Medicaid cuts in GOP health care bill could take toll on Minnesota seniors
The
Seniors are the fastest-growing group to rely on Medicaid, the nation's largest source of public health coverage. In
"There's a lack of awareness that Medicaid is really the safety net in
The proposed health care bill would end the expansion of Medicaid, allowed under the ACA and implemented by
The proposal aims to save billions in federal spending by ending open-ended payments to states and establishing a maximum payment on each enrollee.
The state is in the process of calculating potential losses under the
Capping federal Medicaid dollars will take needed bloat out of the system and give power back to the states,
"It's not just the seniors who rely on Medicaid, their whole family does," said Piper. "Their adult children, who are working and saving to send their kids to college, or who are raising young children who can't take on the additional responsibility of providing day-to-day, 24-hour care of aging grandparents."
Seventy percent of people over 75 will spend time in a nursing home or need access to long-term care services in their lifetime. Medicare, the government's health insurance for seniors, doesn't cover assisted living, extended stays in nursing homes or the costs to hire someone to help with cooking, bathing or managing medications for months or years at a time.
Thus, Medicaid serves as a safeguard for growing numbers of middle-class elders, particularly those with challenging illnesses such as dementia and heart disease, who rely on the program after they've drained their personal savings. Half of
"The general public thinks of this as an issue for some, and not others," said
"What we try to do as a state is provide additional supports to keep people in their homes longer. We know how critical that is to quality of life, for keeping families together. But it's also an expense for the state. Nursing home care is very expensive."
Over the decades,
Those funds now pay for a broad umbrella of services: help with such daily activities as bathing, grooming and toileting; house calls by nurses or case managers to help manage medications; adult day services; meals; transportation to doctor's appointments; and household chores.
Last year, nearly 30,000 Minnesotans were served by the Elderly Waiver program. The state spent an average of
"The proposed cuts will have an unfortunate impact on the progress we've made," said
But these are optional services. Faced with less money, advocates fear the state would be forced to cut back or eliminate these programs.
"There aren't many choices at the state level," said
"They'd really be forced to make a 'Sophie's Choice.' Do you not provide services to people? Do you cut the services they get? Do you cut rates to providers? None of those are good solutions."
Informal caregivers likely will feel collateral damage, advocates warn.
Family, friends and neighbors provide 92 percent of long-term care needed by older adults in
"It feels like we're pulling the rug out from underneath families and seniors," said
Organizations that provide senior housing and services say too much already is being balanced on the backs of those who can afford private pay. Federal cuts will make it even more difficult to pay competitive rates for those eldercare workers who provide front-line care for the aged and infirm with complex needs.
"Right now, you have people in our industry who are hardly making ends meet," said
"Making the longer-term investment in what's right for people and what's gong to sustain communities and keep communities and individuals stabilized doesn't always fit in a short political cycle," she said.
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