The elderly population in America is growing in size owing to declining death rates, increasing life expectancy, and the aging of the baby boomers. Although the prevalence of chronic illness and disability increases with age, successful aging in the elderly population is widespread, and the elderly are generally healthy. Indeed, the prevalence of disability among the elderly is declining, and expenditures for their care are increasingly concentrated at the end of life rather than during extra years of relatively healthy life. Nevertheless, health care costs will undoubtedly increase during the next 30 years as a result of the baby boomers entering late life. The economic and social impact of future growing health care expenditures for the e...
Objective. To assess the coming challenges of caring for large numbers of frail elderly as the Baby ...
The population in the developed world has experienced a significant increase in life expectancy over...
This analysis examines four theories about the relationships between mortality, morbidity, and disab...
Recently life expectancy increases have been noted at advanced ages in the United States. This means...
Population aging, accelerating as the baby boom generations age, will have important fiscal conseque...
In this paper, we examine the effects of likely demographic changes on medical spending for the elde...
The aging of the U.S. population is an ongoing trend. The U.S. Census Bureau projects that by 2050 o...
By mid-century, the nation will be spending more on Medicaid, the joint state/federal health program...
Increased longevity and the aging of the baby boom generation are posing substantial challenges to s...
The US population will age rapidly for several decades and then more slowly, with less aging than mo...
2 Demographic change in the coming decades will take us into uncharted waters. In many countries lif...
Population aging, accelerating as the Baby Boom generations age, will have important fiscal conseque...
Between now and 2030, every country will experience population ageing-a trend that is both pronounce...
Between now and 2030, every country will experience population ageing-a trend that is both pronounce...
During the next five decades, Western populations will inexorably get older. Even if other phenomena...
Objective. To assess the coming challenges of caring for large numbers of frail elderly as the Baby ...
The population in the developed world has experienced a significant increase in life expectancy over...
This analysis examines four theories about the relationships between mortality, morbidity, and disab...
Recently life expectancy increases have been noted at advanced ages in the United States. This means...
Population aging, accelerating as the baby boom generations age, will have important fiscal conseque...
In this paper, we examine the effects of likely demographic changes on medical spending for the elde...
The aging of the U.S. population is an ongoing trend. The U.S. Census Bureau projects that by 2050 o...
By mid-century, the nation will be spending more on Medicaid, the joint state/federal health program...
Increased longevity and the aging of the baby boom generation are posing substantial challenges to s...
The US population will age rapidly for several decades and then more slowly, with less aging than mo...
2 Demographic change in the coming decades will take us into uncharted waters. In many countries lif...
Population aging, accelerating as the Baby Boom generations age, will have important fiscal conseque...
Between now and 2030, every country will experience population ageing-a trend that is both pronounce...
Between now and 2030, every country will experience population ageing-a trend that is both pronounce...
During the next five decades, Western populations will inexorably get older. Even if other phenomena...
Objective. To assess the coming challenges of caring for large numbers of frail elderly as the Baby ...
The population in the developed world has experienced a significant increase in life expectancy over...
This analysis examines four theories about the relationships between mortality, morbidity, and disab...