Adapts the U.S. Future Elderly Model using Taiwanese data to create the Taiwan Future Elderly Model (TFEM) to provide a better policy planning tool for Taiwan in the face of an aging society.
Authors
- Division
- Pardee RAND Graduate School
- Pages
- 139
- Published in
- United States
- RAND Identifier
- RGSD-A3498-1
- RAND Type
- dissertation
- Rights
- RAND Corporation
- Series
- Dissertations
- Source
- https://www.rand.org/pubs/rgs_dissertations/RGSDA3498-1.html
Table of Contents
- A Dynamic Microsimulation Model for Aging and Health in Taiwan The Taiwan Future Elderly Model 1
- Abstract 3
- Contents 5
- Figures and Tables 7
- Figures 7
- Tables 8
- Acknowledgements 11
- 1. Introduction 13
- 1.1 Demographic and Health Trends in Taiwan 14
- 1.2 Caregiving in Taiwan 16
- 1.3 Microsimulation modelling 18
- 1.3.1 Introduction of modelling methods 18
- 1.3.2 Advantages of microsimulation models 19
- 1.3.3 Limitations of microsimulation models 20
- 1.3.4 Prediction vs. causation 21
- 1.4 Research Objectives and Policy Questions 22
- 2. Data and Variables 23
- 2.1 Data 23
- 2.1.1 Taiwan Longitudinal Study on Aging 23
- 2.1.2 Weights in TLSA 24
- 2.2 Variables 25
- 2.2.1 Mortality 25
- 2.2.2 Demographic variables and educational levels 25
- 2.2.3 Chronic diseases and risk factors 26
- 2.2.4 Functional limitations 26
- 2.2.5 Cognitive impairment 28
- 2.2.6 Imputation of missing data in TLSA 31
- 2.3 Descriptive Statistics 32
- 2.3.1 Demographic variables and educational levels 33
- 2.3.2 Risk factors and chronic diseases 34
- 2.3.3 Functional limitations 35
- 2.3.4 Cognitive impairment 36
- 2.4 Comparison with external data 41
- 2.4.1 Compare prevalences of overweight hypertension diabetes with the Nutrition and 41
- Health Survey in Taiwan 41
- 2.4.2 Compare prevalences of dementia by age groups with estimates from Taiwan 43
- Alzheimers Disease Association 43
- 3. Design of Taiwan Future Elderly Model 46
- 3.1 Taiwan Future Elderly Model Overview 46
- 3.2 Transition models 47
- 3.2.1 Variable parameterization 47
- 3.2.2 Overview of transitioned variables 48
- 3.2.3 To use weights or not when estimating transition models 51
- 3.2.4 Model selection 53
- 3.2.5 Final transition models 59
- 3.3 Cohort simulation 68
- 3.4 Population simulation 68
- 3.4.1 Assumptions about replenishing cohorts 69
- 3.5 Calibration 71
- 4. Validation of Taiwan Future Elderly Model 72
- 4.1 Internal validation 72
- 4.1.1 Methodology 72
- 4.1.2 Population level internal validation results 75
- 4.1.3 Individual level internal validation results 79
- 4.1.4 Summary of internal validation 82
- 4.2 Comparison of Taiwan Future Elderly Model projections with external 85
- 4.2.1 Methodology 85
- 4.2.2 Compare population size with official data 2003-2015 88
- 4.2.3 Compare population size with official projections 2015-2043 89
- 4.2.4 Compare number of dementia patients with projections from TADA 2019-2043 90
- 4.3 Limitations of Taiwan Future Elderly Model 95
- 4.3.1 Summary 95
- 4.3.2 Uncertainty in simulated results from TFEM 95
- 4.3.3 Limitations of TFEM related to TLSA 97
- 5. Application of Taiwan Future Elderly Model Forecasting dementia and disability trends in Taiwan 99
- 5.1 Introduction 99
- 5.2 Methods 100
- 5.2.1 Baseline scenario 100
- 5.2.2 Intervention 100
- 5.2.3 Outcomes 102
- 5.3 Results 106
- 5.3.1 Baseline scenario 106
- 5.3.2 Compare 3 policy scenarios to the baseline 115
- 5.3.3 Sensitivity analysis 116
- 5.4 Discussion 119
- 5.4.1 Summary 119
- 5.4.2 Limitations 120
- 5.4.3 Policy implications 123
- 6. Budget and Sources of Funding 126
- 7. Ethical Considerations 127
- Appendix A. Receiver Operating Characteristic curves 128
- References 133