Feder, J., Komisar, H. L., & Niefeld, M. (2000). Long-term care in the United States: An overview. Health Affairs, 19(3), 40-56. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/204635741?accountid=458…
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), the number of elderly people in NSW has exceeded 1.02m in 2012. The trend of the population is rapidly increasing. This topic is interesting because aged is something everyone is going to experience. There is no escape. The…
In the target area of patients requiring long-term care, the demographic area is increasing yearly due to the fact that people are now living longer due to medicine and preventative health care measures. These have a major impact on the changing demographics on the healthcare market today. It will further change due to the increasing population thus changing the ever-growing health care field. “Long-term care is when a patient has a chronic condition or disease, trauma or an illness that will prevent them from practicing their basic self-care needs.“ (Selected Long-Term Care Statistics – What is Long Term Care?, 2005) It is not meant to “cure an illness but allow an individual to attain and maintain an optimal level of functioning.” (Selected Long-Term Care Statistics – What is Long Term Care?, 2005)…
References: Grand Canyon University (GCU). (2102). Aging and long Term Care: An overview PCN 530 Lecture. Retrieved from http: lllcgcu.edu learning platform/user/user.htm…
If we also look at another issue as to why long-term care could be a large burden is the rapid inflation in expenditures for long-term care in recent years. Medicare and Medicaid expenditures on nursing home care were $9 billion in 1980, more than doubling to $25 billion by 1990, and doubling again to $54 billion by 1999. Likewise, Medicare and Medicaid expenditures on home health care increased from less than $1 billion in 1980 to $5 billion in 1990 and to $16.1 billion in 1999, down from a high of $17 billion in 1996 (Health Care Financing Administration 2000; Heffler et al. 2001). With this we can also see that out of pocket…
The greatest challenge facing long-term care in health care is caring for the large number of elderly as the Baby Boomer generation ages. The economic burden placed on those in need of long-term care will be overwhelming. According to “Knickman & Snell” (2002), “the real challenges of caring for the elderly in 2030 will involve: (1) making sure society develops payment and insurance systems for long-term care that works better than the existing ones, (2) taking advantage of advances in medicine and behavioral health to keep the elderly as healthy and active as possible, (3) changing the way society organizes community services so that care is more accessible, and (4) altering the cultural view of aging to make sure all ages are integrated into the fabric of community life”.…
The demographics of the aging population is changing. In the year 2009 persons 65 years old or older were numbered at 39.6 million. They represent 12.9% of the U.S. population. In 2007 people over the age of 65 had an average life expectancy of an additional 18.6 years. Also the mortality rate decreased. The baby boomers will reach the age of 65 between the years of 2010 and 2030 (“Admistration of aging”, 2011). By the year 2030 28% of the American economy will be spent on healthcare. Seniors will likely live outside of Urban areas and change their living arrangements. Seniors are finding themselves living alone and are more dependent on formal and informal support of care. The aging population has become a huge influence of health care costs. As the older population live longer they are likely to spend most of their savings and assets to afford their medical needs (“Finger Lakes Health Systems”, 2004).…
Often times young people are not forced to live on the streets, they make a decision on their own to leave. As in the following case of Martin that was cited in a book written by Kaye Stearman.…
Long-term care includes nursing home facilities as well as home care agencies and assisted living facilities. Who uses long-term care services? Why do they use them?…
Mion, PhD, RN, L. C. (n.d.). Care Provision for Older Adults: Who Will Provide?. Retrieved from…
Over a century the long-term care system has gone through five cycles of changes that are woven together. Professors David Smith and Zhanlian Feng describe the changes that have occurred and the challenges long-term care faces in hopes to educate policymakers to learn from the past and not remake the negative effects. Extended over approximately 20 years a piece, these five cycles start in 1910 to present day (Smith & Feng, 2010, p. 28). Access to quality of long-term care has become strained by economic division.…
Long-Term Health Care is one of the biggest challenges the United States faces today because of the expense it requires to take care of people who are in need of this type of care. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services the amount of people who need long-term care is on the rise. In 1982 the amount of people who required this care was 29.2 million people. It is estimated by the year 2020 the amount of people will be 52.1 million people. Applebaum and Kunkel (1991)…
Aging populations from relatively poor backgrounds out to receive resources higher than the elderly from relatively well up neighbors. This will ensure that the elderly from poor backgrounds receive health care just as those from well up neighborhoods, and will enhance equity. Another ethical issue to consider in the perspective of the background is areas prone to diseases of the elderly. Aging populations from slums and poor areas tend to suffer a lot near the end of their lives. This is because they live in disease prone areas where they easily contract and succumb to diseases. Resource allocation in the care of the elderly should center on the aging in disease prone areas. These populations of the elderly should receive higher resource allocation to ensure that they are accorded the essential health care.…
Robert Applebaum, P. J. (1997, unknown unknown). Long Term Care Resources Program. Retrieved January 31, 2011, from Duke University: http://ltc.duke.edu/occasional_7.htm…
Aging, the process of developing or growing old; the progression of changes in appearance (American Heritage Dictionary, 2007). The role of the media is to educate and inform as well as other masses; the senior population suffers greatly from negative stereotyping than any other age group. Some media outlets portray aging in a stereotypical way relating old age to death or disease. This essay reflects on how older Americans are portrayed through the different media outlets.…