The existing safety net for older Americans – a mixture of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid – was built for a society that no longer exists. When Congress created Social Security in 1935, the average life expectancy in the U.S. was 61; now it is nearly 80. When Congress created Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, it was still common for people to die of acute medical issues, like heart attacks; now many survive those traumas and go on to live, with some assistance, for decades longer. In 1960, the U.S. was overwhelmingly young: just 10% of the population was over 65. By 2040, 1 in 5 of us will be eligible for that senior ticket at the theater. | |
As more people live longer, the social and economic systems designed to care for them are changing. In midcentury America, women had yet to join the traditional workforce en masse and so were widely expected to keep doing what they’d always done: provide unpaid care to children and ailing relatives at home. Moreover, in the 1960s, a large portion of families had access to stable, fixed pensions in retirement, and about a quarter of all workers were covered by generous, union-negotiated contracts. Staying in the same job for decades was common. | |
None of that is true anymore. Some 40% of households with children under 18 are now headed by women who are the primary breadwinner. Those women can no longer stay home to care for children or ailing relatives without risking their family’s financial stability. Meanwhile, fixed pensions have all but disappeared, and union membership has fallen by more than half. Nearly 1 in 3 nonretired Americans has no retirement savings at all. “Our current system doesn’t reflect how we’ve changed as a society,” explains Dr. Bruce Chernof, president and CEO of the SCAN Foundation, which advocates for older adults. “So it’s being asked to do all kinds of things it wasn’t designed to do.” | |
… | |
Much of the U.S. economy rides on how this crisis plays out. Spending on long-term care is expected to more than double from 1.3% of GDP to 3% by 2050 as demand increases alongside an aging populace. America’s entrepreneurial system is coming up with myriad new ways to serve this growing demographic of gray-hairs. But in an era of deregulation, companies that profit from the natural, but often unsettling, process of aging and dying aren’t always scrupulous. The result is a social tension: As health care companies seek to reap not only efficiencies but also profits from a jury-rigged, outdated and overburdened system of elder care, how do we protect those who are often most vulnerable to exploitation? | |
When things don’t work, the results are ugly. In nursing homes and assisted-living centers, ever more ubiquitous arbitration agreements leave the elderly without access to a basic civil trial. Hospice care, beloved by many, is seen as a potential profit center by companies seeking government contracts while providing diminished service to those at the end of their lives. And Medicaid, once intended to be a last-ditch safeguard for the poorest of the poor, is creaking under the weight of new obligations. Medicaid is now the default payer for 61% of all nursing-home residents in the U.S., according to a June 2017 Kaiser Family Foundation report – a demand that’s likely to continue to increase. Meanwhile, adult children already contribute $7,000 to $14,000 a year to caring for an aging parent, according to a 2016 AARP report; that number will likely see an uptick too. | |
— Haley Sweetland Edwards | |
From the “Special Report”: “Dignity, death and America’s crisis in elder care“ | |
Appearing in: Time Magazine, 27 November 2017 issue | |
. | |
On This Day In: | |
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2020 | And The Past Is Much Better Than It Used To Be Too |
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While Congress Slept
December 18, 2017 by kmabarrett
Posted in Health, Politics, Quotes | Tagged AARP, Arbitration Agreements, Assisted-living Centers, Congress, Dr. Bruce Chernof, GDP, Haley Sweetland Edwards, Health, Hospice Care, Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicaid, Medicare, Nursing Homes, Politics, Quotes, SCAN Foundation, Social Security, Social Security Administration, Special Report: Dignity death and America's crisis in elder care death and America's crisis in elder care, Time Magazine | 9 Comments
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I can completely agree on nursing homes, over-priced and poor care facilities (IMO), but the hospice centers I have seen and dealt with here in south FL – I can’t say enough for.!!!
Hi GP,
I’m glad your experience has been positive. I have no experience with either nursing homes or hospice here in the U.S. My mother in law is in a nursing home in the U.K. and she pays the equivalent of $150 / month for three hots and a cot (a bed) in a home over there. That’s in a private room with its own toilet. The meals are served in a common area, but they can have snacks brought to their room. My wife’s family is very happy with the accommodation and the price seems pretty reasonable to me. The best thing is that it’s in walking distance to both siblings, so they can visit every day.
My posting was mainly because my reading of the article is that regulation is needed and being resisted by the industry, which claims it isn’t needed. But, then, don’t they always say that?
Kevin
Over here regulation is definitely needed for the nursing homes and rehabs facilities in that stage between hospital and home. Assisted living facilities are way over-priced!!!!
Like I said, I don’t have any “personal” experience with either. My next door neighbor tells me he and his sister spend $4K / mth on a shared room for their mother. He was retired, but has had to go back to work to make ends meet. I read the article recently and our conversation was several months ago. The article reminded me of the conversation and I began thinking about the long term consequences of these costs. …Hence my post.
I don’t always agree with what I post. It just has to be something which makes me pause and think. Most of the time, that’s why I “generally” don’t “comment” on the quotes I post (other than titling the post). I’m trying to not bias anyone (including myself) who might read the quote. I may change this policy after my blog anniversary in 2019. I like re-reading my prior posts each day and my opinion of the posts changes over time. Adding comments may end up biasing my own future readings, or, more likely, my interpretation of the quote may simply change with time. My reader base (“number of followers”) is so small, I doubt if the change matters to anyone but me, but I am still hesitant.
You are the one that matters!
LOL. Exactly! That’s why I’m trying to avoid a future bias… I’m the only one who reads my old posts (as near as I can tell).
I suppose you’re right, I haven’t been there for a while.
Just out of curiosity, how often do you go back and read your own older posts? And, when you do, how far back do you normally go (week, month, year, several years)?
It depends on the subject. I have actually gone back and deleted one post.