Linked lives: The utility of an agent-based approach to modeling partnership and household formation in the context of social care

The UK's population is aging, which presents a challenge as older people are the primary users of health and social care services. We present an agent-based model of the basic demographic processes that impinge on the supply of, and demand for, social care: namely mortality, fertility, health-s...

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Hauptverfasser: Noble, J., Silverman, E., Bijak, J., Rossiter, S., Evandrou, M., Bullock, S., Vlachantoni, A., Falkingham, J.
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container_start_page 1
container_title
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creator Noble, J.
Silverman, E.
Bijak, J.
Rossiter, S.
Evandrou, M.
Bullock, S.
Vlachantoni, A.
Falkingham, J.
description The UK's population is aging, which presents a challenge as older people are the primary users of health and social care services. We present an agent-based model of the basic demographic processes that impinge on the supply of, and demand for, social care: namely mortality, fertility, health-status transitions, internal migration, and the formation and dissolution of partnerships and households. Agent-based modeling is used to capture the idea of "linked lives" and thus to represent hypotheses that are impossible to express in alternative formalisms. Simulation runs suggest that the per-taxpayer cost of state-funded social care could double over the next forty years. A key benefit of the approach is that we can treat the average cost of state-funded care as an outcome variable, and examine the projected effect of different sets of assumptions about the relevant social processes.
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subjects Aging
Complexity theory
Data models
Demography
Pediatrics
Sociology
Statistics
title Linked lives: The utility of an agent-based approach to modeling partnership and household formation in the context of social care
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