Book contents
- Dementia and Society
- Dementia and Society
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Different Perspectives on Dementia
- Chapter 2 From History to Intervention
- Chapter 3 Personhood, Identity and Autonomy
- Chapter 4 Living Meaningfully with Dementia
- Chapter 5 Quality of Life of Persons with Dementia
- Chapter 6 Living with Dementia
- Chapter 7 Informal Care for Persons with Dementia
- Chapter 8 Risk Factors and Non-Pharmacological Prevention of Dementia
- Chapter 9 An Empowering Dementia Environment
- Chapter 10 The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Well-Being of People Living with Dementia
- Chapter 11 Care Planning and the Lived Experience of Dementia
- Chapter 12 Societal and Ethical Views on End-of-Life Decisions in Dementia
- Chapter 13 Driving and Dementia
- Chapter 14 Social and Private Costs of Dementia
- Index
- References
Chapter 14 - Social and Private Costs of Dementia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Dementia and Society
- Dementia and Society
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Different Perspectives on Dementia
- Chapter 2 From History to Intervention
- Chapter 3 Personhood, Identity and Autonomy
- Chapter 4 Living Meaningfully with Dementia
- Chapter 5 Quality of Life of Persons with Dementia
- Chapter 6 Living with Dementia
- Chapter 7 Informal Care for Persons with Dementia
- Chapter 8 Risk Factors and Non-Pharmacological Prevention of Dementia
- Chapter 9 An Empowering Dementia Environment
- Chapter 10 The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Well-Being of People Living with Dementia
- Chapter 11 Care Planning and the Lived Experience of Dementia
- Chapter 12 Societal and Ethical Views on End-of-Life Decisions in Dementia
- Chapter 13 Driving and Dementia
- Chapter 14 Social and Private Costs of Dementia
- Index
- References
Summary
We give an overview of the huge and increasing economic costs of dementia, both for the persons with dementia and for society as a whole. Public intervention is needed if we want to provide affordable and high-quality care to all persons with dementia. First, although an effective pharmaceutical cure for dementia would undoubtedly be a blockbuster drug for private companies, economic features of the production process of dementia medicines explain the relative underinvestment in private research. Second, there are no well-functioning private insurance markets for long-term care expenditures. Public intervention is needed to stimulate research, to finance care, to reduce inequalities in health and well-being, and address barriers to access to effective treatment and supportive care.
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- Dementia and Society , pp. 267 - 289Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022