Explaining Declining Rates of Institutional LTC Use in the Netherlands: A Decomposition Approach
31 Pages Posted: 1 Jul 2014
Date Written: June 30, 2014
Abstract
The use of long term care (LTC) is changing rapidly. In the Netherlands, rates of institutional LTC use are falling, while homecare use is growing. Important questions are: are these changes attributable to declining disability rates, or has LTC use given disability changed? And have institutionalization rates fallen regardless of disability level or has LTC use become better tailored to needs? We answer these questions by explaining trends in LTC use for the Dutch 65 population in the period 2000-2008 using a non-linear variant of the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition.
We find that changes in LTC use are not due to shifts in the disability distribution but can be traced back almost entirely to changes in the way the system treats disability. Elderly with mild disability are more likely to be treated at home than before, while severely disabled individuals continue to receive institutional LTC. As a result, LTC use has become better tailored to the needs for such care. The finding suggests that policies that promote LTC in the community rather than in institutions can effectively mitigate the consequences of population aging on LTC spending.
Keywords: long-term care, disability, decomposition analysis
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Here is the Coronavirus
related research on SSRN
