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House Bill likely to include important long-term care program
CLASS ACT likely to be part of House Legislative Bill on Health Care Reform:
A very important health care reform development is reported by the Associated Press, regarding senior citizens and the disabled: A new long-term care program for insurance which targets helping seniors and the disabled avoid sky-high costs of nursing homes and care facilities as well as being forced to reside in them.
The CLASS Act, or Community Living Assistance and Support Act will enable those who and are entitled to home care to be able to have access to it.
It has been called "an attractive option" due also to the fact that it has been engineered in a cost-efficient manner:
House health care legislation expected within days is likely to include a new long-term care insurance program to help seniors and disabled people stay out of nursing homes, senior Democrats say.The voluntary program would begin to close a gap in the social safety net overlooked in the broader health care debate, but it must overcome objections from insurance companies that sell long-term care coverage and from fiscal conservatives.
"I'm pretty confident that it will be in there," Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., a leading sponsor, said of the provision.
More than 10 million people currently need long-term care services, a number that's only expected to grow as the baby boom generation ages. But most families whose elders can no longer care for themselves have to scrape to find a solution.
The cost of nursing homes averages $70,000 a year, and a home care attendant runs about $29 an hour. Medicare only covers temporary nursing home stays. Middle-class households have to go through their savings before an elder can qualify for nursing home coverage through Medicaid.
The new proposal is called the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act, or CLASS Act, and passing it was a top priority for the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. The Obama administration also has said it should be part of health care overhaul legislation.
In return for modest monthly premiums while they are working, people would receive a cash benefit of at least $50 a day if they become disabled. The money could be used to pay a home care attendant, purchase equipment and supplies, make home improvements such as adding bathroom railings, or defray the costs of nursing home care.
The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the program — financed by premiums_ would be fiscally solvent over a 75-year period. That calculation assumes an initial monthly premium of $123 and a $75 daily benefit. People would have to pay premiums for five years before they could qualify for benefits. Premiums and benefits would be adjusted annually for inflation.
According to the budget office, the program would take in more money than it pays out over its first 10 years, reducing the federal budget deficit on paper by about $73 billion. That makes it an attractive option for lawmakers trying to shoehorn a major expansion of health insurance coverage into the 10-year, $900 billion limit set by President Barack Obama.


Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 09:57 on October 27th, 2009
This is a great addition to health care reform, and can provide security for the increasing elder population in the future.
Thank you smk for posting this landmark proposal!
at 10:03 on October 27th, 2009
Yes, I agree it is important, and you are most welcome! ;)
at 11:02 on October 27th, 2009
Preventing Alzheimers Disease would be a great advancement, but because the cause is presently unknown, medications to slow the progress are in the fore front.
One hundred years from now genetic markers used to identify Alzheimers could be altered in utero and serve as prevention. Also, environmental factors that contribute to the onset might have been eliminated. But there is also the possibility that the environment gets worse and more cases of the disease occurr.
at 13:08 on October 27th, 2009
Roy,
Natural suppliments, if not toxic, are what we can do now to offset some of the possible environmental causes of Alzheimers, like heavy metals and toxins in water, ground and the air.
I would not discount medical research into medications and procedures to intercept the disease or treat it once diagnosed.
I agree, we have a responsibility for our own bodies and what we choose to put it them. I just wish natural substances were regulated better, so we could be more sure about the content and dosages. Unfortnately, as you probably know, they are not regulated and it's a gamble when we buy some of these suppliments.