According to official statistics from the German long-term care insurance funds, around six out of every one hundred people with statutory health insurance are considered to be in need of long-term care. In this context, "need of long-term care" is defined according to the Eleventh Book of the Social Code (SGB XI) and therefore follows a demand-driven understanding of care, which also aligns with public discourse.In order to meet the increasing number of people in need of long term care - mostly caused by demographic change - with needs-based service structures, knowledge and evaluation of several factors are necessary: the prevalence of care dependency as defined by the SGB XI, the different degrees of severity, and the utilisation of long-term care and healthcare services.In this respect, the article presents findings and calculations based on currently available administrative data from German health and long-term care insurance funds and states its limitations. In terms of an actual epidemiological approach to the topic of long-term care, the aim should be broader reporting based on primary surveys.
Keyphrases
- long term care
- healthcare
- health insurance
- affordable care act
- mental health
- risk factors
- palliative care
- emergency department
- health information
- climate change
- machine learning
- primary care
- risk assessment
- deep learning
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics
- kidney transplantation
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence