“Majority of older adults with probable dementia are likely unaware they have it, study suggests”

“Majority of older adults with probable dementia are likely unaware they have it, study suggests,” ScienceDaily “An analysis of information gathered for an ongoing and federally sponsored study of aging and disability adds to evidence that a substantial majority of older adults with probable dementia in the United States have never been professionally diagnosed or are unaware they have been.” LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, Administrative Coordinator, Center for Long-Term Care Reform): Now, that is depressing. Majority of older adults with probable dementia are likely unaware they have it, study suggests #dementia #goldencareagent
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“A Growing Number of People Are Navigating Retirement Alone. This Woman Is Spearheading a Movement to Change That”

“A Growing Number of People Are Navigating Retirement Alone. This Woman Is Spearheading a Movement to Change That,” by Elizabeth O’Brien, Money “Carol Marak helped her aging parents for a total of six years, frequently driving the 125 miles between her home in Dallas and theirs in West, Texas, to shop, clean, cook and do other tasks for them. ‘I realized there are so many demands in giving care to an older person,’ says Marak, now 67. ‘I don’t have family to do that for me.’ So in February 2016, she started the Elder Orphans Facebook group, which has since
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“CDC: 14% of those 75+ have early symptom of Alzheimer’s”

“CDC: 14% of those 75+ have early symptom of Alzheimer’s,” by Lois A. Bowers, McKnight’s Senior Living Fourteen percent of adults aged 75 or more years have subjective cognitive decline [SCD], one of the earliest noticeable symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. … Additionally, the CDC found that 10% of those aged 65 to 74, 11% of those aged 55 to 64, and 10% of those aged 45 to 54 had SCD.” LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, President, Center for Long-Term Care Reform): I’m dubious. Seems like a higher
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“Baby boomers bode well for CCRCs”

“Baby boomers bode well for CCRCs,” by Lois A. Bowers, McKnight’s Senior Living “Continuing care retirement communities are expected to hold much appeal to baby boomers, and the good news is, the first wave of boomers will be entering the target age range for such communities within the next five years, notes a new “Market Insight” report from CBRE. … The oldest baby boomers are turning 72 this year, and CCRC residents typically are in their late 70s to mid-80s at move-in, according to CBRE.” LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, President, Center for Long-Term Care Reform): And so it
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“Are adult foster homes a good long-term care option?”

“Are adult foster homes a good long-term care option?,” by Liz Seegert, PBS “Call them adult foster homes, board and care homes, residential homes, group or adult care homes. Regardless of the moniker, these small-setting, family-like environments blend neatly into local communities, and are a viable housing option for older adults who may need help with daily living basics, but not the clinical care or amenities of traditional assisted living facilities and nursing homes. … A mix of private pay and Medicaid — under what’s known as a home and community care waiver — pays for care in these homes.
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“3 ways to help employees understand the value of their HSAs”

“3 ways to help employees understand the value of their HSAs,” by Timothy Hayden, Employee Benefit News “High-deductible health plans are on the rise as a growing number of employers turn to consumer-directed health plans to try to curb costs — the portion of employees enrolled in HDHPs rose from 26.3% in 2011 to 39.3% in 2016, according to the latest statistics from the National Center for Health Statistics. Employers that have gone the HDHP route typically offer a qualified plan that includes a health savings account to help pay for qualifying medical expenses tax-free. But there’s a great chance
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“New ways to estimate and fund long-term care costs”

“New ways to estimate and fund long-term care costs,” by Mary Beth Franklin, InvestmentNews “Nothing strikes fear in the heart of retirees more than the three letters: LTC. The potentially crushing costs of long-term care in a nursing home, memory care unit or even at home — most of which are not covered by Medicare — can easily destroy a retirement plan. But the unpredictability of who will require costly care and the diminished availability of traditional long-term care insurance policies create a challenge for even the savviest financial advisers.” LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, President, Center for Long-Term
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“New Study Links MA Plans to Lower Levels of Hospital Visits”

“New Study Links MA Plans to Lower Levels of Hospital Visits,” by Patrick Connole, Provider “At a time a growing number of long term and post-acute care providers are either entering or considering entering the Medicare Advantage (MA) market on the risk side, a new report by consultants Avalere Health said their research shows MA beneficiaries spent less time seeking hospital care for certain conditions. The report said MA plan holders with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes experienced significantly fewer inpatient stays and emergency room visits relative to those in traditional fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare.” LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, President,
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“The ‘Big Bang’ of Alzheimer’s: Scientists ID genesis of disease”

“The ‘Big Bang’ of Alzheimer’s: Scientists ID genesis of disease,” ScienceDaily “Scientists have discovered a ‘Big Bang’ of Alzheimer’s disease — the precise point at which a healthy protein becomes toxic but has not yet formed deadly tangles in the brain. A study from UT Southwestern’s O’Donnell Brain Institute provides novel insight into the shape-shifting nature of a tau molecule just before it begins sticking to itself to form larger aggregates. The revelation offers a new strategy to detect the devastating disease before it takes hold and has spawned an effort to develop treatments that stabilize tau proteins before they
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.

“With little saved, employers and aging employees share same fear: Can retirement happen?”)

“With little saved, employers and aging employees share same fear: Can retirement happen?,” by Yasemin Sim Esmen, Employee Benefit Adviser “Less than two-thirds of workers are confident that they will retire at age 65, and nearly a third of those surveyed plan to continue working in retirement, according to a Transamerica Center for Retirement survey. Sixty-two percent of baby boomers, the group closest to retirement, believe they can comfortably retire. Confidence is lowest among Generation X, who have been hit during the Great Recession and are starting to turn 50, which leaves them a limited amount of time to save.
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Categories: Clippings, Industry News, and Long-Term Care.