“High-Cost Dual Eligibles’ Service Use Demonstrates The Need For Supportive And Palliative Models Of Care”

“High-Cost Dual Eligibles’ Service Use Demonstrates The Need For Supportive And Palliative Models Of Care,” by Julie P. W. Bynum,  Andrea Austin, Donald Carmichael, and Ellen Meara, Health Affairs (gated)

“Abstract: Health care spending is generally highest among people who need both complex medical care and long-term services and supports, such as adults dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. Understanding how different types of complex patients use services over time can inform policies that target this population. High combined Medicare and Medicaid spending are found in two distinct groups of high-cost dual eligibles: older beneficiaries who are nearing the end of life, and younger beneficiaries with sustained need for functional supports. However, both groups have high hospitalization costs. Among high-cost dual eligibles living in the community, those who are older spend less on home and community-based services than those who are younger. Greater use of such services might provide stable support in the last year or two of life, when illness and functional decline accelerate. Tailored approaches to each population’s distinct needs could yield care of increased value to patients and their families, with the potential to lower costs if patients’ needs can be met with fewer stays in short-term inpatient facilities.”

LTC Comment (from Stephen A. Moses, President, Center for Long-Term Care Reform):

As we point out in the Center’s new report “How to Fix Long-Term Care Financing,” dual eligibles consume a disproportionate share of Medicaid expenditures. But simply focusing on giving them more and better care misses a valuable opportunity, i.e., to prevent people from becoming duals in the first place. That’s what our report shows how to do. Our recommendations save money and improve care, for private payers and Medicaid dependents alike.

High-Cost Dual Eligibles’ Service Use Demonstrates The Need For Supportive And Palliative Models Of Care,”

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