Forecasting demand for long-term care services.
- 1 October 1985
- journal article
- Vol. 20 (4) , 435-60
Abstract
This article analyzes three methods used to forecast the transition of long-term care clients through a variety of possible home and facility placements and levels of care. The test population (N = 1,653) is derived from the larger population of clients admitted in 1978 to British Columbia's newly established Long-Term Care program. The investigators have accumulated 5 years of service-generated data on moves, discharges, and deaths of these clients. Results show that the first-order Markov chain with stationary transition probabilities yields a superior forecast to state-by-state moving average growth and state-by-state regression analyses. The results of these analyses indicate that the Markov method should receive serious consideration as a tool for resource planning and allocation in long-term care.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Characteristics and Utilization Pattern of an Admission Cohort of Nursing Home Patients (II)The Gerontologist, 1984
- The Characteristics and Utilization Pattern of an Admission Cohort of Nursing Home PatientsThe Gerontologist, 1983
- The Manitoba Longitudinal Study on AgingMedical Care, 1981
- Short- and Long-Term Residents of Nursing HomesMedical Care, 1981
- Gaining Control of the Long Term Care System: First Returns from the ACCESS ExperimentThe Gerontologist, 1980
- Expanded home-based care for the impaired elderly: solution or pipe dream?American Journal of Public Health, 1980
- Long-Term Care: Can Our Society Meet the Needs of Its Elderly?Annual Review of Public Health, 1980
- British Columbia's long-term care program: the first two years.1980
- Changes in Age and Need for Care among Patients in a Geriatric Institution during a Two-Year PeriodScandinavian Journal of Social Medicine, 1977
- On relationships between longitudinal characteristics and cross-sectional data.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1970