Transcript Document

LONG TERM CARE
A Community Based Approach
Presented by: Lanette Gonzales
Houston, Texas
July 26, 2005
Population Profile
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Harris County: 252,895 residents 65
years of age or older (Texas State Data
Center, 2004)
Residents older than 65 years of age
increased 28%
Residents older than 85 years old or
older increased 52% in the last decade
Socioeconomic Status
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Median household income of older
adults ages 65 to 74 years old –
$33,431 in 1999
Median household income of older
adults 75 years old and older - $25,375
Risk Factors for needing Long
Term Care
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Individuals age 85 years old and older
Multiple chronic health conditions:
- arthritis, hypertension, heart disease,
hearing impairment, cancer, diabetes,
and stroke
Cognitive and/or multiple functional
impairments
Harris County
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Vulnerable older adults are defined as 75
years old and older or those 60 years of age
and older who have at least one need of the
following conditions:
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help bathing
uses a cane, walker, or wheelchair
fair or poor health
afraid to be left alone more than two hours or
has a chronic illness
Risk Factors
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Living alone
Limited to no support system
Living at or near poverty
Women
Minorities
Providers of Long Term Care
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Family Caregivers
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Female Baby boomer
Works full-time
Annual income of $35,000
Provides average 18 hours per week
Support Systems
Community organizations and agencies
Challenges
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Limited funding
Waiting lists
Shortage of direct care workers
Funding
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Major public and nonprofit sources of
funding include Medicaid, Block Grant
Funds, Older Americans Act Funds,
United Way, and local foundations
Self-pay (costs often prohibitive):
Private pay can cost $15 per hour, can
range up to $125 per hour
Shortage of direct care
workers (Stone 2000)
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Low wages and benefits
Hard working conditions
Heavy workloads
Job stigmatized by society
Low or no recognition
Strategies (Better Jobs Better
Care 2004)
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Recruit and retain high quality direct
care workers
Increase wages, fringe benefits, such
as health insurance and payments
Increase and improve training
requirements
Create opportunities for higher job
levels with Career Ladder
Care for Elders
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Private-public partnership established in
2001
Strategy –Improve quality of long term
care
Collaboration with other direct care
service providers
Care for Elders (continued)
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Four solutions:
- Improve recruitment by promoting direct
care work
- Enhanced Screening to improve turnover
rates
- Increase retention with comprehensive
orientation, training, and recognition
- Test pilot wage supplementation to evaluate
worker retention effects.
Sheltering Arms Senior
Services
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501©3 agency
United Way agency
State licensed, Medicare certified
Over 200 employees
Bonded and Insured
Served over 79,000 seniors and their family
caregivers in 2004
Fiscal agent for Care for Elders (2000)
Final Analysis
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Average life expectancy is 87 years old.
Number of people purchasing care for
relatives could place more demands on
formal long-term care system.(BLS
1998)
Personal and home care assistance is
projected to be fourth-fastest growing
occupation. (Stone 2001)
Final Analysis
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Reductions in Medicare payments may
diminish the future growth rate of
health care jobs available.
By 2010, baby boomers will approach
old age and begin to require assistance
Smaller pool of middle-aged women
available to provide low-skilled basic
services
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Medicare and Medicaid are the major sources
of public funding for health care.
Reimbursement policy plays a substantial role
in determining workers’ wages, benefits, and
training opportunities.
Maintain payment rates to keep up with true
cost of providing services, giving
organizations ability to offer competitive
wages and benefits.