Baby Boomers are facing large-scale homelessness, Congress was warned today.
Her warning came in a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on the coming financial tsunami facing Boomers as they surge into their late 60s and beyond.
On Medicaid, which is often used by seniors to pay for long-term care when they run out of money, Lynn and Elder Justice Coalition National Coordinator Robert Blancato warned high demand by Baby Boomers could lead to restrictions on entrants and services in the program by the 2030s.
Ways and Means chair Massachusetts Democrat Richard Neal attacked long-term care in America as insufficient, confusing, emotionally taxing and unaffordable.
He asserted round-the-clock, in-home care costs $180,000 per year with over $80,000 a year to live in a nursing home and assisted living $43,000 yearly.
Long-term care could become out of reach for Boomers who had led financially secure lives when they were working as their savings are drained to pay for immediate health care needs, Blancato cautioned.
“(Boomers) will be unable to afford essential supports and will have to confront homelessness, food insecurity, inability to manage personal hygiene,” Lynn, a gerontologist asserted.
To make more housing available for aging Boomers when the crisis hits in the coming ten years, Dr. Lynn said housing codes could start requiring basic disability adaptation in all units, low-income housing vouchers could be more readily available, and elderly persons living in tents and cars could have some priority in obtaining housing before exposure makes them so sick as to require nursing home care.
“Now is the time to enact legislation to build greater capacity in housing that works for people across their life span through state grants. Housing stock that would be safe, affordable and accessible would prevent people from having to live in a nursing home when disability sets in (often paid by Medicaid) for lack of available housing.” Lynn told the House committee.
Other solutions she has advocated for the long-term-care financial crisis include: incentivizing personal saving for retirement, long-term care services and support insurance, and long-term care; investing in the work-readiness of young people so that the economy is strong and can yield more tax revenue; and standardizing and improving the quality of geriatric medical care.
She also advocated enabling communities to drive down the per capita cost of disability in old age and improve reliability and appropriateness of services through local innovation and collaboration.
Aging Boomers face the gloom of a shortage in hospice care, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization President & CEO Edo Banach said during the session.
“The number of hospice and palliative care physicians and members of the interdisciplinary team will drop dramatically over the next two decades,” Banach warned.
Alzheimer’s Impact Movement executive director Robert Egge noted a study of Medicaid beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s found black/African Americans had significantly higher costs of care than whites or Hispanics primarily due to more inpatient care and medical problems in tandem with dementia.
Older black/African Americans are twice as likely to have Alzheimer’s and other dementia as whites, one and a half times that of Hispanics, he said.
Right now, the lives of many nursing home and assisted living facility residents are bleak, the Long Term Care Community Coalition executive director Richard Mollot told the House panel.
“Avoidable pain, degrading conditions and substandard care are a part of hundreds of thousands of nursing home residents’ lives every day,” Mollot said.
Mollot attacked nursing home oversight as harmfully weak, charging violation fines are “relatively a minor expense.”
He noted inspectors uncovered repeated violations of the same requirement three or more times over three years in more than 40% of nursing homes.
“But less than half of all nursing homes have received any federal fine whatsoever in the last three years and, of those, the average amount is approximately $1,600,” Mallot said.
He added while more than 50% of residents in assisted living and nursing homes have some form of dementia or cognitive impairment and 67% of dementia-related deaths occur in nursing homes, many facilities fail to equip their staff with the knowledge and skills necessary to provide comfort and care.
The consumer advocate pointed to Illinois state inspectors claiming housekeeping and maintenance services at Alden Town Manor in the Chicago suburbs of Cicero had minimal harm despite finding maggot infestation on a resident’s genital area at the Alden Town Manor.
In a June report, the Government Accountability Office said it is imperative that the government agency responsible for ensuring nursing homes protect residents from abuse beef up its oversight.
The report said the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services falls short of that responsibility because information on abuse and perpetrator types is not readily available and incidents of abuse reported by nursing homes lack key information.
GAO said state agencies that conduct nursing home inspections should immediately report reasonable suspicions of crimes against residents to law enforcement.
However, the authors of the study complained those reports often can take weeks or months currently because CMS requires state agencies to tell police or other authorities about abuses only after they are substantiated.
“Two (state) Medicaid Fraud Control Units d we interviewed told us the delay in receiving referrals limits their ability to collect evidence and prosecute cases—for example, bedding associated with potential sexual abuse may have been washed, and a victim’s wounds may have healed,” the GAO report said.
Close to 1.4 million elderly or disabled individuals reside in more than 15,500 nursing homes nationwide.
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Boomers Facing Large-Scale Homelessness, Congress Warned
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