The numbers are slightly different if one assumes that long-term care insurance does not become more common, but the stark upward trend remains. As you can see, long-term care services are costly and the cost will continue to rise; long term care services have to dealing making sure that Medicare and Medicaid will cover the cost of the services in a timely manner. Both Medicaid and Medicare are the safety net for these services and there shouldn’t be any cuts to these services. The growth of the elderly population requires both the need of fiscal and fundamental changes in Medicare and Medicaid that are responsive to cost issues and to changing patterns of need.
At long-term care, you have to look at the differences in the elderly’s health and efficient status, the differences in individual and family preferences and values and economic circumstances. With these combinations, these will factor shape both the choices and resources available to the elderly that needs long-term care. Changes in long term care occur not only because of changing care needs, but also because of changing family or financial circumstances and changing options or preferences for