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CLASS Act is in House Health Bill, But Pitfalls Remain

It was a good day for supporters of the CLASS Act, the national long-term care insurance program that has been on the edges of the health reform debate. A version of the measure was included in the House Democratic reform bill introduced today by Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The decison all but assures the long-term care proposal will be included in the [...]

Erickson’s Bankruptcy and the Future of CCRCs

Lots of buzz about the Oct. 20 Chapter 11 bankruptcy and sale of Erickson Retirement Communities, one of the nation's premier developers of Continuing Care Retirement Communites. CCRCs are campus-like settings that promise lifetime care for seniors, from independent living to assisted living to nursing home care. These facilities operate on several different business models but Erickson, like many others, requires a hefty, [...]

By |2009-10-26T09:41:05-04:00October 26th, 2009|Senior housing|0 Comments

Elder Abuse

Elder abuse is one of those issues we prefer to not talk about. And, in truth, there is much we don't know about it. For instance, even the most basic data on how often abuse happens are notoriously unreliable. Yet, we know it occurs. And far too often. Financial scams, sometimes orchestrated by trusted advisers and friends; physical abuse by caregivers; physical abuse of caregivers (I [...]

By |2009-10-23T08:02:14-04:00October 23rd, 2009|Uncategorized|0 Comments

Changes and Growing Optimism for the CLASS Act

I spent yesterday morning at a Kaiser Family Foundation panel discussion on the CLASS Act, the national long-term care insurance program being considered as part of health reform. The panelists, who included Senate Health Committee aide Connie Garner and a number of advocates for long-term care reform, were upbeat about the possibility that CLASS will be included in a final health [...]

Family Stress and Long-Term Care

When family caregivers are under a lot of stress, the chances increase that their loved ones will have to move to a nursing home. That's the conlusion of an important new study by my Urban Institute colleagues Brenda Spillman and Sharon Long. That conclusion may seem obvious to caregivers, but Spillman and Long back it up with some hard data. They found that [...]

By |2009-10-07T18:25:00-04:00October 7th, 2009|Uncategorized|3 Comments