A review of the April 22, 2010 HCAAM (High Council on the future of health insurance) provided an update on the impact of aging in the deficit of health insurance.
The notice confirms some accepted ideas and crippled others. For example, the cost of care is actually an increasing function of age. The population in category age over 60 years, is responsible for 45% of health spending, and that in the category over 75 years, 8% to 20% of health spending. However, the idea that the majority of expenses for care of a person is in the final year of his life is wrong: spending the last year of life represents only 7-8% of total granted during a life.
HCAAM The expected demographic aging will contribute 0.4 points to growth in health spending of health insurance, a figure roughly equivalent to the growth of ALD (long Disorders duration).
In conclusion, HCAAM considers "a clear policy of finding more efficient care pathways which will both reduce the impact of demographic factors on health insurance spending and the wider health and provide supported more consistent with the needs and wishes of senior citizens, which include rupture with the home are traumatic in nature. "
balance amount of the CNAM
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