Nursing Home Utilization in Adults

Abstract
Rates of nursing home utilization between 1972 and 1986 were determined for 1,302 men and women living in an upper-middle-class community in Southern California. Leading diagnostic reasons for admission were dementia, cancer, and stroke, and the leading nondiagnostic reason for admission was an inability to carry out activities of daily living. In this cohort, rates of nursing home utilization increased with age. Women at all ages used nursing homes at a higher rate than men, although their probability of survival once admitted was greater. Admission rates were higher over time or prior to death than when observed cross-sectionally. Rates were highest in the year prior to death but declined at time of death.

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