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General Health : Other News Last Updated: Jun 30, 2008 - 11:14:37 AM


Health care reforms needed for baby boomers' geriatric care
By Ben Wasserman
Apr 14, 2008 - 5:30:32 PM

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MONDAY APRIL 14, 2008 (Foodconsumer.org) -- The annual health care cost in the United States has already exceeded $7200 per capita, but a report released April 14, 2008 by the Institute of Medicine says that the health care work force is too small and unprepared to deal with the needs o aging baby boomers.

 

The report titled "Retooling for an Aging America: Building the Health Care Workforce calls for high salaries ad financial incentives, more training for family members and other informal caregivers, and changes in care delivery are needed to avert the "impending" crisis.

 

The committee that wrote the report said Medicare, Medicaid and other health plans should pay higher rates to boost recruitment and retention of geriatric specialists and care aides.

 

The first of the nation's 78 million baby boomers will reach age 65 in 2011. The committee said the reforms need to be made by 2030 when all baby boomers will have turned 65 or older.

 

The report determines that work force shortage threatens quality of care; all providers should be competent in geriatric care, higher salaries, financial incentives are needed; family members, other information caregivers need training and Medicare hinders delivery of quality care.

"We face an impending crisis as the growing number of older patients, who are living longer with more complex health needs, increasingly outpaces the number of health care providers with the knowledge and skills to care for them capably," said committee chair John W. Rowe, professor of health policy and management, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York City.

 

"The sheer number of older patients in the coming years will require trying new models for delivering health care and the commitment of greater financial resources," he added. "If our aging family members and friends are to live as robustly as they can and in the best health possible, we must have a work force of adequate size and competency to take care of them."

 

The following is cited from a news release from the Institute of Medicine to give readers a good view of the four types of reforms the committee propsed to deal with.

 

Work Force Shortage Threatens Quality of Care

 

Several reports show an overall shortage of health care workers in all fields, but the situation is worse in geriatric care because it attracts fewer specialists than other disciplines and experiences high turnover rates among direct-care workers — nurse aides, home health aides, and personal care aides.  For example, there are just over 7,100 physicians certified in geriatrics in the United States today — one per every 2,500 older Americans.  Turnover among nurse aides averages 71 percent annually, and up to 90 percent of home health aides leave their jobs within the first two years.

 

Older adults as a group are healthier and live longer today than previous generations, the report notes.  Even so, individuals over 65 tend to have more complex conditions and health care needs than younger patients.  The average 75-year-old American has three chronic conditions, such as diabetes or hypertension, and uses four or more prescription medications, the committee found.  Dementia, osteoporosis, sensory impairment, and other age-related conditions present health care providers with challenges they do not often encounter when tending to younger patients.

 

All Providers Should Be Competent in Geriatric Care

 

Virtually all health care providers treat older patients to some extent during their careers — and likely will do so even more frequently given that one in five Americans will be 65 or older by 2030 — so they need a minimal level of competence in geriatric care, the committee concluded.  Health care workers should be required to demonstrate competence in basic geriatric care to maintain their licenses and certifications.  All health professional schools and health care training programs should expand coursework and training in the treatment of older individuals.

 

To deliver care more efficiently and alleviate the shortage of adequately trained workers, the report calls on the health care professions and regulators to consider expanding the roles and responsibilities of health care providers at various levels of training.  For example, if a certified nursing assistant is able to administer certain medications, a professional nurse would have more time to concentrate on more complex patient needs.  Additional research is needed on how to prepare health care workers to assume expanded roles, the committee noted.

 

Because insufficient training can leave direct-care workers unprepared for the demands of their jobs and lead to high turnover rates, the federally required minimum number of hours of training for direct-care workers should be raised from 75 to at least 120.  More training is required for dog groomers and manicurists than direct-care workers in many parts of the country, the report notes.

 

Higher Salaries, Financial Incentives Needed

 

While the number of older patients is rapidly increasing, the number of certified geriatric specialists is declining.  Medicare, Medicaid, and other health plans need to pay more for the services of geriatric specialists and direct-care workers to attract more health professionals to geriatric careers and to stanch turnover among care aides, many of whom earn wages below the poverty level.

 

Salaries of doctors, nurses, pharmacists, social workers, and others who specialize in geriatric care lag behind those of their counterparts in other fields.  A geriatrician earned $163,000 on average in 2005 compared with $175,000 for a general internist, despite the extra years of training required for a geriatric career. 

 

Physicians who choose dermatology can earn over $300,000 a year.  Registered nurses who work in nursing homes or other long-term care facilities earn less on average than their counterparts, despite working longer hours with more overtime.  Medicare's low reimbursement rate for primary care is the foremost reason that geriatric specialists earn lower salaries, given that so much of their income comes from the government program.  Medicare should increase its reimbursement rates for services delivered by geriatric specialists, the report urges.

 

Direct-care workers are more likely to lack health insurance and use food stamps than workers in other fields.  The median wage for direct-care workers in 2005 was $9.56 an hour.  To boost wages, states should allocate funds to be added to the Medicaid payments that cover the majority of services provided by direct-care workers, the committee stated.

 

Family Members, Other Informal Caregivers Need Training

 

The report calls for health care facilities, community organizations, and other public and private groups to offer training programs to help family members, friends, and other informal caregivers provide proper assistance to their loved ones and to alleviate the stress they may feel in coping with an older friend's or relative's needs.  Health professionals should regard patients and informal caregivers as an integral part of the health care team, the committee added.

 

Between 29 million and 52 million family members, friends, and others tend to aging parents or other older individuals.  More than 90 percent of older adults who receive care at home rely in part on informal caregivers and nearly 80 percent rely solely on family or friends.  However, little is done to ensure informal caregivers have the necessary knowledge and skills.

State attorneys general should recognize training programs for unpaid caregivers as a way that nonprofit hospitals could meet their requirement to provide benefits to their local communities in exchange for their tax-exempt status.  In addition, federal agencies should support the advancement of assistive technologies that can help older patients manage their conditions and handle the basic activities of daily life and also can help informal caregivers take care of their loved ones.

 

Medicare Hinders Delivery of Quality Care

Although a comprehensive examination of Medicare was not the focus of this study, the committee noted several ways that the program hinders the provision of quality care to older adults, including Medicare's low reimbursement rates, its focus on treating short-term health problems rather than managing chronic conditions or age-related syndromes, and its lack of coverage for preventive services or for health care providers' time spent collaborating with a patient's other providers.

 

Medicare and other public and private insurance plans need to remove disincentives that prevent health care providers from adopting new models of care delivery — such as interdisciplinary team care — that could improve patients' health and lower costs, the report says.  The committee acknowledged the complexities of making changes to Medicare and the financial crisis facing the program, which is predicted to run out of money by 2019.  It was beyond the committee's purview to recommend a detailed plan for how to re-engineer Medicare.





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