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At-home elder care touted
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Secondly, nursing homes/transitional care/short-term stays are essential. It costs the state a lot less to give services (i.e. therapy, I.V.'s, wound care, etc) in a nursing/rehab center than in an acute hospital, about 1/3 less. So you can't do away with "nursing homes" but you can address the long term care patient that can be cared for at home. This dialog is good.
1. Some houses are not built so that someone with limited mobility can get around. We can start now in our building permit process by requiring things like wider doors fo the home will be suitable for such use.
2. I do not have any family and it is difficult to find someone to provide care, even if you have a downstairs apartment for them. The prices that I have been quoted are closer to $50,000 a year (more than I ever made) than to those in the article.
3. In talking to potiential caregivers here they make it clear, "I don't do windows" ... and other such "demands" that get you right back in to the "spend down" and apply for assistance.
Mine is the voice of 2007 EXPERIENCE in Utah, I hope that as the aging problems are considered, that some of these items are included in the analysis and solutions.
Personally I think we have major problems for aging and it is not limited to the cost of long-term care facilities.OK for stay-at-home, BUT.
There are programs available through the county aging services to help low income elders stay at home. Like the previous poster mentioned, sometimes the problem is the children don't want to see "their" inheritance go towards mom/dads care and so they look for cheaper, but not necessarily better. Part of the problem is the entitlement mentality, which says that the gov't is responsible for taking care of this. We need to be more responsible in our own planning and understand the costs associated with aging and plan better. There are terrible nursing homes out there and there are some pretty good ones. There are bad home care agencies and good ones. You have to look.