J
Aging Soc Policy 1997;9(3):1-20
The impact by race of changing long-term care policy.
Wallace SP, Levy-Storms L, Andersen RM, Kington RS.
Department of Community Health Sciences, UCLA School of Public Health
90095-1772, USA.
Long-term care policy has evolved with little attention to racial differences
in the need for and use of services. Using 1987 National Medical Expenditure
Survey data on nursing home care, formal in-home personal care, and informal-only
help, a model was created to show how different races would use each type
of care if: (1) a universal home-care benefit was established, (2) existing
Medicaid home-care benefits were ended, or (3) the income level for Medicaid
eligibility was substantially reduced. Expanded community care benefits
would primarily serve severely disabled older whites. Reductions in long-term
care benefits or eligibility would disproportionately impede access to
long-term care for severely disabled older African-Americans. These differences
indicate that race must be taken into account in long-term care policy
initiatives.
PMID: 10186884 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]