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Long-term
care costs exceed yearly income for many
California seniors living alone…Costs are
soaring even as state considers further cuts
to care programs
In Los Angeles County, being disabled can
cost a year's income. That's because the
annual cost of in-home care services for
seniors living alone is now $319 more than
this group's median income of $17,029.
Combine long-term care expenses with other
basic expenses, such as food and rent, and a
Los Angeles senior living alone will need
twice the median income to survive,
according to new data released today by the
UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and
the Insight Center for Community Economic
Development.
In all 58 California counties, long-term
health care is far out of reach for the
state's most vulnerable citizens: seniors
living alone who are disabled.
Yet even as costs soar, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger has proposed the elimination
of Medi-Cal–funded in-home supportive
services for up to 400,000 seniors as a
means of closing the state's budget gap.
"In all 58 counties, long-term care paired
with basic living expenses exceeds median
income," said Jenny Chung, attorney and
program manager at the Insight Center.
"Seniors
can't afford care as it is. How are they
going to cope with cuts?"
In 33 counties (57 percent of all California
counties), the cost of long-term health care
for elderly single women — who are more
likely than men to use long-term care —
exceeds the median income for single
Californians aged 65 or older.
In 38 counties (65.5 percent of all
counties), the cost of long-term care
combined with basic living expenses is at
least two times the median income for this
group.
And in all 58 California counties, long-term
care paired with basic living expenses far
exceeds median income.
"When getting help at home costs a year's
income, something's wrong," said Steven P.
Wallace, associate director of the Center
for Health Policy Research.
"It means that extended families will be
stretched thin to provide care or that the
elderly will bankrupt themselves to pay for
a service provider."
The new data provides county-by-county
estimates of long-term care costs, as well
as long-term care costs paired with basic
living expenses.
These basic living expenses are estimated
using the Elder Economic Security Standard
Index, or Elder Index, a tool that measures
the actual costs of basic necessities for
older adults in each of California's
counties.
The researchers have created an accompanying
table in which these costs are paired with
median income — a measure of Social
Security, pensions and other income for
retired Californians age 65 and older who
are living alone.
The table, which can be sorted, can be
accessed on the websites of the Center for
Health Policy Research and the Insight
Center.
Researchers found that the cost of a
"medium" amount of long-term care — 16 hours
a week — was often equal to or greater than
the median income that single female seniors
receive from Social Security, pensions and
other sources.
When other basic living expenses were
factored in, total costs nearly doubled or
tripled.
Researchers used the "medium" level of
long-term care as a measure because it is
the most representative amount of care used
by seniors in California.
Female seniors living alone are the group
most likely to need paid in-home assistance
when they become disabled.
Approximately 973,000 California seniors
live alone. Of these, 50 percent do not have
enough income to meet basic expenses, as
defined by the Elder Index.
Long-term care is not covered by most
insurance policies.
Only the lowest-income seniors in California
can receive in-home care services through
the state's Medi-Cal program. However, due
to the state budget crisis, services for all
but the most severely disabled may soon be
cut.
"The only alternative, that no one wants, is
going to a nursing home where Medi-Cal will
eventually pick up the cost," Wallace said.
"But Medi-Cal will only pay if a senior is
extremely poor. Which means many seniors are
caught in the middle — with too little money
to afford in-home services and too much to
qualify for a Medi-Cal nursing home."
Among the researchers' findings:
Contra Costa and San Francisco counties have
the highest long-term care costs: $21,043
and $21,011, respectively. Yet the median
income for single seniors living alone is
$23,985 in Contra Costa County and $16,792
in San Francisco County.
The cost of long-term care paired with basic
living expenses is highest in San Francisco
and San Mateo counties: $48,446 and $48,441,
respectively.
In 38 counties (65.5 percent of all
counties), the cost of long-term care paired
with basic living expenses is twice the
median income. In at least one county,
Alpine, these costs are three times the
median income.
Orange County ranked the lowest of all 58
counties in terms of long-term care costs:
$17,136. However, when long-term care costs
are paired with basic living expenses,
Orange County becomes one of the most
expensive places for seniors.
Long-term care costs plus basic living
expenses are $42,603, raising Orange County
to 11th out of 58 counties and illustrating
the toll that rents and other necessities
exact on seniors in expensive areas.
The Elder Economic Security Standard Index
quantifies the actual costs of meeting basic
necessities for older adults in each
California county. The Elder Index is
currently under consideration by the
California Legislature as a planning tool
for state aging-services programs. For more
information on the Elder Standard Index,
click here.
###
The Insight Center for Community Economic
Development is a 40-year-old national
research, consulting and legal organization
dedicated to building economic health in
vulnerable communities.
The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
is one of the nation's leading health policy
research centers and the premier source of
health-related information on Californians.
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