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Majority
of Americans agree 'There's No Place Like
Home' for Care of Elderly Family Members
BATON ROUGE, La., Nov.
9, 2010 --
When faced with managing the care of an
aging or ill family member, a new survey
shows that Americans want to keep their
loved ones close to home.
According to a national telephone poll
conducted by Harris Interactive for Amedisys,
a leading provider of home care and hospice
services (Nasdaq: AMED), 74 percent of
Americans would prefer having a terminally
ill family member taken care of at home with
the care of a trained health aide, rather
than in a traditional nursing home or other
care facility.
In comparison, only 10 percent would prefer
a nursing home and six percent would choose
an outpatient center. The poll also found
that when considering care for an elderly
family member recuperating from surgery,
half (51 percent) would prefer home health
care over any other facility.
The survey was conducted as part of Amedisys'
Annual Home Care Matters Initiative around
National Home Care and Hospice Month, a
national month of recognition across the
industry, which takes place each November.
The poll results show that Americans have a
preference for home care for themselves, as
well.
If faced with chronic medical care, terminal
illness or surgery recuperation, the
overwhelming majority of Americans would
prefer home health care versus off-site care
at a nursing home, rehabilitation or
outpatient center.
The poll found that 65 percent of
respondents would prefer home health care
for themselves while recuperating from
surgery, while 75 percent would prefer it
for themselves if they were in the final
stage of a terminal illness.
Home health care is identified as a valuable
resource for families
Survey respondents said they are already
providing some sort of care for their loved
ones: one-in-five poll respondents (19
percent) reported that they are coordinating
or assisting with home care for a spouse or
elderly family member, and according to the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 43 percent
of those providing care are 50 years of age
or older, and 61 percent of family
caregivers are women.
According to the AARP Public Policy
Institute, the annual economic value of
these types of unpaid care giving activities
is an astounding $354
billion.
"Home health care assists these familial
caregivers in being more effective in
managing a loved one's illness which
provides a significant cost and family
stress relief benefit," says Michael
Fleming,
MD, Chief Medical Officer of Amedisys.
"The home health industry can help produce
better health outcomes for patients if more
people, doctors included, were better
educated about health care at home options."
And, the number of family members caring for
sick loved ones is expected to grow: more
than one-third (34 percent) of respondents
to the Harris poll anticipate that they will
have to do so within the next five years.
Not surprisingly, respondents felt that home
health care is a critical part of the
continuum of care.
Eighty-eight percent of those polled felt
that home health care could be considered a
valuable resource for themselves, their
family members and future generations.
Home care plays a critical role in managing
the age tsunami
According to 2008 figures, approximately 7.6
million Americans receive care at home for a
variety of conditions.
Recent studies show that the average home
care patient has changed considerably during
the past few years, with an increase in
patients requiring major rehabilitation
needs. In fact, a 2007 report from the
Centers for Disease Control showed that 80
percent of older adults had at least one
chronic condition and two-thirds of all
health care costs are spent on chronic
disease management. With the graying of the
American population – and the clear
preference for care at home – the demand for
home care and hospice is only expected to
grow.
"As the population ages, home health and
hospice care is going to become increasingly
important as an alternative to hospital or
nursing home care. And it's a service that
Americans clearly want," said Amedisys Chief
Executive Officer William
Borne.
"Over the next ten years, home health care
has the potential to save $31
billion dollars in
Medicare costs. As we progress into the role
of chronic care management, the home health
and hospice industry has an important role
to play in the future of health care."
Other survey findings:
Currently, 25 percent of those polled
provide some type of financial support to an
elderly family member, and 38 percent
anticipate having to do so within the next
five years.
Regionally, those in the South (43 percent),
the West (44 percent), and Northeast (38
percent) are more likely than those in the
Midwest (26 percent) to provide financial
support within the next five years.
Half (49 percent) of Americans would be
angry and an additional one-third (33
percent) would be disappointed if home
health care was not an available care option
to them.
The Harris Poll National Quorum® was
conducted by telephone within the
United States between
August 4 -8,
2010 among 1,006 adults (aged 18 and over).
Figures for age, sex, race/ethnicity,
education, region, number of adults in the
household, and number of phone lines in the
household were weighted where necessary to
bring them into line with their actual
proportions in the population.
About Amedisys:
Amedisys, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMED) is the
nation's leading health care company focused
on bringing home the continuum of care. Each
day Amedisys delivers personalized health
care services to more than 35,000 individual
patients and their families, in the comfort
of patients' homes.
Amedisys has two divisions, home health care
and hospice. The Company's state-of-the-art
advanced chronic care management programs
and leading-edge technology enables it to
deliver quality care based upon the latest
evidence-based best practices. Amedisys is a
recognized innovator, being the first in the
industry to equip its clinicians with
point-of-care laptop technology and
referring physicians with an internet portal
that enables real-time coordination of
patient care seamlessly.
Amedisys
also has the industry's first-ever
nationwide Care Transitions program.
Amedisys Care Transitions is designed to
reduce unnecessary hospital readmissions
through patient and caregiver health
coaching and care coordination, which starts
in the hospital and continues throughout
completion of the patient's home health plan
of care. For more information about the
Company, please visit: www.amedisys.com.
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is one of the world's
leading custom market research firms,
leveraging research, technology, and
business acumen to transform relevant
insight into actionable foresight.
Known
widely for the Harris Poll and for
pioneering innovative research
methodologies, Harris offers expertise in a
wide range of industries including
healthcare, technology, public affairs,
energy, telecommunications, financial
services, insurance, media, retail,
restaurant, and consumer package goods.
Serving clients in over 215 countries and
territories through our North American,
European, and Asian offices and a network of
independent market research firms, Harris
specializes in delivering research solutions
that help us – and our clients – stay ahead
of what's next. For more information, please
visit www.harrisinteractive.com.