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Long-Term Services and Supports

Long-Term Services and Supports. Skye N. Leedahl, PhD The University of Rhode Island Human Development and Family Studies. What are Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS)?.

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Long-Term Services and Supports

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  1. Long-Term Services and Supports Skye N. Leedahl, PhD The University of Rhode Island Human Development and Family Studies

  2. What are Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS)? • LTSS are provided to people who need assistance to perform routine daily activities over an extended period due to disability or chronic illness. • Goal of integrating supports and medical care to maintain health, improve functional capacity, enhance physical, social and emotional well-being, and maximize autonomy.

  3. What are LTSS? • Includes a broad range of supportive services and supports provided by professionals (formal care) as well as unpaid care provided by family and friends (informal care). • Can be provided in community-based or institutional settings.

  4. Long-Term Care • LTSS is now the preferred term, but prior to that, most referred to LTSS as “long-term care” • LTC continues to be used in private sector, in policy discussions, and by the general public • Definition is very similar to LTSS definition, focused mainly on formal care • Long-term care • A variety of ongoing health and social services provided for individuals who need assistance on a continuing basis because of physical or mental disability

  5. How Many Receive LTSS? • Over 12 million Americans receive some kind of LTSS (needing help with 1 or more ADLs or IADLs) • About 10.9 million are community residents (1/2 are 65+) • Family members provide most assistance (over 90%) • Some live in supportive group homes (less than 10%) • Between 1.5-1.8 million live in nursing homes (4/5 are 65+)

  6. How Many Older Adults Receive LTSS? • About 20% (7.7 million) older adults receive LTSS • Most live in the community and receive services/supports from family, friends, or community services • About 1.1 million live in a nursing home

  7. LTSS Options • Informal Caregivers (unpaid assistance) • Often family or friends • Formal Care Services (paid assistance) Can include: • Home and Community-based Services(HCBS) • Assisted living • Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) • Adult Day Care • Nursing homes

  8. LTSS Financing • Medicaid is the primary payer for LTSS • Of total LTSS spending in 2013: • 51% Medicaid • 21% Other public funds • 19% Out-of-pocket • 8% Private insurance • Dual-eligible beneficiaries (receive Medicare and Medicaid) account for about 62% of Medicaid expenditures

  9. How are LTSS Financed in the Community? • Only 13% (approximately 1.6 million) of community residents receive formal services/paid help • Medicare and Medicaid are primary payers for about 1/3 of community residents (for all or most of charges) • About 1/4 of community residents pay out-of-pocket for formal services (for all or most of the charges) • Rest is paid by some other source, often state or local programs

  10. How are LTSS Financed in Nursing Homes? • Nursing homes cost about $3,500-$5,000 per month: • Medicaid is the primary payer: • Paying about 2/3 of residents • Pays for greater proportions of residents as lengths of stay increase • Out-of-pocket payments and Medicare are 2nd and 3rd most prominent payers: • About 1/5 of nursing home bills are paid for out-of-pocket • Medicare is a major payer during the first 3 months of nursing home stay, paying for about 17.7% of residents

  11. Current Policies & Programs that Influence LTSS • Medicaid • Medicare • PACE • Money Follows the Person Program • Affordable Care Act • Older Americans Act • National Family Caregiver Program • Social Security

  12. Federally mandated, jointly (federal/state) funded, state by state controlled medical insurance for those below income level without insurance Wide variance by state in eligibility and benefits What is Medicaid?

  13. Who Qualifies for Medicaid? • Children • Pregnant Women • Parents • Older Adults • Individuals with Disabilities * To qualify, individuals must meet income requirements * Other requirements depend on federal mandates and state options

  14. Medicaid and State Variation • Each state develops a State Plan for their program and submits it to the federal government • Essentially 52 different programs: • Large financial incentive for states: • Federal government pays 50-80% of services • % depends on the state’s Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), also known as the Federal Medicaid Matching Rate (which is based on state per capita income) http://medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-state/by-state.html

  15. Comprehensive written statement to federal government Describe nature and scope of Medicaid program in the state Contains assurances the program will be operated per the federal requirements Are certain requirements that are mandatory Are various options that states can include What are Medicaid State Plans?

  16. What are Medicaid State Plans? • Can be amended • Takes about 90 days to approve/disapprove amendment • States must have matching funds available before they get federal funds • Must be in the state plan to receive funds • Programs vary from state to state!

  17. 1915 (b): Managed Care waivers- allow states to run managed care organizations 1915 (c): HCBS waivers- provide LTC services in home Combined 1915 (b) and 1915 (c) 1115: Research and Demonstration Projects- test new or existing approaches to financing and delivery 1915 (i) State Plan Home and Community-Based Services 1915 (j) Self-Directed Personal Assistance Services Under State Plan 1915 (k) Community First Choice Medicaid Waivers and HCBS Options

  18. Inpatient hospital Outpatient hospital Physician services Nursing facilities for those over 21 years Family planning Lab/Xray Home health Rural health clinic services Medicaid Mandatory Services

  19. Medicaid Mandatory Services • Federally qualified health center • Nurse practitioner • Nurse midwife • Early and periodic screening, Diagnostic and Treatment services (EPSDT) • Prevention services for those under 21 • Freestanding Birth Center services • Transportation to medical care • Tobacco cessation counseling for pregnant women

  20. Includes: Clinic services Physical/occupational therapy Prescription drugs Dentures Prosthetics Optometrist/eyeglasses Private duty nursing Hospice Medicaid Optional Services

  21. Medicaid Is Complicated

  22. Medicare • Federal Program • Social Insurance program • No means testing • Must have worked 40 quarters (person or spouse) • Who is entitled? • Age 65 and Older (about 80% of beneficiaries) • Under 65 with Certain Disabilities (about 20% of beneficiaries) • Those with End-Stage Renal Disease (about 1% of beneficiaries)

  23. Medicare Benefits • Part A: Hospital Insurance • Part B: Medical Insurance • Part C: Medicare Advantage Plans • Part D: Prescription Drug Coverage

  24. Medicare Choices

  25. Medicare Part A: Hospital Insurance • Inpatient Hospital Care • Skilled Nursing Facility Care (after discharge from hospital for a qualified stay up to 100 days) • Home Health Care (if qualify) • Hospice Care

  26. Medicare Part B: Supplementary Medical Insurance • Doctor services • Outpatient medical and surgical services • Diagnostic tests (X-rays, MRIs) • Ambulance transportation • Durable medical equipment • Physical/occupational therapy • Dialysis • Rural health clinics • Other outpatient services • Early detection and preventive care benefits

  27. Medicare Part C: Medicare Advantage Plans • Option to forego Original Medicare • Sign up for private managed care plan Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs), or fee-for-service plan • About 16% participation

  28. Medicare Part D: Prescription Drugs • Offered through private prescription drug plans • All plans must offer a standard level of coverage (range of drugs in each drug category) • Plans differ in what is covered and cost-sharing amounts. • Formulary • Drugs are categorized into • Tier 1 (lowest copayment, most generics) • Tier 2 (medium copayment, preferred brand name) • Tier 3 (high copayment, non-preferred brand name) • Specialty (unique, very high cost– e.g., cancer) • Minimum Standard Coverage: • Monthly premium: ~$30

  29. Medicare Does NOT Cover: • Long-Term Care Services except for rehabilitation services • Dentures and most dental care • Cosmetic surgery • Acupuncture • Hearing aids • Eyeglasses and eye exams (unless have certain diagnoses) • Routine foot care services *can get supplementary plans (Medigap policies) to cover what Medicare does not

  30. Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly • Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) • Program for people using Medicare, Medicaid, or both • Helps people meet health care needs in the community • Provides all care & services provided by Medicare and Medicaid, plus additional services • Funded through a monthly capitation payment from Medicare and Medicaid for each participant

  31. Money Follows the Person (MFP) Program • Enables individuals utilizing Medicaid to transition from nursing home to the community • Increases home and community base service availability • Eliminates Medicaid-usage barriers • Gives states’ Medicaid programs the ability to allow continuance of funding for HCBS services • Ensures quality services are provided in the community

  32. How much do you know? Watch this video: http://kff.org/health-reform/video/youtoons-obamacare-video/ Take this quiz: http://kff.org/quiz/health-reform-quiz/ The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 (AKA Obama Care, Health Reform, Affordable Care Act)

  33. ACA Summary • Basic Idea: • All Americans are required to have health insurance either through their employer or through insurance exchanges • Focuses on expanding coverage, controlling health care costs, and improve health care delivery system • Includes: • Industry regulation • Expansion of coverage • Mandates

  34. ACA Medicare Changes

  35. ACA Medicaid Changes

  36. Current Issues • Stay up-to-date on the latest issues and topics • Visit the Kaiser Foundation website for the latest on health reform statistics and issues: http://kff.org/health-reform/

  37. Older Americans Act (OAA) • OAA promotes the well-being of older individuals by providing services and programs designed to help them live independently in their homes and communities • Administered by the Administration on Aging (AoA) • Office of Supportive and Caregiver Services • Office of Nutrition and Health Promotion Programs • Office of Elder Justice and Adult Protective Services • Office for American Indian, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiian Programs • Office of Long-term Care Ombudsman Programs • OAA and Aging Network

  38. National Family Caregiver Program (NFCSP) • Provided through the Older Americans Act through grants to states and territories • NFCSP funds a range of supports that assist family and informal caregivers care for their loved ones at home • Information about available services • Assistance in gaining access to services • Individual counseling, support groups, caregiver training • Respite care • Supplemental services

  39. Social Security • Largest social insurance program • Monthly Income Benefits: Retirement, survivor’s, disability, supplemental income, unemployment • Federal program

  40. Programs within Social Security Includes: • Social Insurance • Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) • Unemployment Insurance • Worker’s Compensation • Temporary Disability Insurance • Health Insurance and Health Services • Medicare • Medicaid • Assistance • Supplemental Security Income (SSI) • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families

  41. America’s safety net Vehicle for promoting social justice Mechanism for allocating the costs and benefits of US citizenship Quite controversial due to the costs imposed Social Security Considerations

  42. Important Concepts and Services Relevant to LTSS • Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs) • Quality of care & quality of life • Informal caregivers • Home and community based services • Respite care • Adult day care • Assisted living • CCRCs • Nursing homes

  43. ADLs and IADLs • ADLs: Ability to perform basic tasks • Bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, feeding • IADLs: Ability to perform more complex tasks • Ability to use the telephone, shopping, food preparation, housekeeping, laundry, mode of transportation, responsibility for taking own medications, ability to handle finances • Assessments for ADLs and IADLs are often used to determine the need for LTSS and to help determine payments for services

  44. Improving Quality • Goal of LTSS is to continuously improve quality • Quality measures refers to a wide variety of indicators related to personal and medical care • Can be assessed using measures of structure, processes, and outcomes of clinical care • Quality of life is a multi-dimensional concept related to an individual’s well-being • Related to emotional health, physical health, functional status, comfort and security, social function, and self-worth or agency

  45. Informal Caregivers • Informal caregivers are the single largest source of LTSS in the U.S. • This is only estimated to get larger as the Baby Boomers age. • Approximately 65.7 million caregivers care for someone who is ill, disabled, or age • Services valued at $450 billion per year in 2009 • An estimated 66% are female

  46. Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) • Services provided through Medicaid or other state services to individuals within their own home or community • Support choice and independence of older adults and adults with disabilities • Includes medical and non-medical services, including case management, homemaker, home health, personal care, adult day services, and respite care

  47. Respite Care • Provides relief of caregiving responsibilities on a temporary or periodic basis • Services can include: adult day care, case managers, thorough assessment and counseling, in-home services, support groups, education, training materials

  48. Adult Day Care • Adult day care centers provide a variety of services to meet the needs of participants and family members • Is an alternative to nursing homes or assisted living • Older adults continue living in their home, but come to an adult day care center during the day

  49. What Services Provided at Adult Day? • Services to address ADLs, nursing and other medical needs, psychosocial care, meals, and programs for caregiver well-being and support • Assistance with walking, toileting, meals, bathing, blood pressure monitoring, weight monitoring, medication management, diabetes monitoring

  50. Assisted Living • According to the Assisted Living Coalition, the definition is: • A congregate residential setting that provides or coordinates personal services, 24-hour supervision and assistance (scheduled and unscheduled), activities, and health related services. • Less government regulation and financing than nursing homes • Goals include: accommodate residents’ changing needs and preferences; maximize residents’ dignity, autonomy, and independence; and encourage family and community involvement

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