Consumer Affairs - In a new report,
New York Federal Reserve researchers analyzed credit reports and
Medicare data and found that approximately five years before someone was
diagnosed with dementia their credit score began to dip and the number
of payment delinquencies began to go up. It was even more clear that something was going wrong if that person had been very responsible with money throughout their life. “Years
prior to eventual diagnosis, average credit scores begin to weaken and
payment delinquency begins to increase, overall and for mortgage and
credit card accounts specifically,” the report’s authors wrote. “Credit
outcomes consistently deteriorate over the quarters leading up to
diagnosis.” The researchers said the harmful financial
effects of diagnosed memory disorders exacerbate the already substantial
financial pressure households face upon diagnosis of a memory
disorder.
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