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November 2007 issue
The Case For Long-Term Care Financing--
AAHSA (and others) Continue The Debate And Suggest Changes
More than half of U.S. residents needing long-term care either pay for it
themselves or depend on help from family members. Private long-term care
insurance remains prohibitively expensive. Meanwhile, the elderly population
is about to explode. AAHSA and others have actually come up with some good
ideas to solve the problem.
...
Expanding
Through Home Healthcare--
Masonic Health Systems of Massachusetts: Right Place, Right Time
Masonic Health Systems of Massachusetts is in the enviable position of being
both cash rich and land rich. Concerted strategic planning resulted in a
mission update, a corporate reorganization, and the acceptance of the
concept of debt (a novel idea for this group) before moving forward with
expansion plans.
...
Q&A With Stephen Infranco
The director of public finance in
the not-for-profit health care group of Standard & Poor’s talks about market
stability and factors that affect credit ratings.
...
Recent Not-For-Profit Sales &
Recent Refinancings
We detail some deals that closed in
the last few weeks.
....
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Companies Mentioned in this issue:
November 2007
A
AAHSA p1
Anna Dupree Apartments p3
B
Bethany Lutheran Village p3
Beulah Land Christian Home p3
Blue Cross/Blue Shield p4
C
Canterbury Court p3
E
Episcopal Retirement Homes p3
Extendicare Health Services p3
F
Franklin United Methodist Community p3
G
Graceworks Lutheran Services p3
Grand Lodge of Masons of Massachusetts p1
H
Harrington Home Care & Hospice p7
L
Lancaster Pollard p3
Leadership Council of Aging Organizations p5
Lutheran Community p3
M
Managed Home Care p7
Mariners Home Care p6
Masonic Health System of Massachusetts p6
Masonic Health System of Massachusetts (MHS) p6
P
Professional Home Care of Western Massachusetts p6
R
Retirement Living Services p6
S
Sovereign Bank p7
St. John’s Communities p3
Standard & Poor’s p2
Summerfield Plaza Apartments p3
Sunrise Care Center p3
Systems Unlimited p3
T
Telford Healthcare Center p3
V
Village on the Isle p3
W
Westchester Villages p3
Z
Ziegler p3
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The Case For Long-Term Care
Financing--
AAHSA (and others) Continue The Debate And Suggest Changes
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In today’s world, long-term care financing depends almost exclusively on
two sources: (1) individual out-of-pocket costs and donated services from
family members, the largest private source (about 52%); and (2) Medicaid,
the largest public source.
“Medicaid is a wonderful safety net,” says Barbara Manard, vice president
of AAHSA, “but it’s not an insurance plan. People accepting
Medicaid must spend down all their assets and give up all their income
except for about $30 a month. Certainly, no one would choose an insurance
plan with a co-pay that amounts to everything you’ve got.”
While private long-term care insurance has gotten remarkably better in the
last 20-30 years, it’s still a niche product. “Only about 8% of American
adults have private long-term care insurance,” she says, “and those
policies cover less than 10% of long-term care costs. So it’s a very
limited penetration.” The result is that most ordinary Americans don’t
adequately plan for their future.
Issues and concerns
Long-term care financing has been well studied by a number of
organizations, including AAHSA, and several issues have been identified.
The major concern is the cost of private long-term care insurance relative
to the average income. The premiums are huge: $1,000 per year, on average,
for each benefit year, according to Manard. To cover a five-year benefit
period, the average premium is $5,000 per year. That’s simply out of reach
for most Americans.
Premiums are cheaper for young people, but 20-year-olds don’t even think
about long-term care — even though it’s possible to become disabled at a
young age. “The highest risk begins at age 80,” she adds, “so a
40-year-old considering the insurance would be looking at getting benefits
30 or 40 years out — on average.”
Additionally, people are very concerned about service obsolescence. If you
buy a benefit package today, will it be obsolete when services are needed
30 years from now? New technologies, different types of housing and care,
and innovative ways of packaging and purchasing services are likely to
affect long-term care in the coming decades. People are also concerned
about the stability of the insurance company selling the benefits package.
Will the company that sold the product be around in 40 years?
Private/public solution
The need for a solution is becoming increasingly urgent as the elderly
population grows and people demand more and different choices about where
and how they spend their later years. While an insurance model spreads the
risk more equitably, the private market has not been able to meet the
need. “And we can’t rely on a welfare program that was never intended to
cover long-term care,” adds Manard. “Also, the number of elderly people
relative to those of working age is dramatically shifting.” Right now, the
ratio is 3.3 workers for every retired person. When today’s youngsters
retire, the ratio will be about 2.1 workers per retiree, so this is
certainly a national challenge.
AAHSA convened a study group of CEOs and CFOs from the provider community,
along with representatives of the legal and business community, to look at
the facts. According to the group’s July 2006 report, “Financing Long-Term
Care, A Framework for America” (which can be downloaded on www.aahsa.org),
nearly 10 million Americans (40% under age 65) were in need of long-term
care assistance in 2000 (the most recent data available) and the needs of
many of those individuals were unmet due to the high cost of care. The
group concluded that the best solution is to develop a public system as
the foundation of long-term care financing.
That doesn’t mean that the government would run the program. Medicare is a
national insurance plan, but the services are all delivered by the private
sector. “Actually,” says Manard, “Medicare’s insurance plan is executed by
contracts with private insurers. Blue Cross/Blue Shield, for example,
serves as a fiscal intermediary for the actual running of the plans.” So
Medicare is a kind of public/private model.
The Germans created a long-term care financing system in 1995 that is
proving successful. Based on the old guild system, premiums are not paid
into the state treasury but, instead, are paid to a private,
not-for-profit entity that is very regulated and has public
responsibilities.
“That’s what AAHSA envisions for the United States,” says Manard, “a
foundation that would be the repository for the premiums paid for national
long-term care insurance.” The foundation would be outside the government
but chartered by the public to invest and manage the funds responsibly. It
would probably contract with an entity such as Blue Cross/Blue Shield to
receive monies and pay claims.
“We’ll end up with a public/private mix,” Manard adds, “but the question
is: What’s the proper balance?”
Everyone in...and cash benefits
The goal, then, is to create a product that has broad participation and
the lowest possible cost. The only way to get the price of an insurance
product such as this down is to have near universal coverage and extremely
low overhead. For a private-sector insurance company, the administrative
costs required to sell policies on an individual basis and the need to
return something to company shareholders adds about 25% to the cost,
according to Manard.
The AAHSA concept is to be as inclusive as possible. “We envision a
disability insurance model that would kick in when needed — whether that
person is 75 years old or 23 years old,” she says. “On the day the program
is implemented nationally, to the extent possible, every adult over age 21
would be enrolled, whether they are young and just starting out, age 40
and working on Wall Street, or 82 and living in a nursing home. That is
our ideal.”
Once the plan is underway, for example, people would get a notice on their
21st birthday, similar to what 65-year-olds receive for Medicare, that
would advise them that they’re now enrolled in the national long-term care
insurance plan. The notice would explain the required premium — just a few
dollars per month, but enough to produce an actuarially sound program
without tapping tax revenues — and any program options. If it were
positioned as an opt-out or limited opt-out system, the notice would also
describe the conditions or categories whereby the person could opt out.
“Virtually all of America’s social insurance programs — and also those in
Europe — are a complicated mandatory/voluntary combination,” Manard says.
“Undoubtedly, whatever we do for long-term care will be the same.”
The plan would include appropriate help for people with insufficient
income, and their contributions might come from Medicaid or another
source. Right now, for example, part of the Medicare Part B premiums for
low-income people are paid through Medicaid or from general revenues for
the poor. On the other hand, having almost universal coverage would keep
the costs low enough, in fact, to mitigate future pressure on Medicaid.
In terms of the benefits, AAHSA’s study group concluded that cash should
be one (if not the only) benefit in order to provide consumers with the
optimal flexibility to address their needs for long-term care. The cash
might go directly to the beneficiary, to a fiscal intermediary, or as a
voucher that can be used to purchase services.
Action needed
“It’s a shame that 47 million or so Americans don’t have regular health
insurance,” Manard says, “but 250 million Americans don’t have long-term
care insurance. We’ve been talking about how to finance long-term care for
30 years. Periodically we get closer to consensus, and then we fall back.
Our current national policy has encouraged people to buy private long-term
care insurance, but I think people are now beginning to recognize the
limits of that approach. So the hope is – and I see glimmers of it – that
we are moving toward a national understanding that long-term care
financing is a problem and that we’re running out of time to do something
about it.”
The most recent development is a nine-point plan [see box, right] issued
by the Leadership Council of Aging Organizations (LCAO), that is in
complete sync with where AAHSA feels the country needs to go.
Manard suggests that people visit www.thelongtermcaresolution.org to find
information on how to participate in AAHSA’s national campaign. “Something
important that all providers can do locally,” she adds, “is to educate the
people in their communities about the issues involved in long-term care
and our growing need for a solution. Hold a forum, for example. An
organization with this mission must be part of the solution. We’re all in
this together. And what we’re seeing, particularly with the LCAO
collaboration, is that the groups that serve seniors and people with
disabilities, along with consumer and government groups, are now working
together to come up with a solution for financing long-term care in this
country.”
A detailed report on this topic, prepared for AAHSA, by The Moran Company,
will be available in December on www.thelongtermcaresolution.org.
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