5 ways to improve care for older patients
Last year marked the 50th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid. These two programs (including state funding) represent 37 cents of every dollar spent on health care in the United States. There are more than 54 million Medicare beneficiaries and 64 million Americans on Medicaid.
As one of the defining moments of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, much has changed with the nation and with Medicare since President Harry Truman was given card No. 1. Of all the tweaks and changes over the past half-century, three stand out.
The first occurred in 1972 with the expansion of Medicare to provide coverage to disabled Americans. The second transpired with the passage of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, which allowed Medicare beneficiaries the option of receiving benefits through capitated health insurance Part C plans (later known as Medicare Advantage plans). The third occurred in 2003 with the signing of the landmark Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act, which provides a prescription drug benefit for seniors and people living with disabilities.
Five ways to better care
All three of these revisions were designed to respond to public need. Now, with Medicare entering its second half-century and 10,000 baby boomers turning 65 every day, it is time to ask what is needed when it comes to caring for our nation’s seniors. Here are five places to start:
First, we need to acknowledge that for too long, society has conveniently grouped “older Americans” into one standardized bucket. Under closer inspection, we find that the bucket has leaks. As healthy baby boomers start collecting Medicare, it is time to accept that all seniors are not alike. Nobody would argue that the lifestyle habits and health care needs of a 25-year-old are far different from those of a 50-year-old. Yet, our society has failed to adequately recognize the same 25-year difference between a 65-year-old and a 90-year-old. It’s time we develop better programs that speak to what seniors at various stages in the life cycle want and need.
Second, we need a better way to care for low-income, chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries who, in overwhelming numbers, want to remain in the comfort of their own homes. This means the creation, support and funding of a special-needs plan that targets home- and community-based services for low-income Medicare beneficiaries who need assistance with basic activities of daily living.
Enabling these seniors to remain in the community by providing them the support they need — and working through Medicare Advantage plans, which already have a demonstrated competency — will significantly improve the quality of life for these seniors and their families while simultaneously delivering savings to both the state and federal governments.
Third, we need to confront a caregiver crisis in America: A large percentage of today’s home caregivers are seniors themselves. Spending days and nights caring for a loved one can take a heavy physical and mental toll on those delivering the care. In many cases, that toll is so great that the caregiver’s own health is compromised. The result is a household of two ailing adults not only challenged by their physical illnesses, but suddenly in need of assistance with normal daily activities.
This caregiver crisis requires an incentivized system that supports people who take on this very important role. Among the ideas being suggested are broadening tax deductions or tax credits for caregivers’ expenses and expanding family- and medical-leave benefits for full-time workers. These suggestions have merit, as do many others.
Fourth, we need to focus senior care on the right care in the right setting at the right time. A study by the UCLA School of Nursing found that seniors often enter the emergency department simply because of incomplete or misunderstood information. That failure of communication often continues during the emergency department visit and frequently results in numerous costly and unnecessary invasive examinations, which yield vague findings that had little to do with the original problem.
For those seniors who need hospitalization, we need to take a new look at transition planning: What happens to seniors upon discharge? What are we doing to really understand not only our patients’ physical conditions, but also every detail about their prior level of functioning and living arrangements awaiting them at home? How do we ensure that seniors will take (and can afford) the prescribed medication? How will they get to their doctors’ offices for follow-up care?
Fifth, let’s all agree with unquestioned certainty that coordinated care works. Fee-for-service medicine is often fragmented, redundant and wasteful while incentivizing doctors and hospitals to maximize services. We must shift to a model that rewards organizations and providers who embrace coordinated care and high-quality performance. Such a model not only reduces costs, but is the most balanced, ethical and humane way to care for patients.
With many older adults living longer, senior patients often have six or more chronic conditions and routinely take more than a dozen medications. The complex interactions between these conditions and medications require programs for health, disease and medication management. That’s where care coordination is most effective. Seniors enrolled in managed care experience fewer hospital admissions and readmissions, fewer ED visits, and lower overall medical costs. Medicare Advantage plans help to ensure the appropriate use of services, improve the coordination of care with different providers and improve clinical outcomes every step of the way.
Today, about 11 percent of our country’s population is 65 or older and, in just two decades, one in every five Americans will be elderly. Many of the facts that we have known to be true need to be re-examined through fresh lenses. Only then can we appropriately treat and maintain the health of this growing population in ways that make us, as a nation, proud.
Chris Wing (CWing@scanhealthplan.com) is CEO of SCAN Health Plan in Long Beach, Calif.