep pockets, be ready to care for an aging parent at home. Medicare covering 70% of the costs was not my experience, my mother's supplemental insurance carrier dropped her. Be ready to step down from your job to provide the round the clock care unless you can hire nurses. Be ready for the pain of watching a loved one deteriorate before your eyes. Be ready for life as you know it to end. I'd recommend care givers training and counseling, you'll need it.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
02:33 AM on 03/16/2011
You lived it, I lived it, thousands have too. But I am very sure that not one Ivy Greed Capitalist, even if they had a parent suffer from it, cares one bit. As long as it might appear to cost them one cent of profit, they dont want to hear about it.