Ontario study of adults with intellectual disabilities shows they're high-cost healthcare patients

Note: This is a summary of information produced by the source under Full Article below. All questions should be directed to the original news source.

NBHC Sustainability
November 01, 2018

ICES and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health believe over one-third of adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) are high-cost healthcare patients, defined as those who rank in the top 10% of healthcare spending. The healthcare costs study of Ontario adults with IDD found:

  • In the top 10% category, 36.0% of adults with IDD had annual healthcare costs above $2,610;
  • In the top 5% category, 21.3% of adults with IDD had annual healthcare costs above $5,446; and
  • In the top one percent, 7.6% of all adults with IDD had annual healthcare costs above $22,070.

The researchers say the highest costs for adults with IDD are for psychiatric hospitalizations, which highlights the need for a better understanding of the trajectory toward becoming a high-cost patient. Solutions designed for the general high-cost population often focus on older and medically fragile individuals and the researchers believe these may not apply to people with IDD.

Full article link