America Is Getting Older. Its Long-Term Care System Is Getting Weaker. cover art

America Is Getting Older. Its Long-Term Care System Is Getting Weaker.

America Is Getting Older. Its Long-Term Care System Is Getting Weaker.

Listen for free

View show details

Americans are rapidly aging, which is accelerating the demand for the long-term services and supports (LTSS) necessary to their care, as well as the care of a diverse range of children and adults with disabilities. Medicaid is the primary payer for LTSS. Since the early 1980s, that coverage has included home and community-based services (HCBS), which have proven better for health, less expensive and what most people prefer over institutional care. HCBS now make up almost two-thirds of long-term services and support spending, double the rate in 2001.

Because HCBS are an optional benefit under Medicaid, states facing fiscal crises can limit access, including through enrollment caps and waiting lists. Today more than 600,000 people are waiting for care across 41 states.

With states facing nearly $1 trillion in federal Medicaid funding cuts over the next decade from H.R. 1 and a drumbeat of recent statements from federal leaders questioning the integrity and purpose of HCBS, the fragile infrastructure that keeps people out of nursing homes is at risk — bringing greater urgency to the imperative for change.

adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet