HGleckman

About Howard Gleckman

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far Howard Gleckman has created 760 blog entries.

Baucus Adds Medicaid Home Care to Reform Bill

In a bit of surprising news, Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus (D-Mont) added some key long-term care amendments to his health reform bill. The provisions, first proposed by senators John Kerry (D-Mass), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), and Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) would all make home and community based care more accessible under Medicaid. Currently, Medicaid is only required to provide long-term [...]

By |2009-09-22T19:43:01-04:00September 22nd, 2009|Health reform, long term care reform, Medicaid|0 Comments

Senator Baucus Mostly Ignores Long-Term Care

I am disappointed, but not surprised, that Congress' latest health reform effort does almost nothing to repair our tattered long-term care system.   The massive health reform bill proposed today by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont) touches nearly every part of the health system: Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, hospitals, doctors, you name it. Except for one critical element. The proposal all [...]

By |2009-09-16T15:05:34-04:00September 16th, 2009|long term care reform|0 Comments

Is This the Year for Long-Term Care Reform?

I moderated two interesting panels today at a long-term care conference sponsored by Genworth, the big insurance company. The first panel included author and family caregiving expert Virginia Morris, National Family Caregivers Association president Suzanne Mintz, and Ancil Alexander, a home health aide who visits clients in the South Bronx. Virginia talked about the desperate need caregivers have for information, Suzanne discussed the [...]

By |2009-09-14T14:32:17-04:00September 14th, 2009|long term care reform|0 Comments

Family Caregivers Need to Care for Themselves

The wonderful families I met while writing Caring for Our Parents had many things in common: The made tremendous sacrifices to help frail parents or spouses, they brought deep love and great patience to this responsibility. And under great physical, emotional, and financial stress, they often ignored their own health.  It may sound selfish, but if you are assisting a loved one, [...]

By |2009-09-07T13:09:47-04:00September 7th, 2009|Caregiver tips|0 Comments

Why Can’t The Washington Post Understand End-of Life?

In the past two weeks, The Washington Post published two op-ed columns on the end-of-life provision in the House's health reform bill, one by Post editorial writer Charles Lane and the other by house conservative Charles Krauthammer. The proposal would permit Medicare to pay doctors for discussing issues of death and dying with their patients. But the two columns, each [...]

By |2009-08-23T14:54:00-04:00August 23rd, 2009|End of life|0 Comments

A Community Tackles Long-Term Care II

I got back last night from two days in St. Paul, Minn, where I worked with a few dozen deeply commited people who are looking for concrete solutions to the challenges of long-term care. The program was sponsored by the Citizen's League, and it brought together nursing home executives, retired physicans, lobbyists, state officials, advocates for the elderly and the disabled, care [...]

By |2009-08-19T19:34:32-04:00August 19th, 2009|long term care reform|0 Comments

A Community Tackles Long-Term Care

I'm off to St. Paul to particpate in a two-day workshop on long-term care sponsored by the Minnnesota Citizens League, a non-profit dedicated to finding common ground on important policy issues among business, government, community organizations, and individuals. The progam, entitled Creating Incentives for Personal Responsibility in Long-Term Care, has exactly the right goal: Finding community solutions to the challenges of caring for [...]

By |2009-08-16T10:49:11-04:00August 16th, 2009|long term care reform|0 Comments

What Are Living Wills?

In recent weeks, we've heard end-of-life counseling compared to government run "death boards." This rhetoric is beyond irresponsible, but it lays bare a very important problem--too many of us have no idea what living wills and other advance directives do, or how they work. So, a brief primer: In short, these legal documents allow you to tell doctors and hospitals [...]

By |2009-08-11T18:45:00-04:00August 11th, 2009|End of life, Health reform|0 Comments

Medicare and End-of-Life

The most bizarre episode so far in Washington's health care debate is the persistent rumor that the House version of reform would force Medicare patients to participate in counseling sessions where they would "learn how to end their life sooner." This is a lie. The House bill would do no such thing. Yet the myth persists, thanks to constant repetition by conservative radio talk show hosts such [...]

By |2009-08-02T13:24:16-04:00August 2nd, 2009|End of life, Health reform|0 Comments

Technology and Long-term Care

How much can technology help the frail elderly live independently? The promise of high-tech assistive devices and monitoring systems has attracted the attention of many long-term care families, desperate for new ways to keep an eye on mom. Not surprisingly, some big companies, including GE and Cisco, as well as smaller start-ups and university research labs, are increasingly interested as well.   [...]

By |2009-07-28T14:39:46-04:00July 28th, 2009|Technology|1 Comment