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Topic: Health 1
Article 1
Financing the nation’s long-term care needs should be a
responsibility shared equally by government and individuals,
agrees a majority of respondents (61%) to the latest
Commonwealth Fund Health Care Opinion Leaders survey. A wide
majority—80 percent—of the 246 respondents to the online survey
also favors adding a long-term care benefit to Medicare,
financed by a premium, to address the growing cost of such
services.
“In the near future, our nation faces the daunting challenge of
meeting the needs of growing numbers of older
Americans—including baby boomers nearing retirement age—for
nursing home, home health, and assisted living care,” said
Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis. “Health care leaders
support strategies to spread these costs widely, rather than
place the entire burden on individuals or families.”
When asked about policies to finance long-term care costs, in
addition to adding a long-term care benefit to Medicare,
majorities of respondents said they favor providing tax
incentives for individuals to purchase private long-term care
insurance (75% in favor), transferring responsibility for
Medicaid long-term care from states to the federal government
(68%), allowing tax-favored medical savings accounts to
purchase long-term care insurance (63%), and tightening rules
and state enforcement of Medicaid asset transfer restrictions
(61%). More leaders oppose (47%) than favor (40%) vouchers for
elderly and disabled Medicaid beneficiaries to purchase their
own long-term care services.
Financing approaches that did not receive strong support
included expecting adult children to contribute in part to
their parents’ long-term care costs (47% in favor), placing
responsibility solely on the government (41%), expecting
employers to contribute to their employees’ long-term care
costs (33%), and requiring individuals to pay for all or most
of their long-term care (26%).
When asked about effective ways to assure and improve the
quality of long-term care, about two-thirds of respondents said
that pay-for-performance (66%), consumer report cards (66%),
and state enforcement against low-quality providers (65%) were
effective approaches. Majorities also thought increased payment
rates to long-term care providers (59%) and establishment of
staffing requirements for nursing homes (57%) could improve
quality. Slightly fewer than half (45%) said Medicare Quality
Improvement Organizations (QIOs) were effective in improving
nursing home quality.
Only about one-quarter (27%) of respondents were familiar with
the “culture change” or “resident-centered care” movement in
nursing home care, despite the fact that work on culture change
has now been included by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) in the eighth scope of work for QIOs.
The online survey of experts, representing a range of health
care sectors and diverse perspectives, is the sixth in a series
conducted by Harris Interactive® for the Commonwealth Fund,
designed to highlight leaders’ perspectives on the most
important and timely health policy issues facing the nation.
This survey focused on the nation’s long-term care needs.
Results from the survey on long-term care are posted on the
Fund’s website, along with a year-end review of highlights from
all six surveys conducted over the past year. “These expert
opinions provide a guide to a pragmatic strategy for change,
with broad support across all sectors of society and the health
care industry,” said Davis.
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