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Congress, Medicare, and The “Doc Fix”

For months, physicians have been refusing to take new Medicare patients, and some are now even dropping long-time patients. The problem: Congress's inability to resolve a now 13-year-long argument over how much Medicare should pay docs. The whole mess started in 1997, when the government concluded that Medicare was overpaying many doctors. The reality was that some physicians probably were being paid too much while others were [...]

By |2010-06-02T16:25:28-04:00June 2nd, 2010|Uncategorized|0 Comments

Superbug: If You Care About MRSA, Buy This Book

By now, long-term care providers and consumers may know something about MRSA, the antibiotic-resistant infection. But chances are they don't know nearly enough. If you want to learn more--and believe me, you need to learn more--pick up a copy of Maryn McKenna's new book Superbug. (Free Press 2010). Part detective story, part expose, part careful explanation of the science of bacteria, Superbug is a frightening [...]

By |2010-04-29T16:42:14-04:00April 29th, 2010|Uncategorized|0 Comments

CLASS Act, Medicaid Improvements in Obama Health Bill

The compromise health reform plan proposed today by President Obama includes many of the key long-term care provisions that were included in the earlier House and Senate bills. The CLASS Act--the national long-term care insurance program--along with federal incentives to encourage states to expand their home and community based care programs under Medicaid, and improved care coordination for those receiving both Medicare and Medicaid [...]

By |2010-02-22T10:59:35-05:00February 22nd, 2010|Uncategorized|2 Comments

CLASS and the Budget

Pity the supporters of the CLASS Act, the proposal to create a national long-term care insurance system. They are on to an important idea, but they are caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place. Here's the problem: much of the congressional support for the CLASS Act is based on the Congressional Budget Office estimate that it will generate [...]

By |2009-11-23T19:39:22-05:00November 23rd, 2009|Uncategorized|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

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

CLASS Act Premiums May Be $100, CBO Says

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that premiums for the national long-term care insurance system proposed by Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) may be significantly higher than the $65 per month Kennedy aimed for. CBO figures that for the insurance system to be self-sustaining, premiums would have to be in the range of $100 to $110 per month.  A key question for the Kennedy [...]

By |2009-06-26T09:04:01-04:00June 26th, 2009|Uncategorized|1 Comment

Where Will We Get the Aides to Help Care for Our Parents?

The OECD has just published an interesting new study that shows the long-term care workforce crisis is not just an American problem. Major developed countries all around the world are struggling to find enough qualified workers to care for their growing populations of frail elderly. The problem in the U.S. is becoming a crisis. We pay home care workers an average [...]

By |2009-04-15T08:56:36-04:00April 15th, 2009|Uncategorized|0 Comments