
Older Americans want Medicare to pay for long-term care
WASHINGTON – A growing number of Americans age 40 and older think Medicare should cover the costs of long-term care for older adults, according to a poll conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
That option is unlikely to gain much traction as President Donald Trump’s administration and Republicans in Congress look to cut the federal budget and repeal President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care law. Most older Americans mistakenly believe they can rely on Medicare already, the poll shows, while few have done much planning for their own long-term care.
Things to know from the AP-NORC poll of older adults:
MOST WANT MEDICARE TO PAY
More than half of older Americans —56 per cent — think the federal government should devote a great deal or a lot of effort to helping people with the costs of long-term care, and another 30 per cent think it should make a moderate effort to do so.
According to the new poll, 56 per cent of Americans age 40 and over think Medicare should have a major role in paying for ongoing living assistance, up from 39 per cent who said so in 2013. Majorities of both Democrats and Republicans now think Medicare should bear a large part of the burden.
The poll has other signs of growing support for government involvement in providing long-term care. Seventy per cent of older Americans say they favour a government-administered long-term care insurance program, up from 53 per cent who said so a year ago. Most also favour tax policies to encourage long-term care planning, including tax breaks to encourage saving for long-term care and the ability to use nontaxable accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs to pay for long-term care insurance premiums. Most also favour tax breaks for people who provide care to family members and employers who give paid family leave to workers.
But just 25 per cent would favour requiring individuals to purchase long-term care insurance, perhaps echoing opposition to the individual mandate to buy insurance that has long been the least popular part of the 2010 health care law.
The poll suggests many Americans have misconceptions about current government aid to pay for living assistance. Fifty-seven per cent plan to rely on Medicare quite a bit or completely for their own ongoing living assistance if and when they need it, even though Medicare does not cover most nursing care or home health aides. Just 25 per cent plan to rely on Medicaid. Medicaid is much more likely to pay for long-term care, but is only available to lower income and disabled individuals and families.
FEELING UNPREPARED
Two-thirds of Americans age 40 and up say they’ve done little or no planning for their own long-term care needs. In fact, the survey shows that if anything, older Americans feel less prepared for the costs of care than they have in recent years. Just 15 per cent say they’re very or extremely confident that they’ll have the financial resources they need to pay for any ongoing living assistance, down from 27 per cent who said so in 2013.
Just a third have set aside money to pay for nursing care or home health aides, less than half have talked to their families about their preferences for receiving long-term care and most have not created a living will or advance treatment directive.
They’re not just feeling personally unprepared. Two-thirds of older Americans think the country as a whole is not ready for the rapid growth of the older adult population over the coming decades.
RELYING ON FAMILY
Most of those with experience either providing or receiving care say that it was provided in the home, usually by a friend or family member rather than a paid health aide. And among those who think a friend or family member will need living assistance in the next five years, most anticipate being at least partially responsible for providing that care. But just as most have done little preparation for their own care needs, just 12 per cent feel very well prepared to provide long-term care, while another 56 per cent feel somewhat prepared.
Two-thirds of older Americans say they are confident in being able to rely on their own families for support as they age. But those with lower incomes are less likely than those with higher incomes to have quite a bit of confidence in help from family members, 59 per cent to 74 per cent.
Just 20 per cent of older Americans think family members should have a large responsibility to help their older relatives pay for long-term care.
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The survey was conducted March 2-29 by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, with funding from the SCAN Foundation.
It involved interviews in English and Spanish with 1,341 people aged 40 and older nationwide who are members of NORC’s probability-based AmeriSpeak panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. Results from the full survey have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.2 percentage points.
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Online:
AP-NORC long term care polls: http://www.longtermcarepoll.org/
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