Urban Institute

How Can The US  Fix Long-Term Care In A Post Covid-19 World?

The Covid-19 pandemic has been a catastrophe for frail older adults. More than 170,000 residents and staff of long-term care facilities have died from the virus, and adults over age 65 living in all settings have accounted for about 80 percent of the nation’s deaths, or about 400,000 fatalities. But what lessons have we learned? And how can we build [...]

By |2021-03-10T10:59:12-05:00March 10th, 2021|long term care reform|20 Comments

Don’t Blame Older Adults For Big Increases In Medicaid Spending

Is the growing need for long-term supports and services (LTSS) by older adults driving big increases in Medicaid spending? Not according to a new study by Don Redfoot and my Urban Institute colleague Melissa Favreault. Indeed, they found that while Medicaid enrollment and expenditures for older adults grew in recent decades, it had far less effect on the program than [...]

By |2018-08-22T19:15:44-04:00August 23rd, 2018|Aging, Medicaid|1 Comment

A New Public/Private Long-Term Care Financing Plan

Two years ago, the Long-Term Care Financing Collaborative proposed a public catastrophic long-term care insurance program. In effect, people would use private insurance, savings, or home equity to pay for the first few years of their care needs, then the government would pick up costs for people with true catastrophic needs. Today, two highly-respected long-term care experts offered an important [...]

By |2018-02-14T12:43:53-05:00January 31st, 2018|long-term care financing|1 Comment

In The Coming Debate Over Medicare, Remember How Much Seniors Pay

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) promises that 2018 will be the year Congress attempts to reduce spending on big federal programs like Medicare. As that debate unfolds, keep this in mind: A 65-year old woman will need to have put aside $95,000 to have a just a 50/50 chance of paying her Medicare premiums and prescription drug costs over her [...]

By |2018-02-14T12:43:53-05:00December 22nd, 2017|Medicare|1 Comment

Despite Medicare, Seniors Will Pay More For Medical Care In Coming Years

Medicare is a critical lifeline for older adults who need health care as they age. But a new study shows that over the next two decades, out-of-pocket medical costs for older adults are likely to rise significantly, even with access to Medicare. By 2035, a typical senior will spend one out of every seven dollars of retirement income on medical [...]

By |2017-03-30T09:42:15-04:00March 30th, 2017|Health Care, Medicare|2 Comments

Should Congress Cut ACA Insurance Premiums for Young People By Raising Them For Those 50+?

A proposal by congressional Republicans aimed at reducing health insurance costs for young people would substantially boost premiums for those over age 50, according to a new analysis by the actuarial firm Milliman Inc. The proposal could result in up to 18,000 older adults losing health coverage and increase the cost of federal insurance subsidies by $6.7 billion, if the [...]

By |2017-02-08T14:22:21-05:00February 8th, 2017|Aging, Health Care|0 Comments

It Costs More To Care For Frail Older Adults Than To Raise Kids

It costs families more to care for a frail older adult than to raise a child for the first 17 years of her life. Yet, while the government routinely provides a broad range of assistance and free services for children, it offers only limited benefits for those needing long-term supports and services—and mostly only for those who are impoverished and [...]

By |2017-01-18T11:41:33-05:00January 18th, 2017|family caregivers|1 Comment

The Staggering Cost of Long-Term Care and Medical Care in Old Age

A typical 65-year-old couple will need to save nearly $400,000 to pay for out-of-pocket medical care and long-term care in old age, according to new estimates by the Fidelity Benefits Consulting. That is $60,000 more than a typical couple’s entire savings at retirement, including equity in their home. Fidelity estimated an older couple will need to put away an average [...]

By |2016-08-31T15:18:24-04:00August 31st, 2016|Health Care, long-term care financing|0 Comments

Medicare Wants to Pay Doctors and Hospitals for Performance, But Can It Really Be Measured?

Prodded by Congress, Medicare will tie more of its compensation for doctors and hospitals to the quality of their care. And who, you might ask, could be against such pay for performance--besides incompetent providers trying to preserve their reimbursements?  Doesn’t it make sense to pay docs and hospitals for improving the health of their patients rather than for the volume [...]

By |2016-01-29T11:45:22-05:00January 29th, 2016|Health Care|0 Comments