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UK Dementia Care Costs Reach £42billion, Alzheimer’s Society

A new report commissioned by Alzheimer’s Society [1] from Carnall Farrar sets out estimates of current and future economic and healthcare costs of dementia in the UK. It shows the huge impact that dementia has upon our health and social care system and how this will grow significantly in the future. 

The projected rise in dementia prevalence poses a significant healthcare, social care and economic challenge, and highlights the urgent need to prioritise it as a health and care concern. There are currently estimated to be 982,000 people living with dementia in the UK, rising to 1.4 million in 2040.

The costs of dementia rise significantly as the condition progresses. The annual, per person cost for mild dementia is £28,700 compared to £80,500 for severe dementia, driven by increasing need for more complex health, social and unpaid care. If we can increase the time spent in earlier stages of dementia or decrease the length of time for which people require more complex care, the total costs of dementia could be reduced.

Despite strong evidence about the benefits of dementia diagnosis, spending on dementia diagnosis and treatment is equivalent to just 1.4% of total dementia healthcare costs.

An unacceptable amount of the financial burden of dementia is falling on individuals and families – 63% of the total cost of dementia is borne by patients and their families.

With increasing prevalence, the need for social care and unpaid care is set to increase by 43% by 2040. This is concerning – social care providers already find it challenging to recruit new staff, and the cost and time commitment of unpaid care is already significant with a third of unpaid dementia carers reporting that they spend more than 100 hours per week caring for a dementia patient.

the-annual-costs-of-dementia [2]

 

Download the full report [3]

“One in three people born today will develop dementia. It’s the biggest health and care issue of our time, yet it isn’t the priority it should be amongst decision-makers. We wouldn’t accept this for any other terminal disease, we shouldn’t accept this for dementia. One in three people with dementia do not have a diagnosis. They are facing dementia alone without access the vital care, support, and treatments. If we don’t address diagnosis, we have no hope of addressing the major dementia challenges we face and reducing the cost to the health service and wider economy. Dementia’s devastating impact is colossal – on the lives of those it affects, on the healthcare system and on the economy. ” Kate Lee, Alzheimer’s Society CEO


How many people in the UK have dementia?

What are the costs of dementia?

What are the costs to families and people with dementia?

Background to the report


This article is shared from the Alzheimer’s Society website, find the original and more information and quotes on the report at https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/news/2024-05-10/soaring-dementia-care-costs-uk-42-billion [4]