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Research Breakthroughs
Could Result in
45 Percent Decrease in Alzheimer's Cases and
$149 Billion in Annual Medicare and Medicaid Savings by 2050
June 23,
2004
Washington,
DC —A new Alzheimer’s Association report released today shows that medical
research breakthroughs could result in nearly three million fewer Americans with
the disease and $149 billion in annual Medicare and Medicaid savings by 2025.
Speaking at
a Capitol Hill press conference with members of the Senate and House, Sheldon
Goldberg, president and CEO of the Alzheimer’s Association, urged Congress to
increase the federal investment in Alzheimer research at the National Institutes
of Health to at least $1 billion annually.
“With a
five-year investment in research, we could achieve major breakthroughs in
delaying the onset of the disease and slowing its progression,” Goldberg said.
“The resulting savings to our overburdened health care system would be
astronomical. If Congress wants to control health care costs, Alzheimer’s
disease is the place to begin, and the time to begin is now.”
Goldberg
said that for every dollar spent now on research, taxpayers would receive a
tremendous return in future savings on Medicare and Medicaid costs –12 to 1 by
2015, 30 to 1 by 2025, and over 100 to 1 by 2050 – if the disease could be
delayed a few years and its progression slowed. Preventing the disease would
produce an even higher return.
Senator
Arlen Specter (R-PA), Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Labor Health and
Human Services Subcommittee stated, “these findings show that increasing
spending now for Alzheimer research will pay significant dividends for the
future in terms of both lessening human suffering and saving billions of dollars
in Medicare and Medicaid spending. I'm delighted to join with the Alzheimer's
Association in calling for setting the goal of $1 billion for Alzheimer
research.”
Today,
Medicare beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s account for 34 percent of Medicare
spending, even though they constitute only 12.8 percent of the population over
the age of 65. With the nation’s 77 million baby boomers approaching old age,
the number of Americans with the disease and associated costs are projected to
soar. Adequate funding for research on prevention and treatments must begin now
because the boomers will begin to enter the age of risk for the disease in 2010.
The report,
entitled, Saving Lives, Saving Money: Dividends for Americans from Investing
in Alzheimer Research, was conducted by the Lewin Group, an international
health and human services consulting firm, on behalf of the Alzheimer’s
Association. The firm analyzed the impact of Alzheimer’s disease research
breakthroughs on costs and disease prevalence. The report assumed that with a
sufficient level of funding, researchers will be able to find a) a way to delay
onset of the disease as much as they have been able to delay onset of congestive
heart failure; and b) a way to slow progression as much as scientists have
slowed the progression of Parkinson’s disease.
Working
collaboratively, the federal government, the Alzheimer’s Association, and the
pharmaceutical industry have made great research advances over the past 20 years
that have laid the foundation for major breakthroughs in prevention, diagnosis,
and treatment in the years ahead.
"Increasing
funding for Alzheimer research will increase the pace of discoveries that could
slow or delay the progression of the disease and eventually prevent it,” said
Ronald Petersen, M.D., Ph.D., a member of the Alzheimer’s Association’s Medical
and Scientific Advisory Council, President Ronald Reagan’s neurologist and
member of a team of physicians who diagnosed the President with Alzheimer’s
disease in 1994, and director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the
Mayo Clinic. “We can build a future without Alzheimer's disease if we act now to
achieve breakthroughs in science."
The
projected Medicaid and Medicare savings would come from a dramatic reduction in
the number of Americans with Alzheimer’s disease and a substantial reduction in
the numbers who progress to severe stages of the disease when care needs and
costs are highest. The new report shows that the projected research advances
would lead to:
A drop in
the number of Americans projected to have Alzheimer’s in 2025 from 6.5 million
to 3.6 million – a nearly 45 percent decrease.
Significant
savings in Medicare spending on people with Alzheimer’s. If the projected
research breakthroughs occur by 2010, taxpayers would begin to see savings as
early as 2015, when Medicare spending would decline by $51 billion to $138
billion. By 2025, annual spending for beneficiaries who are now projected to
have Alzheimer’s would decline by 43 percent, or $126 billion – from $294
billion to $168 billion. And by 2050, Medicare would save $444 billion in annual
spending for beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s – from $1,049 billion to $605
billion. In addition, 5.3 million fewer Americans would have Alzheimer’s disease
in 2050 because of the advances.
Dramatic
savings in Medicaid spending for nursing home care for people with Alzheimer’s
disease. Medicaid would have savings of up to 60 percent by 2025 because of
improvements in prevention and treatment. Without medical advances, Medicaid
spending is projected to increase from $27 billion in 2015 to $38 billion in
2025 and $118 billion by 2050. With improvements in prevention and treatment,
the 2015 cost is projected to be $17 billion, the 2025 cost is $15 billion, and
the 2050 cost is $48 billion.
The
Association believes that a $1 billion annual investment would be a fitting
tribute to the late President Reagan and his family. Last week, Senators Barbara
Mikulski (D-MD) and Christopher Bond (R-MO) introduced legislation that would
authorize a doubling of annual research spending to $1.4 billion. Similar
legislation was introduced in the House of Representatives by Congressmen Ed
Markey (D- MA) and Chris Smith (R-NJ).
Goldberg
warned that Congress and the Administration must move quickly. “There is a
narrow window of time to reach these breakthroughs in order to achieve these
savings,” he said. “Because the process that leads to the devastating effects of
Alzheimer’s begins at least 10 years before symptoms appear, we must find ways
to delay onset before boomers enter the age of risk. That is why the increased
investment in Alzheimer research must be made now.”
The portion
of the report prepared by The Lewin Group was funded through an unrestricted
grant by PhRMA to the Alzheimer's Association.
The
Alzheimer’s Association is the world leader in Alzheimer research and support.
Having awarded more than $150 million to nearly 1,300 projects, the Alzheimer's
Association is the largest private funder of Alzheimer research. The
Association’s vision is a world without Alzheimer’s disease. For more
information about Alzheimer's disease, visit www.alz.org or call 800-272-3900.
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