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Our Mission:

The Center for LTC Reform is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality long-term care for all Americans by promoting public policy that targets scarce public resources to the neediest, while encouraging people who are young, healthy and affluent enough, to take responsibility for themselves.   We do this through...


Read the Center's two latest reports published by the Paragon Health Institute:
Long-Term Care: The Problem and Long-Term Care: The Solution

Watch Paragon’s web event: Long-Term Care: The Problem and The Solution

VIDEO -- Examining Abuses of Medicaid Eligibility Rules -- Includes Congressional testimony from Steve Moses (at 18min:45sec)
NEED A SPEAKER? Have Steve Moses speak at your next event.
"Clash of the Titans: Moses vs Gordon on Medicaid and other Dark Matter"
at the 12th Annual ILTCI Conference. Listen.
How Can You Work with the Center for LTC Reform?
Take our virtual tour of the Center's website.  This video webinar explains how to access and navigate the valuable content on the CLTCR website.
Read Medicaid Planning Quotes / Read "LTC Predictions" / Read Testimonials

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Not a CLTCR member?  Get a free trial membership for your sneak peak at our LTC Almanac and Members-Only Zone. 
Contact us at 206-283-7036 or info@centerltc.com

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Join the Center for Long-Te Care Reform.  Help us fight for rational LTC policy reform.  Receive our daily email publications.  Get a user name and password to our Members-Only Zone.  Only $150 per year.  Mail your check to Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc., 2212 Queen Anne Avenue North, #110, Seattle, Washington, 98109.  Contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com if you have questions.  Join the team!

 

 

 


READ STEVE'S BIO

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Updated Monday, April 20, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-012:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • What’s worse than Medicaid fraud?

  • Henry Paulson Says U.S. Should Prepare for a 'Vicious' Bond Crash

  • Alternative Contingency Policies for When the Social Security Trust Fund Is Exhausted

  • The Trump Administration’s Anti-Waste in Health Care Campaign

  • $5,400 a Month for Assisted Living Is the New Reality—How Families Are Making It Work

  • Report: Home health providers ordered to pay over $100M in restitution for fraud in 2025

  • America Built No System For Aging: The Largest Generation In History Just Started Turning 80 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, April 17, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: LTC INSURANCE FRAUD

LTC Comment: As health insurance fraud surges nationwide, we consider how it impacts LTC insurance in the private and public sectors after the ***news.***

*** LTC CLIPPINGS:  Did you catch these stories recently? Our LTC Clippings subscribers received them in real time including Steve Moses’s trenchant, often ironic, sometimes humorous, usually concise “LTC Comments.” To subscribe or for a free trial, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com. Examples below:

4/13/2026, “Report: With spend-down of assets, US long-term care system ‘effectively penalizes aging’,” by Kathleen Steele Gaivin, McKnights Senior Living

Quote: “Costs associated with the provision of long-term care in a system that requires lower- and middle-class older adults to spend down their assets to pay for home care or life in an assisted living community or skilled nursing facility perpetuates ‘cycles of wealth inequality,’ making it difficult for future generations to build financial security, according to a new study published by the Roosevelt Institute. … ‘This spend-down process interrupts the potential for intergenerational wealth building, after what is often a lifetime of work and saving by low-income and middle-class families, perpetuating cycles of wealth inequality,’ Forden said. ‘Meanwhile, these costs are increasingly captured by profit-driven corporations and private equity firms.’”

LTC Comment: Medicaid asset spend down is the most misunderstood concept in LTC financing jargon. It crushes the poor and lower middle class but gives the middle-class and affluent an off ramp. Unlike income spend down that requires spending for care, asset spend down can be done simply by using countable wealth to purchase exempt resources. I explained how that works and estimated how much it costs Medicaid (and taxpayers) in “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.” Blaming “profit-driven corporations” for the damage spend down does to those in need is just socialist claptrap. It’s the “progressive” political proclivity to give everything to everyone and print the money to pay for it that is the root of the problem. To make sense of what ails LTC, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers. To find ample private funds for LTC, check out “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.” For what not to do, see “Medi-Cal-amity: California’s Reckless Expansion of Medicaid Long-Term Care to the Affluent.” Much more on long-term care here. ***

 


4/16/2026
, “Henry Paulson Says U.S. Should Prepare for a 'Vicious' Bond Crash,” by Christopher Amstey, Financial Advisor

Quote: “Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called on U.S. authorities to prepare a back-up plan in order to avert a potential collapse in demand for Treasuries — an event that he warned would have ‘vicious’ effects. … U.S. budget experts have for years warned of the potential for a ‘doom loop,’ where investors start demanding higher yields on Treasuries due to risks tied to the government’s swelling debt burden, which then causes an increase in the government’s interest payments — in turn widening the deficit. … ‘It’s going to take increased revenues, taxes, and dealing with expenses,’ he said. It would also mean overhauling Social Security and health care programs, he said. ‘You can raise the revenues without a big drag on growth, if you close preferences and loopholes in the tax code.’”

LTC Comment: Remember when Modern Monetary Theory told us the U.S. government could spend without restraint by printing money to fill funding gaps? Whoops! Turns out there’s a limit to that strategy. When you borrow so much that no one is willing to loan you more, you’re stuck. This reality is what will finally force America to confront problems like out-of-control entitlement spending. The good news is that we have plenty of realistic solutions to draw from to fix LTC.

 

LTC BULLET: LTC INSURANCE FRAUD

LTC Comment: LTC insurance fraud was a frequent topic at the recent Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance (ILTCI) conference in Orlando, Florida. We covered that conference and its fraud sessions in detail a couple weeks ago in LTC Bullet: ILTCI 2026 Virtual Visit.

In the meantime, your Center for Long-Term Care Reform has started digging deeper into LTC insurance fraud. We’re especially interested in measures LTCI carriers have taken to identify, mitigate, and prosecute fraud. We will conduct a literature search and interview some of the experts who presented at the ILTCI meeting. We also invite anyone with expertise on this topic to share your insights and suggestions by contacting smoses@centerltc.com.

Our special interest in this topic is to identify best fraud control practices developed by private LTCI carriers that may be transferable to ameliorate the much bigger problem in public programs, especially Medicaid and Medicare. For now, we’re scoping out the general subject of health care fraud. These are some of the issues, suggested by AI, that we plan to explore in a draft paper and op-eds.

Insurance Fraud Incidence
Finding precise, "hard" data for long-term care (LTC) fraud is challenging because it is often grouped into broader "healthcare fraud" or "improper payment" categories. However, recent industry reports and government snapshots provide these estimated figures for 2023–2025:

Private Sector LTC Insurance Fraud
In the private sector, fraud is often measured as a percentage of total claims paid.

  • Estimated Fraud Rate: Experts from firms like illumifin and the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud estimate that 5% to 10% of all LTC insurance claims involve some form of fraud, waste, or abuse.
  • Financial Impact: With the industry paying approximately $14.1 billion in benefits in 2023, the estimated annual loss to fraud is roughly $700 million to $1.4 billion.
  • Case Severity: For sentenced healthcare fraud cases in 2024, the median loss per case was approximately $2.5 million, with nearly 20% of cases involving losses over $9.5 million

Health Care Fraud
LTCi becoming more of a target for fraud
What Data Says About Health Care Fraud 

Public Sector (Medicare & Medicaid) LTC Fraud
The public sector primarily tracks "Improper Payment Rates." It is critical to note that while improper payments include fraud, they also encompass administrative errors like missing documentation. 
Medicare Program Integrity and Efforts to Root Out Improper Payments, Fraud, Waste and Abuse
Fiscal Year 2024 Improper Payments Fact Sheet

  • Medicaid (FY 2025 Estimates):
    • Improper Payment Rate6.12% ($37.39 billion), an increase from 5.09% in FY 2024.
    • Fraud Specifically: Of these improper payments, only a fraction is confirmed fraud. Most (over 77%) are attributed to insufficient documentation.
  • Medicare (FY 2025 Estimates):
    • Fee-for-Service (FFS)6.55% ($28.83 billion).
    • Medicare Advantage (Part C)6.09% ($23.67 billion), often due to lack of documentation for diagnoses.
  • Enforcement Outcomes (FY 2024): State Medicaid Fraud Control Units (MFCUs) reported 1,151 convictions and recovered $1.4 billion

5 Key Facts About Medicaid Program Integrity – Fraud, Waste, Abuse and Improper Payments
Fiscal Year 2025 Improper Payments Fact Sheet
Medicaid Fraud Control Units Annual Report: Fiscal Year 2024
Improper Payments and Fraud: How They Are Related but Different
Types of Corporate Fraud

Fraud Tolerance
There is evidence suggesting that a segment of the public, particularly younger generations, has developed a higher tolerance for certain types of non-violent fraud, such as insurance fraud and digital scams. While many still view these actions as illegal, studies indicate a growing trend of rationalizing or accepting "lower-level" fraud, often viewing it as a victimless crime against large, wealthy corporations rather than individuals. 

Survey Finds Younger Generations Have a Higher Tolerance For Insurance Fraud – What Insurers Should Know

Fraud Types Shared by Public and Private Insurers

  • "Phantom" care and billing: Submitting claims for services never provided, such as x-rays, drugs, or home care hours.

  •  Upcoding: Misrepresenting a patient's diagnosis or severity to bill for a higher rate of reimbursement.

  • Medical Identity Theft: Fraudsters visiting facilities to collect Medicare or Medicaid numbers under the guise of offering "free" services, later used for bogus billing.

  • Kickbacks: Financial incentives given to physicians or facilities to steer patients toward specific high-cost therapies or services.

  • These practices often involve predatory actors working on both the public and private sides.

Common Red Flags

  • Early Duration Claims: Claims filed soon after a policy is purchased.
  • Unusual Billing: Inconsistent, high, or rapidly increasing hours.
  • Pressure Tactics: Salespeople rushing decisions or pushing to handle all documentation.
  • Too-Good-To-Be-True: Policies promising to cover everything. 

Around 38.5% of companies surveyed reported provider misrepresentation of services as a significant risk. 

Critical Vulnerability: Cognitive Impairment 
A major finding in current research is that populations with diminished capacity are disproportionately targeted. Both private and public sectors are now prioritizing caregiver-specific audits and specialized training for claim examiners to detect when a patient is being manipulated into signing falsified logs or timesheets. Common LTC Fraud Schemes Targeting Vulnerable Seniors

Private Sector Lessons Transferable to the Public Sector
Private insurers have pioneered several strategies that are now considered best practices for public side enforcement: 6 Claims Best Practices for Life Insurance Fraud Prevention

The public sector can enhance its anti-fraud efforts by adopting the private sector’s focus on individual-level behavioral verification and formalized cross-payer data integration. While programs like Medicare and Medicaid excel at large-scale algorithmic detection, private insurers often utilize more "on-the-ground" investigative techniques that can identify sophisticated schemes where the billing data itself appears legitimate. 
Fraud Control in the Health Care Industry: Assessing the State of the Art

1. Shift from "Pay and Chase" to Real-Time Prevention
The public sector can adopt private-sector strategies to move from reactive recovery to proactive prevention:

  • Adopting "Pre-Payment" Edits: Private insurers use sophisticated "claim scrubbing" applications to flag anomalies before payment is issued. Implementing similar real-time root-cause analysis in public systems can reduce the need for expensive post-payment investigations.
  • Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) Optimization: Public programs can learn from private insurers' use of GPS and biometric data to ensure caregivers are physically present at the reported care location, a key defense against "phantom" billing. 

Public-Private Partnership to Prevent Health Care Fraud Announced by Health and Human Services
Best practices for employers to combat claims-related healthcare fraud
Long-Standing State-Based Efforts to Combat Fraud Against Medicaid Continue to Improve

2. Enhanced Behavioral and Field Investigations
Private insurers often identify fraud by looking beyond the billing codes to the actual lifestyle and behavior of the parties involved

  • Targeted Surveillance: Private sector "field investigations" frequently uncover fraud—such as patients performing activities they claim to be unable to do—that purely data-driven public audits might miss.
  • Caregiver-Specific Audits: Focusing research on the caregiver’s lifestyle, professional licensing, and historical litigation can uncover systemic fraud rings. 

Long-Standing State-Based Efforts to Combat Fraud Against Medicaid Continue to Improve

3. Formalized Information Sharing Networks
Public-private partnerships are the most direct way for the public sector to benefit from private-sector progress:

  • Healthcare Fraud Prevention Partnership (HFPP): This voluntary program allows federal and state agencies to share data with private plans to gain a "cross-payer" view. This helps identify "double billing" where a provider bills both a private LTC policy and Medicare for the same service on the same day.
  • Unified Fraud Hotspots: By sharing data on specific suspicious billing codes and geographic fraud "hotspots," the public sector can direct its high-intensity enforcement teams more effectively. 

About the Partnership
Public-Private Partnership to Fight Fraud Formed
Public-Private Partnership to Fight Fraud Formed
Public-Private Partnership to Prevent Health Care Fraud Announced by Health and Human Services

4. Improving Public Awareness and Reporting
The public sector can refine its "whistleblower" and awareness campaigns by studying what motivates individuals in the private sector to report fraud
The Public’s Self-Avoidance and Other-Reliance in the Reporting of Medical Insurance Fraud: A Cross-Sectional Survey in China

  • Incentivizing Reporting: Research shows a "free-rider" mentality often prevents people from reporting public insurance fraud. Strengthening whistleblower protections and creating stronger incentives—similar to those in private litigation—can improve the flow of actionable leads to Medicaid Fraud Control Units (MFCUs).

Long-Standing State-Based Efforts to Combat Fraud Against Medicaid Continue to Improve

  • Education on Specific Red Flags: Adopting private-sector training that teaches beneficiaries to look for "red flags" like pre-filled timesheets or inconsistent care plans can empower them as a front-line defense. 

Long-Term Care Fraud (NAIC)

Key Trend: Both sectors identify Personal Care Services (PCS) as the highest risk area. In Medicaid, PCS attendants and agencies accounted for the most fraud convictions (326 in FY 2025), a trend mirrored in private sector reports identifying home care as a "major industry challenge". 
Medicaid Fraud Control Units recover $700,000 in assisted living cases, with 300+ investigations still open

 

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Updated Monday, April 13, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-011:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Report: With spend-down of assets, US long-term care system ‘effectively penalizes aging’

  • How Long-Term Care Costs Drain the Middle Class and Deepen Intergenerational Wealth Inequality

  • Less than half of Americans are planning for their retirement healthcare needs, survey finds

  • Skilled nursing emerging among most attractive real estate sectors

  • Layin’ It on the Line: The long-term care crisis in Utah: Why national plans fail here and how to shield your assets (Part 2)

  • Future long term care expenditure trajectories across OECD countries

  • The Five Biggest Medicaid Planning Mistakes — and How to Avoid Them

  • Rising Long-Term Healthcare Costs Pose Growing Threat to Farm Family Legacies

  • Providers must educate prospects to cut gap between expectations, realities of senior living rates: report

  • Eight arrested in $50M hospice fraud scheme as oversight intensifies

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, April 6, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-010:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • CMS CRUSH initiative alone not sufficient to fight fraud, groups say

  • Federal Debt Management: Treasury Is Meeting Borrowing Needs but the Deteriorating Fiscal Outlook Poses Risks

  • Home care groups CRUSH plans for more anti-fraud requirements

  • What Happens When the Social Security Trust Fund Is Exhausted?

  • Who should pay for older adults’ care? Caregivers answer differently

  • Waste, Fraud, and Abuse in Government Health Care Programs is No Joke

  • We Are 63 With $5.7 Million. My Wife Wants to Buy Long-Term Care Insurance, but I Want to Self-Insure. Who Is Right?

  • New Medicare HCBS model, designed for California, targets ‘overlooked middle’

  • Top economist finds silver lining for skilled nursing amid nation’s uncertain outlook

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, April 3, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC Bullet: ILTCI 2026 Virtual Visit

LTC Comment: ILTCI ’26 was another successful industry convocation. This “virtual visit” to the conference is intended to give those who could not attend a sense of what it was like and to encourage them to consider attending in the future. It follows the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the Center for Long-Term Care Reform. We completed our 28th year on April 1, 2026. Check out the Center’s many state- and national-level policy studies here. Read dozens of published articles here. Speeches, here. Review hundreds of LTC Bullets, organized by topic and chronologically, here. This is how we announced our mission in “Center for Long-Term Care Financing Established; "LTC Bullets" Opening Salvo”: “The Center will advocate public policy that targets scarce public resources to the neediest, while encouraging people who are young, healthy and affluent enough, to take responsibility for themselves. We believe that private insurance and investment can guarantee quality long-term care for prosperous seniors and help to save the Medicaid long-term care program for the truly needy. The Center will offer a range of fee-for-service products to public and private clients including consulting, publishing, training and public speaking.” It’s been a great run and it will continue as long as we have your support and collegiality in our common mission to improve long-term care for all Americans. ***
 

LTC BULLET: ILTCI 2026 VIRTUAL VISIT

LTC Comment: The 2026 Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened March 8–11, 2026 in Orlando, FL at the Rosen Shingle Creek Resort. The meeting’s theme this year was "Dream… Design… Deliver: Reimagining the Future of LTC.” Conference chair, Gina Besz from “illumifin,” opened the proceedings. She told the 1000-plus attendees what to expect, thanked the organizers, presenters and sponsors, and disclosed (always a topic of great interest) the city hosting next year’s conference: Indianapolis, March 14-17, 2027. She also surprised us by sharing where the meeting will convene the following year: Houston, April 2-5, 2028.

Next came announcement of the ILTCI Recognition Award recipients for 2026. This award “honors the trailblazers, innovators, and lifelong contributors advancing long-term care insurance and shaping the future of aging in America.” Steve Serfass, Partner, Faegre Drinker Biddle and Reath, LLP, received the individual award. Two companies shared the organization award: Lincoln Financial and One America. Congratulations to these award recipients for their many years of dedication and hard work in our common mission to improve long-term care for all Americans.

Jeff Noel, a 30-year Disney Leadership veteran, sponsored by NGL, keynoted the conference. He's the author of “Mid-Life Celebration” and hosts the podcast “If Disney Ran Your Life.” Noel captivated the audience with stories and theories bearing on leadership excellence, employee engagement, customer service, brand loyalty, creativity and innovation. Always do “just a little more than what the customer expects.” Go the “extra inch” not just the last mile. Their standing ovation demonstrated the audience’s appreciation of his remarks.

The exhibit hall is a highlight of every ILTCI meeting. It is where attendees convene to eat, drink, visit exhibitors and network. I missed the opening exhibit hall reception Sunday night due to flight complications, but I attended the breakfast, lunch, and late-afternoon sessions on the remaining two days. To meet, greet, confer, pitch, negotiate and generally do business of any kind in the LTC insurance industry, there is nothing like the ILTCI conference with its exhibit hall and the ample opportunities to connect in the hallways as well. Be there next year in Indy if you can.

After Monday morning’s announcements and keynote address, the conference turned to breakout sessions. These included presentations on seven different subject tracks:

  • Sales, Marketing, & Distribution: Focused on consumer engagement, expanding into middle-income markets, and distribution trends.
  • Actuarial & Finance: Covered topics such as AI in actuarial work, asset-liability management, and in force management.
  • Management & Operations: Addressed operational excellence, technology adoption, and call center evolution.
  • Wellness & Aging in Place Solutions: Explored innovative services, technologies for aging in place, and AI/robotics in care.
  • Claims & Underwriting: Focused on accelerated underwriting, electronic health records, and fraud detection.
  • Legal, Compliance & Regulatory: Covered regulatory changes, compliance issues, and legal developments impacting LTC insurance.
  • [Track Name Varies - General/Future Trends]: Covered broader industry topics, such as the future of LTC and caregiver crises. 

It seems like themes run through the ILTCI conferences for years at a time. I noted the focus on wellness in LTC Bullet: Virtual Visit to ILTCI 2023. Emphasizing wellness and doing more for policyholders than simply processing and paying claims remains a strong conference theme. But it seemed to me that at the 2026 program fraud identification, control, and mitigation took a new and bigger role. That topic especially interests me as fraud is soaring right now in public programs like Medicaid and Medicare. So you’ll see in what follows that I covered several breakout sessions aimed at the topic of fraud.

It’s worth noting that another theme, prominent in earlier ILTCI meetings, has disappeared. That is the public policy context in which the LTC insurance industry operates. Medicaid is the predominant payer for LTC in the USA. It crowds out private LTC insurance by desensitizing the public to LTC risk and cost leaving private LTC insurance with a small residual of the market. Yet Medicaid was barely mentioned at the 2026 conference. Even state experiments with public LTC financing such as WA Cares in Washington State and the latest proposal for a national LTC financing program, WISH, were mostly ignored. Of course, I wasn’t in every session, so maybe there was public policy content I missed, but with no track dedicated to the subject as in the past, its importance has clearly declined.

First Breakout Monday, March 9, 2026, 10:45am
Track: Legal, Compliance & Regulatory
Title
: The Fraud Escape Room Experience: LTC Edition
Description: Step into the world of long-term care insurance fraud investigations—like you’ve never experienced before. This interactive session combines real-life case studies with an escape-room-inspired twist. Our expert panel will guide you through actual fraud investigations from across the country, highlighting the tactics and techniques used to uncover and stop bad actors. But beware: after each case, you’ll receive a cryptic clue left behind by a fictional mastermind who may be orchestrating these schemes. Are these cases truly unrelated, or is someone pulling the strings from the shadows? Work together to solve riddles, connect the dots, and uncover the truth before time runs out. Join us for a session that educates, entertains, and challenges your investigative instincts—because in this room, every detail matters.
Moderator:
Matt DeLong, illumifin
Presenters:
Tara Dickson, Cozen O'Conner
Adam Haque, John Hancock
Tom Kakos, illumifin
Matt Keeling, Unum
Comments: This program blew me away. I had no idea fraud was so rampant in private LTC insurance, nor did I know anything about the highly creative efforts carriers are employing to identify, prove, and control fraud that these speakers shared. They described three case studies, each of which was nearly beyond belief. They told of policy holders who claimed severe need, got approved, but were then shown to be fully capable of doing all the ADLs they claimed to be unable to manage. Arrogant and brazen, the fraudsters evaded being caught until they were shown to be out of compliance by clever methods described by these presenters. Such techniques included desktop investigation, searching social media, unmanned surveillance, tracking travel and many more.

Here’s just one of the anecdotes they shared. Married couple on claim since 2023. Both filed and approved for similar conditions. Tax qualified policies. Both had $380 per day home health unlimited lifetime. Both claimed they needed assistance with five out of six ADLs. Neither claimant had precipitating event. 12 hours a day 7 days a week for husband. 16 hours for wife. On claim same year. Documentation issues. Desktop investigation. Social media. Husband was sole owner of home care agency. Both reported not driving, using cane. Too consistent. Handwriting gave them away. The same individual did all the documentation. Extremely clever in how projected. Reviewers struck gold in social media, found something interesting. Extensive overseas trips while on claim, including Spain, Portugal, Puerto Rico, California. How could they do that while on claim? Are caregivers actually showing up? Got video taking trash out with no trouble, walking with no cane. Wife shopping loading, stuff in vehicle. All while claiming many hours of care. All activities while caregiver supposedly providing care. Did 15 days of surveillance. Never saw a single caregiver come. Interview. Time to talk to claimant. What did you do today, yesterday? Called and talked to husband. Insisted both need claims, can’t leave home without caregiver. Are caregivers present? Yes, but just stepped out to get lifesaving medications.

Showed him all documents, pressed further, eventually admitted he created all the documentation including the claims. Said took caregivers along on international trips. Should be records of this. Showed clips of him and wife moving independently. We’re always in pain, they said. Where are your caregivers? Biggest turn of investigation. Caregivers returned from errands. Did not see anyone from our surveillance. No photo IDs. Husband answered all their questions. Week later, called husband back. He admitted in Philippines. Who were those individuals claimed to be caregivers? Just locals from Philippines. Case outcomes. Both claims reviewed by medical staff. Claims closed. Fraud, waste and abuse reported to Dept. of Insurance. Settlement reached. Surrendered both policies and made some repayment.  

Second Breakout, Monday, March 9, 2026, 2pm
Track: Legal, Compliance, & Regulatory
Title: Inside the Jury Box: An LTCI Mock Voir Dire, How Everyday Consumers View LTC Insurance
Description: What do everyday consumers really think about long-term care insurance—and how might those views shape the outcome of a trial? In this interactive session, we’ll stage a mock voir dire (jury selection) to explore how potential jurors respond to key concepts like policy language, benefit triggers, and product design. Participants will observe and engage with the process as attorneys question mock jurors, uncover biases, and strategize selections. Beyond the courtroom drama, this session offers a rare opportunity to hear unfiltered consumer attitudes toward LTC insurers, coverage expectations, and claims disputes. Whether you're in legal, compliance, product, or risk, you'll walk away with a deeper understanding of how your decisions may be interpreted by a jury—and how to prepare for it.
Moderator:
Gina Fortin, Unum
Presenters:
Matt Kops, Blueprint Trial Consulting
Chris Petillo, Faegre Drinker
Michael Rafalko, Cozen O'Connor
Comments: Clever idea. Attorneys for the plaintiff and the defendant interviewed “jurors” playing various roles to represent different kinds of consumers. Jurors bring experiences, attitudes/values and personalities to court. A “jury consultant” commented on the process of selecting or rejecting jurors in the voir dire process of a trial. All 9 jurors interviewed by both attorneys based on a hypothetical complaint fact pattern. Each attorney eliminated three jurors based on brief 4-minute interviews leaving three of the nine empaneled. The session used audience polling. The idea was to tease out consumer attitudes about LTC insurance, but the jurors were all people in the business. So I’m not sure that objective was achieved. But the session definitely invited consideration of complex ideas and attitudes about the product.

Third Breakout, Monday, March 9, 2026, 3:45pm
Track: Wellness & Aging in Place Solutions
Title: Imagineering Aging with a Gen Z Advocate: Promising Models and Interrogational Collaboration
Description: In this fireside chat led by Gen Z advocate Arielle Galinsky, we'll explore bold ideas for aging-in-place, LTC policy reform, and the importance of multigenerational collaboration. Arielle brings her deep passion on all things aging & LTC as well as her commitment to advancing aging policy reform at the state and national levels. From her research and experience, she will lead insightful conversation on 1) why aging needs to be an intergenerational conversation, 2) what we can learn from international aging models and policies, 3) and what policymakers need to know to make this vision a reality. Get ready for an energizing conversation that brings a fresh, forward-thinking perspective on aging.
Speakers:
Cailyn Canty, Davies
Arielle Galinsky, The Legacy Project, Inc.
Comments:
This session was intended to bring to light the innovative perspectives of a Gen Z influencer. The principle speaker, Ms. Galinsky, was articulate and knowledgeable. Her views were grounded in personal experience. She became a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) to understand better the challenges of caregiving. Very thoughtful, but I discerned little unique perspective from the younger generation. She seemed to be saying what older generations are also saying with little new analysis. A promising wrap up to the conversation was promised. But it amounted to referencing states that have proposed new policy models like WA Cares. What is one thing we can all do? Support the WISH Act; advocate for it. This is not fresh thinking, only restating the current public policy thinking, such as it is in the LTC insurance business.

2nd day March 10, 2026, 9am
Track
: Claims and Underwriting
Title: The Current Anti-Fraud Landscape: Industry Insights
Description: Join leading experts as they share how carriers are currently viewing and addressing fraud. This session will dive into the latest industry survey findings, examine innovative approaches to fraud mitigation, and explore effective models for managing fraud, waste, and abuse (FWA). Attendees will gain valuable perspectives on current challenges and best practices to safeguard the integrity of LTC claims.
Moderator:
Roy Christenson, ERAC
Speakers:
Jeff Ferrand, illumifin
Jessica Loesing Gallagher, Faegre Drinker
Tom McManama, PwC
Comments: Fascinating session. Fraud recognized as a problem 20 years ago, but over the past 10 years it has really taken off. No longer lost in a claims “black box.” Fraud identification and control is getting more sophisticated. Rapid acceleration of technology. Trying to leverage it. Fraud thought to affect other business lines, but now seen to hit LTC insurance too. PwC Anti-Fraud Survey showed 6 to 8% of claims have fraud. $1.3 billion. By 2030 Milliman found $25 billion claims in four years. So $2.5 to $3 billion in fraud. “We are all fraud ambassadors now.” Much higher for home health care than these estimates that are across all products. What is most common type? Claimant and provider fraud and combination, collusion. Not eligible at start or became not eligible but stayed on claim. Provider bills where not providing care. Skimming. Charge for more and pocket some. Easier to investigate home health care (HHC) so tend to start there. Facility fraud has lot of checks and balances. Vulnerability in billing practices. Little prosecution of fraud. Prosecutors focus on bigger fish, like Medicare and Medicaid. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) are only now beginning to search for and control fraud that runs rampant in public programs but receives little attention from states that reap a bonanza of federal funding.

2nd day March 10, 2026, 10:45pm
Track
: Management & Operations
Title: AI Fakes and Real Risks: Securing Long-Term Care Systems from Manipulation
Description: As deep fake technology becomes more sophisticated, the long-term care industry faces new threats to operational integrity and patient safety. This session explores how AI-generated falsifications can impact critical areas such as HR, policy administration, and claims —posing risks to claims processing and regulatory compliance. We’ll examine real-world scenarios, discuss detection strategies, and explore how organizations can safeguard against manipulation while maintaining trust and accuracy in their data systems.
Producer (non-participant):
Paul Marquez, Diligence International Group, LLC
Speakers:
Karen Babio, Davies
Kevin Glasgow, Diligence International Group
Comments:
Overview: Fakes not new, old theme, me toos, art of deception. AI to create fakes, creating synthetic identities, tech and tools; is your insurer ready? Most people are honest but some aren’t. Out there to defraud in any way they can. Have to be careful because there are bad actors. What is a deep fake? Universal studios pioneered computer generated voice or image to look real. Systems learn from each other improving deep fakes. Trojan horse. New tools lowered cost and skill needed. Art of deception: cognitive biases, shortcuts, emotional influence, social trust, cooperation, cognitive overload tendencies for over confidence, expertise gaps. They only have to be right a small percent of time. Criminals targeting. Awareness gap. Tech gap. What’s changed? Presenters created the introductory fake very easy, low level. No tech training. Very low cost to create avatar. Could have done anyone in the room.
“Catch me if you can”: movie. Impersonations. Major insight: Change in attitude toward nonviolent crime. Younger generation much more accepting of profiting from nonviolent crime. Consider in context of home health fraud. Effect on jury pools.
Fakes are nothing new. Just new tech doing more things. Voting on which images real. About random chance. Better at finding video fakes.
Using AI fakes to make better, smarter, faster. Phishing, spear phishing (targeted), vishing (video phishing), smishing (using fraudulent texts). Counterfeit compliance certs insurance certificates.
Financial records, invoices paystubs, utility bills tax form, fake ID documents.
Possible imposter originated scams initiators and facilitators: family members, people in position of trust, insurance community members, human traffickers, organized crime groups, paramedical examiners, attorneys, brokers, investors. Getting more organized.
Has your organization any training for deep fakes? What kind?
Apply for credit over and over again. Loyalty information. Gradually create identify. Get higher and higher credit rating. Fictitious person. Continue to “ripen” ID until accepted.
AI fraud surges 195%. AI arms race. Synthetic identities. $30 billion in life insurance industry annually.
Companies need to think more like banks.
Threat actors always out there. Attitude shapes moral compass against insurers. Insurance has a high ROI. Organized crime funding has entered the fray.
SIFT: Stop, investigate, find, trace to original source. 

2nd day March 10, 2026, 2pm
Track
: Management & Operations
Title: Inside the Mind of a Hacker: Cyber security Threats and Defenses in Insurance
Description: Join an ethical hacker for a behind-the-scenes look at how cybercriminals are evolving - and how AI is reshaping the cyber security landscape. Through real-world examples and expert insights, this session reveals common vulnerabilities, emerging AI-driven attack methods, and practical defenses. Learn how cyber security impacts your business - and walk away with actionable strategies to protect your organization from the risks of an AI-enabled threat environment.
Moderator: Christie Conway, Wellcove
Speakers:
Kalin Kelly, Continental General
Tom Liston, Bad Wolf Security
Comments: AI is not experimental, it’s in the wild. Changing rules for defenders and offenders. What is AI? Systems that find patterns, massive data sets, on internet. Lots of knowledge. But dark side. Models mimic understanding brilliantly. But they don’t reason. Excel at static prediction not logical deduction. Content generation, code assistance, customer service, and everything else. Private investment in generative AI soaring. $34 billion, up 19%. Limits of today’s AI, not necessarily going to get same output every time. May confidently present but it is wrong. Not responsible for anything. Falls on humans to control. 4.4% 2023 performance 71.7% 2024 performance. AI coding capability has gone explosive in growth. Hackers faster, defenders smarter. Fraud pattern detection. Synthetic employees, when agents talk to agents. Undercurrent. Sub layer underneath humans. Unmonitored. Could proliferate bad information. Driven social engineering. Excellent impersonalization. Video calls. Texts. Email. Phone. Fake documents. Executive impersonalization. Uncomfortable truth. What companies doing. Not a lot. 78% use, 40% mitigate risk, 37% have governance. Adoption has exploded, but governance last.
97% no access controls, 63% no governance. Average global breach cost: $4.4 million.

Tom Liston: I’m a thief. Broke into banks and much else. 60% of firms suffered data breach; 277 days to discover a data breach; Overall 93% resulted in an external attacker gaining internal network access. He set out to find one compromised business per day. Found 500. Very easy. Who? Small to medium business, large well-known companies, government organizations; universities. Solutions: Treat network as if it is compromised; Limit damage attacker can do, network security basics not magic black box. Use multi-factor identification. Monitor closely.

2nd day March 10, 2026, 3:45pm
Track
: Claims & Underwriting
Title: Game On: Integrating FWA Programs into the Claims Process - A Chutes and Ladders Experience
Description: Join us for an engaging and interactive session that brings the classic board game Chutes and Ladders to life. This dynamic experience combines audience participation with practical insights, guiding you through the highs and lows of integrating FWA programs into the LTC claim process. Each “move” on the board represents real-world examples, challenges, and opportunities - including emerging technologies, digital controls, smart workflows, and human insights. Led by seasoned claims executives and an experienced trial attorney, this session goes beyond theory—offering actionable strategies, risk mitigation tips, and legal perspectives that matter. Whether you climb the ladder of success or slide down a chute of unexpected complications, you’ll leave with a deeper understanding of how to stay ahead in today’s evolving long-term care claims landscape.
Moderator:
Jane Bagley, Fuzion
Speakers:      
Andrew Azarmi, Dentons
Laurene Polignone, John Hancock Financial Services
Kristen Sewell, Continental General
Comments:
Series of scenarios offered. Then vote on whether fraud or not. Go down a chute if wrong; up a ladder if correct. In the middle, I noted “So far all examples obvious.” Andrew, the attorney, comes at it from a different perspective. Lawyer, not insurance company. Lessons learned. Facts in claims can become questionable. Policyholder appeals claim denial. Submits signed letter from primary care physician Dr. Feelgood. Under his care. Suffers cognitive impairment. Needs assistance with several ADLs .You verify Dr. Feelgood is a board certified MD. Video surveillance over 5 days reveals policyholder is walking, driving, entering/exiting sedan, rolling 2 large trash cans from curb up sloped driveway into garage. Picking up dry cleaning while talking on cell. Entering and exiting Pilates studio. Answer: Time review. 

3rd Day, March 11, 2026, 8:30am
Title
: Alzheimer's Association: Explore Cutting-edge Developments in Brain Health, Diagnosis, and Treatments
Description: Learn how lifestyle interventions can reduce the risk of cognitive impairment, how blood-based biomarkers are enabling earlier, more accessible Alzheimer’s diagnosis and advancements in treatments. The second half of this session will provide a comprehensive overview of rapidly moving innovations within dementia care specialty models including both Medicare and Medicare Advantage funded approaches. The impressive early clinical and cost savings outcomes and how LTCI specifically might take advantage in the short-to-mid-term. Discussions will include an overview of the Dementia Care Navigation Service, powered by Rippl and the Alzheimer’s Association, which has shown promising results including a 30% drop in emergency department visits and a 15% reduction in hospital admissions through personalized, proactive support aligned with Center for Medicare and Medicaid’s GUIDE Model.

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Updated Monday, March 30, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-009:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • My brother says lawyers can get him a Medicaid nursing home in Florida for a ‘hefty fee,’ despite his assets. Is this a scam?

  • Family caregivers’ unpaid work valued at over $1T in 2024, AARP report finds

  • China launches long-term care insurance system to alleviate aging challenges

  • Long-term care is expensive. Take these 3 steps now to help you afford it later.

  • Fears Over Retirement Healthcare Costs Are Rising — And Many Americans Aren’t Planning for Them

  • A Medicaid 'spend down' may get an older person long-term care coverage but isn't a DIY strategy

  • 5 ‘AI-proof’ healthcare jobs will surge through 2034

  • Lincoln Financial Recognized for Leadership in the Advancement of Long-Term Care Planning

  • Japan's elder-to-elder caregiving crisis fuels homicides and hidden neglect

  • ‘Heartbreaking and destructive’: Ohio lawmakers seek to rein in Medicaid home liens

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Wednesday, March 25, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-008:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Senior care rates balloon in every state: CareScout report

  • Older adults with financial trouble experience faster cognitive decline, study finds

  • CMS’ anti-fraud tactics run risk of destabilizing HCBS system, article asserts

  • Alzheimer’s beneficiaries benefited from Medicare Advantage risk adjustment model, study finds

  • Lawmakers reintroduce Hospice CARE Act, which would update benefit, help stop fraud

  • UPDATED: ‘Good news’ as CMS doubles spending on nursing home staffing campaign

  • 2026 Long-Term Care Market Outlook

  • Simultaneous senior care and child care burdening ‘sandwich generation,’ report finds

  • State scraps managed care for Medicaid’s LTC patients

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, March 23, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: VINCE BODNAR ON LUMOS (corrected)

LTC Comment: Today’s “Guest Bullet” features Vince Bodnar with exciting Plateau/Lumos developments after the ***news.*** (We regret having accidentally published an earlier, unedited version of this material on Friday, March 20.)

*** THE 2026 ILTCI CONFERENCE in Orlando, Florida March 8-11 was another big success. Over 1000 attendees explored LTCI’s frontiers in each of seven subject tracks. The Center for Long-Term Care Reform will bring you our annual “virtual visit” to the 2026 conference in two weeks. Our conference coverage, giving summaries of the program’s keynote and breakout sessions, is a tradition that goes back to the first one in Miami, 2001. Check out our “History of the LTC Insurance Conferences” published in 2021 and for conference coverage 2023 to 2025, search “virtual” here. These sources offer a fascinating history of the hot topics and many challenges the industry has faced year-by-year during the first quarter of the current century. Enjoy! ***


LTC BULLET: VINCE BODNAR ON LUMOS (corrected)

LTC Comment: I’ve followed the long-term care insurance industry’s successes and challenges since the mid-1980s. Through most of that history one name stood out for his expertise, creativity, professionalism and congeniality. Vince Bodnar has concentrated on LTCI since 1990. With over three decades of experience, he has held many key roles, including Chief Actuary at illumifin, co-founder of DaVinci Consulting Group, LLC, and leadership positions at Genworth Financial, Willis Towers Watson and Milliman. He has spent his career shaping how America understands and delivers long-term care protection. He has thrice chaired the ILTCI Conference, founding its Wellness & Aging in Place Solutions Track during his last chairmanship, twice chaired the Society of Actuaries LTC Section and founded what is now the LTCi Consortium. He has also been recognized for his contributions to LTC insurance program design on multiple continents.

From his early actuarial work designing innovative coverage models to his leadership in advancing new distribution strategies across the LTC industry, Bodnar has been a consistent voice for disciplined, sustainable product development. Now, as President of The Plateau Group – recently rebranded as Lumos Insurance—he’s applying that same clarity of purpose to a broader challenge: integrating long-term care into the full retirement journey.

Bodnar's arrival at Lumos comes at a pivotal moment. The 45-year-old carrier is building a suite of senior-focused life, health, and long-term care solutions—each grounded in the company's hallmark underwriting rigor and long-term risk discipline. For Bodnar, the mission is not just to launch products, but to redefine how retirees and their advisors approach aging, income, and care as connected parts of a single financial story.

Here in his own words is what Vince Bodnar and Lumos seek to achieve.

Building LTC into a Lifecycle: How a 45-Year Credit Insurance Carrier Is Entering the Senior Market

You don’t expect conversations about long-term care planning to begin with credit insurance, but that foundation is central to understanding what Lumos is now building in the senior market. The Plateau Group was founded in 1981 by a consortium of Tennessee banks as a credit insurance carrier. Under that name, it spent more than four decades helping lenders manage portfolio risk responsibly.

In March 2026, the company rebranded as Lumos Insurance. The new name follows a multi-year modernization of the company’s operating infrastructure and governance framework. The overhaul was significant enough that its leaders decided a new brand was necessary to reflect the changes.

That modernized platform is broader than the old name suggested. Lumos now spans senior-focused life and health solutions, supplemental health products, and specialty property and casualty programs—in addition to the credit insurance work that started it all. The company holds an AM Best A- (Excellent) financial strength rating and has maintained it through more than four decades of market cycles.

The part of that platform getting the most attention right now is the senior market. Specifically, what Lumos is building around long-term care.

"Insurance is a long-duration business. Clarity early — around objectives, product design, distribution structure, and accountability — allows execution to scale responsibly." — Vince Bodnar, President & CFO, Lumos Insurance

Meeting People Where They Are in Retirement

Getting older is expensive. Medicare covers a lot, but not long-term care—and that gap can swallow a retirement plan fast. Lumos is building a suite of products, all backed by large global reinsurers, aimed at helping people manage that exposure, starting in the second half of 2026.

The company’s philosophy starts with a simple observation: the industry has long treated Medicare supplement coverage, retirement income, and long-term care as three separate conversations, usually with three different advisors. Lumos is trying to change that. The goal is to give agents a way to start a relationship with a client at retirement and stay useful to them as their needs change over the years—being there for the wellness questions, the family stress, and eventually the care itself.

The entry point is a Medicare supplement product for clients who are newly eligible for Medicare. From there, Lumos plans to introduce a long-term care product suite that covers multiple types of buyers and distribution models—traditional standalone LTC coverage, products designed for worksite or direct-to-consumer channels, and hybrid structures that pair longevity protection with care funding.

One product is already on the market and is gaining traction. Lumos has introduced an underwritten single-premium immediate annuity—a SPIA—designed specifically for people who are already receiving care and need more income to cover it. The problem it solves is real: someone in a care facility, burning through savings, who needs a predictable income stream to avoid outliving their money. The product is available in several states now and is expected to reach most states within 30 days.

Lumos is also looking beyond traditional insurance products. The company is evaluating ways to help retirees tap home equity to support aging in place—modest home modifications, safety technology, the kind of investments that let someone stay in their own house longer. It’s not insurance, but it addresses the same underlying goal.

The proposed suite also includes wellness support, caregiver resources, and care coordination services. That last piece matters more than it might sound. Most long-term care is delivered by family members—a daughter driving her mother to appointments, a spouse managing medications, a son trying to figure out what Medicaid does and doesn’t cover. Lumos wants to give those families practical tools, not just policyholders a policy.

For agents and advisors, the model is designed around continuity. An agent who writes a Medicare supplement policy at 65 has a natural reason to come back at 70, and 75, and beyond—if the carrier has products worth coming back for. That’s the relationship Lumos is trying to make possible.

Credit Insurance Is Still the Core

"Credit life, health, property and related remain core to our identity, but our platform is broader. The underwriting rigor that built our credit business now applies equally to senior health, supplemental health, and specialty P&C programs." — Vince Bodnar

None of this means Lumos is walking away from credit insurance. The company is emphatic on that point. Credit protection isn’t a legacy business being maintained out of nostalgia—it’s the foundation everything else is built on. And the credit-driven insurance market, it turns out, needs disciplined carriers right now. Many larger companies have pulled back from credit life, credit health, and related products in recent years. Lumos has moved toward that gap rather than away from it.

The three pillars of the Lumos platform—Credit Protection, Specialty Property & Casualty, and Life & Health—run on the same operating discipline. The governance standards, the underwriting rigor, the commitment to long-term partner alignment: those aren’t new. They’re just being applied to new markets.

What Comes Next

The full product suite is expected to roll out through 2026, with specific timing dependent on regulatory approvals state by state. Lumos says more details will emerge as the year progresses. The bigger idea behind all of it is straightforward, even if the execution is complicated. People need help at the beginning of retirement, in the middle of it, and at the end of it—and those needs are connected. A carrier that can stay relevant across all three stages is more valuable than one that shows up once and disappears. For a company that spent 45 years staying close to borrowers through the life of a loan, that philosophy should feel familiar. The product just looks different now.

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Updated Tuesday, March 17, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-007:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicare Advantage Reallocates Subsidies from the Sick to the Healthy

  • The Looming Crisis in Home Health Care

  • AARP Report Finds Long-Term Care Costs Outpacing Americans’ Incomes

  • OneAmerica Financial earns national LTC award

  • Reimagining long-term care through AI

  • Local Governments Play An Important Role In Medicaid Financing

  • [Column] Direction and Challenges of Long-Term Care Insurance System Reform

  • WA Cares needs to clarify family caregivers needn't be union members

  • Medicare Advantage: 14 Steps to a Better Program 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, March 9, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-006:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Number of hospice enrollees increased last year for third year in a row, report finds

  • In 2025, number of home health agencies ticked up, bucking trend, new chartbook says

  • America’s Dementia Care Crisis

  • CMS targets New York for home care fraud

  • Assisted living sees highest year-over-year growth compared with other areas of long-term care

  • 5 Retirement Planning Tips for Solo Agers

  • ‘Excellent evidence’ nursing home staffing mandates don’t cause financial harm: study

  • Unlocking Idle Annuities

  • 1 in 5 older adults would pick assisted living if they no longer can live alone: Pew survey 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, March 2, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-005:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Genworth's CareScout Unit Jumps Into the Aging Crisis

  • Recent Medicaid data release has research limitations, home care advocates say

  • Understanding Medicaid Home Care Amid CMS Focus on Potential Fraud and Abuse

  • Long-term care insurance mergers & acquisitions – What have we learned since 2023?

  • Economic uncertainty challenges retirement confidence among older adults: survey

  • As aid-in-dying laws come to more states, nursing homes face tough new decisions

  • NGL launches new long term care product

#############################

"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Friday, February 27, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2024 DATA UPDATE

LTC Comment: Heads up! We're about to explain why long-term care insurance sales have disappointed, why people don't "use their homes to stay at home" and why LTC providers who depend on public financing are at risk. Details after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** ILTCI CONFERENCE: The big annual LTC insurance conference is coming up March 8-11 at the Rosen Shingle Creek Resort in Orlando, Florida. Get all the latest information here. You’ll find the Session Schedule Matrix, and information on the Keynote Speaker, the Alzheimer’s Association Session, and much more. Read the session descriptions and get a general conference schedule outline. Get details on the CLTC Master Class and the Future Leaders Program. Organizers say:

Over the past 25 years: The ILTCI Conference has grown to be the nation’s largest gathering of the extended care industry’s top thought leaders. Professionals from all disciplines attend and participate in a concerted effort to broaden their knowledge, network, and bring more consumers to the table to plan for their long term care needs. Contributors and speakers share cutting-edge expert opinions and analysis covering diverse fields in our 7 tracks while exhibitors and sponsors showcase a broad range of solutions and advancements.

Register here.***

 

LTC BULLET: SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2024 DATA UPDATE

LTC Comment: Once a year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) reports health care expenditure data for the latest year of record. In January, CMS posted 2024 statistics on its website here. Click on this link NHE Tables (ZIP) to download the tables. Then, click on the ones of interest, Tables 13, 14 and 15 for our purposes here.

Health Affairs has published a summary and analysis of this new data titled “National Health Care Spending Increased 7.2 Percent In 2024 As Utilization Remained Elevated." The article is “open access” so available free here. Unfortunately, the Health Affairs article has little to say about long-term care beyond the raw data. This was the extent of it:

In 2024, mainly as a result of declining enrollment, all Medicaid services except home health care and nursing and residential care facilities experienced growth that was slower than growth in 2023. … Services used for long-term care (the population most likely to use this type of care was more likely to retain Medicaid coverage)—including other health, residential, and personal care services; home health care; and nursing and continuing care retirement communities—continued to experience strong growth in 2023 and 2024 (8.9 percent and 9.5 percent, respectively; data not shown).

Not much on LTC, but more than in past years. Note the surge in nursing home, home care, and residential care expenditures. Read on to get the rest of the story.

Following is our annual analysis of the latest long-term care expenditure data. Note that we added Table 13, “Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care Expenditures,” to our analysis starting two years ago. This category includes Medicaid home and community based waivers and care provided in residential care facilities, so it is a vital part of the LTC marketplace. We focused only on nursing home[1] and home health expenditures before.

Heads Up: This may be the most important LTC Bullet we publish all year. It is the twenty-fourth in a row we’ve done annually to analyze the federal government’s enormous, and we argue, often detrimental, impact on long-term care financing. If you'd like to see the earlier versions, go here and search for “So What if the Government Pays.” You’ll find our yearly analyses of the data going all the way back to "So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC, 2002 Data Update."

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"So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC, 2024 Data Update"
by
Stephen A. Moses

Ever wonder why LTC insurance sales and market penetration are so discouraging? Or why reverse mortgages are rarely used to pay for long-term care? Or why LTC service providers are always struggling to survive financially and still provide quality care? Read on.

Nursing Homes

America spent 219.9 billion on nursing facilities and continuing care retirement communities in 2024, a 7.3% increase compared to 2023. The percentage of these costs paid by Medicaid and Medicare has gone up over the past half century (from 26.8% in 1970 to 57.4% in 2024, up 30.6% of the total) while out-of-pocket costs have declined in the same period (from 49.2% in 1970 to 22.1% in 2024, down 27.1% of the total). Source: Table 15: Nursing Care Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities Expenditures; Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2024.

So What? Consumers' liability for nursing home and CCRC costs has declined by almost half, down 44.9% in the past five decades while the share paid by Medicaid and Medicare has more than doubled, up 114.2%.

No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care! No wonder they don't use home equity for LTC when Medicaid exempts at least $752,000 and in some states up to $1,130,000 of home equity (as of 1/1/26. The "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA) set a nationwide limit at $1 million starting January 1, 2028.) No wonder nursing homes struggle financially—their dependency on parsimonious government reimbursements is increasing while their more profitable private payers are disappearing.

Unfortunately, these problems are even worse than the preceding data suggest. Over half of the so-called "out-of-pocket" costs reported by CMS are really just contributions toward their cost of care by people already covered by Medicaid. These are not out-of-pocket costs in terms of ASSET spend down, but rather only INCOME, most of which comes from Social Security benefits, another financially vulnerable government program. Thus, although Medicaid pays a little more than one-third of the cost of nursing home (and CCRC) care (35.9% of the dollars in 2024), it covers over two-thirds (67.0%) of all nursing home patient days.

So What? Medicaid pays in full or subsidizes over two-thirds of all nursing home patient days. Even if Medicaid pays nothing, with the entire amount due contributed from the recipient's income, the nursing home receives Medicaid's dismally low reimbursement rate.

No wonder the public is not as worried about nursing home costs as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care. No wonder nursing homes risk insolvency when so much of their revenue comes from Medicaid, often at reimbursement rates less than the cost of providing the care. Consider this for example: “We found that Medicaid payment rates for the average or median nursing home covered about 82 cents per every dollar of reported cost nursing homes incurred caring for Medicaid residents. For approximately 40% of nursing homes, Medicaid per diem payments covered 80% or less of their estimated per diem Medicaid costs." (Source: “In Case You Missed It: New HHS Report Reveals Significant Medicaid Shortfall For Nursing Homes,” AHCA/NCAL, October 22, 2024)

Private Health Insurance

Don't be fooled by the 8.8% of nursing home costs that CMS reports as having been paid by "private health insurance" in 2024. That category does not include private long-term care insurance. (See category definitions here.) No one knows how much LTC insurance pays toward nursing home care, because “In most cases, private long-term care insurance reimburses people for the expenses they pay out-of-pocket and would be classified as out-of-pocket spending in the NHE data.” (Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS),” KFF, July 8, 2024) Thus, a large proportion of insurance payments for nursing home care gets reported as if it were "out-of-pocket" payments. This fact further inflates the out-of-pocket figure artificially.

Assisted Living

How does all this affect assisted living facilities? According to the Genworth Cost of Care Survey for 2024, median ALF cost was $70,800 per year ($5,900 per month), up 1.1% from 2023, but up 37.2% since 2020. Although assisted living facilities remain mostly private pay, almost half of ALFs were “authorized or certified” to participate in Medicaid and only “a small minority of state Medicaid programs do not cover services in assisted living.” Furthermore, “Almost 1 in 5 residents relies on Medicaid to pay for daily services (18%).” (Find these latter two quotes under the source’s “Finance” tab.) Over time, assisted living facilities have followed nursing homes down the primrose path of accepting more and more revenue from Medicaid.

Many people who could afford assisted living by spending down their illiquid wealth, especially home equity, choose instead to take advantage of Medicaid nursing home benefits. Medicaid exempts one home and all contiguous property (up to $752,000 or $1,130,000 depending on the state), plus—in unlimited dollar amounts—one business, one automobile, prepaid burials, term life insurance, household furnishings, personal belongings and Individual Retirement Accounts not to mention wealth protected by sophisticated asset sheltering and divestment techniques marketed by Medicaid planning attorneys. Income rarely interferes with Medicaid nursing home eligibility unless such income exceeds the cost of private nursing home care.

So What? For most people, Medicaid nursing home benefits are easy to obtain without spending down assets significantly and Medicaid's income contribution requirement is usually much less expensive than paying the full cost of assisted living.

No wonder ALFs are struggling to attract enough private payers to be profitable. No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care. This problem has radically worsened in recent years because more and more state Medicaid programs are paying for assisted living as well as nursing home care, which makes Medicaid eligibility more desirable than ever.

Home Health Care

The situation with home health care financing is very similar to nursing home financing. According to CMS, America spent $169.4 billion on home health care in 2024, 10.3% more than in 2023 ($153.6). Medicare (32.9%) and Medicaid (22.5%) paid 55.4% of this total and private health insurance (not LTC insurance) paid 22.0%. Only 17.9% of home health care costs were paid out of pocket. The remainder came from several small public and private financing sources. Data source: Table 14: Home Health Care Services Expenditures; Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2024.

So What? Only one out of every six dollars spent on home health care comes out of the pockets of patients and a large portion of that comes from the income (not assets) of people already on Medicaid.

No wonder the public does not feel the sense of urgency about this risk that they would if they were more personally at risk for the cost of their care.

Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care

This category includes a lot of long-term care spending that is not encompassed by the nursing home and home health NHE categories, such as Medicaid home and community based waivers and care provided in residential care facilities. The trends are very similar. Americans spent $320.5 billion on these services in 2024, up 9.1% from $293.7 billion in 2023. Medicare (1.4%) and Medicaid (62.4%) paid 63.8% of that total; private health insurance and other third parties contributed 31.5%; out-of-pocket expenditures amounted to only 3.5%. Data Source: Table 13: Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care Services Expenditures: Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2022

So what? Only one dollar out of $29 spent on these important LTC services comes out of the pocket of a private payer.

No wonder the public feels so little sense of worry about planning, saving, investing or insuring for long-term care.

Summary

                                        

Source: National Health Expenditures[2]

Across all three kinds of LTC services out-of-pocket expenditures account for only $1 in $7.87 spent. Half of this spending comes from income of people already on Medicaid. Thus only 6.35%, or $1 in $15.74 could have come from spend down of savings.

Bottom line, people only buy insurance against real financial risk. As long as they can ignore the risk, avoid the premiums, and get government to pay for their long-term care when and if such care is needed, they will remain in denial about the need for LTC insurance. As long as Medicaid and Medicare are paying for a huge proportion of all nursing home and home health care costs while out-of-pocket expenditures remain only nominal, nursing homes and home health agencies will remain starved for financial oxygen.

The solution is simple. Target Medicaid financing of long-term care to the needy and use the savings to fund education and tax incentives to encourage the public to plan early to be able to pay privately for long-term care. For ideas and recommendations on how to implement this solution, see www.centerltc.com.

Note especially:

Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less,” Cato Institute (2025)

Medicaid’s $100 Billion Plus Leak,” Paragon Health Institute (2024)

Long-Term Care: The Solution” (2023) with the Paragon Health Institute at https://paragoninstitute.org/research-paper-page-moses-ltc-solution-20231002/

Long-Term Care: The Problem” (2022) with the Paragon Health Institute at

https://paragoninstitute.org/long-term-care-the-problem/

Medicaid and Long-Term Care” (2020) at http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/Medicaid_and_Long-Term_Care.pdf

How to Fix Long-Term Care Financing” (2017), at http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/How-To-Fix-Long-Term-Care-Financing.pdf

In the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Congress took some significant steps toward addressing these problems. A cap was placed for the first time on Medicaid's home equity exemption and several of the more egregious Medicaid planning abuses were ended. But much more remains to be done. With the Age Wave cresting and threatening to crash over the next two decades, we can only hope it isn't too late already.

Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform in Seattle, Washington and a Visiting Fellow with The Paragon Health Institute. The LTC Center's mission is to ensure quality long-term care for all Americans. Steve Moses writes, speaks and consults throughout the United States on long-term care policy. Learn more at www.centerltc.com or email smoses@centerltc.com.

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[1] Note that CMS changed the definition of National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories in 2011, adding for example Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) to Nursing Care Facilities. This change had the effect of reducing Medicaid's reported contribution to the cost of nursing home care from over 40% in 2008 to under one-third (32.8%) in 2009. CMS also created a new category called "Other Third Party Payers" (7.1%) which includes "worksite health care, other private revenues, Indian Health Service, workers' compensation, general assistance, maternal and child health, vocational rehabilitation, other federal programs, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, other state and local programs, and school health." For definitions of all NHEA categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

[2] For definitions of all National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

 

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Updated Wednesday, February 25, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-004:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Number of hospice providers rises 39.6 percent between 2019 and 2024, report finds

  • Americans Remain At Elevated Risk Despite Broad Plan Participation

  • 2026 Predictions: LTC Will Be King Again

  • Hidebound scholars harm long-term care

  • Medicaid’s Multiple Roles

  • Washington finalizes long-term care insurance rules for WA Cares

  • What Happens When the Social Security Trust Fund Is Exhausted: An Alternative Contingency Policy

  • Poverty and Dependency in the United States, 1939–2023

  • The Current Market For Long-Term Care Planning

  • Medicaid Closes Tax Loophole, Saving Billions for Taxpayers

  • Low state rates undermine nursing home quality, especially at Medicaid-reliant for-profits

  • $10,000 a Month for Parents’ Long-Term Care Is a Growing Crisis—Who Can Afford to Pay?

  • Millions Misspent: How Maine Lost Control of Autism Medicaid Spending

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, February 23, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-003:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Health Care Cost Curve Is Bending up Again

  • New tool ultimately could open up senior living to more people

  • Cleaning Up Medicaid Fraud Will Save Indiana Millions of Dollars – Governor

  • My Mother Has $260k in an IRA. Is a Nursing Home Able to Take It?

  • The long term care shake-up: What Unum’s exit really signals for 2026

  • Low state rates undermine nursing home quality, especially at Medicaid-reliant for-profits

  • Milliman launches Long-Term Care Index, providing a benchmark for expected lifetime long-term care costs

  • What Older Americans Want Policymakers To Know

  • Ross Schriftman Announces Run for Wyoming House District 37

  • With no way to account for MA pressures, MedPAC recommends a 4% pay cut for nursing homes

  • How Did We Build a Welfare System that Gave So Much Money Away?

  • National Health Care Spending Increased 7.2 Percent In 2024 As Utilization Remained Elevated

  • New York’s Per Capita Home Health Aide Workforce Is Three Times Greater Than Other States’ Average

  • Greater assisted living capacity may delay nursing home placement for older adults with dementia, study finds

  • US nursing home capacity declines twice as steep as estimated: JAMA study

  • Minnesota to freeze new Medicaid provider enrollments in 13 high-risk categories

  • A multi-billion euro shortfall in long-term care insurance – what critics warned about before its introduction is now coming to pass 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, January 12, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-002:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Pervasive Fraud in Government Health Care Programs

  • ‘Far fewer people’ receive institutional services than HCBS, CMS says

  • Guiding Families Through The Great Wealth Transfer

  • Some Older Adults May Qualify for a New $6,000 Tax Break

  • Medicaid’s Home Care Support for Family Caregivers in 2025

  • Retirement Planning Without Kids Demands Attention to Long-Term Care and Estate Strategies

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, January 9, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: HOW REAL IS MEDICAID ASSET SPEND DOWN?

LTC Comment: Does Medicaid asset spend down devastate everyone who needs long-term care or does it crush the poor, but exempt the well-to-do? We explore; you decide; after the ***news.***

*** ARGENTINA: Damon and I are about to take a rare vacation together. There will be a hiatus in our regular bi-weekly LTC Bullets and weekly LTC E-Alerts, but we will continue to send our daily LTC Clippings. We’re headed to Bariloche, Argentina from which we’ll journey by public transportation through Patagonia to Ushuaia, South America’s southernmost city, then on by ship to Antarctica. In the meantime, we’ll have full phone and internet connectivity, so keep your comments and questions coming. The Center for Long-Term Care Reform’s initiatives on behalf of responsible LTC financing policy will resume fully upon our return. ***

*** VENEZUELA: Fifty-eight years ago I arrived in Caracas, Venezuela with thirty fellow Peace Corps volunteers to begin a two-year stint in an agricultural reform program. Venezuela had experienced its first ever peaceful, democratic transition of government only ten years before. Yet it seemed like there were teenagers with submachine guns on every corner. Rumor  (untrue) had it that two PC volunteers had been shot and killed recently after accidentally running a police checkpoint. It was like the wild west for this newly minted Poli Sci BA and my now-late-wife, Judith. We settled in to our site three hours by bus from Caracas with water we had to boil, electricity only four hours at night, and little access to groceries beyond bodegas selling beer, sardines and a hard cheese we were told not to eat. When the Venezuelan agricultural extensionist and home demonstrator we were supposed to back up didn’t make an appearance, we improvised, teaching in the elementary school, working with kids in a 5V club (like 4H), and building furniture (me) and teaching sewing (Judy). Two kids, Vidal (10 years), now my son’s middle name, and Dolores, aka “Goofy,” (8 years) hung out at our house most of the time. Fifty years later, Dolores, who at the time lived in a mud house, but is now a nun in Colombia, tracked me down on the internet. We had a reunion a couple years ago in Bogota and we stay in touch. So, imagine my chagrin watching Venezuela collapse economically over the past decades causing untold misery for the people in Carmen de Cura, Estado Aragua, with whom I worked and got to know so well. I hope their long repression and suffering will end at last with the departure of Maduros and the death, hopefully, of Chavismo, although so much remains at risk. Viva Venezuela Libre! ***

 

LTC BULLET: HOW REAL IS MEDICAID ASSET SPEND DOWN

LTC Comment:  How real is Medicaid asset spend down? It’s a critical question. If, as the conventional wisdom holds, people all across America are spending down their life’s savings on LTC before they get any help from Medicaid, we have one kind of problem. It cries out for even more government money and regulation, the usual appeal.

But if Medicaid asset spend down only crushes the poor and financially marginal people while giving the middle class and affluent an asset-spend-down off ramp, as I believe, the problem is totally different. That suggests we should reconfigure government LTC spending so it helps the needy first without discouraging everyone else from planning privately to meet LTC risk.

The Center for Long-Term Care Reform has tackled the Medicaid asset spend down question many times over the years. See, for example, most recently, “Understanding Medicaid Spend Down,” July 12, 2024. Or check out the rest of our 15 “Medicaid Spend Down Bullets” dating back to June 15, 1999. I summarized the issue in a paper titled “The Myth of Medicaid Spend-Down” in 1991. But today, let’s take a fresh look at the spend down issue.

On December 4, 2025, JAMA Network Open published “Asset Spend-Down and Medicaid Enrollment in Nursing Homes,” by Gabriella Aboulafia, MPP1; Amanda C. Chen, PhD, and David C. Grabowski, PhD. I sent the following letter to the article’s “corresponding author,” Ms. Aboulafia. Later I received a thoughtful response from one of the other authors, the influential, virtually omnipresent scholar, David Grabowski. I urge you to read the subject article and my letter. Dr. Grabowski’s feedback and my reply to him may be a topic for another time if he agrees. In the meantime, here’s my letter. Your comments are welcome.

December 16, 2025 

Gabriella Aboulafia, MPP
Corresponding Author
“Asset Spend-Down and Medicaid Enrollment in Nursing Homes”
JAMA Network Open

 

Dear Dr. Aboulafia,

I am writing in response to your article titled “Asset Spend-Down and Medicaid Enrollment in Nursing Homes” published December 4, 2025 in JAMA Network Open.

In that article, you and your co-authors addressed the issue of nursing home asset spend-down leading to Medicaid eligibility. You explain that your “main outcome was whether an individual spent down their assets and became enrolled in Medicaid during their nursing home stay.” (p. 1/11) You define “spend-down in nursing homes as a transition from non-Medicaid enrolled to Medicaid enrolled.” (p. 3/11)  You conclude: “Of those who were initially not Medicaid enrolled, 16.4% spent down their assets during their stay and enrolled in Medicaid ….” (p. 1/11) You infer: “This finding raises concerns both about individuals impoverishing themselves because of the high cost of care and the long-term financial sustainability of the Medicaid program.” (p. 1/11) Although it is not stated explicitly in your article, the clear implication is that people spend down their assets for private nursing home or other care before becoming eligible for Medicaid. That is not necessarily true.

There are many ways for middle class and affluent people to “transition from non-Medicaid enrolled to Medicaid enrolled” without expending their assets for long-term care (LTC). While Medicaid has a very low limit on countable assets, usually $2,000, most large assets seniors own are exempt, such as home equity, retirement savings, a vehicle and many more. Excess countable assets are easily excluded from consideration by using them to purchase exempt resources as I explain in “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.” Besides this simple method of artificial self-impoverishment, Medicaid planning specialists use special irrevocable income-only trusts, Medicaid compliant annuities, and other legal techniques to qualify much wealthier people for Medicaid. Your article does mention one method of “shielding assets,” but as you point out, asset transfers are rare and small compared to the commonplace practices just described.

You observe that “individuals who once spent their savings on nursing home care now may deplete their assets in the assisted living sector and then transition to a nursing home at or near Medicaid eligibility.” (p. 8/11) That is true, but the same methods people use to qualify for Medicaid without spending down assets while institutionalized are equally effective while they remain in the community. In fact, Medicaid planners routinely advise families to reconfigure their loved one’s income and assets long before care is needed. They do this not to ensure Medicaid eligibility upon nursing home admission. Rather, paying privately for a short time before converting to Medicaid ensures access to top-quality care. The best nursing homes and home health agencies compete aggressively for private patients who pay on average 150 percent of the Medicaid reimbursement rate. By retaining “key money” in this way, middle class and affluent people lock in access to better nursing homes than poor and financially borderline individuals, who lack resources to pay privately for a while, can obtain.

Transition to Medicaid LTC eligibility does not necessarily involve expending assets for care. The peer-reviewed literature you cite rarely acknowledges this fact, but the evidence adduced above establishes it. Assuming transition to Medicaid requires high private spending leads to unfounded assumptions about ruinous LTC spending that I rebut in “The Fallacy of Impoverishment,” “Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.” I respectfully invite you to consider these points and I would welcome the opportunity to discuss them with you.

Sincerely

Steve Moses 

Stephen A. Moses
President, Center for Long-Term Care Reform
smoses@centerltc.com
425-891-3640

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Updated Monday, January 05, 2026, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #26-001:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • What Medicaid Cuts Could Mean for Home Care Workers and Family Caregivers

  • Study: Adults in community with dementia at high risk of being bedbound at life’s end

  • Medicaid Money Laundering Harms Long-Term Care

  • What you need to know about changes to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid in 2026

  • They said it best in long-term care in 2025

  • Retirement Planning Without Kids Means Focusing On Long-Term Care And Estate Strategies

  • I’m a CEO who’s spent nearly 40 years talking to presidents, lawmakers and leaders about our long-term care crisis. They knew this moment was coming 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, December 22, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-045:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • ‘Spend-down’ rates among nursing home residents rise with longer stays, study finds

  • Interactive Compendium of LTSS Financing Options

  • Census Bureau: Americans 55+ comprise fastest-growing age group of workers in US

  • Long-term-care financing: Some good changes to WA Cares, new area of recommendation needed

  • Dave Ramsey's Take on Long-Term Care Planning Is Wrong

  • Better Care for Billions Less: Fixing Medicaid’s Long-Term Care Incentives

  • The Local Loop: How States Turn Medicaid into a Government Provider Payday Scheme

  • New Poll: Most Americans Expect Social Security Benefit Cuts; a Third Believe the Program Won’t Exist When They Retire 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, December 19, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: THE GOLDILOCKS LTC PLAN

LTC Comment: Making Medicaid pay first would blow the lid off government LTC spending, but that’s their plan. We explain after the ***news.***

*** ILTCI NEWS from the 2026 conference organizers: “We're thrilled to announce that Jeff Noel, a 30-year Disney leadership veteran and two-time Disney Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, will take the stage as our keynote speaker, Sponsored by NGL, at the 2026 ILTCI Conference!” For many more details about this keynoter, go here. ***

*** MORE about ILTCI: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company? Early Bird Attendee Pricing available thru Jan 16, 2026! ***

*** CATO PODCAST with Center president Steve Moses published:

12/11/2025, “Better Care for Billions Less: Fixing Medicaid’s Long-Term Care Incentives,” by Michael Cannon and Stephen Moses, Cato

Quote: “Cato’s Michael Cannon and the Center for Long-Term Care Reform’s Stephen Moses examine how Medicaid’s long-term-care eligibility rules let middle- and upper-middle-class households shelter assets and shift costs onto taxpayers, driving up spending and lowering quality for the poor. Drawing on Moses’s new Cato paper Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less, they explain how perverse incentives, generous exemptions, and weak estate recovery undermine private planning and inflate a program already consuming one-third of Medicaid’s budget.”

LTC Comment: Click through to the link at the top to hear this 45-minute podcast. Then, please read the paper and send any questions or comments to smoses@centerltc.com. To join our mission to fix LTC financing policy and ensure quality long-term care for all Americans, click here. To review all of our individual and corporate “Membership Levels and Benefits,” go here. Thanks for your support. ***

 

LTC BULLET: THE GOLDILOCKS LTC PLAN

LTC Comment: A recent LTC Discussion Group presentation triggered my interest. Karen Kopecky, an Economic and Policy Advisor with the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, proposed a radical reform of Medicaid long-term care financing. Her plan, co-authored with another economist, involves making Medicaid “primary,” that is, first payer for long-term care. It’s an intriguing idea. If Medicaid paid first, consumers would be more likely to buy private LTC insurance to “top off,” ending “crowd out.” So I contacted Dr. Kopecky. We had a cordial exchange of views. Here’s my bottom line takeaway. I thank the Paragon Health Institute’s Niklas Kleinworth for his helpful editing of this piece.

“The Goldilocks LTC Plan”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Two economists offer an ingenious proposal to improve long-term care (LTC) financing: make Medicaid the first payer for services. That is, have it pay before private LTC insurance so that more people will top off with private coverage. Their plan rests on a common, but false premise, that LTC causes widespread ruinous asset spend down leading to Medicaid eligibility. The plan would be dangerous and expensive if Medicaid financial eligibility is not tightened substantially first.

In “Welfare-enhancing public and private insurance arrangements for long-term care risk,” economists R. Anton Braun and Karen A. Kopecky explain the LTC financing challenge like the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. First, they reject two common approaches to reform. Slashing Medicaid would please taxpayers, but hurt the poor. That porridge is too cold, morally. Universal LTC coverage would help the poor, but disadvantage taxpayers. That porridge is too hot, politically. The authors position their third reform as the happy medium. In their own words:

Under our reform, benefits continue to be means-tested, but Medicaid is the primary payer. This third scenario works best. The poor continue to receive free public insurance, the middle class top up their Medicaid benefits with private insurance and enjoy higher welfare and private insurance takeup and profits also increase. (p. 3) … Making Medicaid the primary payer for LTC insurance while retaining the means-test increases private LTCI takeup rates, increases the profitability of insurers, and increases the welfare of low-, middle-, and high-income individuals. (p. 33)

On its face, this third concoction seems just right. But there’s a fly in this gruel.

The salutary outcomes predicted for reform number 3 depend on strictly means testing Medicaid benefits. Otherwise, everyone would use up Medicaid’s primary benefits and never get to the point of wanting or needing private insurance. Medicaid costs would explode and the private LTC insurance market would disappear entirely.

Thus, we need to know what these authors believe about means testing Medicaid LTC eligibility and whether their assumptions are correct. They say Medicaid benefits are only available to people with very low income and less than $3,000 in assets. They conclude “most Americans use their savings to pay for formal long-term care services” leaving “middle-class elderly Americans particularly exposed to LTC risk.” Consequently, they claim one in ten Americans incur out-of-pocket (OOP) nursing home expenses of $200,000 or more.

That clearly expresses the conventional wisdom about Medicaid spend down. But is it true? Demonstrably not.

The following table shows that only 12.9 percent of U.S. LTC expenditures are paid out of pocket. The vast majority (87.1 percent) come from government programs (especially Medicaid and Medicare) and other third parties. Furthermore, half of the out-of-pocket spending comes not from assets, but from the income people already on Medicaid contribute to offset the program’s cost for their care. Consequently, only 6.5 percent — or about $41 billion — of LTC spending could come from asset spend down. That is too small a portion to support claims that one in ten Americans spend down their assets at catastrophically high rates.

Table: Out of Pocket Contributions are a Small Share of Overall LTC Spending

Source: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, National Health Expenditures. For definitions of all National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

Why then do scholars think out-of-pocket asset spend down is so much higher than the facts bear out? Faulty estimates based on statistical micro-simulations are the cause. Ignoring the nonexistence of evidence, they presume falsely that people must spend down assets privately for care before qualifying for Medicaid. They run the numbers through their simulator and voila, catastrophic LTC asset spend down estimates emerge.

There is a better explanation of how America spends so much on LTC annually ($629.3 billion), but individual Americans contribute so little ($40.9 billion) out of pocket. If people with high incomes and assets qualify easily for Medicaid LTC benefits without spending down, the paradox of high LTC costs overall combined with low individual asset spend down would be resolved.

Medicaid Income and Asset Eligibility

High income does not prevent Medicaid LTC eligibility. Most states subtract private medical and LTC expenses from income before they apply a low-income standard. Others cap income but allow special income diversion trusts to achieve the same outcome. Bottom line: high income people with commensurately high health care expenses qualify.

Likewise high assets do not interfere with Medicaid LTC eligibility. Most large assets seniors own are exempt, including $1 million of home equity and unlimited tax-deferred retirement savings, a business, a vehicle, and others. Any remaining countable wealth is easily made exempt by using it to purchase exempt assets.

The internet and Medicaid planners offer long lists of exempt assets into which Medicaid applicants can convert countable resources in order to become eligible without decreasing their wealth. Mandatory estate recovery goes largely unenforced so resources protected by Medicaid pass to heirs further desensitizing future generations to LTC risk and cost.

The Goldilocks LTC Plan

So, what can we conclude about the Goldilocks LTC Plan? Make Medicaid primary? That would be a disaster unless or until Medicaid’s lenient LTC financial eligibility rules are reformed. But fix that so that people really do have to spend down their wealth before becoming eligible for Medicaid and the Goldilocks plan would no longer be needed. If Medicaid truly required impoverishment to qualify, people would realize the potential financial devastation that would ensue if they ever needed high-cost long-term care and they would begin to plan early to save, invest or insure privately for LTC.

If that porridge is too cold, then try this: keep Medicaid income and asset eligibility limits generous, but strictly enforce estate recoveries so that eventually all wealth sheltered in exempt assets is returned to the program to help those truly in need. That would relieve taxpayers, end Medicaid’s windfall for heirs, and return dignity to recipients—it isn’t welfare if you pay it back. It would create a much stronger incentive for all Americans to take LTC risk and cost seriously in time to prepare.

Real progress toward resolving long-term care’s many problems will not be made until scholars, analysts and policymakers set aside the “Fallacy of Impoverishment” and deal with the reality of Medicaid’s true impact. The program desensitizes the public to LTC risk and cost leaving most Americans unprotected and reliant on Medicaid when high LTC costs occur. That’s fixable with public policy reform that saves money, eliminates bad incentives, and rewards thoughtful LTC planning. When worsening budget constraints compel lower LTC spending, drastic change will become inevitable. Far better to do it now before the fiscal vise closes narrowing options ever further.

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Updated Monday, December 15, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-044:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Childfree Care Crisis

  • Medicaid pays 82 cents on the dollar. That hurts these nursing homes most

  • With inflation, older adults are depleting retirement savings earlier than expected, survey finds

  • Older adults face high risks of mortality, institutionalization after hip-fracture surgery, study finds

  • Asset Spend-Down and Medicaid Enrollment in Nursing Homes

  • BREAKING NEWS: CMS shares updated Medicaid income, resource standards

  • Medicare Advantage 2026 Spotlight: A First Look at Plan Offerings

  • Trump said he’s looking into an Australian-style retirement program for America. Here’s how it works

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, December 8, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-043:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Healthcare gains 33,000 jobs in November as overall economy sheds 32,000

  • A smaller share of older U.S. adults live alone today than in 1990

  • Reforming Long-Term Care Policy

  • 6 Long-Term Care Rate Increases Hidden in Winter Renewal Contracts

  • Affordability, Elder Financial Abuse, and Estate Planning

  • Study Reveals The Age You Hit The 'Tipping Point' Into Frailty

  • 5 Key Facts About Medicaid and Provider Taxes

  • Your Parents' Long-Term Care Could Cost $10,000 a Month—Who's Really Going to Pay?

  • As pressures mount, so do involuntary nursing home discharges. Here’s how providers should approach them

  • New AHIP Report Highlights the Vital Role of Long-Term Care Insurance in Each State

  • 7 ESSENTIALS in every Short-Term Care (Extended Care) & Home Health Care Plan

  • Dangers of Ignoring Long-Term Care Conversations with Clients

  • Senior Living Satisfaction

  • My Wife and I Planned Our Retirement Perfectly. Then She Got Sick.

  • OOPS: How the collapse of out-of-pocket long-term care spending hurts senior living

  • A Look at Waiting Lists for Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services from 2016 to 2025

  • Satisfaction with senior living up despite increasing rates, 2025 J.D. Power study finds

  • Nursing homes singled out in annual Justice report on elder abuse

  • Medicare Part B Premiums to Jump 9.7% in 2026

  • Family caregivers of people with Alzheimer’s fail to grasp agitation, survey finds

  • Medicare Advantage enrollment among long-stay residents grows by more than 180% between 2010 and 2023, report finds

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, December 5, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: THE $97 TRILLION LTC PARADOX

LTC Comment: Public policy incentivizes accumulating wealth, but discourages spending it on private long-term care (LTC). We explain after the ***news.***

*** REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2026 Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance (ILTCI) Conference! Organizers report: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company? Early Bird Attendee Pricing available now!” Damon and I will be there to work and cover the conference, respectively. Register here. ***

*** MORE ILTCI NEWS: 2026 Session Titles & Descriptions announced. “The wait is over! Our amazing Program & Education Committee has put together a stellar lineup of sessions for 2026. These 48 sessions will be scheduled for Monday and Tuesday of the conference. Click this link to see the full list, descriptions, and a one page PDF you can share with your friends and coworkers.” PLUS THIS: Alzheimer's Association Session Announced. Learn how lifestyle interventions can reduce the risk of cognitive impairment, how blood-based biomarkers are enabling earlier, more accessible Alzheimer’s diagnosis and advancements in treatments. The second half of this session will provide a comprehensive overview of rapidly moving innovations within dementia care specialty models including both Medicare and Medicare Advantage funded approaches. Be sure to add this Wednesday morning session to your plans!”

*** STC GAINS ACCEPTANCE as Dennis Rinner of GoldenCareUSA explains in this article that we highlighted in the following LTC Clipping last week. LTC Clippings are a daily feature we bring to Center for LTC Reform premium members. Steve Moses tracks the news and analysis bearing on LTC issues of all kinds. He cites the source, pulls a representative quote, and gives his interpretation of important articles, reports, and news items. To join the Center and get access to our LTC Clippings, LTC Bullets, LTC E-Alerts and our members-only website, go to https://centerltc.com/support/index.htm or contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.

10/30/2025, “7 ESSENTIALS in every Short-Term Care (Extended Care) & Home Health Care Plan,” by Dennis Rinner, GoldenCareUSA

Quote: “In the last couple years, there has been a major paradigm shift in the extended care product space: The landscape is changing. Agents and consumers (in particular, seniors) are aligned in demanding products that are more consumer and senior friendly. Everyone wants:

1. Less Underwriting … 2. Less Complicated … 3. Less Costly …Shorter-duration plans can be more flexible, are significantly lower in cost (more affordable than LTC alternatives), but they can still be comprehensive in the amount of coverage clients can select. … Let’s take a closer look at these seven essentials:

  1. State Availability
  2. Underwriting
  3. Unisex Rates
  4. Discounts
  5. Included Features (Built-In Choices)
  6. Add-On Features (Riders)
  7. Value Proposition”

LTC Comment: Click through for all the details in this excellent review of the new world of extended care coverage. Dennis Rinner has the real world experience and GoldenCareUSA has the wide reach to support agents and consumers in the STC and LTC space throughout the country. ***
 

LTC BULLET: THE $97 TRILLION LTC PARADOX

LTC Comment: Last January I had this insight. The United States government encourages Americans to save and invest. Public policy rewards putting money aside for retirement, building home equity, and amassing life insurance cash value. But the same government’s policies—ironically and counterintuitively—discourage spending that accumulated wealth for high-quality private long-term care. As a result, most Americans who face elevated LTC expenditures end up on Medicaid, a means-tested public welfare program. How can that be, I wondered. What are the consequences for care access and quality? Could different policies make better use of America’s vast wealth to improve its dysfunctional LTC system?

That puzzle and those questions led me to draft the following paper. It became the basis for a vastly revised “Policy Analysis” titled “Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less,” published November 13, 2025 by the Cato Institute. Because the piece published by Cato is very different from the original draft, focusing mostly on different points, I want to make the original available to LTC Bullets readers. Here it is.

“The $97 Trillion LTC Paradox”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Executive Summary

Government motivates personal asset accumulation with generous tax incentives. But it discourages spending the amassed wealth on long-term care (LTC), the single biggest financial risk aging Americans face. This contradictory policy undercuts LTC service delivery by relying too heavily on inadequate public financing. Resolving it in favor of more private LTC financing would reduce Medicaid expenditures by billions of dollars and simultaneously expand tax revenues from increased commercial activity. This paper explains why and how.

Contradictory Policies

Many government laws and regulations encourage private wealth accumulation in retirement savings, home equity, and life insurance. Tax-favored programs like IRAs and 401(k)s reward people for setting aside retirement funds. The federal government promotes home ownership with subsidized mortgages (FHA, VA, USDA), mortgage-interest tax deductions, and down payment assistance, enabling owners to grow equity. Life insurance receives favorable treatment through tax-deferred growth of cash value and tax-free death benefits. Thanks to these policies, Americans hold trillions of dollars in retirement savings ($40T),[1] home equity ($35T),[2] and life insurance ($22T),[3] $97 trillion in total for these resources alone. But little of this enormous wealth goes to pay for the potentially catastrophic cost of LTC. How can that be?

LTC includes the long-term services and supports people require when they cannot perform basic activities of daily living without assistance. Such assistance may be needed due to injury, illness, frailty, cognitive impairment or old age. The need grows exponentially as America’s vulnerable aging population surges. Most of what we read about LTC in the popular and academic literature presumes that people all across the country are spending huge sums of money on nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and long-term home care. See for example the “Dying Broke” series by the New York Times and KFF.[4] The media tell us that many people spend down their life’s savings for this commonplace, unavoidable and supposedly uncompensated expense. In truth, the most reliable evidence shows that widespread, ruinous LTC spend down does not occur. What really happens?

LTC Financing

As the following table shows, government paid for most of the $629 billion America spent on LTC in 2023. Medicaid covered 44 percent and Medicare, 16 percent. Private insurance paid nine percent and other public and private sources, 17 percent. Thus, third parties covered the vast majority of all LTC expenses, 87 percent. Personal out-of-pocket spending (OOP)  accounted for only 13 percent. As explained below, half of OOP came from income contributed mandatorily by people already on Medicaid, not from personal assets. Only six or seven percent of the entire cost of LTC could possibly come from spend down of private savings. At roughly $40 billion, out-of-pocket asset spend down barely nicks the tip of the nearly $100 trillion private wealth iceberg.

Source: National Health Expenditures*

Table: 2023 Total LTC Spending by Type and Source in Billions of Dollars with the Percentage Increase Since 2022[5]

*  For definitions of all National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories, see LINK.

How can it be that private wealth is largely off the table for financing LTC? For one thing, paid LTC services are far less common than many believe. Fifty-five percent of people who reach age 65 will not require any paid LTC. Thirty-one percent will need two years or less.[6] Those shorter term needs do fall largely on the public, but they are manageable. Johnson and Wang found that “Nearly nine in ten older adults have enough resources, including income and wealth, to cover assisted living expenses for two years.”[7]

It is the remaining 14 percent of paid LTC lasting two years or more, especially the 4 percent lasting over five years, that incur crushing outlays due to the high cost of care. Median rates for nursing homes are $320 per day for a private room and $285 for a semi-private room; assisted living runs $5,350 per month; homemaker and home health aide services, $30 and $33 per hour, respectively.[8] Paid LTC need lasting for long periods at those high rates is clearly unaffordable by a public largely uninsured privately for the risk. So, as there is no evidence of widespread catastrophic private LTC spend down, we must focus on who or what pays instead and how exactly the public avoids this huge liability.

Medicaid’s LTC Financing Role

Medicaid pays for most of the longest, most expensive LTC needs. However, the public welfare program’s 44 percent share ($278 billion) of total 2023 LTC expenditures ($629 billion) understates its full impact on the service delivery system. Medicaid recipients are required to contribute most of their personal income (upwards of half of OOP), including their Social Security benefits (41% of OOP), to offset Medicaid’s cost for their care.[9] This supplemental private revenue makes the cost of Medicaid look smaller and out-of-pocket expenditures appear higher. After co-opting their private revenue in this way, Medicaid underpays LTC providers, reimbursing them on average only 70 percent of the rates they would otherwise have received from private payers.[10] The combined impact of Medicaid’s commandeering half of total out-of-pocket LTC spending, approximately $40 billion worth of private income, and then paying LTC providers often less than the cost of supplying the care[11] has had a devastating impact on LTC access and quality. Resulting meager wages worsen the nationwide shortage of paid caregivers. By dominating LTC financing while paying sub-market rates, Medicaid also shifts costs to a dwindling number of private payers who must pay higher rates for their usually shorter LTC terms of need to compensate.

Thus, Medicaid is the dominant payer for the longest needs and largest LTC expenditures. But Medicaid is a public assistance program presumed to have draconian income and asset limits that block eligibility. That is why most analysts and the media assume that people must spend down both their income and assets for LTC until, impoverished, they qualify for Medicaid benefits. It is this “Fallacy of Impoverishment”[12] that resolves the paradox of low public out-of-pocket LTC spending despite sky-high national LTC expenditures.

Financial Eligibility for Medicaid LTC

Medicaid does require low income to qualify for LTC benefits, but most state Medicaid programs deduct private health and LTC expenditures from income before applying the low-income standard. So, even high income people qualify if their medical and LTC costs are commensurately high, as they usually are for seniors in need of expensive, extended care. Some states do cap income instead, but they allow special income diversion trusts to achieve the same purpose of enabling higher income people to qualify.

Likewise, high assets do not interfere with eligibility for Medicaid LTC. Most large assets seniors own, such as homes, tax-favored retirement savings, or an automobile are exempt. Countable assets, such as cash, stocks, bonds, really anything easily convertible to cash, are usually capped at $2,000. But excess countable wealth is easily converted to exempt status by using it to purchase exempt assets. See “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”[13] Long lists of exempt resources to facilitate this process are readily available on line or from financial advisers who specialize in reconfiguring clients’ income and assets to qualify them for Medicaid LTC benefits. Bottom line, virtually no amount of income or assets automatically disqualifies someone from qualifying for LTC funded by Medicaid and practically any amount of wealth can be reconfigured to secure Medicaid LTC eligibility.

Mystery Solved

It should be clear now what is going on. The conundrum of how private out-of-pocket LTC spending can be so low when total national LTC spending is so high is solved. The public handles relatively small, shorter-term LTC expenses out of their available income and assets without severe difficulty. But as LTC need extends in time and cost, pressure builds on families to find a way to fund the care. Millions take on the responsibility of caring for loved ones without pay, but the financial and emotional stress is so great that many seek help elsewhere. Turned away by Social Security and Medicare, which do not pay directly for LTC, they eventually discover Medicaid. There they find the help they seek, but it comes with all the downsides associated with the program such as the need to rejigger income and assets to qualify, access and quality problems, institutional bias, long home care waiting lists, and discrimination due to providers preferring higher-rate private payers.

Consequences

What are the ramifications of this unwieldy LTC system for each of its economic stakeholders? For government, the dominant payer, LTC is a huge expense that unrelentingly compounds budget deficits and long-term debt. For the public, LTC is a risk about which they are in denial until they need it, at which time Medicaid obviates the biggest cost, further desensitizing future generations to LTC risk. For senior advocates, LTC means seeking extra government benefits, while missing the irony that the more government spends on LTC, the less incentive people have to prepare privately for the risk. For Medicaid planners, LTC generates big profits from artificially impoverishing affluent clients to qualify them for benefits while holding back “key money” so their clients can access the best publicly financed care available to the exclusion of needier recipients. For care providers, LTC is a race for survival, as they struggle to supply quality care despite inadequate reimbursement from public programs that crowd out private payers at market rates. To the financiers who supply the debt and equity capital to build, operate and maintain care facilities, LTC requires a constant search to find profitable projects in a market dominated by poor public payers. Finally, for insurers, LTC is a hopeless challenge to sell a product government has been giving away since Medicaid began in 1965. These players in the LTC marketplace compete to squeeze scraps of benefit or profit from a centrally planned, government-dominated system that serves none of them well, and simultaneously defies reform.

Solutions

What can be done? This entrenched LTC economic system must be disrupted to its core. All payers, including Medicaid, should pay market rates to all LTC providers. This would reduce caregiver shortages and mitigate access and quality problems through market competition. To be able to pay market rates, however, Medicaid would need to cover fewer recipients. To reduce Medicaid LTC dependency without harming people in need, the program’s financial eligibility limits must be tightened gradually so that the public has time to adjust to a new reality of heightened private LTC risk. To achieve that objective, the system should exempt everyone under 55 years of age and anyone already needing LTC from the following changes.

1.  Keep Medicaid’s treatment of income the same, continuing to require a low income standard after deducting private medical and LTC expenses from total income. Excess Social Security, pension and other private income should continue to offset Medicaid’s cost for recipients’ care, but the income flowing to LTC providers should be at market rates eliminating Medicaid’s artificially low reimbursements and reinvigorating the entire LTC service delivery system.

2.  Stanch Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak. Stop allowing Medicaid applicants to purchase exempt assets in order to spend down unlimited, otherwise countable resources artificially. Instead, treat asset spend down the same as income spend down, by limiting it to deductions for actual, documented private medical or LTC expenditures.

3.  Bring seniors’ $14 trillion[14] of home equity into the LTC financing system by eliminating or vastly reducing Medicaid’s home equity exemption. At its current 2025 level between $730,000 and $1,097,000,[15] Medicaid’s misplaced generosity diverts nearly all home equity away from LTC funding, enough alone to solve most of LTC’s many access and quality problems.

4.  Stop “Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts”[16] and “Medicaid Compliant Annuities”[17] from diverting vast sums of private wealth from LTC spending into taxpayer-financed Medicaid expenditures. These legal gimmicks, used exclusively by the affluent clients of Medicaid planning specialists, should be illegal.

5.  Medicaid’s 5-year asset transfer look-back[18] is too short to discourage intentional self-impoverishment to qualify for LTC benefits. Expand it to 20 years. As home ownership and transfers are publicly recorded by county assessors and recorders, respectively, a 20-year look-back rule could be easily administered. It would end one of the most commonly recommended early LTC planning methods.

6.  End systemic LTC racism.[19] Today, affluent Medicaid planners’ clients access the best Medicaid facilities and services to the exclusion of needier groups, including racial and socio-economic minorities, by using “key money”[20] to purchase red-carpet LTC access that the less privileged cannot afford. When all funders, including Medicaid, pay market rates for care this unfair advantage benefiting the well-to-do over the underprivileged will disappear.

7.  Give Medicaid back to the vulnerable aged and disabled people for whom it was originally intended by reversing the program’s new focus on able-bodied, working-age adults.[21]

8.  Allow states to experiment with creative ways to do more with less by encouraging and approving waivers that trade federal matching fund limits for more state-level LTC policy flexibility.

Implementing these eight measures will vastly reduce Medicaid LTC caseloads over time, including the most expensive cases dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The new program will be better for all who qualify because it will pay market reimbursement rates adequate to ensure access to and quality of care across the care continuum from home to nursing home care. Middle class and affluent people no longer able to qualify for Medicaid LTC while sheltering wealth will find private pay LTC of higher quality and greater availability. They will pay market rates instead of higher private rates inflated by cost shifting caused by earlier artificially low Medicaid rates. With enormous sums of new private financing flowing through the LTC service delivery system at market rates, commercial activity will flourish generating additional tax revenue as more caregivers and LTC providers join the newly profitable sector.

Obstacles

This is an attractive picture. But getting from the dysfunctional system we have now to this vastly different organization of incentives and results is a problem. Critics will excoriate this new approach as uncaring toward people in need despite the irony that most of them believe incorrectly that the existing LTC system already impoverishes millions. But in truth this change will mean better LTC for those most in need who will continue to qualify for assistance from Medicaid. Others who become responsible to pay for their own LTC before they qualify for Medicaid will have time to adjust and prepare before they are affected. People already in need of LTC or under age 55 will remain unaffected and covered by Medicaid.

The biggest challenge to re-inventing LTC in this way is how to awaken the public to the new reality without inciting opposition. No longer will people be able to ignore the risk and cost of LTC in their younger years and still receive Medicaid LTC in old age while preserving wealth. How to achieve a transition from current LTC complacency and government dependency to serious personal responsibility and planning is the major obstacle. Families struggling to make ends meet and save for their own retirement will not look kindly at a new obligation to save, invest or insure for LTC. How can they be relieved of that burden while simultaneously reducing the public financing option that has failed everyone so miserably?

Answers

The solution is to re-prioritize LTC among life’s responsibilities. As this paper has explained, public policy rewards the accumulation of savings, but discourages the use of private wealth to fund LTC. Why should amassing wealth that will pass to heirs if unspent take precedence over funding quality LTC for the living? Why should Medicaid incentivize heirs to use welfare-financed care for their infirm parents’ LTC needs? What if public policy prioritized preparing privately for future LTC need instead? What might such policy look like?

Step one is to inform the public about the loss of Medicaid as a late-life wealth preserving safety net for the middle class and affluent. Then establish and promulgate new LTC planning goals for consumers to achieve no later than age 65 as a precondition for any later Medicaid help with catastrophic costs. Give every citizen an objective analysis of their LTC risk and an estimate of the likely cost of the care they may need some day. Each person could then know what they need to set aside to cover their average expected LTC need. Research shows that an overall average is $70,000 invested by age 65 will cover median paid LTC need.[22] Of course individuals may need to set aside less or more depending on their unique circumstances. While ensuring that every individual’s average LTC risk is covered by private funding would not eliminate Medicaid’s back end catastrophic risk, it would substantially reduce that risk enabling Medicaid to do a better job for all remaining long-duration recipients.

How can people achieve their needed level of LTC savings without undue pressure on their ongoing living needs? One way could be to allow or require individuals and families to earmark other resources they are accumulating, such as retirement savings, home equity or life insurance, to be used for LTC if and only if otherwise unaffordable LTC needs occur in the future. In that manner, wealth being accumulated with strong public policy inducements can be repurposed to fund future LTC without impairing families’ current cash flow. Savings that would otherwise pass through inheritance would go to fund higher quality LTC for the living and create a stronger inducement for younger generations to save, invest or insure for their own future LTC need.

Conclusion

Some government policies encourage citizens to accumulate vast savings. But other public policies discourage them from spending this wealth on LTC. Easy access to Medicaid LTC benefits late in life enables people to ignore LTC risk and cost when they are young without drastic financial consequences later. As a result, few people plan, save, invest or insure for LTC early in life and they end up dependent on Medicaid late in life. But Medicaid distorts the LTC market by dominating it, paying too little for care, and thus causing caregiver shortages and other access and quality problems.

To fix LTC, all payers, including Medicaid, should pay market rates enabling competition to ameliorate service delivery and financing problems. For Medicaid to pay market rates, however, LTC caseloads must decline dramatically. To reduce LTC caseloads, tighten Medicaid LTC financial eligibility limits by ensuring that recipients actually spend down income and assets for real private medical and LTC expenses before becoming eligible. To prepare the general public for this less easily available Medicaid LTC program, identify each person’s likely LTC risk and cost, then let them earmark enough from assets they are otherwise accumulating to satisfy their LTC planning responsibility if and only if needed to fund their future LTC.

This arrangement will induce people to plan for LTC earlier and to pay privately for their care when needed. That private spending will reduce the cost of LTC for Medicaid. Medicaid, relieved of covering so many people who should, could and would have paid for their own LTC absent current public policy incentives to the contrary, will be able to do a better job for all remaining, genuinely needy recipients. The terrible condition of LTC service delivery and financing in the United States is not the result of too little government funding and regulation, but too much. Reconfiguring the carrots and sticks in public policy to redirect vast personal savings toward private LTC financing is the key to improve LTC for everyone, rich and poor alike.
 


[1] Natalie Lin, “US Retirement Assets Hit Record $40T,” Plan Advisor, September 20, 2024, https://www.planadviser.com/us-retirement-assets-hit-record-40t/

[2] Keith Griffith, “Homeowners Are Sitting on Their Biggest Share of Equity Since the 1950s,” realtor.com, October 1, 2024, URL: “Meanwhile, aggregate homeowner equity reached a new high of $35.1 trillion for the quarter, up 10% from a year ago and triple what it was 10 years ago.”

[3] American Council of Life Insurers, 2024 Life Insurers Fact Book, November 8, 2024, [LINK]: “By the end of 2023, total life insurance coverage in the United States was $22.2 trillion, an increase of 1.6 percent from 2022 (Table 7.1).”

[4] KFF, “Dying Broke: A New Jointly Reported Series on America’s Long-Term Care Crisis from KFF Health News and The New York Times,” November 14, 2023, KFF Health News, [LINK]

[5] Note that KFF argues that Medicare and Private Insurance should not be included in LTC expenditures, which would drop the total for 2023 from $629.3 billion to $469.3 billion, raise Medicaid’s share from 44.2 percent to 59.3 percent and increase out-of-pocket expenditures from 12.9 percent to 17.4 percent. I disagree with KFF’s reasoning. For their analysis and mine, see respectively Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS),” KFF, July 8, 2024 [LINK] and Stephen A. Moses, “LTC Bullet: LTC Data Manipulation,” Center for Long-Term Care Reform, August 30, 2024, https://centerltc.com/bullets/archives2024/1388.htm

[6] Richard W. Johnson and Judith Dey, “Long-Term Services and Supports for Older Americans: Risks and Financing, 2022,” ASPE Research Brief, August 2022 (Revised), p. 6, [LINK]

[7] Richard W. Johnson and Claire Xiaozhi Wang, “The Financial Burden of Paid Home Care on Older Adults: Oldest and Sickest Are Least Likely to Have Enough Income,” Health Affairs, 38, No. 6 (2019), p. 1000, https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2019.00025

 [8] Genworth Cost of Care Survey 2023, Genworth Financial, Inc., July 11, 2024, https://pro.genworth.com/riiproweb/productinfo/pdf/131168.pdf

[9] Recent academic LTC literature does not distinguish between the share of out-of-pocket LTC expenditures coming from personal income as opposed to assets or savings. We know from earlier analysis, however, that it is substantial. According to Lazenby and Letsch (1989): “An estimated 41 percent … of out-of-pocket spending for nursing home care was received as income by patients or their representatives from monthly social security benefits ... .” Given that elderly people have other sources of income besides Social Security, such as pensions, annuities and investment returns, all of which, except for a small monthly maintenance needs allowance, must be contributed to offset Medicaid’s cost for their care, it is reasonable to assume that income, as opposed to asset spend down, approaches or exceeds 50 percent of total out-of-pocket LTC spending. Helen C Lazenby, Suzanne W Letsch, “National health expenditures, 1989,” Health Care Financing Review, 1990 Winter;12(2):1–26, [LINK]

[10] American Council on Aging. “2021 Nursing Home Costs by State and Region, Understanding the Difference Between Private Pay and Medicaid Reimbursement,” https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/nursing-home-costs. Accessed January 4, 2025.

[11] Liz Liberman, “Medicaid Reimbursement Rates Draw Attention,” NIC/CARES blog, 2018, [LINK]

[12] Stephen A. Moses. “The Fallacy of Impoverishment,” The Gerontologist, volume 30, Issue 1, February 1990, pages 21–25, https://academic.oup.com/gerontologist/article-abstract/30/1/21/586769 

[13] Stephen A. Moses, “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak,” Paragon Health Institute, July 1, 2024, https://paragoninstitute.org/paragon-prognosis/medicaids-100-billion-leak/

[14] Erica Drzewiecki, “Senior Home Equity Reaches $14 Trillion,” National Mortgage Professional, October 8, 2024, URL.

[15] American Council on Aging, “Projected 2025 Medicaid Long-Term Care Financial Eligibility Criteria: Home Equity Limits,” accessed January 4, 2025, https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/medicaid-eligibility-2025/

“States projected to use $1,097,000 as the home equity limit in 2025: Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Washington. … California does not have a home equity limit.”

[16] American Council on Aging, “How Medicaid Planning Trusts Protect Assets and Homes from Estate Recovery,” accessed January 4, 2025, https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/asset-protection-trusts/

[17] American Council on Aging, “How Purchasing a Medicaid Compliant Annuity Impacts Eligibility for Medicaid Long-Term Care,” accessed January 4, 2025, https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/eligibility-by-annuity/

[18] American Council on Aging, “Understand Medicaid’s Look-Back Period; Penalties, Exceptions & State Variances,” accessed January 4, 2025, https://www.medicaidplanningassistance.org/medicaid-look-back-period/

[19] Tetyana Pylypiv Shippee, et al., “Evidence for Action: Addressing Systemic Racism Across Long-Term Services and Supports,” Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, February 2022, 23(2):214-219, https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34958742/

[20] Search for “key money” in this article: Flaster Greenberg PC, “Top Tips For A Successful Medicaid Spend Down,” May 17, 2019, accessed January 4, 2025, https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/top-tips-for-a-successful-medicaid-67619/

[21] Brian Blase, “Medicaid Financing Reform: Stopping Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable,” Paragon Health Institute, July 24, 2024, URL.

[22] Inferred from Johnson and Dey as explained in “Long-Term Care: The Solution,” p. 17, footnotes 47-50.
 

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Updated Friday, November 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: CATO ON LTC

LTC Comment: Cato published papers on long-term care financing reform in 2005 and again this year. After slow progress for two decades a change for the better may be coming soon. Reflections after the ***news.*** 

*** REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2026 Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance Conference! Organizers report: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. We still have room for exhibitors and sponsors!  Please contact us at info@iltciconf.org if you are interested in either opportunity to showcase your products and services to our attendees. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company?” Damon and I will be there to work and cover the conference, respectively. See you then. ***

LTC BULLET: CATO ON LTC

LTC Comment: In 2005, public policy regarding LTC financing was in ferment. The U.S. economy slowed to a crawl. State and federal politicians worried about making fiscal ends meet. Medicaid LTC expenditures soared while public interest in private LTC insurance waned. Policymakers worried about funding LTC, but frequent appeals for a big new entitlement program for that purpose fell flat. The best thing I can say about that time two decades ago is that LTC and fiscal responsibility still mattered to legislators and policymakers.

I spent half that year commuting from Seattle to Washington, DC—2 weeks on, 2 weeks off—to advocate for tighter Medicaid financial eligibility rules, stronger estate recoveries, and more support for private LTC insurance. I spoke to everyone who would listen from all the LTC trade associations, to members of Congress and their staffs, to experts at the most influential think tanks, Cato, AEI, and Heritage. We had high hopes to pass legislation that would encourage the public to plan early for LTC and save, invest or insure for that risk instead of ending up on Medicaid by default.

That was how things stood on September 1, 2005 when the Cato Institute published “Aging America’s Achilles’ Heel: Medicaid Long-Term Care.” If you don’t feel like reading that 18-page article, listen instead to this 6-minute interview that summarizes it generated by Google Illuminate. Or, better yet, check out this hour-long debate between yours truly and Vincent Russo, who is a Medicaid planner with three offices in New York as well as a founding member and fifth president of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, the Medicaid planners’ trade association.

As it turned out, we did get meaningful legislation the following March 2006 when Vice President Dick Cheney flew back from the Middle East expressly to break a Senate deadlock and pass the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. The DRA ’05 enacted the first ever cap on Medicaid home equity, setting the exemption between $500,000 and $750,000 at state option. The legislation also unleashed the LTC Partnership program that had been stifled for years by a prohibition against exempting sheltered assets from estate recovery. Those were two steps in the right direction, but not nearly enough.

Unfortunately, the DRA ’05 was the last significant progress America has made toward saving Medicaid LTC benefits for the needy and diverting middle class and affluent people toward savings, investment or insurance for LTC. An amazing thing happened in the U.S. during those intervening years. The Federal Reserve pushed interest rates to near zero setting off a government, corporate, and personal spending spree such as the country had never seen before. State and federal budgets exploded; national debt soared to $38 trillion; and personal wealth from home equity, stocks, and bonds skyrocketed. The wealthy profited more than ever; the needy made few if any gains.

As long as this economic party continued, the powers-that-be had little interest in fixing Medicaid LTC. I’d noticed over the years that when the economy went into recession and politicians couldn’t stay within budgets, they showed interest in ideas and recommendations to control Medicaid LTC costs, especially when proposed to improve care access and quality at the same time. But when the good times rolled, they lost interest. That’s why I’m hopeful now.

The U.S. economy is showing signs of stress. Interest rates are up. National debt is in the stratosphere. Interest on the debt exceeds defense expenditures. Deficits approaching $2 trillion per year increase the debt immediately and boost debt-service costs over time. Doubts emerge that the United States can service its debt going forward. That means it will struggle repaying bondholders for their investments resulting in America’s creditors losing confidence in the dollar. The “debasement trade” tempts investors to abandon fiat currencies like the dollar for hard assets like gold and silver.

In other words, conditions are lining up for policymakers and politicians to take the need for LTC financing reform seriously again. Therefore, timing was right for another Cato paper to point the way. Cato published “Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less” on November 13, 2025, bookending its 2005 coverage of the issue. Please read the new paper or listen to this 7-minute “interview” summarizing it. Then share your feedback, positive or negative, with me at smoses@centerltc.com. Thanks for your time and consideration.

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Updated Monday, November 17, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-042:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • New Paper: Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less

  • Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less

  • Long-term care is ‘elephant in room’ in financial planning discussions, despite concerns

  • Better than Boca

  • The cost of care is gutting the American dream. Here's how to fix it.

  • Robots will play a growing role in elder care, experts say

  • Genworth Plans to Offer Market-Linked Long-Term Care Benefits

  • Number of ‘solo-agers’ skyrockets, AARP survey finds

  • I just retired with a cushy $2M nest egg but my wife, 62, has been diagnosed with a serious illness and may need long-term care. What do we do now?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, November 10, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-041:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Rise in premature deaths prevents Americans from reaching age of Medicare eligibility, study finds

  • Layin’ It on the Line: The long-term care crisis 2.0 — Why the government may force you to buy coverage

  • Measure to allow investment of WA Cares tax dollars in stock market on track for approval

  • Are taxpayers wasting $86 billion on SilverSneakers and Medicare Advantage goodies they don't use?

  • Long-term services: Lots of ideas but who will pay for them?

  • Medicaid payment pause could have unintended consequences for assisted living providers, residents

  • As Pickleball Continues to Gain Players, Injuries Are Increasing

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, November 7, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: OOPS! THE COLLAPSE OF OUT-OF-POCKET LONG-TERM CARE SPENDING AND ITS CONSEQUENCES

LTC Comment: Academics and the media claim millions of middle class Americans are spending their life’s savings on long-term care until they’re broke. We examine this “Fallacy of Impoverishment” after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2026 Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance Conference! Organizers report: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. We still have room for exhibitors and sponsors!  Please contact us at info@iltciconf.org if you are interested in either opportunity to showcase your products and services to our attendees. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company?” Damon and I will be there to work and cover the conference, respectively. See you then. ***

*** BOLO. The Cato Institute plans to publish Steve Moses’s “Policy Analysis” titled “Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less” on November 11. This new paper reveals why America’s LTC service delivery and financing systems are such a mess. It proposes a creative new approach to resolve all LTC’s problems. Be on the lookout. ***
 

LTC BULLET: OOPS! THE COLLAPSE OF OUT-OF-POCKET LONG-TERM CARE SPENDING AND ITS CONSEQUENCES

LTC Comment: Anecdotes abound that some people spend enormous sums on long-term care (LTC). What is lacking is any evidence that catastrophic LTC asset spend down is widespread. The evidence we do have is all to the contrary. For example, consider the following decade-by-decade tables derived from annual National Health Expenditure data. Start with the most recent year for which we have data, 2023. It shows that overall out-of-pocket LTC spending for nursing homes, continuing care retirement communities, home health care and other health, residential, and personal care is only 12.9%. What can we make of this?

Source: National Health Expenditures*
“Other” includes “health, residential, and personal care”
*  For definitions of all National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

If you didn’t have these facts right in front of you, what percentage of U.S. spending for LTC would you guess that people pay out of pocket? You’ve heard Medicaid requires impoverishment, so that implies a lot of private spending. You know LTC insurance is unpopular, owned by only 3.1% of Americans, so that source wouldn’t contribute much. Everyone says Medicare doesn’t pay for LTC, so no help there. The other public and private third-party LTC payers are each relatively small and not well known. So, you could be excused for guessing that out-of-pocket LTC expenditures must be half, maybe even two-thirds of total LTC spending.

Actually, that guess wouldn’t be far off from what peer-reviewed scholars have estimated over the years. Kemper, Komisar, and Alecxih claimed in 2005 that 45% of  LTC expenditures were “uninsured private expense.” In 2016, Favreault and Dey said: “Families will pay about half of the costs themselves out-of-pocket.” Favreault and Johnson reckoned in 2021 that “out-of-pocket payments” were 57% of “total LTSS expenditures.” The following NHE tables, covering 2020, 2010, and 2000, reveal that actual OOP spending during those periods was 12.0%, 14.1% and 19.9%, respectively. How could respected scholars get such an important statistic so wrong? And why?

How and Why Do Scholars Estimate OOPS at Double or Triple the Actual Rate?

Instead of using the actual NHE data provided by CMS that I’m citing here, scholars chose to rely on “micro simulations” generated by software like the Urban Institute’s “Dynamic Simulation of Income Model (DYNASIM).” Here’s how DYNASIM describes its seductive capabilities:

Using the best and most recent data available, [DYNASIM] projects the size and characteristics—such as income and health status—of the US population for the next 75 years. DYNASIM can also describe “what if” scenarios, showing how outcomes would likely evolve under changes to public policies, business practices, or individual behaviors. With this model, we can show how different groups will fare over time, who is moving ahead and who is being left behind, and which groups would win and lose under various policy options.

In other words, as it applies to our current question, if you plug in Medicaid’s financial eligibility rules, DYNASIM will grind out a statistic for how much people must have had to pay out-of-pocket for LTC based on national data for how much income and wealth the public starts with before they confront LTC costs. On top of that, DYNASIM points scholars and policymakers  toward who “would win and lose under various policy options.” Scholars like simulations based on assuming LTC causes impoverishment because they “point” to the policy options most academics prefer, i.e., more public, less private financing.

What’s Wrong with DYNASIMulation?

So, exactly how do the experts come up with those high OOP spending estimates? First, they cite sources that say Medicaid LTC eligibility depends on having “low income,” only $967 per month and low assets, usually $2,000. These are the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) limits that do guarantee Medicaid eligibility once reached. Then they assume everyone spends down any excess wealth they possess for private LTC until they reach those levels and become eligible for Medicaid. Their simulator applies those strict financial eligibility criteria to national income and wealth data and conclude that half or more of all LTC expenditures must come from private out-of-pocket spending. QED.

What’s wrong with this method? Why does it produce estimates that are three or four times what the actual data show? Although people who fall within those low Medicaid income and asset limits do qualify for LTC benefits, that does not mean that other people with substantially more income and assets cannot qualify nor that they must spend down their savings for private LTC before becoming eligible for Medicaid.

People with high incomes qualify because in most states Medicaid deducts their private health care spending from their incomes before applying a low income standard. Some states do apply an income cap, but they allow special income diversion trusts to achieve the same purpose. Either way, high income people qualify easily for Medicaid LTC benefits.

Nor do high assets disqualify people from Medicaid LTC. Most large assets seniors own are exempt for determining eligibility. Exempt assets include most home equity, home improvements, IRAs, a side business, a vehicle, prepaid funeral expenses, all personal belongings and household furnishings and others, lists of which are available online and from Medicaid planners. Extra countable assets people own are easily made exempt by using them to purchase resources that are exempt, thus achieving eligibility while preserving wealth in a different form. This is “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”

In other words, Medicaid LTC financial eligibility is more complicated than simply applying the presumed income limit of $967 per month and the $2,000 cap on countable assets to national income and asset ownership data. That simple-minded simulation produces vastly over-estimated numbers for OOPS. So, given that CMS provides hard data every year on actual OOP spending, we need to ask not only how the experts come up with such inflated estimates, but why they do it.

I think the reason scholars inflate OOPS is the ideological proclivity among academics toward “LTC solutions” that involve more government spending and regulation. Most of their articles, reports and books that estimate very high OOP spending then conclude that to relieve the awful burden of LTC on families, the only viable solution is to increase Medicaid spending, add LTC to Medicare, or concoct a new compulsory, payroll-funded, LTC entitlement on the model of Social Security and Medicare.

But all such proposals have fallen flat. The time for big government entitlement programs has passed. We’re likely to lose the ones we already have before a new one for LTC comes along. The national debt exceeds $38 trillion. Spending surpasses revenue this year by $1.8 trillion. We’re on the brink of being unable to service the national debt, which means the bond market may demand austerity, not a promising economic environment for big new government spending programs going forward.

Consequences of Declining OOPS

Consider the history of actual OOPS spending over the years. Here are the remaining tables for each start of decade since 1970.

Note the gradual decline in OOPS starting from almost 40% in 1970, only five years after Medicaid began subsidizing LTC with virtually unlimited federal matching funds, to 25.9% in 1990, finally dropping by half again to 12.9% in 2023. Clearly the burden of out-of-pocket LTC spending on the public has declined radically over the years.

These facts have consequences. The decline in OOPS explains why most Americans do not worry about LTC until they need it. As their LTC spending soars, they easily qualify for Medicaid. The next generation receives that message when, thanks to Medicaid, their inheritances are unencumbered by their parents’ LTC costs. The cycle is perpetuated as each new generation fails to save, invest or insure for LTC and ends up relying on Medicaid.

Today, Medicaid is the dominant payer for all forms of LTC, 44.2%. In 2023, as the first table above shows, it covered, 30.4% of nursing home care, 34.6% of home health care, and 60.3% of “other” health, residential, and personal care services. Medicaid pays nursing homes and other LTC providers dismally low reimbursements, often less than the cost of providing the care. Much higher private-pay revenue for nursing homes has collapsed to only 7%. High dependency on low Medicaid reimbursements is the cause of LTC’s biggest problems including caregiver shortages, poor access and low quality.

What to Do Instead

Instead of fantasizing catastrophic LTC spending, based on wishful simulations, to scare up demand for a big new, compulsory, payroll-funded LTC entitlement program, here’s what needs to happen instead.

Recognize that OOPS is much lower than the scare mongers claim. Strengthen Medicaid financial eligibility rules so they do not allow middle-class and affluent people to qualify for LTC benefits while preserving wealth and without spending down for their own care. Save and improve Medicaid as a LTC safety net for the genuinely needy who currently receive the program’s worst facilities and services.

For full documentation of these problems and detailed proposals to solve them, see the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.” Watch for the Cato Institute’s “Better Long-Term Care for Billions Less,” forthcoming November 11.

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Updated Monday, November 3, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-040:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Are Consumers Ready For The Great Wealth Transfer?

  • Who Will Care For Aging Clients?

  • Gen X could be ‘most financially vulnerable cohort’ facing retirement: report

  • Fiscal sanity or risky gamble? Allowing state to invest WA Cares Fund in stock market

  • New report finds wide variation across states in financial strain among family caregivers

  • New Research on Long-Term Care Insurance Partnerships

  • 90% of Americans plan to skip the No. 1 piece of Social Security advice, study finds

  • My husband and I have $7K in Social Security and $2.5 million in stocks. What could go wrong?

  • 9 Things Retirees Should Stop Buying, According to Financial Experts

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, October 27, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-039:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Deciding on Senior Living? 10 Things You Should Know

  • 8 Insurance Benefits You Lose After 70

  • Shutdown or not, there are things to do

  • Exposure to bright lights at night linked to increased risk of heart disease, study finds

  • Investment Firm Acquires LifeSecure From Michigan Blue

  • LTCi makes a difference in family caregiving, study finds

  • Nationwide expands hybrid long-term care lineup with new annuity option

  • Strengthening a safety net requires reforms to long-term care through Medicaid

  • Morgan Stanley: Longevity Is Redefining Financial Planning

  • Pushed from liberal-leaning states, home care providers may eye expansion in Arizona, Florida, Texas, attorney says

  • The Top 5 Reasons For Turmoil In The Medicare Advantage Market

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, October 24, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: A BETTER LTC ANSWER THAN WA CARES

LTC Comment: As WA Cares slides down the slippery fiscal slope facing all compulsory, payroll-funded government entitlements, we bring you a better option, after the ***news.***

*** REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2026 Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance Conference! Organizers report: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. We still have room for exhibitors and sponsors!  Please contact us at info@iltciconf.org if you are interested in either opportunity to showcase your products and services to our attendees. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company?” Damon and I will be there to work and cover the conference, respectively. See you then. ***

*** LTC CLIPPINGS are a daily feature we bring to Center for LTC Reform premium members. Steve Moses tracks the news and analysis bearing on LTC issues of all kinds. He cites the source, pulls a representative quote, and gives his interpretation of important articles, reports, and news items. To join the Center and get access to our LTC Clippings, LTC Bullets, LTC E-Alerts and our members-only website, go to https://centerltc.com/support/index.htm or contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com. In the meantime, here’s a sample LTC Clipping highlighting an article by today’s Guest LTC Bullet author Elizabeth New.

7/16/2025, “Estate recovery is fair — if Medicaid is for the needy,” by Elizabeth New, Washington Policy Center

Quote: “The American Medical Association (AMA) recently voted to oppose a federal requirement that says states must seek to recover long-term care (LTC) Medicaid costs from the estates of deceased beneficiaries. That’s bad advice from the AMA and implies that states are doing a good job with estate recovery efforts. They’re not. … Stephen Moses, a longtime advocate of estate recovery and president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, has argued for years that strong recovery policies promote personal responsibility and discourage Medicaid gaming. He’s right. Pretending that all estate recovery is punitive or unjust ignores the fact that the real injustice lies in allowing people with means to use a safety net they do not need. The AMA's vote of opposition sends the wrong message, and lawmakers just missed a cost-saving beat in their big bill. Medicaid is not an inheritance-preservation program. It is a last-resort lifeline. Federal and state lawmakers should not be shamed for treating it that way.”

LTC Comment: Hearty thanks to Elizabeth New of the Washington Policy Center for this spot-on article. She is a tireless advocate for sensible LTC financing policy. For more on the topic, read my 1988 study for the USDHHS Inspector General titled “Medicaid Estate Recoveries.” Most of its recommendations, including mandatory estate recoveries, became federal law in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993.  ***

 

LTC BULLET: A BETTER SOLUTION FOR WASHINGTON THAN WA CARES

LTC Comment: Elizabeth New, nee Hovde (her former byline) is Director of the Center for Health Care and Center for Worker Rights at the Washington Policy Center, a free market oriented think tank in Washington State. We’ve cited her analysis and criticism of WA Cares in LTC Clippings at least six times in the past year. She indicts Washington State’s LTC entitlement program as insufficient, mismanaged, and unfairly structured, placing an undue burden on taxpayers. Today Ms. New brings us a broader perspective on her thinking about Medicaid’s and WA Cares’ roles in long-term care service delivery and financing. Here’s how she introduces today’s LTC Guest Bullet:

Elizabeth New: A funny thing happened on the way to WA Cares. 

As I studied Washington state’s new, mandatory long-term care program — which distorted the private insurance market, has solvency issues, will offer limited help to only some workers and taxes low-income earners to subsidize those with no need for public aid — I learned about the even more concerning burden Medicaid Long-Term Care is placing on taxpayers.

The following policy paper, written for Washington state lawmakers, is the result of that deeper investigation. It proposes reforms to Medicaid Long-Term Care that can preserve the safety net for people in true need, while protecting taxpayers from a program that has been stretched beyond its design.

My analysis draws on key insights from industry experts, including the foundational work of Stephen Moses. I invite you to read, “Strengthening a safety net requires reforms to long-term care through Medicaid.” 

Introduction

Washingtonians are living longer. More people are — and will end up — using long-term-care services to help them with activities of daily life. 

Some people need financial help with long-term care, which state and federal taxpayers generously provide through Medicaid. Other people finance long-term care with private resources and have no need for taxpayer dependency. Many others have savings and investments that could be used for long-term care but instead have taxpayers pay for their long-term care, while protecting money and assets to pass onto their heirs. Inadequate eligibility requirements and low pursual of estate-recovery measures make this easier to do.

Medicaid is the primary payer of long-term care (LTC) services in the nation and Washington state, and LTC funding makes up 20% of Washington state Medicaid spending. Keeping up with the financial demands to come from an increased number of people relying on taxpayers for long-term care requires changes to eligibility requirements and estate recovery measures attached to the safety net.

Key Takeaways

  1. Washington state is aging, and an increasing number of people are applying for Medicaid long-term care (LTC) earlier. This will lead to longer durations of use and escalating costs.
  2. LTC costs consumed 20% of $29.2 billion in Medicaid spending in Washington state in fiscal year 2022. 
  3. Medicaid enrollees who used long-term services and supports comprised 6% of total enrollment but 37% of federal and state spending.
  4. The WA Cares Fund is unlikely to substantially help reduce Medicaid LTC demand. Given a lifetime benefit of $36,500, high LTC costs and irresponsible state messaging, program recipients will often exhaust the benefit and then seek Medicaid.
  5. Medicaid is the primary payer for LTC nationally, financing more than half (61%) of the total spending. This reliance on taxpayers is concerning as the population ages and program eligibility remains broadly accessible.
  6. Eligibility rules let people rearrange assets to appear poor and qualify for taxpayer-funded long-term care, even when they have nearly $1.1 million in home equity.
  7. Estate recovery helps repay taxpayers after a recipient’s death, supporting program integrity and sustainability, yet Washington recovered only 0.34% of $5 billion in fiscal year 2025.
  8. To deter gaming and preserve aid for those truly in need, lawmakers should push Congress to extend the five-year asset look-back period to 20 years.
  9. Medicaid needs to be a safety net — not an inheritance-preservation vehicle — protecting resources for vulnerable Washingtonians.

READ THE FULL STUDY HERE

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Updated Monday, October 20, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-038:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Say what? Insensitive comments fuel family caregiver’s humorous web video series

  • Seniorly to be acquired by CareScout in $20 million transaction

  • How the Government Shutdown Could Affect Older Adults

  • Impact Of The Carer's Gap

  • US adults are generally unprepared for aging, new ‘longevity preparedness index’ finds

  • US health agency releases 2026 quality ratings for Medicare plans

  • Here’s what’s really stopping Medicare Advantage from covering all of America’s seniors

  • Economic volatility driving people to delay retirement or go back to work

  • Nationwide launches CareMatters Annuity to Address Growing Long-Term Care Concerns

  • CBD Calms the Inflamed Alzheimer’s Brain

  • RN turnover in skilled nursing reaches 100 percent over a decade

  • Out of pocket payments for home-based long-term care in Europe drive older people into poverty

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, October 13, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-037:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • 2026 Tax Deductible Limits For Long-Term Care Insurance Increase 3 Percent

  • Layin' it on the Line: The long-term care crisis - why the government may force you to buy coverage

  • Largest Study of Alzheimer’s in African Americans Reveals Disease Targets

  • Vote ‘Yes’ to strengthen WA Cares Fund for elder, long-term care | Editorial

  • A small think tank's crusade against Obamacare is making some Republicans nervous

  • Most Americans expect to need long-term care in the future, and they don’t want that care in assisted living

  • Retirement goals slipping away as more Americans live paycheck to paycheck

  • Senior living and care market sees resurgence, increased demand

  • A small think tank's crusade against Obamacare is making some Republicans nervous

  • Vote ‘Yes’ to strengthen WA Cares Fund for elder, long-term care | Editorial 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Friday, October 10, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: MEDICAID MONEY MANIPULATION HARMS LONG-TERM CARE

LTC Comment: State Medicaid programs, Medicaid planners, and the federal government manipulate money mischievously in different, but complementary ways to the detriment of the program’s mission. We explain after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN for the 2026 Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance Conference! Organizers report: “Our in-person conference March 8-11, 2026 at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, FL is now accepting attendee registrations! As always, our agenda will include numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. We still have room for exhibitors and sponsors!  Please contact us at info@iltciconf.org if you are interested in either opportunity to showcase your products and services to our attendees. Everyone who's anyone in Long Term Care Planning will be there. What about your company?” ***

 

LTC BULLET: MEDICAID MONEY MANIPULATION HARMS LONG-TERM CARE

LTC Comment: State Medicaid programs employ provider taxes, intergovernmental transfers and other creative financing methods to transfer costs from their general funds onto federal taxpayers. Medicaid planners manipulate Medicaid financial eligibility rules to qualify their affluent clients artificially for Medicaid’s best care to the exclusion of the poor. The state and federal governments convert high private LTC revenue into less-than-cost Medicaid reimbursements to the detriment of care access and quality for the poor and vulnerable the program is supposed to serve. This concatenation of poor public policies got under my skin. I wrote the following essay to tease out their meaning and consequences.

“Medicaid Money Manipulation Harms Long-Term Care”
by
Stephen A. Moses

The Medicaid program is big and growing rapidly. States administer Medicaid; the federal government oversees their programs; both share the cost. States contribute a payment that their federal partner matches by a formula varying from 50% (one-to-one) to 83% of the total cost. States manipulate this system with various creative financing techniques. For example, nearly all states (49) tax health care providers to generate extra revenues they use to boost their federal financial match without drawing on their general funds. The Paragon Health Institute calls this and other similar methods to maximize federal expenditures at minimal state cost, often diverting them to unauthorized purposes, “legalized money laundering.”[1]

The largest laundered sums involve hospitals and managed care insurers, but states also tax nursing homes and other long-term care (LTC) providers for the same purpose. Less understood is a related form of money laundering. Non-poor people routinely qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits. Medicaid converts their potentially higher private-pay revenue into below-cost payments to LTC providers with serious negative consequences for care access and quality. This paper discusses each of these Medicaid money manipulation methods and their results.

Long-Term Care

LTC consumes a disproportionate share of Medicaid. Only six percent of Medicaid recipients use LTC, but they consume 37 percent of program expenditures.[2] Although home and community-based services (HCBS) now consume nearly two-thirds (63.2 percent) of Medicaid LTC spending,[3] nursing homes remain a critical care venue, serving 24 percent of all Medicaid LTC recipients.[4]

Forty-nine states tax nursing homes, maximizing their federal match and laundering funds for expanded uses. Despite measures implemented to control this practice, the sums involved are very large. The Paragon Health Institute cites a particularly egregious example in Indiana.[5]

But more than just money is involved. New research indicates that the LTC provider tax gimmick may have far-reaching detrimental impacts on the access to and quality of care Medicaid recipients receive.

Creative LTC Financing

A recent NBER working paper, titled “Creative Financing and Public Moral Hazard:

Evidence from Medicaid and the Nursing Home Industry,”[6] argues that creative financing schemes like provider taxes have several negative secondary effects. The authors conclude that such schemes distort state incentives “discouraging increases in effective reimbursement rates retained by the providers, while encouraging expanded access to inpatient care.” (p. 35) They therefore exacerbate “the persistently low effective Medicaid reimbursement rates that contribute to the systematic quality shortfalls in the nursing home industry.” (p. 36) Simultaneously, “the schemes incentivize higher inpatient care volume,” (p. 36) which the authors call “public moral hazard,” despite “widespread preferences among older adults to age at home.” (p. 36) Worst of all, they “show that creative financing leads to disproportionate increases in Medicaid funded care in the lowest-quality nursing facilities, with potentially harmful consequences for patients.” (p. 1) According to the authors, dementia patients in low quality facilities are disproportionately impacted.

Wholesale Medicaid Money Laundering

In summary, the new NBER paper finds that taxing LTC providers to increase federal matching funds incentivizes states to (1) expand nursing home care volume in preference to the HCBS that patients prefer, (2) channel funds disproportionately to lower quality nursing homes serving many dementia patients, and (3) capture some of the added federal funds for purposes other than LTC, thus reducing effective nursing home reimbursement rates and exacerbating related access and quality problems. Provider taxes operate as a kind of wholesale money laundering scheme to capture extra federal funds, redirect them from their intended use to other purposes, increase LTC use and expenditures, and transfer the cost from state to federal tax payers.

Retail Money Laundering

Provider taxes may also encourage money laundering at a retail level. The NBER paper observes that “States can influence care volume through capacity regulations, Medicaid eligibility, benefit design, and Home- and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers.”[7] (Emphasis added) How might states increase caseloads by manipulating Medicaid financial eligibility rules for the purpose of gaining more federal matching funds? States have wide discretion to set and enforce rules governing eligibility for Medicaid LTC benefits. They decide, for example, how much countable wealth to allow recipients to retain; which kinds of assets are exempt and in what amounts; to what extent they enforce restrictions on asset transfers, irrevocable trusts and compliant annuities to qualify; the level of effort they extend to track and collect estate recoveries; and many others. Could it be that the incentive to increase Medicaid LTC caseloads created by the provider tax scheme contributes to the indifference many states show toward setting and enforcing strict financial eligibility controls?

California is an outlier in this regard, having totally eliminated its countable asset limit for a time, and leaving in effect its most generous limit in the country.[8] But few states successfully restrain access to Medicaid LTC benefits by people with assets they could use to pay privately for their care. Although Americans hold $97 trillion in retirement savings ($40T),[9] home equity ($35T),[10] and life insurance ($22T),[11] very little of that wealth goes to pay for their LTC. Only 6.5 percent of the $629 billion they spent on LTC in 2023 came from private savings. Medicaid (44 percent), Medicare (16 percent), private insurance (10 percent), other third party payers (17 percent), and private income of people already on Medicaid (6.5 percent) paid the rest. In essence, most potential private LTC spending is converted, or effectively laundered, to become public spending mainly through Medicaid and Medicare with serious consequences for LTC services and financing.

Combined LTC Money Laundering

States and the federal government are complicit in laundering private funds to convert them to public expenditures. Federal financial eligibility rules discourage states from controlling access to Medicaid LTC benefits by the middle class and affluent. Provider tax incentives predispose states not to exercise such control. The federal government requires that state Medicaid programs treat many large assets as exempt. Examples include home equity, side businesses, retirement savings, home furnishings, personal belongings and many more. But federal law and regulations place no restriction on spending down countable assets to purchase exempt resources effectively obviating the need for prosperous people to spend their own funds on care. “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak” explains how this loophole works and its consequences.[12]

This policy of diverting private LTC spending into public expenditures has devastating consequences for LTC access and quality. It diverts hundreds of billions of dollars of LTC spending from coming to care providers at market rates. Channeling that spending through Medicaid causes providers to receive the funds at egregiously low reimbursement rates, less on average than the cost of providing the care.[13] This inadequate revenue is a primary cause of caregiver shortages that lead to widespread access and quality problems. Faced with unsustainably low reimbursements for nearly two-thirds of their residents,[14] nursing homes charge a dwindling supply of private payers rates above the market-based rates that would apply in Medicaid’s absence. This incentivizes the remaining private payers to find ways to qualify for Medicaid without spending down assets.

Medicaid’s Mission Redefined by LTC Money Laundering

Medicaid is supposed to be a safety net for people in need of LTC but unable to pay for it. But Medicaid LTC money laundering at the wholesale, retail and combined levels has made a mockery of that mission. States fleece the federal government with provider tax schemes. Federal eligibility laws and regulations enable the middle class and affluent to access LTC benefits without spending down assets. Savvy financial advisers direct prosperous clients to take full advantage of the loose financial eligibility rules. At the same time, Medicaid’s income and asset spend down rules quickly crush the poor, aged and vulnerable with high private pay outlays they have no way to avoid.

In recent years, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) further undermined Medicaid’s LTC safety net role by extending benefits to able-bodied, working-age recipients up to 138 percent of the poverty level. The 90 percent federal match for these “expansion” enrollees incentivized states to shift eligibility and spending to that group leaving the traditional poor and vulnerable caseload shortchanged.[15] In 2003, the aged and disabled were 25 percent of enrollees and they consumed 69 percent of total Medicaid expenditures.[16] By 2022, this needier group had declined to 20 percent, receiving only 51 percent of total spending.[17] The poorest of the poor, “dual eligibles” who qualify for both Medicaid and Medicare, were 14 percent of Medicaid enrollees in 2005 and accounted for 42 percent of total program expenditures.[18] By 2023 they remained 14 percent of enrollees but they garnered only 32 percent of spending.[19] These changes reflect the ACA’s redirecting Medicaid toward able-bodied, working-age recipients to the detriment of the more vulnerable aged and disabled.

Conclusion

Creative financing schemes used (1) by state Medicaid programs, such as provider taxes (wholesale); (2) by individual affluent recipients and their financial advisers, such as gaming Medicaid financial eligibility rules (retail), and (3) by both, such as diverting LTC funding from the private market sector to Medicaid funding (combined), increase federal Medicaid LTC expenditures excessively, divert federal funds to unintended and unauthorized purposes, and impair the access to and quality of care available to the public.

Congress should recapture control of Medicaid LTC financing by (1) ending the provider tax gimmick, (2) closing the financial eligibility loopholes that convert Medicaid LTC from a safety net for the needy to a hammock for the middle class, and (3) using the savings therefrom to ensure Medicaid pays LTC providers market-based rates for a much smaller caseload of genuinely needy recipients. Further savings will accrue as these changes work their way through the market incentivizing more aging Americans to take the risk and cost of LTC seriously, plan ahead, save, invest or insure for LTC, and stay off Medicaid.


 

[1] Brian Blase and Niklas Kleinworth, “Addressing Medicaid Money Laundering: The Lack of Integrity with Medicaid Financing and the Need for Reform,” Paragon Health Institute, March 2025, LINK

[2] Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, “How Many People Use Medicaid Long-Term Services and Supports and How Much Does Medicaid Spend on Those People?,” KFF, August 14, 2023, [LINK]

[3] Andrea Wysocki, Caitlin Murray, Aparna Kachalia, Alexandra Carpenter, and Cara Stepanczuk, “Trends in the Use of and Spending for Home and Community-Based Services as a Share of Total LTSS Use and Spending in Medicaid, 2019–2021,” Mathematica, July 24, 2024, p. 3, LINK

[4]  Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, op. cit.

[5] Brian Blase and Niklas Kleinworth, op. cit., p. 14.

[6] Martin B. Hackmann, Juan S. Rojas, and Nicolas R. Ziebarth, “Creative Financing and Public Moral Hazard: Evidence from Medicaid and the Nursing Home Industry,” NBER Working Paper 34118, August 2025, https://www.nber.org/papers/w34118

[7] Martin B. Hackmann, Juan S. Rojas, and Nicolas R. Ziebarth, op. cit., p. 16.

[8] Stephen A. Moses, “Medi-Cal-amity: California’s Reckless Expansion of Medicaid Long-Term Care to the Affluent,” Paragon Health Institute, April 9, 2025, LINK

Stephen A. Moses, “California put the wealthy on welfare—and you’re paying for it,” Paragon Health Institute, April 22, 2025, LINK

Paul Winfree and Brian Blase, “California’s Insurance-Tax Shuffle: How Federal Money Ends Up Paying for Medicaid for Illegal Immigrants,” Paragon Health Institute, March 12, 2025, LINK

[9] Natalie Lin, “US Retirement Assets Hit Record $40T,” Plan Advisor, September 20, 2024, https://www.planadviser.com/us-retirement-assets-hit-record-40t/

[10] Keith Griffith, “Homeowners Are Sitting on Their Biggest Share of Equity Since the 1950s,” realtor.com, October 1, 2024, https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/homeowner-equity-share-home-values/: “Meanwhile, aggregate homeowner equity reached a new high of $35.1 trillion for the quarter, up 10% from a year ago and triple what it was 10 years ago.”

[11] American Council of Life Insurers, 2024 Life Insurers Fact Book, November 8, 2024, https://www.acli.com/about-the-industry/life-insurers-fact-book/2024-life-insurers-fact-book: “By the end of 2023, total life insurance coverage in the United States was $22.2 trillion, an increase of 1.6 percent from 2022 (Table 7.1).”

[12] Stephen A. Moses, “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak,” Paragon Health Institute, July 1, 2024, https://paragoninstitute.org/paragon-prognosis/medicaids-100-billion-leak/

[13] John R. Bowblis, et al., “Assessing Medicaid Payment Rates and Costs of Caring for the Medicaid Population Residing in Nursing Homes,” ASPE, June 2024, LINK

[14] Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, op. cit.

[15] Brian Blase and Drew Gonshorowski, “Medicaid Financing Reform: Stopping Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable and Reducing Bias Favoring Wealthy States,” Paragon Health Institute, July 2024, LINK

[16] Diane Rowland, “Medicaid: Addressing the Future,” testimony to The U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging, June 28, 2005, Figure 1, p. 12, LINK

[17] Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, “MACPAC Releases 2024 Edition of MACStats: Medicaid and CHIP Data Book,” December 18, 2024, LINK.

[18] Diane Rowland, op. cit., p.3

[19] Maria T. Peña, Maiss Mohamed, Alice Burns, Jeannie Fuglesten Biniek, Nancy Ochieng, and Priya Chidambaram, “A Profile of Medicare-Medicaid Enrollees (Dual Eligibles),” KFF, January 31, 2023, LINK


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Updated Monday, October 6, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-036:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Why fewer seniors are expected to enroll in Medicare Advantage next year - and opt for original Medicare instead

  • Malpractice claims involving nurses on the rise in home healthcare, report finds

  • Occupancy increases for 17th quarter in a row as boomers fill up senior living communities ‘faster than they can be built’: NIC

  • What the Trump Administration Can Do in the Short-Term to Address the Long-Term Care Crisis

  • CareScout launches long-term care insurance option

  • CareScout Launches Care Assurance, First Insurance Solution for Company

  • Protecting Your Inherited Home From Long-Term Care Costs: The Basics

  • Veterans with burdened caregivers more likely to enter nursing homes, study finds

  • KFF study: A look at growing enrollment in Medicare Advantage special needs plans

  • Pay gap getting bigger, ADP says

  • China:New guidelines for long-term care insurance services

  • Who'll Take Care of Grandma? How Trump's Immigration Policies Threaten Elder Care

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com). 

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Updated Monday, September 29, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-035:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Americans risk retirement security to support loved ones, study finds

  • I Asked ChatGPT How a 55-Year-Old Can Prepare for Retirement, Here's What It Said

  • Study Sheds Light on Drinking and Dementia Risk

  • Home care job openings expected to skyrocket amid wage pressures, job instability

  • Study uncovers communication gaps between long-term care insurers, family caregivers

  • States Are Cutting Medicaid Provider Payments Long Before Trump Cuts Hit

  • Alliance urges policymakers for ‘bold’ action to correct HCBS rate insufficiency

  • Physical frailty may cause dementia, study suggests

  • Average Spending by Age for Those 55 and Up: Are You Thrifty?

  • U.S. Retirement Assets Hit Record $45.8 Trillion In Second Quarter 2025

  • Nursing homes fail to report 43% of major falls: Behind OIG’s findings

  • Layin’ It on the Line: The hidden IRS rule that could save your retirement from long-term care costs

  • 66 percent of millennials, Gen Z expect to inherit $335K from parents in ‘Great Wealth Transfer’

  • New Study Finds Families with Long-Term Care Insurance Face Less Financial Strain

  • Longer Pre-SNF Hospital Stays More Likely For Medicare Advantage Beneficiaries 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, September 26, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: LTC POLICY GOES AROUND AND COMES AROUND

LTC Comment: The last year long-term care financing policy and Medicaid LTC reform were major political issues was 2005. What goes around comes around, after the ***news.***

*** ATTENTION: ILTCI ’26. The next Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conference will be held March 8-11, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. Exhibitor and sponsor applications are available now and attendee registration opens online with early bird pricing October 1st. As usual, Steve and Damon from the Center for Long-Term Care Reform look forward to attending this essential LTC industry event. Join us, and in the meantime, go to ILTCICONF.ORG for further information. ***

*** “What goes around comes around,” and thanks to our members, the Center for Long-Term Care Reform stays around. Please join us in our mission to ensure quality long-term care for all Americans. We do this by promoting public policy that targets scarce public resources to the neediest, while encouraging people who are young, healthy and affluent enough, to take responsibility for themselves. To find out how you can "do well by doing good," consider supporting our work by joining us at the Premium Membership level. Center for Long-Term Care Reform premium members receive our full suite of individual membership benefits including:

·       All LTC Bullets and E-Alerts

·       Access to our Members-Only Zone website and Almanac of Long-Term Care

·       Subscription to our Clipping Service

·       Email/phone access to Steve Moses for 24-hour turnaround queries

Our Premium Membership is designed to give you a competitive advantage in your long-term care profession. Your increased knowledge of the critical issues and challenges we face in the field of long-term care service delivery and financing equals improved professional success for you and better LTC services for your clients and for those who have no choice but to rely on scarce public resources. 

Stay on the forefront of professional knowledge and help us fight for rational long-term care policy reform by contacting Damon at 206-283-7036 / damon@centerltc.com to start your Premium Membership immediately or go directly to our secure online subscription page and sign up for as little as $21 per month. ***

LTC BULLET: LTC POLICY GOES AROUND AND COMES AROUND

LTC Comment: Join me today for a ride in the Cato Institute’s way-back machine. The libertarian think tank has recovered a long-lost video of a 2005 debate. The battle of wits pitted free-market advocate Steve Moses against Medicaid estate planner Vincent Russo. Cato’s Director of Health Policy Studies, Michael F. Cannon, introduced the program. Marilyn Werber Serafini, then an award-winning journalist with the National Journal, moderated. Watch the debate here. (Click the picture on the right when the website comes up.)

Watch the video and you’ll note I got some things wrong. I predicted that federal and state budgets were approaching a breaking point. I said Medicaid and Medicare were at risk. In the future, I thought people would not be able to ignore the risk and cost of LTC until they need care and then turn the liability over to Medicaid. Home equity would become the main funder of LTC for the majority of elderly who were home owners. Private LTC spending and insurance would flourish as the only path to quality LTC, especially in home and community-based settings.

Boy was I wrong back then. What happened instead was that Medicaid LTC spending continued to grow. Medicaid financial eligibility remained easy. LTC insurance sales slumped dramatically. Medicaid’s giant home equity exemption continued to crowd out private LTC financing through home equity conversion. All the things I warned were ruining LTC access and quality back then only became worse over the next two decades. Hope for change languished.

How can we explain those last twenty years? 2005 was a heady year for LTC financing policy. The economy was good, but politicians fought over Medicaid spending, especially LTC expenditures. The big LTC issues were resolved when the Deficit Reduction Act became law in March of 2006. The DRA established the first ever cap on Medicaid’s home equity exemption and made asset transfer restrictions longer and stronger. It seemed like my predictions and recommendations were coming true.

Unfortunately, 2005 was the last year that Medicaid and LTC financing costs dominated political discussion. Since then, there have been studies and proposals, mostly advocating big new state and federal LTC entitlements, but spending has surged instead in the existing dysfunctional system with no relief. For the past twenty years, worries about budget deficits and escalating debt subsided, enabling the status quo to continue and worsen. Consequently, the national debt exploded from $8.1 trillion in 2005 to $37.5 trillion today.

But politicians’ casual attitude about deficits and debt is changing now. Budget constraints that dominated in 2005 are finally returning in 2025. Inflation has exceeded the Fed’s 2% goal for nearly five years and will continue high until 2028 at least. In FY 2024, the federal government spent $6.75 trillion, but collected only $4.92 trillion in revenue, causing a $1.83 trillion deficit. Analysts worry the U.S. will be unable to service the national debt as interest payments alone already exceed spending for national defense.

So, I stand by my predictions and recommendations from that long-ago debate. The economic reckoning I predicted then is finally upon us. We may flounder on a little longer, but by the mid-2030s, the end will come for the LTC financing system that has prevailed since Medicaid’s founding in 1965. 2031 marks the year boomers start turning 85 and their health and LTC needs skyrocket. Social Security’s trust fund is exhausted in 2034; Medicare’s in 2033. Both those entitlements prop up Medicaid LTC, but won’t help much going forward.

If you want to know what all this means, watch that 2005 debate again. I stand by what I said then. What’s different is that the denouement I predicted in 2005 is closer than ever now. What goes around, comes around, and, boy, is it coming at us hard and fast today.

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Updated Monday, September 15, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-034:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Federal long-term care advisory commission proposed

  • CCRC operations have stabilized, but SNF-heavy ones face issues, Fitch says

  • Senior living helps older adults live well longer, NORC/NIC study finds

  • From early detection to advanced care: How IoT is reshaping Alzheimer’s management

  • Who Pays for Long-Term Services and Supports?

  • Expanding the scope of extended care to ease the growing healthcare burden

  • Risky Prescribing and the Epidemic of Deaths From Falls

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Tuesday, September 9, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-033:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Why Bruce Willis's Family Moved Him into a Separate Home

  • Affluent Investors Are Embracing "Multi-Retirements"

  • How will Medicaid changes affect long-term care?

  • ‘Sandwich Generation’ Neglecting Retirement Savings

  • Nebraska Town Says CON Laws Are Blocking Nursing Home Care

  • BREAKING: CMS intends to repeal nursing home staffing rule

  • Social Security and Medicare cuts are coming because the bond market will eventually bring Congress to its knees, economist says

  • Is Life Insurance The Answer To The Growing Long-Term Care Need In The U.S?

  • Study finds accumulated wealth dramatically reduces dementia odds in seniors over 80

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, September 5, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: HOW TO FUND WISH

LTC Comment: Analysts and advocates have rallied around WISH, but the proposed LTC insurance plan is starved for funding. Where could the needed money come from?

LTC BULLET: HOW TO FUND WISH

LTC Comment: New York Congressman Tom Suozzi has introduced the Well-Being Insurance for Seniors to be at Home (WISH) Act. It is a creative new approach to funding long-term care that has captured the imagination and gained the support of many LTC analysts, advocates, providers, and insurers. I’ve criticized the plan here and here. But that is not my purpose today. Rather, I’d like to say “if this is what you want to do, here’s how to pay for it.”

What is WISH?

In briefest summary, WISH proposes a new catastrophic or back-end LTC insurance program that would pay qualified recipients a cash benefit equal to the median cost of six hours per day of personal care. To qualify, participants would have to meet their own LTC costs during a waiting period of one to five years depending on their income. Higher income people would pay their own way longer than lower income people before qualifying. WISH also plans a major public education campaign; expects private insurers to wrap new, less expensive policies around the WISH chassis; and hopes that Medicaid savings will accrue.

The catch is how to pay for WISH. Earlier proposals included a mandatory payroll deduction of three percent from workers and three percent from employers. In the current economic and political climate, that plan proved impractical. With the national debt exceeding $37 trillion, interest rates and inflation on the increase, and America’s creditors balking at buying our bonds, the country’s ability to service the debt it already has is at risk. As federal expenditures already far exceed revenue, any additional spending must be borrowed or printed, further worsening the financial crisis. So, if payroll taxes are out, where could the money come from to support WISH?

Finding New LTC Money

Medicaid allows LTC recipients to retain substantial wealth in exempt form. Exempt assets include up to a million dollars in home equity; the cost of home upgrades; one business including the capital and cash flow; an automobile; personal service contracts; unlimited home furnishings and personal belongings; compliant annuities and promissory notes; and even IRAs if they are in payout status, as most are for the elderly due to required minimum distributions (RMDs). No one knows how much wealth Medicaid LTC recipients own in this exempt form. But it is likely very substantial because of a quirk in Medicaid financial eligibility rules that encourages conversion of countable assets into exempt status.

Artificial Asset Spend Down

Medicaid treats asset spend down differently than income spend down. To reach the maximum monthly income limit of $967 dollars, applicants must demonstrate that they have purchased qualified medical or LTC goods or services with their own funds. The same is not true for asset spend down. To reach the $2,000 asset limit that applies in most states, applicants may spend their excess funds on anything they choose as long as they receive fair market value in return. They do not have to purchase qualified medical or LTC goods or services. In fact, they can buy assets that Medicaid considers exempt. This gives Medicaid LTC applicants a strong incentive to “spend down” by converting their countable assets into exempt resources with a simple purchase. There is no practical limit on how much wealth Medicaid LTC recipients can shelter from actual spend down in this way.

Medicaid’s well acknowledged proper role is to be a LTC safety net for the poor and vulnerable. It is supposed to protect the middle class and affluent only after they have consumed their excess resources by purchasing their own care. The presumption that genuine spend down of assets for LTC will occur is a key element of the WISH program. It follows that we need to know how much private wealth Medicaid protects in exempt form and how common the practice of spending down countable wealth by purchasing exempt resources is. What if the sums are so large and the practice so common that Medicaid has effectively obviated the need for middle class and affluent people to spend substantial personal funds for their long-term care? This could explain why so few people plan early, save, invest or insure for LTC. If the worst happens, Medicaid pays and protects significant wealth.

Clues from GAO

We have more questions than answers, but here are some clues. GAO conducted a study in 2014 that attempted to estimate the amount of exempt assets Medicaid LTC recipients own. GAO’s findings were not “generalizable” to the whole country due to limits in their methodology. But in a paper for the Paragon Health Institute titled “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak,” I asked “what if GAO’s findings were projectable? How much money lies fallow, unused to purchase private LTC, because Medicaid exempts that wealth and pays the bills instead?” The sums were impressive. For example:

  • “Half or more of Medicaid’s $217 billion annual LTC budget [$278 billion as of 2023] goes to beneficiaries who could otherwise afford to pay privately.”

  • “Medicaid covered 5.6 million LTC recipients in 2020. If 12.6 percent of them had over $100,000 in noncountable resources, as GAO found, then at least $70.4 billion went unused for private LTC financing at Medicaid’s expense. That’s a lot of wealth for a poverty program to protect, fully 32.5 percent of the total $217 billion Medicaid spent on LTC.”

  • “If [as GAO found] 75 percent of LTC recipients owned a median amount of $12,530 in noncountable assets each, then at least $52.6 billion found its way into sheltered wealth, largely as prepaid burial expenses, which are sometimes permitted for the entire family, including adult children. That is a giant subsidy for the funeral industry at the expense of LTC financing for the poor, fully 24.2 percent of total Medicaid LTC expenditures.”

  • “If [according to GAO] 31 percent of 5.6 million Medicaid recipients owned homes with a median value of $68,350, then $118.7 billion of real estate value was diverted from private LTC financing. (The $68,350 is from the GAO report and would be much higher if the analysis was done today and not a decade ago.) Given that Medicaid exempts nearly all home equity, it is clear that Medicaid replaces practically all personal LTC liability from home equity. The loss is 54.7 percent of what the program spends on LTC.” 

That is a lot of money (54.7 percent of 2023 Medicaid LTC expenditures [$278 billion] would be $152 billion) that Medicaid protects from the cost of paying privately for LTC. But what if the actual amount is much higher? GAO analyzed the total of exempt assets in only two counties in each of three states, Florida, New York and South Carolina. They researched and analyzed only a small sample of 350 cases. GAO based its findings on case record reviews and interviews with eligibility workers, but it did not verify the completeness and accuracy of the case records by reviewing bank accounts or public records, such as property ownership or transfers. Given these shortcomings, and others GAO acknowledges in this and other reports, it is safe to say that this study found only a fraction of the exempt assets that the Medicaid recipients possessed.

Follow the Money

To identify funds that could be tapped to fund WISH, Congressman Suozzi should ask GAO and CBO to conduct comprehensive studies of (1) the kind and amount of exempt assets held by Medicaid recipients in the United States and (2) the extent of the practice of qualifying for Medicaid LTC benefits by purchasing exempt assets to spend down countable wealth.

These studies should …

  • Review sample sizes sufficient to generalize results to the whole U.S. population.

  • Include critical review of case records, followed by interviews with Medicaid eligibility workers, supervisors, recipients and family members.

  • Review public records such as county assessors (real property ownership) and recorders (property transfer).

  • Conduct matches with IRS, Social Security, and other data bases to find unreported assets.
    Verify the incidence and equity value of home ownership by Medicaid LTC recipients.

Home equity incidence and amount is especially important to determine because it is currently unknown, likely very high and could easily be used to reduce Medicaid expenditures, saving money WISH could employ, if Congress required home equity conversion as a condition of eligibility.

Make Asset Spend Down Real

Once we know how much exempt wealth Medicaid protects from actual LTC spend down, Congress should consider making two changes in Medicaid financial eligibility policy.

  1. Change the asset spend down rules to comport with the income spend down requirements. In other words, require that asset spend down be for qualified medical or LTC expenses as is already mandatory for income spend down.

  2. Disallow the practice of purchasing exempt assets to reduce countable wealth artificially.

These measures would likely not entirely replace the revenue WISH could have generated from a payroll tax, probably around $530 billion per year, but they would vastly relieve the burden on Medicaid of funding LTC and substantially increase the incentive for the middle class and affluent to plan for LTC, purchase private insurance, and stay off Medicaid.

More to Come

Does it seem far-fetched that more than half of what Medicaid spends on LTC, over $150 billion, could be protecting wealth that people might otherwise have used to purchase quality care in the private market? What if I told you that amount is dwarfed by the total wealth that could go to fund private LTC, but doesn’t, because of various third parties? To get the evidence and logic to support this claim, stay tuned for a forthcoming LTC Bullet, provisionally titled “Better LTC for Billion$ Less.” Coming this month.

Subscribe

Did someone forward today’s LTC Bullet to you? Don’t miss any future LTC Clippings, LTC Bullets, or LTC E-Alerts. Become a premium member of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform here. Thanks for your support.

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Updated Monday, September 1, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-032:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • ALTCS Release on Support for Long-Term Care Bill

  • Sense of purpose protects against dementia, large study finds

  • WISH Act could ‘substantially’ improve retirement outcomes for those with catastrophic LTSS needs, analysis finds

  • Could ‘Golden Passport’ tempt older adults to swap senior living for cruise ship living?

  • Failing to save enough for retirement is top financial regret, survey finds

  • Public awareness campaigns needed to increase long-term care insured rate, report says

  • My Mom Needs Nursing Home Care —Can She Cash Out Her Annuity To Pay Off Her Mortgage And Still Qualify For Medicaid In New York?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, August 25, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-031:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Despite expectations of longevity, many retirees unprepared for potential LTC needs

  • Dual eligibles still rely heavily on family for care despite LTSS program expansion

  • Biden-era rule curbing Medicare Advantage marketing incentives overturned

  • Bill Gates Backs $1M AI prize to Tackle Alzheimer’s

  • A Federal Backstop for Long-Term Services and Supports Could Change Retirement Outcomes

  • CMS Launches Nationwide Push to Remove Ineligible Medicaid Enrollees, Uphold Citizenship Requirements

  • States created Medicaid add-ons to protect access. Nursing homes started taking more Medicare patients instead

  • Nearly one quarter of Americans financially support aging parents: report

  • Senior living returns outperform all other real estate sectors in first half of 2025

  • Why Are So Many Seniors Being Evicted From Their Long-Term Care Homes?

  • Estate Planning: The latest regarding Medi-Cal’s asset test

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, August 22, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: IS MEDICAID FOR THE POOR AND VULNERABLE?

LTC Comment: Medicaid is nearly always described as a program for the poor and vulnerable. Is that true? Was it ever? Today, we explore some evidence that suggests it wasn’t and isn’t, after the ***news.***

*** TAKE ACTION: Compiling and reviewing the content of today’s Bullet brought to my mind these famous quotes.  

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing".
"Silence in the face of injustice is complicity with the oppressor."
"If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor."

Standing by while Medicaid is converted from a safety net for the poor and disabled into a hammock for the financially comfortable is a case in point.

If you want to be part of the movement to return Medicaid to those who need it most and to incentivize everyone else to take personal responsibility, especially for LTC planning, then join the Center for LTC Reform and help us fight the good fight.

You can join and contribute here. Thanks for your time and consideration. ***

 

LTC BULLET: IS MEDICAID FOR THE POOR AND VULNERABLE?

LTC Comment: How many articles have you read that explain how Medicaid benefits the affluent, often to the exclusion or disadvantage of the needy? Not many, I’ll bet, unless you follow these LTC Bullets. But there is plenty of evidence that, to whatever extent Medicaid was aimed at the poor and vulnerable originally, the program is undergoing a major change in the opposite direction. I’ll summarize some of that evidence below and use it as a base for a future article on the topic.

Of course, the go-to source for evidence that Medicaid LTC benefits are easily and widely available to non-poor Americans is the Center for Long-Term Care Reform’s articles, speeches, reports and newsletters (LTC Bullets). Here are quotes from and links to a few recent examples

“Medicaid should help the poor, but crushes them. The affluent should pay for their own LTC, but don’t. Then they take the best Medicaid offers. What’s wrong and what to do?” (“Medicaid Oversight,” July 11, 2025

“Is Medicaid LTC set up to hurt the poor, underprivileged, and marginalized while inordinately benefiting the affluent and middle class?,” (“Understanding Structural Long-Term Care Racism,” May 16, 2025)

“Private wealth sits on the sidelines as Medicaid shifts from helping the poor and vulnerable to subsidizing the middle class and affluent. Facts and analysis follow.” (“How the Wealthy Stole Medicaid,” April 18, 2025)

But Medicaid is not only available to the middle class and affluent in need of long-term care. It has also come to prioritize young, able-bodied people over the aged, poor, disabled, and most vulnerable. The Paragon Health Institute has identified a number of ways that Medicaid has transitioned from covering the poor and vulnerable to covering many more.

“For more than a decade, the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) Medicaid expansion has shifted resources away from the most vulnerable Americans – single moms, infants, and the disabled – in favor of able-bodied adults without dependents.” (“Losing Focus: How the ACA’s Medicaid Expansion Left Traditional Enrollees Behind,” by Liam Sigaud, February 10, 2025)

“Since 2013, Medicaid rolls have swelled under the Affordable Care Act. More than 20 million able-bodied, working-age adults to Medicaid. These new enrollees, who now account for about 25 percent of Medicaid enrollees nationwide, have put additional strain on the health care system and diverted resources away from vulnerable Medicaid enrollees.(“Myth: The OBBB will harm the most vulnerable Medicaid enrollees,” by Liam Sigaud, August 5, 2025)

“The Affordable Care Act (ACA) significantly expanded Medicaid over the past decade, worsening the program’s structural problems. The ACA created a new eligibility category for Medicaid—able-bodied, working-age adults—with a much higher federal reimbursement percentage for these enrollees. This has led to a host of problems, including: 1) a diversion of resources away from traditional Medicaid enrollees, particularly low-income children and people with disabilities, that has reduced their access to health care services; 2) a near quadrupling of Medicaid’s improper payments; and 3) a surge of spending that has significantly contributed to large and growing federal deficits.” (Medicaid Financing Reform: Stopping Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable and Reducing Bias Favoring Wealthy States,” by Brian Blase and Drew Gonshorowski, July 2025)

“States receive $9 in federal funds for every $1 of state spending on able-bodied, working-age adults compared to an average of only $1.33 in federal funds for every $1 of state spending on children, pregnant women, seniors, and people with disabilities. Thus, states receive nearly seven times more federal funding for every $1 of spending on expansion enrollees than traditional enrollees. This incentivizes states to prioritize expansion enrollees over traditional, more vulnerable populations and harms their access to care.” (“Consequences of Medicaid’s Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable,” by Brian Blase, June 29, 2025)

“The week’s Paragon Pic highlights the significant expansion in Medicaid enrollment over the last three decades, demonstrating that it is no longer solely a safety net for categories of just low-income Americans. … Paragon has written extensively on how Medicaid expansion has led to many problems, including a diversion of resources away from traditional Medicaid enrollees, a near quadrupling of Medicaid’s improper payments, and a surge of spending that has significantly contributed to ballooning federal deficits. Paragon also has written about how easy it is for people to qualify for Medicaid long-term care services, as the easy ability to artificially impoverish parents, aunts, and uncles has enabled heirs to protect their inheritances and pass costs to their fellow Americans.” (“Paragon Pic: Medicaid is No Longer for the Poor,” by Drew Gonshorowski)

“Though Medicaid was intended to provide health care for the truly needy, the federal government provides an open-ended federal reimbursement of real state expenditures but also artificial state expenditures. As a result, states, insurers, and providers have used Medicaid to siphon hundreds of billions of dollars from federal taxpayers over the past decade and raise payments well above what can be considered ‘economical or efficient,’ as federal law requires.” (“Addressing Medicaid Money Laundering,” by Brian Blase and Niklas Kleinworth, March 2025) 

“Unrestricted Medicaid Expansion: California uses this influx of federal money to fund large-scale Medicaid expansions. The most significant of these are extending Medicaid coverage to illegal immigrants and eliminating the asset test so wealthy people can qualify for taxpayer-financed long-term care. Because the federal dollars are money laundered, the state circumvents restrictions on federal Medicaid funding for illegal immigrants.” (“California’s Insurance-Tax Shuffle: How Federal Money Ends Up Paying for Medicaid for Illegal Immigrants,” Paul Winfree and Brian Blase, March 12, 2025)

“Medicaid, a vital program for indigent and disabled Americans who need long-term care, is facing a crisis of sustainability. The program, initially designed to assist those with insufficient means, is commonly exploited by loopholes in the system that allow basically anyone to gain eligibility for LTC services through financial planning. This trend not only stretches Medicaid’s resources thin but also raises questions about the program’s long-term viability and its impact on state and federal budgets.” (“Preserving long-term Medicaid for the poor,” Gary Alexander, January 15, 2024)

“For decades, federal policymakers of both parties tried to ensure that scarce Medicaid LTC resources went solely to the needy. They failed, leaving Medicaid, including state and federal budgets, financially overwhelmed and most people, regardless of their economic condition, using public assistance if they incur catastrophic LTC costs.” (“Long-Term Care: The Solution,” Stephen Moses, October 2023) 

Closing LTC Comment: From 1965 until 1980, Medicaid allowed everyone to give away unlimited wealth without penalty to qualify for LTC benefits. Costs exploded, so measures were taken to discourage improper asset transfers and eventually to require recovery of exempt assets from estates. But none of those measures succeeded. Middle class and affluent people gained access to Medicaid after they confronted high LTC costs. Heirs benefited by Medicaid’s protecting their inheritances. Consumers responded by failing to plan for LTC. Private LTC insurance languished as a result. During Covid, Medicaid didn’t even enforce the existing lenient financial eligibility rules exacerbating all these problems. Since the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid has prioritized serving young, able-bodied people with huge subsidies for them to the detriment of aged, poor and disabled recipients. This whole house of cards is destined to collapse. When it does, America will be forced to adapt to an absence of huge, market distorting government transfers. Far better to move in the direction of market-based LTC by thoughtful policy than to wait for the economy to take us there by default. How to do that?

For analysis and ideas on LTC reform, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers. To find ample private funds for LTC, check out “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.” For what not to do, see “Medi-Cal-amity: California’s Reckless Expansion of Medicaid Long-Term Care to the Affluent.” Find much more on long-term care here.

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Updated Monday, August 18, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-030:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Genworth plans major move in fraught long-term care insurance market

  • Ken Dychtwald’s Future Vision of Health, Aging and Longevity

  • Should You Disown Your Assets to Get Medicaid Long-Term Care? What to Know

  • The Rise of Phantom Obamacare Enrollees: Biden COVID Credits Drive Massive Increase in Individual Market Enrollees With No Medical Claim

  • Men with dementia face 24 percent higher death risk than women in major Medicare study

  • 300 million program to expand access met with restrained enthusiasm by long-term care experts

  • How retirees can manage rising healthcare costs

  • ‘Groundbreaking’ companionship exemption to give home care agencies better flexibility, attorney says

  • Long-Term Services and Supports in Supplemental Benefits in Medicare Advantage Plans 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, August 11, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-029:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Silver Tsunami

  • MA-specialized home health agencies deliver less care, worse health outcomes, major study finds

  • Long-term care on track for a third of healthcare bankruptcy case volume this year

  • Foreign-Born Workers Made Up Half The Increase In The Direct Care Workforce In Home And Community Settings, 2012–22

  • Study: Mental health problems plague nearly half of nursing home staff

  • Surgical care through Medicare Advantage is lower cost and does not compromise patient safety, new major study finds

  • Study: Medicare spends billions on medically unnecessary procedures

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, August 8, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: LTC MUSINGS

LTC Comment: Three weeks of wandering around East Africa with hardly a thought about long-term care left me reflecting on four decades of struggling with that intractable public policy challenge. Some thoughts after the ***news.***

*** LTC CLIPPINGS:  Did you catch these stories this week?  Our LTC Clippings subscribers received them in real time including Steve Moses’s always trenchant, often ironic, sometimes humorous, usually concise “LTC Comments.”  To subscribe or for a free trial, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com. Examples below:

8/2/2025, “Study: Medicare spends billions on medically unnecessary procedures,” by Donna Shryer, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “A new study reveals that Medicare beneficiaries are receiving billions of dollars worth of medical care that offer little to no clinical benefit and may lead to harm. Researchers found that Medicare spent $4.4 billion annually between 2018 and 2020 on 47 different low-value medical services, with seniors paying an additional $800 million out of their own pockets.”

LTC Comment: When government is the payer, the provider is the customer, and the patient is caught in between, this is what you get.

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8/2/2025, “German nursing homes see cost for care explode,” by Volker Witting, DW

Quote: “The cost of a stay in a nursing home has risen to an average of €3,248 ($3,760) per month, according to the German Association of Nursing Homes (vdek), an association that represents the interests of several statutory health insurance providers.”

LTC Comment: We warned over 20 years ago that Germany’s LTC “insurance” plan would not be the end all and be all it was being made out to be: LTCI in Germany and Don't Look to Germany for a Long-Term Care Model. Now reality is setting as it is about to do for our Social Security and Medicare entitlements. At least we dodged the LTC entitlement trap … well, except in Washington State. ***
 

LTC BULLET: LTC MUSINGS

LTC Comment: I used to think long-term care was pretty simple and straight forward … both the problem and the solution.

People become old, injured, or demented and they need help with activities of daily living. That help can be very expensive.

But, like death, age and disability are things people don’t like to think about, so they tend not to plan for them.

Consequently, many people end in need of LTC but unable to pay for it.

So, government wanted to help. Medicaid came along 60 years ago this month and started paying for nursing homes, the main care venue available at the time.

Two big things happened quickly:

  1. Medicaid LTC costs exploded because nearly everyone qualified.

  2. The public stopped worrying about LTC because government paid.

Policymakers and politicians adapted by making Medicaid LTC harder to get with asset transfer restrictions and other eligibility controls.

But lawyers specializing in “elder law” found ways around Medicaid’s eligibility restrictions, making their affluent clients as quickly and easily eligible as the poor, often more so, by streamlining and systemizing the application process.

When I started working on the LTC issue in 1982, this was the situation.

Most people ignored LTC until they needed it. The poor qualified for Medicaid care. The middle class and affluent did as well, often with help from specialized “Medicaid planners.”

I figured that as long as the public could ignore LTC risk and cost, wait to see if they ever need extended care, and get the government to pay if they do, why would they plan, save, invest or insure for LTC?

Specifically, I noticed there was a budding new product, called private LTC insurance, trying to get a foothold in the market. How I wondered would it have a chance competing with Medicaid?

To buy insurance for a risk, people have to believe a risk exists and plan ahead. But everything about government’s handling of LTC sent the message: “don’t worry, if you ever need LTC, Medicaid will pay.”

As I studied the issue I concluded “you can’t have it both ways.” You can’t provide free LTC after the insurable event occurs through Medicaid and still expect people to buy private insurance for LTC risk with high premiums 30 years in advance.

So I did a study and wrote a report in 1985 for the Health Care Financing Administration (CMS’s predecessor) advocating that if Medicaid is to pay for LTC when needed it should also secure exempt property so it isn’t transferred to qualify and require recovery from recipients’ estates when the wealth is no longer needed by qualified relatives.

That way, people would have skin in the game. They would figure “if I ever need LTC, Medicaid will pay, but Medicaid is welfare with a poor reputation for access and quality, and if I rely on it I’ll have to pay it back out of my estate anyway, so maybe I should consider this new LTC insurance product. You can still read that 40-year-old report here.

HCFA suppressed that report, believing Regional Office staff should not be writing and publicizing national policy studies. But the USDHHS Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office picked it up and did similar studies under their imprimaturs. The IG hired me out of HCFA to do its study and write its report, published in 1988 and available here.

The LTC social contract described in that study became law in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993. Most of the study’s recommendations, such as longer and stronger transfer of assets restrictions and mandatory estate recoveries, became statutory requirements for state Medicaid programs to impose.

Had the new rules been implemented and enforced, planning for LTC by saving, investing or insuring would have become routine as a sensible way to avoid dependency on Medicaid with its welfare stigma and poor quality, combined with the requirement to pay it back from the estate.

Instead of incentivizing adult children to save their inheritances by putting their ailing parents on Medicaid, the new system would encourage them to help their elders pay privately for LTC and stay off Medicaid with its various downsides. It would also encourage the younger generation to prepare for their own future LTC need.

But as it turned out, states did not implement the new rules effectively; the federal government did not enforce the rules; the media didn’t publicize them and consumer behavior did not change.

As a consequence, we find ourselves decades later with Medicaid LTC costs continuing to soar, with access and quality deficient, with private LTC insurance languishing, and with little hope for improvement.

What’s worse, there have been recent calls to cut back or eliminate mandatory estate recovery, limiting or removing one of the only provisions in the rules to encourage early LTC planning.

Whereas Medicaid LTC eligibility was always easy to obtain, especially with legal assistance, it has become easier than ever due to the widespread practice of artificially spending down countable wealth by using it to purchase exempt resources. See “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak” for details on that practice.

America’s faltering LTC system sinks deeper and deeper into dysfunction. Nursing home bankruptcies are up. Assisted living facilities follow nursing homes down Medicaid’s primrose path. Realignment from institutional to home and community-based care, expected to save money, actually drives up total costs because those in home care need nursing homes eventually too.

Crazy, contradictory public policies encourage asset accumulation on the one hand (Americans hold $97 trillion in home equity, retirement savings and life insurance) but discourage asset expenditure for LTC by Medicaid eligibility policy that allows high income and high asset people to qualify easily while preserving wealth in exempt form.

The common assumption that Medicaid LTC eligibility requires impoverishment is myth at best (misunderstanding), hoax at worst (intentional). The common statement in popular and academic media that millions of Americans are spending their life’s savings on LTC is unsupported by facts. Only 6.5% of LTC expenditures could come from savings. 

LTC is not the high financial risk (70%?) it is often reported to be. 55% who reach 65 will have no paid LTC costs. 31% will need 2 years or less and 9 in 10 have resources (income and wealth) to cover two years of assisted living. For the remaining 14% who need 2 years or more, especially the 4% who need 5 years or more, Medicaid pays much of the cost. Little wonder people worry so little about LTC until they need it.

Estimates of out-of-pocket LTC expenditures are dubious because they are based on micro-simulations that assume people are paying going rates for care. There is no evidence that people actually spend down savings for care as opposed to reconfiguring wealth to qualify by other means, such as asset transfers, irrevocable trusts, Medicaid-friendly annuities or purchase of exempt assets.

Medicaid pays LTC providers notoriously low reimbursement rates which accounts for the access and quality problems and the caregiver shortages.  Medicaid requires recipients to contribute most of their income to offset the cost of their care to Medicaid. This in effect converts what would have been private pay revenue at market rates into Medicaid-level reimbursement that is a cause of many problems.

America’s dismally inadequate LTC system will not improve until Medicaid pays market rates. Medicaid can’t pay market rates until it covers fewer middle class and affluent people.

Medicaid treats the affluent well but crushes the poor. Key money allows affluent people who have used Medicaid financial eligibility loopholes to quality to access the best care to the exclusion of the aged, poor and vulnerable Medicaid supposedly helps first.

So, in conclusion, America’s Medicaid-based LTC system is much more complicated than it seemed when I first assessed the situation in 1982. We made progress in 1993 with stronger asset transfer limits and mandatory estate recovery. In the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 we finally got the first ever cap on home equity. But since then, no progress, and some back sliding.

I remain optimistic that the country will come to its senses. Winston Churchill famously said “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they’ve tried everything else.” But I’m convinced now that we will have to hit a financial wall before the right corrective actions are taken.

When the country has borrowed so much and the rest of the world loses confidence in our ability to service our debt, a reckoning will occur. I expect that to happen in the 2030s when a triple threat occurs. Boomers start turning 85 in 2031, Social Security and Medicare cut back by mid-decade, and their reductions in support for Medicaid LTC will spell the end of that program’s availability to middle-class and affluent people.

At that point, by default if not by intentional policy, Medicaid will shrink to a safety net for the poor, be forced to pay market rates for care to attract enough caregivers, and become a much better program for those in need when it no longer covers those who should, could and would pay their own way going forward.

To make sense of what ails LTC, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers. To find ample private funds for LTC, check out “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.” For what not to do, see “Medi-Cal-amity: California’s Reckless Expansion of Medicaid Long-Term Care to the Affluent.” Much more on long-term care here.

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Updated Monday, August 4, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-028:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • German nursing homes see cost for care explode

  • Genworth Gets More Approvals for Long-Term Care Market Return

  • Study reveals how medication side effects can lead to dangerous medication cycles in adults 65+

  • Federal funding cuts force retirement research centers to close

  • Shield Your Assets as Part of a Comprehensive Long-Term Care Plan

  • Where and How to Invest Your Long-Term-Care ‘Bucket’

  • Medicare Advantage in 2025: Enrollment Update and Key Trends

  • First-of-its-kind study finds that lifestyle programs improve cognition in older adults

  • Users of Medicaid HCBS increased while users of institutional LTSS decreased from 2019 to 2021, new report reveals

  • The number of family caregivers is surging

  • Long-term care insurance still a rare benefit for employees, and enrollment is low 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, July 28, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-027:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Why So Many Seniors Can’t Afford Long-Term Care

  • Victims of Biden’s Enrollment-At-Any-Cost Exchange Strategy

  • ‘Gray Divorce’ Trend Threatens Retirement Security

  • LTCi environment ripe for innovation

  • Does Using Medicaid Affect Quality of Care in Long-Term Care Facilities?

  • Fiscal Fallout: Long-term care spending driver of Washington DSHS’s swelling budget

  • Seniors face widening care gaps after dementia diagnoses, major study reveals

  • CMS Finds 2.8 Million Americans Potentially Enrolled in Two or More Medicaid/ACA Exchange Plans

  • Unpaid caregivers sacrifice more than $15.5K annually, study finds 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, July 25, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: HAGELMAN REFLECTS

LTC Comment: Ron Hagelman has been an oracle of LTC insurance knowledge for decades. Here he shares some off-the-cuff comments on the business, its practitioners, and their beneficiaries, after the ***news.***

*** CLTCR Premium Membership  --  Center for Long-Term Care Reform premium members receive our full suite of individual membership benefits including:

·       All LTC Bullets and E-Alerts

·       Access to our Members-Only Zone website and Almanac of Long-Term Care

·       Subscription to our Clipping Service

·       Email/phone access to Steve Moses for 24-hour turnaround queries

Our Premium Membership is designed to give you a competitive advantage in your long-term care profession. Your increased knowledge of the critical issues and challenges we face in the field of long-term care service delivery and financing equals improved professional success for you and better LTC services for your clients and for those who have no choice but to rely on scarce public resources. 

Stay on the forefront of professional knowledge and help us fight for rational long-term care policy reform by contacting Damon at 206-283-7036 / damon@centerltc.com to start your Premium Membership immediately or go directly to our secure online subscription page and sign up for as little as $21 per month. ***

 

LTC BULLET: HAGELMAN REFLECTS

LTC Comment: You’ve read his columns in Broker World and heard his formal presentations and casual comments at long-term care meetings. Now peel away the formality and consider these “personal reflections” straight from Ron’s heart. 

“The Personal Reflections of a Veteran LTCI Evangelist”
by
Ronald R. Hagelman, Jr. CLTC, CSA, LTCP

I have considered myself an insurance professional for 40 plus years, three-fourths of it in LTCI and I will not give up the notion that the good guys and girls in our chosen corner of the insurance marketing universe are the ones that survive to tell their stories. We are consistent in strapping on our fiduciary armor every morning to restore and confirm each day our belief in the wisdom of understanding and leveraging risk. We understand better than most the value of planning ahead and drastically altering future outcomes by our diligent and caring interference.

My insurance career seems to have paralleled the rise of a new vital product and sales genre. I grew up in an insurance family. As a product and distribution consultant uphill sales battles, innovative product development and national marketing strategies have continued to define my work, good and bad. In the 1980’s supplemental health plans proliferated from cancer indemnity to nursing home supplements. These augmenting policies and concepts helped create a rich sales environment that fed a growing inventory of benefit added on and specific indemnity enhancements. The industry did not ignore the risk. We simply had yet to understand its actual size and benefit trajectory.

Our clients responded better to the idea of care at home. With the advent of HIPAA, a corollary universe of senior home care service companies also began to evolve. The government had taken drastic action to incentivize the private market by defining a tax-qualified comprehensive policy, fair benefit triggers and aggressive corporate premium deductibility. New sales and the necessity of senior care support at home began to flourish in tandem. In truth many of the readers of this column just like me would never be the same. Subsequently, adverse pricing adjustments, the Pension Protection Act expanding combo life and annuity product options, partnership plans, NAIC rider restructuring and rate stabilization have expanded our opportunities to sell protection into place.

The new definition of the LTCI conundrum is no longer only focused on sales and it is about to be overwhelmingly about claims. The billions of claim reserve dollars we stockpiled so diligently into place for the last 25 years should again caution us to follow the money pouring through claim management. We must not forget the delay of payment fines not so long ago levied against disability income carriers. Boomers we worked so hard to prepare will begin to turn 80 next year when the average age at claim is 78 and half will need care. We remain woefully unprepared: reserves under pressure, claim management TPA’s who exclude or diminish the role of professional financial planners in the claim process, serious shortages of available caregivers and the persistent lack of will from public or private sources to prepare for the claim tsunami now rapidly approaching the beach.

I must strongly caution my fellow veterans, those who care ahead and plan ahead to get your fiduciary claim support duck parameters in a row. This is when Noah started looking for timber. I would strongly recommend being prepared by establishing a relationship with a senior care company that understands the complexity of LTCI and can help expedite claims when the impact occurs. It is imperative we acknowledge the volume of claims gathering just offshore. It is mandatory that we applaud and gratefully recognize those agents who are now ready to hand out safety vests to their past clients and righteously help their children purchase their own future safety devices.

Ronald R. Hagelman has 44 years in the business, currently consults for Amada Senior Care, received the ILTCI Recognition Award (2024), and published over 250 LTCI articles. He created and distributed over 50 Life, Health and Annuity products for 16 companies.

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Updated Monday, July 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-026:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Respite care more than doubles chances of elderly patients dying at home, study finds

  • Estate recovery is fair — if Medicaid is for the needy

  • Nurse practitioners critical in treating older adults as ranks of geriatricians shrink

  • Genworth's CareScout Unit Unveils Long-Term Care Insurance Strategy

  • Caring for a loved one with dementia is hard. Financial planning can alleviate the stress.

  • Estate, Long-Term Care Plans Under the ‘Big Beautiful Bill’

  • ‘I enjoy vacations to Europe’: I’m 75 and have $1 million in an IRA. Why do I feel guilty?

  • Retirement conditions more challenging for late baby boomers, later generations

  • Your Guide to Medicare Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs) 

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, July 14, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-025:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Hospital-to-home transitions fail seniors with dementia and multiple conditions, study reveals

  • UPDATED: Genesis HealthCare files for bankruptcy, nearing sale

  • The Number Of Americans Planning To Leave An Inheritance Goes Up As The Number Expecting To Receive One Goes Down

  • Be inspired by this feature article on Maddy Dychtwald's work and life

  • Labor Department withdraws Biden-era proposal to eliminate subminimum wages for disabled workers

  • New Trump budget ‘a significant win’ for providers; optimism among the gloom

  • New York releases Master Plan for Aging providing 100 aging-in-place solutions

  • Changes made — and not made — to WA Cares in 2025

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, July 11, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: MEDICAID OVERSIGHT

LTC Comment: Medicaid should help the poor, but crushes them. The affluent should pay for their own LTC, but don’t. Then they take the best Medicaid offers. What’s wrong and what to do? After the ***news.***

*** LTC PROVIDERS struggle to provide decent LTC while Medicaid pays too little to meet that minimal standard. Now the federal government wants to cut back even more. Fighting to keep the already inadequate status quo is not the answer. It’s high time to fight back. So I wrote this column for McKnight’s LTC News suggesting how the LTC profession should proceed. Check it out and let me know what you think: “The best defense is a good offense,” ***

 

LTC BULLET: MEDICAID OVERSIGHT

LTC Comment: We had a chance to address the inequities in Medicaid LTC with the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” But that opportunity passed. What should we do now? Here’s one way to save billions and improve Medicaid for those who need it most.

“Medicaid Oversight”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Medicaid is the talk of the town. Republicans want to “fix” it (reduce costs). Democrats want to “save” it (no change). But Medicaid’s biggest component and its dirty little secret go unaddressed.

Medicaid funds 61 percent of long-term care (LTC) in the USA and LTC consumes 37 percent of state and federal Medicaid spending. But only six percent of Medicaid recipients use LTC and spending on them is nine times higher than for non-LTC users. So LTC overweighs Medicaid spending.

Yet the big funding debate just concluded in Washington, DC ignored LTC. Advocates and opponents of the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) fought over the 63 percent of Medicaid dollars that go to the other 94 percent of recipients. That’s important of course, but it should not have excluded LTC.

What about LTC should analysts and lawmakers consider more closely? The three things everyone knows about LTC are that

  • most people will need it as they age;
  • LTC is very expensive; and
  • it wipes out the life’s savings of millions of Americans.

But Mark Twain said “It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.” That adage applies perfectly to Medicaid and LTC.

Which things most people think they know about LTC are not so? And how should that information become part of the mission to improve Medicaid while reducing its cost?

LTC wipes out the savings of millions of Americans? Not so. Only 12.9% of LTC spending comes out of people’s pockets and half of that is income (mostly from Social Security) that people already on Medicaid have to pay to offset the cost of their care. Only $1 in $15 (6.5%) could come from savings. There is no evidence of widespread catastrophic LTC spend down, only anecdotes.

Medicaid LTC eligibility requires low income? Not so. Medicaid either deducts private health care costs from income before applying a limit or it allows income diversion trusts. So, high-income applicants with commensurately high private expenses qualify routinely.

Medicaid LTC eligibility requires low assets? Not so. Most large assets seniors own, such as home equity, retirement savings, one business, a vehicle, personal belongings, and others, are exempt from the asset test. Mandatory estate recovery is only lightly enforced and easily avoided.

Countable assets, such as cash, stocks, bonds, etc., over $2,000 preclude Medicaid LTC eligibility? Not so. Countable assets are easily reduced or eliminated entirely by using them to purchase exempt resources, a common technique explained in “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”

Medicaid LTC eligibility serves the poor, aged and disabled best? Not so. Medicaid income and asset spend down rules quickly crush the needy who have few resources and little advice from financial advisors on how to qualify for Medicaid without devastating financial consequences.

All Medicaid recipients receive the same care? Not so. Poor, aged and disabled recipients tend to live in neighborhoods with nursing homes and other LTC providers that are most heavily dependent on Medicaid’s low reimbursement rates resulting in deficient access and quality.

Middle class and affluent people would never seek Medicaid LTC eligibility due to its poor reputation for access and quality? Not so. The well-to-do who self-impoverish artificially hold back “key money” to pay privately before they convert to Medicaid. This ensures their access to the best nursing homes and other LTC providers that are desperate to attract private payers at much higher rates than Medicaid pays. Once in, they can’t be removed when their payment source changes.

Medicaid’s dirty little LTC secret is that it punishes the poor and rewards the affluent leaving the latter with little reason to worry about LTC risk and cost. This is why few plan for LTC and most end up on Medicaid when care costs escalate beyond their incomes.

Is there one thing the Congress could do that would save money and reduce this inequity? Yes.

Apply the same rule to asset spend down that already applies to income. High-income people qualify for Medicaid LTC, but only after they prove they spent down for actual medical or LTC expenses. High-asset people, however, are under no such obligation to spend down for care. They can spend excess countable assets to purchase exempt resources, becoming eligible while hiding their wealth for heirs to inherit.

This oversight in Medicaid LTC financial eligibility rules lets the affluent take the best of what Medicaid offers and leaves fewer resources in the program to serve its more appropriate, needier recipients. It also creates a moral hazard by eliminating the need for people to plan early for LTC by saving, investing, or insuring against the risk.

Solution? Require that Medicaid LTC asset spend down be for private medical or LTC expenses, not just to buy exempt assets. Based on a 2014 Government Accountability Office report, we estimate this could save Medicaid $100 billion or more every two or three years as burgeoning numbers of elders move through the LTC financing system.

Confronting LTC’s realities instead of accepting its commonplace fallacies is a foolproof way to save money and improve Medicaid for the vulnerable people who need it most.

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Updated Monday, July 7, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-024:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The One Big Beautiful Bill Now Heads to President Trump

  • Feds ensnare home-based care providers in nationwide healthcare fraud crackdown

  • Don't Rely on Medicare or Medicaid for Your Long-Term Care

  • Senate Passes Bill Keeping Helpful Nursing Home Provisions Intact But Worries Remain

  • Older childless Americans worry about who'll care for them — do these 4 things if you’re 50-plus with no kids

  • The best defense is a good offense

  • CMS proposes 6.4 percent home health rate cut for 2026

  • The Senate Improves OBBB's Health Policy Provisions

  • A Perfect Storm Is Poised to Raise Long-Term Care Costs. Here’s How You Can Get Ahead of It

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, June 30, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-023:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Discrepancy exists between proposed federal budget, what Americans want, survey finds

  • Documentary pulls back curtain on home care

  • US Short-Term Care Insurance Market to Grow from USD 45 Billion to USD 110.1 Billion by 2033 with a Robust 10.2% CAGR

  • More Boomers Can Afford Senior Living, But Development Shortfall Threatens ‘Severe Shortage’ Ahead

  • 10 Warnings Clients Would Give Their Younger Selves About Long-Term Care

  • Rogers Victor: America’s senior health crisis needs fresh solutions

  • National Health Expenditure Projections, 2024–33: Despite Insurance Coverage Declines, Health To Grow As Share Of GDP

  • Financial strain, illness hinder seniors’ desire to age in place, CenterWell survey finds

  • California budget must consider growing older adult population

  • UPDATED: Providers ‘hopeful’ but ‘skeptical’ as feds announce insurers, MA plans will limit prior authorization use

  • CAPITAL IDEAS: Should millionaires buy long-term care insurance?

  • If You Want Medicaid to Cover Long-Term Care, Get Ready to Hire a Lawyer

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, June 23, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-022:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

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  • New dashboard breaks down by state, county the number of people using Medicaid HCBS

  • 1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid would have a devastating impact on people receiving long-term care. Here's why

  • Why is caregiving so hard in America? The answers emerge in a new film

  • Higher Medicaid mix drives down nurse staffing, regardless of ownership type

  • MA plans extend hospital stays, reduce post-acute services

  • Medicare and Social Security go-broke dates pushed up due to rising health care costs, new SSA law

  • Older adults in the US are increasingly dying from unintentional falls

  • States allocate highest percentage of revenue to Medicaid in FY 2023 in 20 years: report

  • New study reveals seniors are money-savvy until dementia sets in

  • Senior care insurance costs double over a decade with steepest risks for SNFs

  • Study projects Alzheimer’s financial burden will hit African American and Latino families hardest by 206

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, June 20, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: MEDICAID’S LONG CON

LTC Comment: How did Medicaid swindle LTC providers, insurers, and consumers for six decades? Answers after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** PARAGON ON THE OBBB: As we enter the dog days of summer, weighty questions are under consideration in Washington, DC and consequential decisions will soon be made. The Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) touches health policy and LTC policy in significant ways. For the health policy issues at stake, follow the Paragon Health Institute’s many reports, articles and weekly newsletter. On the LTC side, stay tuned here. LTC providers worry caps on provider taxes in the OBBB will hurt state Medicaid programs and reduce providers’ already inadequate revenue stream. But I think “The Best Defense is a Good Offense” so I’m hoping McKnights LTC News will publish my draft article of that title. It proposes an amendment to the OBBB that would save the billions of dollars Republicans seek while delivering the better access to higher quality care Democrats demand. ***

 

LTC BULLET: MEDICAID’S LONG CON

LTC Comment: The more I thought about the history of Medicaid’s role in providing and funding long-term care, the more it seemed like a decades-long confidence game. Promising to help the poor with LTC, the program instead captured LTC providers between the rock of inadequate reimbursement and the hard place of mandatory quality. Medicaid tricked insurers into offering a product the program was giving away to the same middle class and affluent people who should have bought it. And consumers, barraged with warnings that LTC could wipe out their life’s savings, were duped into complacency by the reality that when the time came, late in life, that they faced potentially catastrophic LTC costs, Medicaid always paid. The consequences couldn’t be more real if they were intentionally inflicted by a bad actor rather than the haphazard result of centrally planned, government regulated, interference in the LTC marketplace.

So, I started writing. The following essay is a work in progress. There is much to change and more to add before it is complete. So take it with a grain of salt for now. And think about what a mess Medicaid has made of LTC service delivery and financing. 

“Medicaid’s Long Con”
by
Stephen A. Moses

A "long con" is a “sophisticated and extended confidence game where a swindler slowly gains the victim's trust over a long period to eventually extract a large sum of money or other valuable assets. It involves multiple stages and careful manipulation of the victim's perception to make them believe they are in control while being subtly guided towards the con artist's desired outcome.”

That definition, culled from AI, brings to mind how Medicaid, the dominant payer for long-term care (LTC) in the USA, has duped LTC providers, insurers, and consumers into making poor financial decisions and accepting insufferable economic conditions. From this perspective, let’s review each LTC player’s relationship with Medicaid one at a time.

Providers

Starting with its passage in 1965, Medicaid sold LTC providers (almost exclusively nursing homes at the time) a bill of goods. Reimbursements were generous at the start. With no asset transfer restrictions or estate recoveries in the beginning, new Medicaid admissions soared. Nursing homes evolved from largely Mom and Pop operations into a vast industry of big corporations maximizing revenue from the public welfare program. As Medicaid paid exclusively for nursing home care, other potential modes of service delivery, such as home care or assisted living, were stymied for decades.

This sweet deal for nursing homes didn’t last long. Medicaid LTC expenditures exploded from the start. To control costs, state Medicaid programs reduced reimbursement levels. To compensate, nursing homes charged private payers more. Private payers responded by seeking Medicaid eligibility, often facilitated by Medicaid planning attorneys exploiting financial eligibility “loopholes.” Nursing homes’ private-pay revenue collapsed from half in 1970 to under ten percent in 2023. In the meantime, many state Medicaid programs established certificate of need programs to limit construction of new nursing homes on the principle that “they can’t charge us for a bed that doesn’t exist.” But this practice gave existing nursing homes a de facto monopoly by excluding potential competition, further undercutting the incentive to provide quality care.

Over time Medicaid nursing home reimbursements became so inadequate that access and quality deteriorated substantially. Media exposés of awful institutional conditions proliferated. National legislation passed in 1987 requiring better care, but little changed. It became so bad that new venues and modes of care finally became available, because, faced with the choice between nursing home care paid for by Medicaid or the new and rapidly growing option of assisted living, financially able consumers chose to pay privately for the more desirable alternatives. In time, private-pay home care also got traction as consumers’ distaste for Medicaid funded nursing home care grew.

How does this history display the trappings of a swindle? Nursing homes were led down a primrose path to rely almost exclusively on Medicaid (and some Medicare) financing. Their private pay revenue stream, half again as much as Medicaid pays, nearly disappeared as savvy consumers took advantage of the easily available public financing. As care quality deteriorated and consumers migrated to other private-pay options, nursing homes were left with too little revenue to hire and retain enough caregivers resulting in further deterioration of care access and quality. Nursing homes and other Medicaid LTC providers don’t even get the benefit of the relatively low out-of-pocket LTC spending that consumers still pay (12.9 percent of total LTC spending). Medicaid converts recipients’ private income and asset spend down into its egregiously low level by requiring recipients to pay most of their income (largely Social Security) to the LTC provider to offset the cost to Medicaid.

If a con artist had set out in 1965 to trap LTC providers in a system that disables their ability to provide quality care while holding them accountable to achieve unrealistic standards, he could not have done a more effective job than Medicaid itself has done, however haphazardly.

Insurers

How did Medicaid ensnare insurers? When Medicaid LTC expenditures exploded in the early 1970s, lawmakers and program officials started clamping down. Transfer of assets restrictions  and estate recoveries were first authorized (TEFRA ’82) and later made mandatory (OBRA ’93). In 1988, the DHHS Office of Inspector General published a report (full disclosure, I wrote it) that said in paraphrase: if we’re going to let people get Medicaid LTC benefits while retaining large exempt assets, then they should have to pay it back out of their estates. That was the quid pro quo in OBRA ’93.

So the OBRA ’93 message to insurers was: Medicaid will no longer pay all the LTC costs for everyone. People now have to pay their own way until they qualify under Medicaid’s stringent income and asset rules … or … they’ll have to pay back everything Medicaid pays for their care out of their estates. More distressing yet, most analysts and the media went even further. They insisted people could get no help from Medicaid until they spent down all their savings into impoverishment. Some big insurance companies took this draconian LTC situation to the bank, or so they thought.

Starting in the 1980s and through the early 2000s, over 100 insurance companies made private LTC coverage available. They priced it low to attract market share and because solid historical actuarial data on the incidence of paid LTC was unavailable to counsel them otherwise. Who wouldn’t buy this coverage, they speculated, given the consequences of going bare: total impoverishment or loss for heirs of the estate to Medicaid recovery? But results did not meet expectations. It turned out that prospects for the coverage didn’t buy the hype about total economic risk; the estate recovery liability was never fully enforced or publicized; and the public remained too complacent about LTC risk and cost to purchase the expensive LTC coverage.

Medicaid duped the private insurance industry into thinking LTC was a big financial risk that people would buy coverage for and then pulled the rug out from under the carriers who tried, by making catastrophic coverage available even to the middle class and affluent after the insurable event occurred. The end result is that relatively few people plan and insure for LTC and most end up on Medicaid if they need high cost extended care. Swindled by Medicaid’s bait and switch, the LTC insurance business has evolved creatively and maintained a foothold but it has now, and can only anticipate for the foreseeable future, a relatively minor role in financing LTC.

Consumers

Perhaps the biggest losers in Medicaid’s long con are consumers, especially the needy whom the program is supposed to serve. The public was trapped in a welfare-financed LTC system for decades that gave them nothing but nursing home care. Only after that system deteriorated to the point of a national disgrace, did enough financially able consumers rebel by spending their own money for newly evolving private home and community-based care options. But LTC is so long in duration and so expensive to pay for privately, families were put in the position of having to care for their own loved ones as long as possible. This caused tremendous financial and emotional stress, leading them to turn to Medicaid when the strain and cost became too much.

That’s when Medicaid softens the blow. Despite conventional wisdom, drummed into everyone by the media (remember “Dying Broke”), that Medicaid LTC requires spend down for care into impoverishment, the reality is very different. Middle class and affluent people, once they consider and look into public financing options, find that eligibility for Medicaid is relatively easy. Income is no obstacle for people with high private medical or LTC costs because those costs are deducted before a low income standard is applied. Likewise, high assets don’t matter as they are either already tied up in exempt resources (the home, retirement savings, a vehicle, person belongings, etc.) or they’re easily converted to exempt status by using countable assets to purchase non-countable resources. See “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”

Here’s the irony and the tragedy. Medicaid financial eligibility rules crush the poor quickly. They lack resources to pay privately even for a while. They end up in the worst nursing homes and LTC providers, the ones that are heavily dependent on Medicaid’s low reimbursements. So the people Medicaid is supposed to serve first, the aged, disabled, and disadvantaged, get the worst care Medicaid provides. But what about those middle class and affluent people Medicaid allows to qualify so easily? They hold back enough “key money” from their artificial self-impoverishment process, so they can pay privately for a few months. That gives them access to the nursing homes and LTC providers, who have relatively few Medicaid recipients, and are less dependent on Medicaid’s poor reimbursements. They crowd out the poor and most needy from the best care.

So here’s how Medicaid swindled consumers. By making Medicaid LTC benefits easy to obtain late in life after the insurable LTC event occurs, Medicaid created a moral hazard. The public doesn’t believe the scare tactics insisting that LTC is a catastrophic risk. People don’t know who pays for LTC, but they can see someone must. Alzheimer’s patients aren’t dying in the streets in large numbers. So consumers don’t worry about LTC until they need it at catastrophic levels and then they slip seamlessly onto Medicaid. By making the best care Medicaid offers available to people who can afford to hold back “key money,” the program added insult to injury. It helps most the very people who, if they bore more of the cost of LTC, would protect themselves earlier with savings and insurance in order to avoid the need to co-opt Medicaid’s scant resources.

Summary

Medicaid’s long con continues to this day. LTC providers, suckered by the promise of practically unlimited customers and revenue, find themselves struggling to supply decent care at less than the cost. LTC insurers struggle to sell a product Medicaid has been giving away for 60 years, with its best care going to the very people who should, could and would have bought LTC insurance in Medicaid’s absence. Consumers, duped by Medicaid to think they don’t need to worry about LTC when they are young, healthy and affluent enough to prepare for the risk, end up dependent on a deficient welfare program that does a better job for the financially able than for the poor and disabled it was supposed to serve first.

Do you think the confidence game analogy is inapt? No one set out to mess up America’s LTC financing system so badly? Well, consider this: “Central planning, public funding, heavy regulation, and easy access to welfare benefits have caused most of LTC’s problems, such as nursing home bias, poor access and quality, inadequate revenue for care providers, caregiver shortages, and the terrible emotional and financial distress for caregiving families. Medicaid especially is responsible because, despite the conventional wisdom that it requires impoverishment, the program’s LTC benefits are routinely available not only to the poor but to the middle class and affluent as well.” (Source) To say the terrible results were unintentional is a distinction without a difference. The same causes always produce the same results.

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Updated Monday, June 16, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-021:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • AMA Opposes Estate Recovery to Recoup Medicaid $$ From Dead Beneficiaries

  • More Americans Are Filing for Retirement Benefits Earlier—Their Long-Term Retirement Security Could Suffer as a Result

  • More workers caring for aging parents than those caring for preschool children, survey finds

  • More Americans aging into retirement are still paying down mortgages

  • Study: 82 percent of unpaid caregivers suffer mental health struggles

  • ‘Consequences Are Undeniable’: New AHCA Survey Warns Medicaid Cuts Could Force Nursing Home Closures

  • Your Company Needs an Eldercare Policy

  • Medi-Cal and Asset Tests: Hit by Reality

  • US dementia caregiving costs to surpass $3T by 2060, study indicates

  • Alzheimer’s Association launches free app for newly diagnosed dementia patients

  • Family caregivers provide $873.5 billion in unpaid labor annually: report

  • Gov. Newsom proposes ‘asset test’ for low-income and disabled Medi-Cal applicants. What does that mean?

  • 660,000 more LTC workers needed by 2030, skilled nursing still below pre-pandemic levels

  • How Nondisabled Medicaid Recipients Without Children Spend Their Time

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, June 02, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-020:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Alzheimer’s Association launches free app for newly diagnosed dementia patients

  • First Look: Understanding the Governor’s 2025-26 May Revision

  • Failure to factor in LTSS costs ‘most significant risk’ to retirement income

  • How Medicare Advantage Changed Home Health Care Use

  • Health Care Provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill: Summary and Analysis

  • 5 Key Facts About Nursing Facilities and Medicaid

  • AI predicts cognitive frailty risk in older adults with 84 percent accuracy, study finds

  • The Middle-Class Dilemma: Funding Long-Term Care Without Insurance

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, May 30, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: WHY SHOULD THE WEALTHY BUY LTCI?

LTC Comment: Why buy insurance when you can afford to self-fund for the risk and cost of long-term care? Answers after the ***news.***

*** WHO PAYS FOR LTC? We’ve explained elsewhere how little of the cost of LTC gets paid “out of pocket.” Here’s a table summarizing all of the LTC financing sources.

Note that only 12.9% of LTC spending comes out of pocket. But half of that is spend through of income (not savings) that people already on Medicaid half to contribute to offset Medicaid’s cost for their care. So, only about 6.5% of total LTC expenditures could come from savings, despite all the media hullaballoo about how LTC wipes out the life savings of millions of Americans.

That brings us to this LTC Clipping we published last week about similar findings presented by Andrew Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute.

5/20/2025, “No, Long-Term Care Costs Aren’t Going to Cause a Retirement Crisis*,” by Andrew G. Biggs, American Enterprise Institute
Quote: “*Unless we eliminate Medicaid, Medicare, state programs, private insurance and charities. Then sure, we’ve got a problem. … But assuming that retirees pay nothing for long-term care is actually closer to the truth than Morningstar’s assumption that seniors pay 100% of costs out of pocket, given that we know seniors actually only pay about 14%. This would be particularly true for lower-income seniors, where long-term care costs almost certainly would be covered by Medicaid. For instance, a 2022 analysis published by the Department of Health and Human Services projected that 73% of low-income seniors will pay nothing out of pocket for long-term care services. The overall out-of-pocket average for this group is slightly over $6,000. Not per year, but ever. In short, the Morningstar analysis doesn’t point toward Americans facing a retirement crisis. If anything, it indicates the opposite.”
LTC Comment: Finally another analyst (besides me) who gets it right. Assuming that huge LTC costs will wipe out elders’ savings is just wrong. Only 14% of LTC expenditures come out of pocket and half of that is Social Security income people already on Medicaid have to contribute to offset the program’s cost for their care. Only 7% could come from savings, one dollar out of 14. Unless and until the USA puts more private wealth at risk for LTC, most people will ignore LTC risk, end up on Medicaid without spending down their savings for care, and suffer the poor LTC access and quality the government provides. [Excuse the slight variances in percentages as they come from using different data bases.] ***

 

LTC BULLET: WHY SHOULD THE WEALTHY BUY LTCI

LTC Comment: “Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald 

That sentiment holds true for the reasons high net worth people should consider purchasing private long-term care insurance. In today’s “Guest Bullet,” Center for LTC Reform individual member Shawn Britt of corporate-member Nationwide explains why the wealthy would be well advised to buy LTCI. The very rich may have different “pain points” than the less affluent. Finding those vulnerabilities, identifying them, and asking the right questions to bring them forward are keys to helping the wealthy see the need to insure. Read Shawn’s cogent advice and apply it for your well-to-do clients’ benefit … and yours.

 


"Why the Wealthy Shouldn't Overlook Long-Term Care Insurance"
by
Shawn Britt – CLU, CLTC

Long-term care insurance is often thought of as a “safety-net” for the middle market, but in reality, LTC coverage is for everyone! Too often, high net worth (HNW) clients approaching their financial professional about purchasing LTC coverage are told “you can afford to self-fund long-term care.” It happens in reverse as well, with clients rebuffing a LTC discussion by saying “we plan to self-insure.” However, being able to afford self-funding does not make it a good idea. There are many sound reasons for the wealthy to use LTC coverage in their financial strategy.

Find financial pain point

How do you discuss the need for LTC coverage with HNW clients in a way that makes sense? For these clients, you are looking for their “financial pain point” – a concern related to money that can be solved or protected by having LTC coverage. Yes, they can afford to pay for their own care, but that involves spending money – funds that may have been allocated to be used for better purposes. When you find their financial pain point, you justify the need for LTC coverage, particularly if that pain point has an emotional tie to it. But first, it is important to understand just how much the affluent and the HNW spend on long-term care expenses.

Highly affluent individuals spend more on long-term care

High net worth and highly affluent clients typically spend more on LTC than the typical upper middle class or middle market client.

    The HNW and highly affluent people are less likely to receive physical care from their adult children – who are more likely to have executive/professional level jobs

    The HNW are more likely to stay at home for care, no matter the cost. The current national average cost for 24/7 care at home exceeds $260,000 annually, but can run $350,000, $400,000 or higher in the wealthier communties!1

    For those going to a facility, it is often a top end “luxury” facility with services and amenities not typically found in a traditional facility. The cost of receiving care in such an atmosphere can run upwards to $35,000 a month.2  That can add up to over $400,000 per year in today’s dollars. 

The cost of an LTC event for a HNW or highly affluent individual that lasts three years can easily exceed a $1,000,000 or more in today’s dollars - and fifteen to twenty years from now, costs could run from $2 million to $4 million for an individual or a couple. That is a lot of money – even for the wealthy! When you discuss that level of cost with a client, the idea of “self-insuring” may start to lose appeal. How could those same dollars have been put to a better use if the HNW client had used cost effective insurance to pay for their LTC expenses?

How LTC Insurance Eases the “Financial Pain Points”

The following are just a few of the potential pain points you may discover when talking with your financially affluent and HNW clients.

    Ask your client to list the charities and causes they would like their estate to donate to upon their death. Then after showing them the cost of a 3-year LTC claim that could cost anywhere from $1 million to $2 million (depending on when the claim commences), ask them which charity should be crossed off the list.

    Is your HNW client heavily invested in real estate or businesses that cannot be easily liquidated? An LTC event taking place when this client is asset rich and cash poor could result in having to sell an asset well below its value.

    Does your client have relatives or other people they are financially responsible for? Using LTC coverage to fund those potential events make much more sense than paying out of pocket.

    Does your client call you every time the market takes a hit? Most clients, regardless of wealth, do not want to see their account values go down. Pulling out large amounts of money to pay for care in a down market results in a double loss. The money cannot be grown back or grown forward.

    Self-funding sets up the client’s estate to potentially pay unnecessary estate taxes. If they are lucky enough not to need LTC, the “LTC funds” sitting in their estate could be estate taxed. What if you could avoid that risk by using the “self-insurance funds” to purchase LTC coverage at a faction of the cost, and then donate the rest of the dollars to charity now, which would allow for a tax deduction now? The tax deduction could help offset the cost of the LTC insurance premium!

    Regardless of wealth, putting one adult child in charge of a parent’s care puts them in the position of making financial decisions that their siblings may not agree with. Having LTC insurance helps take that issue off the table. When LTC benefits are paying for the parent’s care, it is far less likely that siblings will disagree on how the money is being spent, since the care is being paid for by LTC benefits from an insurance company – not their inheritance.

Final Thoughts

How do the HNW become wealthy? Some inherit – but many build their wealth (or build it further) by making good financial decisions throughout their life that include leveraging assets and finding win-win solutions to potential problems. So, why would they stop doing that now? The key is to find the pain point. What really means something to the HNW or highly-affluent client that has that has a dollar cost associated with it? Then show the client how self-funding LTC expenses eats up the dollars they might otherwise devote to that desire, such as charitable giving, liquidity needs, supporting family members needing LTC, inheritances, major philanthropy or whatever that pain point is.

Today’s LTC coverage options attached to some form of financial product can offer guaranteed premiums and benefits, and protect the investment in the policy from loss if LTC is not needed. Long-term care coverage is just as important for the HNW and highly affluent client as with any client – it is just for different reasons.

Shawn Britt is Director of Long-term Care Initiatives, Advanced Consulting Group, Nationwide

1 A Place of Mom – ”How Much Does 24/7 Home Care Cost in 2024? An In-Depth Guide” – May 9, 2024

2 Evelyn Battaglia – Brick Underground “Where seniors can find luxury independent living residences with resort-like amenities plus 24/7 personal care” – August 22, 2023

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Updated Tuesday, May 27, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-019:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicare vs. Medicaid for Long-Term Care: What You Don't Know Can Cost You

  • Morningstar study on long-term care costs gets pushback from think tank

  • No, Long-Term Care Costs Aren’t Going to Cause a Retirement Crisis*

  • Explaining Waste, Fraud, and Abuse in Medicaid

  • Medicaid State Fact Sheets

  • 10 Things You Should Never Say to a Caregiver

  • America’s retirement security hits ‘breaking point’ as Social Security funds dwindle: report

  • Federal judge sides with 23 states, blocks billions in HHS cuts

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, May 19, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-018:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Home health use remains high among beneficiaries with dementia, study finds

  • Residents more likely to suffer physical restraints, bedsores at bankrupt nursing homes: report

  • UnitedHealth under criminal investigation for possible fraud in Medicare Advantage line: WSJ

  • Medicare ACO program shows no impact on end-of-life care for dementia patients

  • Tracking the Medicaid Provisions in the 2025 Reconciliation Bill

  • Expanding state private insurance partnership programs can help reduce public spending on long term care

  • Long-Term Care Provisions in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce Bill

  • The Evergreen Model for Long-Term Care: A state-level strategy for a persistent social policy problem

  • Caregiving: HHS Should Clarify When Youth May Qualify for Support Services

  • “Here There Be Dragons”: The Myths and Claims Undermining Medicaid

  • Congress Must Cut and Reform Medicaid

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Monday, May 16, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: UNDERSTANDING STRUCTURAL LONG-TERM CARE RACISM

LTC Comment: Is Medicaid LTC set up to hurt the poor, underprivileged, and marginalized while inordinately benefiting the affluent and middle class? Answers after the ***news.***

*** GENWORTH/CARESCOUT LTC SYMPOSIUM: On May 7, 2025 Genworth and CareScout convened a symposium in Washington, DC on “Sustainable Solutions: The Future of Long-Term Care Financing.” Read all about it on the program’s “landing page” here. Genworth CEO Thomas McInerney welcomed the attendees. Congressman Tom Suozzi, author of the WISH Act, keynoted the program. Four panels followed focused on LTC financing policy and reform. I joined the fourth panel, titled "Better Together..." – Public + Private Collaboration, moderated by CareScout President and CEO Lynn White, along with fellow panelists Stephanie Moench from Oliver Wyman and Susan Coronel from AHIP. The end result of the half-day program was a long-sought, final solution to the LTC financing crisis! Well, maybe not, but a sincere effort toward that objective was made by all. Kudos to Genworth/CareScout for underwriting and producing this program. ***

*** STOP THE PRESSES: I was just informed that a “2025 Long-Term Care Symposium Recap” has been posted here with this announcement: “On May 7, Genworth & CareScout hosted our 2025 Long-Term Care Symposium. We convened leaders, advocates, policymakers, and other stakeholders from the public and private sectors to discuss how we can meaningfully progress toward solving our country’s long-term care financing challenges. Take a look at the replays and photos from the event, information about our panelists, supplementary videos highlighting the perspectives of caregivers, and additional resources … .” Check out panel #4, on which I served, here. ***
 

LTC BULLET: UNDERSTANDING STRUCTURAL LONG-TERM CARE RACISM

LTC Comment: A couple years ago I began reading what has become a vast, peer-reviewed literature about structural long-term care racism. Peer-reviewed articles, many cited in the paper that follows, claim that underprivileged, marginalized, often racial minority groups receive less and lower quality long-term care than members of the more affluent demographic majority. The authors make a compelling case for the discrepancies they identify. They uniformly place the blame on Medicaid, especially that welfare program’s deficient reimbursement rates that undercut access and quality. What they fail to do, however, is to identify and explain the “laws, policies, institutional practices, and entrenched norms” that disempower racial and ethnic minorities and cause the care disparities they list. That is what I’ve attempted to do in the following paper posted today to the Center for LTC Reform’s website.

My paper explains how Medicaid LTC financial eligibility policy affects the poor and the affluent differently. It crushes the poor with stringent income and asset spend down rules that impoverish them, often immediately. But it treats the affluent and middle class very differently. They can have virtually unlimited incomes as long as their health and LTC expenses are high enough as they usually are for people who need expensive LTC. The affluent can also retain virtually unlimited assets because seniors hold most of their wealth in resources Medicaid considers exempt, such as home equity. Even the very wealthy qualify for Medicaid by using special trusts, annuities and other Medicaid planning techniques. Bottom line, the affluent and middle class qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits almost as easily and quickly as the poor.

But why would the well-to-do choose Medicaid, with all its well-known deficiencies, when they could afford quality care in the private market? The answer to that question is the underlying cause of LTC racism. Prosperous people gain access to the best care available from Medicaid. They are routinely advised to hold back “key money” so they can pay privately for a while before applying for Medicaid. This buys them access to the best nursing homes and LTC providers who are desperate to attract private payers even for short initial stays at 1.5 times the Medicaid reimbursement rate. The poor and underprivileged, lacking any private funds after spending down their meager incomes and assets to qualify for Medicaid, have access only to the mostly Medicaid nursing homes and home care providers that receive so much bad publicity about poor access and quality. The net effect is that people with wealth receive the best Medicaid has to offer while the less fortunate receive the worst. 

That is the root of structural LTC racism. Read the following paper for details and see if you agree.

 

Title: Understanding Structural Long-Term Care Racism

By: Stephen A. Moses

Abstract: Socioeconomically marginalized groups, including racial minorities, receive lower quality long-term care (LTC) in the U.S. compared to the more affluent majority. Disparities include sub-standard nursing home care, impaired access to assisted living or home care and reduced or inferior medical treatments. Medicaid causes these deficiencies because it dominates LTC financing, but pays too little to ensure quality. Many scholars conclude the system is structurally racist. This paper examines the laws, regulations and policies that produce racially prejudiced LTC outcomes. Medicaid’s financial eligibility rules devastate the poor but enable higher income individuals to qualify and preserve substantial exempt wealth. By retaining “key money” to pay privately at market rates before converting to Medicaid, the financially able access better facilities and services than are available to enrollees unable to pay. By indemnifying the nonneedy against LTC risk, Medicaid created a moral hazard that discouraged LTC planning and left most people dependent on public assistance when they face catastrophic care costs. The solution to structural LTC racism is to eliminate Medicaid’s laws and regulations that benefit the affluent and disfavor minorities.

Main Text: Long-term care (LTC), also known as long-term services and supports, encompasses medical and custodial care in residential or institutional settings for people in need of assistance with activities of daily living due to frailty, disability or cognitive impairment. Socially and economically marginalized groups face impaired access to quality LTC in the United Sates. A rapidly expanding academic literature documents disparities of many kinds.

Blacks tend to reside in nursing homes that have “serious deficiencies, lower staffing ratios, and greater financial vulnerability.”[1] Besides dubious nursing homes, the range of deficiencies experienced disproportionately by Black, Indigenous, and persons of color (BIPOC) includes segregation;1,[2] reduced access or deficient home and community-based care,[3],[4],[5] assisted living,[6] mental health services,[7] pain medication,[8] influenza vaccinations,[9] hospital and hospice care[10] and ADRD (Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias) care;[11] more physical restraints[12] and pressure ulcers;[13] and higher COVID-19 incidence, hospitalization and death counts.[14],[15]

Structural LTC Racism

What accounts for these inequities? The common denominator is Medicaid dependency.[16] Due to its dominance of LTC financing, contributing over half of the $438 billion the U.S. spent on LTC in 2022,[17] and its low reimbursement rates, far below private-pay levels and often less than the cost of providing the care,[18] Medicaid is responsible for most of the deficient access and quality that BIPOC patients receive. Because the long-term care system itself causes racial disparities, many sources attribute the problems to “systemic, structural or institutionalized racism.”[19],[20] Structural racism “operates through laws and policies that allocate resources in ways that disempower and devalue members of racial and ethnic minority groups, resulting in inequitable access to high-quality care.”[21]

Residential segregation and poverty cause BIPOC LTC users to live disproportionately in poor neighborhoods. People with lower economic status who live in relatively impoverished neighborhoods with nursing homes that rely most heavily on Medicaid’s meager reimbursements tend to be the ones who suffer most from structural LTC racism. Whites who depend on Medicaid are not immune to the same deficiencies afflicting marginalized enrollee groups. But Whites on the margin are more prosperous and less dependent on Medicaid. They tend to live in areas with better private-pay LTC options, such as home care and assisted living, and with nursing homes that are less Medicaid dependent.[22]

Proposed Solutions for Structural LTC Racism

Proposals to eliminate or mitigate structural LTC racism center on improving Medicaid with better policies and more funding. One source calls for a multi-prong effort to add “disproportionate-share payment adjustments to nursing homes with a higher proportion of Medicaid residents” and to equalize “Medicaid and private-pay payments.”1 Another would “increase Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement rates, especially for providers serving high proportions of Medicaid-eligible and BIPOC older adults” and “expand access to Medicaid-waivered HCBS services.”20 These are worthy goals, but simply pouring more resources into Medicaid without eliminating the conditions that favor Whites over BIPOC patients would only deliver a better funded, but still structurally racist program.

Absent from the large body of peer-reviewed articles on structural LTC racism is much discussion of the specific “laws, policies, institutional practices, and entrenched norms” that disempower racial and ethnic minorities and cause the care disparities.[23] If Medicaid dependency triggers the LTC system’s inequities and deficiencies, then the laws and policies governing Medicaid LTC eligibility should be a crucial topic for analysis. What are those laws and policies? What role do the rules governing access to Medicaid LTC benefits play? Do they benefit some and disadvantage others? If so, how are marginalized groups disempowered and devalued? Do prosperous people benefit disproportionately from Medicaid? If so, how?

Medicaid and Structural LTC Racism

Income and Asset Eligibility Rules

The most common statement about Medicaid LTC eligibility in both the popular and academic literature is that qualification requires low income and assets. Sources explain that income above $943 per month ($967 as of 2025) or assets exceeding $2,000 renders someone ineligible for the program. Applicants must “spend down” privately for care to those levels before they become financially eligible. In fact, however, Medicaid LTC financial eligibility is much less stringent.

Income is rarely an obstacle to eligibility because state Medicaid programs either deduct private health and LTC expenses before applying the low income standard or they permit applicants to divert excess income into trusts. Most states (34) use the “medically needy” income eligibility method.[24] They deduct private medical and LTC expenses from income before determining eligibility, enabling people to qualify despite having incomes well above categorical eligibility limits. Other states use an “income cap” method, allowing income up to 300 percent of the Supplemental Security Income monthly limit. People with much higher incomes can still qualify for Medicaid in income cap states by diverting excess income to an income diversion trust, also known as a “Miller” or “Qualified Income Trust.”[25] A rule of thumb is that income below the monthly cost of a nursing home, easily $8,000 or $9,000, relatively high income, is not disqualifying.

Likewise, most large resources seniors own are exempt from Medicaid’s asset limit. Exempt wealth includes a home and all contiguous property up to a minimum of $713,000 ($730,000 as of 2025) everywhere and a maximum of $1,071,000 ($1,097,000 as of 2025) or more in nine states,[26] but also, without any dollar limit, one vehicle, prepaid burial funds, a business including its capital and cash flow, personal belongings and household furnishings, even IRAs if they are in payout status as is usually true for elders in need of LTC.25

Medicaid Financial Eligibility and Structural LTC Racism

How do these facts about Medicaid LTC income and asset eligibility relate to structural LTC racism? Most low income, asset-poor people qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits quickly. They have little income and countable wealth to spend down and what they do have is consumed rapidly by private health and LTC expenditures. Medicaid LTC financial eligibility policy devastates people on the lowest rung of the wealth ladder.

Less understood is that many people with substantially greater wealth also qualify quickly and with little or no asset spend down required. Their biggest assets, such as home equity, are exempt already and their countable resources are easily converted to exempt status. They can “spend down” countable assets simply by purchasing a new car, home improvements or any other item on long lists of exempt assets available online,25 or from attorneys specializing in Medicaid planning.[27]

Medicaid planners routinely qualify even wealthy clients for Medicaid LTC benefits by means of legal spend down avoidance strategies such as Medicaid asset protection trusts used “to protect assets from being counted for Medicaid eligibility;”[28] Medicaid-compliant annuities that convert “excess funds into an income stream with no cash value” to accelerate “Medicaid eligibility, while protecting your client’s assets;”[29] life estates “to preserve your residence and increase your Medicaid eligibility,”[30] or half-a-loaf methods. “Half a Loaf, Reverse Half a Loaf, and Modern Half a Loaf are Medicaid gifting strategies (also called transfer strategies) … used for the purpose of reducing countable assets to qualify for Medicaid. These strategies can also preserve some of the Medicaid applicant’s assets for their family members.”[31] California’s Medi-Cal program recently eliminated its limit on countable assets altogether making LTC benefits available regardless of wealth and obviating the need for sophisticated legal spend down strategies.[32]

One effect of this system is that middle-class and affluent people qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits as easily as the poor and with less financial disruption. Once qualified, all use Medicaid’s LTC benefits. When people of moderate or substantial wealth qualify for Medicaid, they consume scarce resources that would otherwise have benefited people of lesser means. Such expanded coverage depletes Medicaid’s scarce resources and reduces the range and quality of care available to others on the program, especially BIPOC enrollees.

But why would people who could purchase high quality LTC in the private market prefer to qualify for Medicaid instead? Is it only to save money? Or could they somehow capture the best care Medicaid has to offer to the exclusion of more disadvantaged enrollees? How biased is Medicaid-based structural LTC racism?

Key Money[33]

It seems counter-intuitive that individuals and families with significant wealth would choose to use Medicaid even when that path is legally available to them given the program’s reputation for substandard access and quality. The reason they do is one of the many ways structural LTC racism manifests in the LTC marketplace.

Some nursing homes have relatively few Medicaid beds. Such facilities often have supplemental philanthropic funding and comparatively high private-pay or Medicare resident census.1 They enjoy the higher financial margins that come from those sources’ relatively more generous reimbursements. Such facilities often provide better care and services because of their higher revenue and lesser dependency on low Medicaid rates. This two-tier system benefits those who can access it, but disadvantages any, including many BIPOC enrollees, who cannot.16

Because the Medicaid reimbursement rate for nursing home care is approximately 70 percent of what private payers pay,[34] skilled nursing facilities eagerly seek out new admissions who can pay privately from day one and for at least some period of time before they convert to Medicaid.1 Medicaid planners encourage their affluent clients to hold back enough countable wealth, so-called “key money,” from the Medicaid spend down process so they will be able to pay privately for care at the start “to facilitate the admission of the Medicaid applicant to the best long-term care facility available.”[35] Once admitted, nursing homes cannot evict patients simply because their source of payment changes from private pay to Medicaid.[36],[37]

Because socioeconomically disadvantaged groups lack key money, they end up in the less desirable Medicaid-only or mostly Medicaid facilities. More prosperous White enrollees tend to live in areas with the best LTC facilities and they possess the key money to buy their way in. This result is unfair, unethical, and structurally racist, but commonplace.[38]

Moral Hazard

Beyond consuming Medicaid resources that could have gone to economically marginalized people, the availability of Medicaid LTC benefits to individuals of higher financial means has another negative, systemic consequence. In effect since Medicaid began operating in 1966, this system created a moral hazard—“a situation in which people or organizations do not suffer from the results of their bad decisions, so may increase the risks they take.”[39] The result of making Medicaid LTC eligibility available late in life while allowing significant wealth to be divested or retained in exempt form is that too many people fail to plan for LTC.[40] They end up consuming Medicaid resources instead. Why save, invest or insure early in life against needing LTC someday in old age when the government covers catastrophic costs if such care is needed and reserves the best publicly financed care for the most economically well-off people? This harmful incentive discourages early, responsible LTC planning by relatively prosperous people. It underwrites structural LTC racism.

Roots of Structural LTC Racism

Medically Needy Eligibility

From the beginning, Medicaid LTC benefits were available not only to the financially destitute, those meeting the strict financial qualifications for state welfare payments or Supplemental Security Income (SSI), but also to the medically needy. The medically needy are people with too little income to pay for institutional or home-based LTC, but with too much income to qualify for cash assistance. These higher income people are not excluded from Medicaid eligibility based on income if their private health and LTC expenses are high enough or they use an income diversion trust. The result is that people with significant incomes end up relying on Medicaid. The same people preserve wealth in the form of exempt assets. While such assets are vulnerable to mandatory estate recovery, few states enforce that requirement effectively and the liability is easy to avoid with some early legal planning.[41]

Law makers’ well-intentioned plan to help more people with LTC disinclined everyone to prepare personally for LTC risk and overloaded the public assistance program with enrollees. Medicaid LTC tried to do too much for too many so it does too little for most, especially for BIPOC enrollees with the greatest need. That is the root of structural LTC racism.

LTC Financing and Racism

Medicaid LTC enrollees are required to contribute most of their income to offset the program’s cost for their care. As Medicaid reimbursement rates are only about two-thirds of private-pay rates, enrollees get a substantial discount on their care.34 But LTC providers are short-changed. They receive only the Medicaid rate, often less than the cost of the care, instead of the higher private-pay rate even though enrollees are paying “out-of-pocket” from their incomes, largely from their Social Security benefits. It sometimes happens that enrollees’ incomes are higher than Medicaid’s rate for their care. In those cases, Medicaid pays nothing; the enrollee pays all; and the LTC provider struggles financially with most of its revenue coming from the lowest payors’ rate. As the structural LTC racism literature often observes, low Medicaid reimbursements cause care deficiencies and inequities. These occur because of the laws and policies that govern Medicaid LTC eligibility and financing.

A Solution for Structural LTC Racism

If the cause of structural LTC racism is too many enrollees with sheltered or divested wealth overwhelming Medicaid’s ability to pay for quality care, then the solution must lie in diverting more prosperous people away from Medicaid dependency, enabling them to pay privately for LTC, and thus empowering Medicaid to afford better care for those most in need who remain eligible. But that is a tall order. It presents two major challenges: (1) how to keep people with significant wealth off Medicaid so more program resources reach the people currently shortchanged by structural LTC racism, and (2) how to prepare the middle class and affluent to pay for their own LTC when they need it after Medicaid is no longer available to pay for their care and preserve their wealth as now.

Re-targeting Medicaid to end structural LTC racism

Knowing how to exclude higher-income/higher-asset people from Medicaid LTC so that more program resources reach the disadvantaged is not difficult. Simply repeal the Medicaid laws, regulations and policies that permit them to qualify. Medically needy income eligibility rules that allow higher income people to qualify if their private health and LTC expenses are high enough should end. Practically unlimited asset exemptions, such as for home equity, that permit people with any amount of wealth to qualify must go. Spending down by purchasing exempt assets instead of paying for care should cease. Medicaid strategies such as special trusts, annuities, spousal refusal, and life estates—legal gimmicks that enrich lawyers and their affluent client heirs—must stop as well. Easing the path to Medicaid’s best LTC options by means of key money should end. Stopping structural LTC racism cannot be achieved until Medicaid is preserved exclusively for the most disadvantaged, whom its laws and policies have hurt the most historically.

But these needed changes are much more difficult to achieve politically than they are to identify and list. People who benefit from the status quo will fight to preserve and expand the current system and structure. These interested parties include (1) most Americans who remain oblivious to LTC risk and cost because easy access to Medicaid LTC late in life has enabled their denial; (2) elder law attorneys and financial planners who profit from transitioning prosperous clients to the best of Medicaid-financed care; (3) politicians who garner votes by promoting easy access to Medicaid LTC benefits; (4) LTC analysts and economists who ignore the extensive legal literature on Medicaid planning and pretend the practice of artificial impoverishment does not occur, and (5) the state and federal health and human services bureaucracies that have strived to expand Medicaid LTC to everyone, especially the White middle class, instead of targeting it to the victims of structural LTC racism. These are the people and the reasons that sustain the LTC status quo and stand in the way of reform, consistently protecting structural LTC racism whether consciously and intentionally or not.

Conclusion

Structural LTC racism causes reduced access to quality LTC for marginalized groups. It is grounded in Medicaid LTC eligibility law, regulations and policies. By enabling middle class and affluent people to access Medicaid LTC late in life, and preserve exempt wealth, the program became overloaded with people who should, could and would otherwise have prepared privately for LTC risk and cost. Medicaid covered too many enrollees with too many benefits ensuring that those most vulnerable financially would receive the program’s deficient care, while others more privileged, in possession of key money, would gain access to the best care the program offers.

The good news is that this condition is reversible. Lawmakers should end access to wealth-preserving Medicaid LTC benefits late in life. Instead, offer creative methods for families in mid-life to prepare responsibly to pay privately when and if they ever need expensive extended care. Some possibilities include allowing individuals and families to meet individually set LTC saving goals by carving out portions of other wealth they are accumulating, such as from retirement savings, home equity, life insurance or estate planning. Implement such measures and enormous, desperately needed private funds will flow immediately into the LTC service delivery system ensuring better access to higher quality care for everyone. Relieved of financing LTC for the middle class and affluent, Medicaid will be able to pay adequately to ensure quality care for all enrollees, ending the long-standing system of structural LTC racism.

Why this goal is realistic and how to achieve it are topics for another paper.


 

[1] Smith DB, Feng Z, Fennel ML, Zinn JS, Mor V. Separate and unequal: racial segregation and disparities in quality across U.S. nursing homes. Health Aff 2007;26:1448—1459.

[2] Rahman M, Foster AD. Racial segregation and quality of care disparity in US nursing homes. J Health Econ 2015;39:1—16.

[3] Fabius CD, Ogarek J, Shireman TI. Racial disparities in Medicaid home and community-based service utilization among White, Black, and Hispanic adults with multiple sclerosis: implications of state policy. J Racial Ethn Health Disparities 2019;6:1200—1207.

[4] Zhanlian F, Fennell ML, Tyler DA, Clark M, Mor V. Growth of racial and ethnic minorities in US nursing homes driven by demographics and possible disparities in options. Health Aff 2011;30:1358—1365.

[5] Gorges RJ, Sanghavi P, Konetzka RT. A national examination of long-term care setting, outcomes, and disparities among elderly dual eligibles. Health Aff 2019;38:1110—1118.

[6] Morales MJ, Robert SA. Black–White Disparities in Moves to Assisted Living and Nursing Homes Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries. J Gerontol Soc Work 2020;75:1972—1982.

[7] Rivera-Hernandez M, Kumar A, Epstein-Lubow G, Thomas KS. Disparities in nursing home use and quality among African American, Hispanic, and White Medicare residents with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. JAH 2019;31:1259—1277.

[8] Mack DS, Hunnicutt JN, Jesdale BM, Lapane KL. Non-Hispanic Black-White disparities in pain and pain management among newly admitted nursing home residents with cancer. J. Pain Res. 2018;11:753-761.

[9] Travers JL, Schroeder KL, Blaylock TE, Stone PW. Racial/ethnic disparities in influenza and pneumococcal vaccinations among nursing home residents: a systematic review. Gerontologist 2018;58:205—217.

[10] Zheng NT, Mukamel DB, Caprio T, Cai S, Temkin-Greener H. Racial disparities in in-hospital death and hospice use among nursing home residents at the end-of-life. Med Care 2011;49:992-998.

[11] Rivera-Hernandez M, Kumar A, Epstein-Lubow G, Tomas KS. Disparities in nursing home use and quality among African American, Hispanic, and White Medicare residents with Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias. J Aging Health 2019;31:1259—1277.

[12] Cassie KM, Cassie W. Racial disparities in the use of physical restraints in U.S. nursing homes. Health Soc Work 2013;38:207—213.

[13] Cai S, Mukamel DB, Temkin-Greener H. Pressure ulcer prevalence among Black and White nursing home residents in New York state: evidence of racial disparity? Med Care 2010;48:233—239.

[14] Gorges RJ, Konetzka RT. Factors associated with racial differences in deaths among nursing home residents with COVID-19 infection in the US. JAMA Netw Open 2021;4:e2037431.

[15] Khazanchi R, Evans CT, Marcelin JR. Racism, not race, drives inequity across the covid-19 continuum. JAMA Netw Open 2020;3:1—3.

[16] Mor V, Zinn J, Angelelli J, Teno JM, Miller SC. Driven to tiers: socioeconomic and racial disparities in the quality of nursing home care. Milbank Q 2004;82:227—256.

[17] Rudowitz R, Tolbert J, Burns A, et al. Medicaid 101. KFF, 2024 https://www.kff.org/health-policy-101-medicaid/. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[18] Gruneir A, Miller SC, Feng Z, Intrator O, Mor V. Relationship between state Medicaid policies, nursing home racial composition, and the risk of hospitalization for Black and White residents. Health Serv Res 2008;43:869—881.

[19] Jones CP. Levels of racism: a theoretic framework and a gardener’s tale. Am J Public Health 2000;90:1212—1215.

[20] Shippee TP, Fabius CD, Fashaw-Walters S, Bowblis JR, Nkimbeng M, Bucy TI, et al. Evidence for action: addressing systemic racism across long-term services and supports. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2022;23:214—219.

[21] Yearby, R, Clark B, Figueroa JF. Structural racism in historical and modern US health care policy. Health Aff 2022;41—187-194.

[22] Sloane PD, Yearby R, Konetzka RT, Li Y, Espinoza R, Zimmerman S. Addressing systemic racism in nursing homes: a time for action. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2021;22:886—892.

[23] Braveman PA, Arkin E, Proctor D, et al. Systemic and structural racism: definitions, examples, health

damages, and approaches to dismantling. Health aff 2022;41:171—178.

[24] Musumeci MB, Chidambaram P, Watts MO. Medicaid financial eligibility for seniors and people with disabilities: findings from a 50-state survey. KFF 2019 LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[25] American Council on Aging. Spending down assets to become Medicaid eligible for nursing home/long term care. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[26] American Council on Aging. Impact of home ownership on Medicaid eligibility considering marital status & Medicaid type. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[27] American Council on Aging. Medicaid planning: definition, costs & types of planners, LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[28] Law Offices of Stephen J. Silverberg. What is a Medicaid asset protection trust (MAPT). LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[29] Krause Financial Services. Medicaid compliant annuity. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[30] The Retirement Group. Residence Transfer Subject to Life Estate: Medicaid Planning for Merck Employees and Retirees. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[31] American Council on Aging. How the modern half a loaf strategy helps families become Medicaid eligible and preserves assets. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[32] California Health Advocates. Medi-Cal’s asset limit is now eliminated. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[33] Kenton W. Key money: what it is, how it works, in practice. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[34] American Council on Aging. 2021 nursing home costs by state and region, understanding the difference between private pay and medicaid reimbursement. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[35] JD Supra. Top Tips For A Successful Medicaid Spend Down. https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/top-tips-for-a-successful-medicaid-67619/. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[36] Elder Law Answers. Fighting nursing home discrimination against Medicaid enrollees. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[37] California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform. Overview of Medi-Cal for long term care. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[38] Warshawsky MJ. Steps to make long-term care financing fairer and more sustainable. Tax Notes Federal 2022;176:973—988.

[39] Cambridge Dictionary. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

[40] Brown JR, Finkelstein A. Insuring Long-Term Care in the United States. JEP; 2011: 119-142.

[41] Super Lawyers. Avoiding pay back: Medicaid planning and estate recovery: protecting your assets from state reimbursement for nursing home care costs. LINK. Accessed July 13, 2024.

 

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Updated Monday, May 12, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-017:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Suozzi Looks To Trim Costs Of His Public Long-Term Care Insurance Plan

  • Employees with higher incomes, education levels more likely to anticipate need for long-term care

  • Skilled nursing workers more prone to violence, injuries than any other healthcare sector: study

  • Elder Law Planning: Safeguarding Your Assets And Securing The Best Care

  • 2 in 7 say low pay will be the reason they leave senior care sector: study

  • The age-old problem of long-term care

  • More than 1 in 5 Medicare home health users have unreported dementia, study finds

  • Americans with Alzheimer’s tops 7 million, new report  shows

  • Fate Worse Than Death: Many Long-Term Care Residents Lose All Independence, Study Says

  • VA Nursing Home Care: Opportunities Remain to Enhance Oversight of State Veterans Homes

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, May 2, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC Bullet: Five Things You Probably Don’t Know about Long-Term Care

LTC Comment: What if most of what we think we know about long-term care is wrong? Let’s explore some possibilities after the ***news.***

*** WEDNESDAY, I participated in an “Alliance for Health Policy” event in Washington, DC. The Alliance’s annual Signature Series addresses challenging issues in health policy “by convening cross-sector dialogue with experts in both policy and practice” to “critically examine and identify what’s at stake, as well as key areas of opportunity.” Last year’s theme focused on the transformative power of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in health care and health policy. This year’s theme is “aging.” Participants imagined what it would be like to be 80 years old (easy for me) and considered what challenges being that age could bring to various demographic scenarios.

 I’ll be back in DC next week for Genworth and CareScout’s Symposium on “Sustainable Solutions: The Future of Long-Term Care Financing.” Check out the program’s landing page here, where you can read about each of the four panels and review the panelists’ bios. Join us virtually for the Symposium here. I’ll be on Panel #4: "Better Together..." – Public + Private Collaboration. Expect some spirited discussion. ***
 

LTC BULLET: FIVE THINGS YOU PROBABLY DON’T KNOW ABOUT LONG-TERM CARE

LTC Comment: Will Rogers is famously quoted as saying, "It isn't what we don't know that gives us trouble, it's what we know that ain't so." No truer words have been spoken about long-term care. Here are some thoughts and considerations on that theme. I may develop these notes into a paper, but for now just see what you think and feel free to offer feedback to smoses@centerltc.com.

“Five Things You Probably Don’t Know about Long-Term Care”

by

Stephen A. Moses

  1. Very little private wealth funds LTC

a.  $97 trillion wealth in …

              i.   Retirement savings ($40T),

            ii.   Home equity ($35T)

            iii.  Life insurance ($22T)

b.  LTC spending: $629.3B

                           i.   Medicaid: $278.3B, 44.2%

                           ii.   Medicare: $100.3B, 15.9%

                           iii.  Private insurance and other public payers: $169.0, 26.9%

                           iv.  Out of pocket: $81.7B, 12.9%

1.  Half is income of people already on Medicaid

a.  Mostly Social Security income

b.  But pension and other private income too

2.  Only half could be spend down of savings

a.  $40.9B, 6.5%

b.  $1 out of $15 spent on LTC 

  1. Medicaid is good for the affluent, bad for the poor

a.  Medicaid treats the affluent well

                           i.  High income people qualify (medically needy)

                           ii.  High asset people qualify (exempt wealth)

                           iii.  Affluent people get the best Medicaid offers

1.  Key money

                           iv.  Medicaid is a windfall for affluent heirs

1.  Big exemptions

2.  Little estate recovery

b.  Medicaid treats the poor poorly

                           i.  Few assets wiped out quickly

                           ii.  Lack key money, so …

1.  Shunted to the worst, high-Medicaid nursing homes and home care providers

                           iii.  Victims of “LTC racism

  1. Medicaid no longer prioritizes the poor aged, disabled and dual eligibles (“How the Wealthy Stole Medicaid”)

a.  Since ACA, Obama Care, in 2010

                           i.  90% federal match; $9 federal for every $1 state

                           ii.  Covers working age adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level

                           iii.  Mostly single, often unemployed, childless people incentivized to remain so and to attract others to the same generous benefit

b.  Expansion population grew from nothing to 20% of Medicaid dollars

c.  Aged and disabled

                           i.  Went from 25% of enrollees and 69% of expenditures (2003)

                           ii.  To 20% and 50%, respectively (2023)

d.  Dual eligibles

                           i.  From 14% and 42% (2005) to 14% and 32% (2023)

  1. LTC financing is schizophrenic

a.  Diametrically contradictory public policies

                           i.  Reward accumulation of wealth, such as tax-favored IRAs and 401(k)s that build nest eggs; subsidized mortgages and mortgage-interest tax deductions that grow home equity; and tax-deferred growth and tax-free death benefits that boost life insurance cash value.

                           ii.  Medicaid eligibility policies that discourage spending for LTC

1.  Punish the poor

2.  Reward the affluent.

b.  Results

                           i.  Plenty of private funds in the economy lie fallow for LTC financing

1.  Less full price revenue for LTC providers

2.  LTC access and quality suffer

                           ii.  As those funds are not at risk, LTC insurance market to protect them lags

1.  People ignore LTC until they need it

2.  Then qualifying for Medicaid is the path of least resistance

                           iii.  Too many people rely on Medicaid, with dire consequences

1.  Poor reimbursements

a.  Caregiver shortages

b.  Deficient care

c.  Too little HCBS

d.  Nursing home closures

2.  Institutional bias

a.  Decades warehousing elderly in nursing homes

b.  Still problem in rural areas

3.  Discrimination

a.  In favor of private payers

                                                         i.  Key money

                                                         ii.  Access to best institutional and home-based care

b.  Against Medicaid recipients

                                                         i.  LTC racism

                                                         ii.  Condemned to high-Medicaid, poor quality care

4.  Moral hazard

a.  Easy access to Medicaid caused …

b.  Complacency, resulting in …

c.  Failure to plan, save, invest or insure in LTC

  1. A public/private LTC solution does not require a big, new, compulsory, payroll-funded entitlement and trust fund

a.  Medicaid must pay market rates

                               i.  Eliminate discrimination against poor and for affluent

                               ii.  LTC providers pay adequate wages

1.  Solves caregiver shortage

2.  Ensures caregiver quality

                               iii.  Competition

1.  For private payers

2.  Instead of begging for more Medicaid

                               iv.  But Medicaid cannot pay market rates with so many on the program

1.  Must reduce Medicaid census

2.  Increase private financing

a.  Put $97 trillion private wealth to work

b.  Attract LTC insurance to protect the wealth

b.  Solutions to reduce Medicaid dependency and attract private wealth to LTC

                               i.  Keep Medicaid treatment of income the same

1.  Continue to require income spend down for care (medical or LTC)

2.  Excess Social Security, pension and other private income offsets Medicaid costs

3.  But LTC providers receive market rates, not Medicaid’ previous below-cost rates

 

                               ii.  Stop allowing spend down by purchasing exempt assets (“Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak”)

1.  Asset spend down does not have to be for care costs currently

a.   Unlike income spend down

b.  Allows conversion of unlimited countable wealth to exempt status

2.  So make them the same

a.  Potential savings of $100+ billion per “class” of elders

                                                          i.  New “class” of infirm elders every two or three years

                               iii.  Eliminate or radically reduce Medicaid’s huge home equity exemption

1.  Let seniors’ $14 trillion of home equity flow into LTC financing

2.  Vast new revenue potential for LTC providers

3.  Better access and quality

4.  Strong incentive to insure home equity early against LTC cost

                               iv.  End abusive Medicaid planning methods that benefit only the affluent

1.  Irrevocable trusts

2.  Medicaid compliant annuities

                               v.  Extend Medicaid’s five-year lookback to 10 years or 20

1.  Easy to check through assessors and recorders

2.  Discourages early planning for Medicaid LTC

                               vi.  End systemic LTC racism

1.  When all funders, including Medicaid, pay market rates …

2.  Discrimination based on payment source will end, and

3.  LTC racism will disappear.

                               vii.  End Obama Care preference for able-bodied, working-age adults

1.  Stop 90% match for “expansion” population

2.  Give Medicaid back to the vulnerable poor, aged and disabled people it was intended to serve

                               viii.  Let states experiment

1.  Block grants

a.  Accept less federal money

b.  Receive more policy flexibility

2.  Experiment with creative ways to do more with less

a.  States as laboratories of federalism

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Updated Monday, April 28, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-016:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Baby Boomers Are No Longer Concerned About Their Kids Future-Here’s Why

  • The Care Dividend Why and How Countries Should Invest in Long-Term Care

  • Personal savings goals out of reach for most Americans: survey

  • Why should societies invest in long-term care? New evidence makes the case for action

  • In policy shift, Medicare makes family caregivers part of medical reimbursement system

  • Medicaid Reform Goals + Paragon’s Latest on Reducing Medicaid and Exchange Waste

  • Long-Term Care: Affording it Without Losing the Farm

  • Long-term care insurance crisis: Soaring premiums, policy buyouts, and ‘deceptive’ tactics

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, April 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-015:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Americans plan to save less for retirement, even though it won’t be enough, survey finds

  • An untapped resource: How family caregivers provide value for home care

  • History Repeats? Faced With Medicaid Cuts, States Reduced Support For Older Adults And Disabled People

  • Without support, seniors aging in place may elect facility-based care, study finds

  • Medicare Advantage And Supplemental Long-Term Services And Supports: A Small Step In The Right Direction

  • Hospital visits for cannabis use linked to higher dementia risk

  • Unpacking dysfunction in long-term care insurance

  • How cutting Medicaid would affect long-term care and family caregivers

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Monday, April 18, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: HOW THE WEALTHY STOLE MEDICAID

LTC Comment: Private wealth sits on the sidelines as Medicaid shifts from helping the poor and vulnerable to subsidizing the middle class and affluent. Facts and analysis follow the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** MCKNIGHTS LTC NEWS COLUMNS by Steve Moses. From time to time, we point LTC Bullets readers to columns I’ve published in McKnights LTC News. McKnights is the leading publisher of news about the LTC provider industry with separate publications focused on nursing homes, senior living and home care. I think it is very important for people working in the LTC financing side of the business to understand the challenges people working in the provider side of the business face and vice versa. These columns published in the past year are my way to reach out and encourage mutual understanding between our professional silos. I invite your feedback to smoses@centerltc.com. If you find value in this work, remember it is part of what you support when you join the Center for Long-Term Care Reform. Please do that here. Check out all our membership levels and benefits here. Let’s fix long-term care together. 

Are We LTC Suckers, April 11, 2025
Disrupt LTC Now, February 26, 2025
Where Did the Private Payers Go?, January 17, 2025
What’s Next for Long-Term Care?, December 2, 2024
Long-term care policies matter, October 28, 2024
What if Medicaid Paid Market Rates?, September 16, 2024
How Medicaid cripples SNFs, August 12, 2024
What Assisted Living Needs Versus What It Gets, July 8, 2024
The Medicaid LTC snafu, April 15, 2024 ***
 

LTC BULLET: HOW THE WEALTHY STOLE MEDICAID

Last week, the Paragon Health Institute published “Medi-Cal-amity: California’s Reckless Expansion of Medicaid Long-Term Care to the Affluent.” In that policy brief, I explained how Medi-Cal eliminated its asset eligibility test making even the richest Californians eligible for the Medicaid program’s most expensive long-term care (LTC) benefits. Unfortunately, that egregious misuse of the public welfare program in the Golden State is only the tip of the iceberg nationally.

Medicaid has transitioned for decades from a means-tested program intended to help the poor and vulnerable into an entitlement for the middle class and affluent. For example, the aged and disabled were 25 percent of enrollees in 2003, when they consumed 69 percent of total Medicaid expenditures. By 2023, they had declined to 20 percent of enrollees receiving only 51 percent of total spending. The poorest of the poor, “dual eligibles” who qualify for both Medicaid and Medicare, were 14 percent of Medicaid enrollees in 2005 and accounted for 42 percent of total program expenditures. By 2023 they remained 14 percent of enrollees but they garnered only 32 percent of spending. Why are Medicaid’s most vulnerable recipients getting such short shrift lately?

The 2010 Affordable Care Act, aka Obama Care, created a new category of Medicaid recipients: working age adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. State Medicaid programs receive a 90 percent federal funds matching rate for services provided to this new group of enrollees. Compared to the average match rate for other Medicaid eligibility groups of 50 to 77 percent depending on the state, this special, extremely high level makes this “expansion” population very attractive. States need to put up only $10 to receive $90 from the federal government. Responding to this incentive, states have added 21 million recipients to Medicaid enrollment nationally. These new, young, able-bodied recipients now consume 20 percent of total Medicaid expenditures, 18 percent from federal funds and two percent from states.  

It is easy to see, therefore, why the resources Medicaid formerly reserved for the poor elderly and disabled are going instead to mostly single, often unemployed people incentivized thereby to remain so and to attract others to the same generous benefit. But there is another, possibly even more important way, that Medicaid’s neediest and most vulnerable recipients are being crowded out from access to the best care.

Over the years, by a kind of eligibility bracket creep, more and more well-to-do people have gained access to Medicaid LTC benefits without the inconvenience of spending down their savings to pay privately for  nursing home or home care first. High income people qualify because Medicaid deducts their private health care expenditures from their income before applying an income test. Most elderly people in need of LTC have high private health costs so they qualify easily based on income. For example, if a private nursing home costs $10,000 per month, a Medicaid applicant with that much income would qualify for Medicaid, transferring the cost of the nursing home and other medical expenses to the program. While the patient’s income would still go to the nursing home to offset Medicaid’s cost for the care, the facility would receive only Medicaid’s below-cost reimbursement rate instead of the much higher private pay rate. The Medicaid rate, at about two-thirds of the private pay rate, severely inhibits the facility’s ability to provide quality care for LTC patients on the program.

Likewise, people with high assets routinely qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits, even when countable assets are officially limited to $2,000 as in most states, because nearly all of the elderly’s large assets are exempt from any spend down requirement. Such exempt resources include most home equity, up to $1,097,000 in some states but never less than $730,000 in any state except California, which eliminated the asset test altogether making the home equity limit moot. Also exempt, in unlimited amounts, are one business, tax-favored retirement savings, a vehicle, prepaid burial funds, personal belongings and home furnishings. As few states enforce mandatory estate recovery, most of these exempt resources pass unencumbered to heirs who reap a windfall from funds Medicaid protected from their parents having to pay privately for their own LTC.

The two trends in Medicaid policy just described—new able-bodied, working-age adults capturing one-fifth of the program’s spending in the past 15 years while high income and high asset people increasingly qualify easily for LTC without first spending down their wealth—are converting Medicaid from a safety net for the needy into an entitlement for the indolent and affluent. There should be little wonder why few people take the risk and cost of future LTC seriously enough to save, invest or insure in preparation. Nor should we be surprised that so little private spending goes to pay for LTC as this table of National Health Expenditure data shows:

Only 12.9 percent of total LTC spending comes “out of pocket.” But even that low amount is deceiving as it includes income people on Medicaid must contribute to offset the program’s cost for their care. Removing that income, mostly from Social Security benefits, we find that only about 6.5 percent of total LTC spending, $1 out of $15, could come from asset spend down. No wonder people don’t worry about LTC until they need it and gravitate quickly to Medicaid when costs of care escalate.

For these reasons, America’s LTC financing system is rapidly spiraling into an inadequately funded, welfare-based, centrally planned, government-run failure that serves no one well, and especially not the neediest aged and disabled recipients it is supposed to have served primarily. How can we reverse this process of collapse? Step one is to remove the ACA expansion group from Medicaid eligibility or, short of that, to radically reduce their federal matching rate so that  states have no special incentive to add them compared to supporting traditional coverage groups such as poor women, children, the aged and disabled. Step two is to divert the middle class and affluent toward early planning for LTC and away from eventual dependency on Medicaid. Achieving that objective requires tightening Medicaid LTC financial eligibility rules, enforcing mandatory estate recovery, and prohibiting the use of special trusts and annuities to qualify while sheltering large sums of wealth. For details on how to do that, see the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem,” “Long-Term Care: The Solution,” and Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak.

If we give Medicaid back to truly needy poor women and children, the aged and disabled, what can we expect to happen? Medicaid census will plummet. Covering many fewer genuinely eligible recipients, the program will be able to pay market rates for services across the LTC spectrum: home care, assisted living and nursing home care. That will end the discrimination against Medicaid recipients that occurs because LTC providers are desperate to attract private payers at 1.5 times the rate Medicaid pays. It will end the “LTC racism” that occurs when the needy are crowded out from the best nursing home and home care services because they lack “key money” to pay privately for a while which opens doors to the best care for the affluent.

But where will the money come from to pay private rates to LTC providers across the care spectrum? Money in the U.S. economy for this purpose is not in short supply. It is simply diverted from funding LTC by Medicaid financial eligibility policies that discourage its use. In fact, Americans own $97 trillion in retirement savings ($40T), home equity ($35T), and life insurance ($22T) that could go to pay for their LTC when needed if it were not diverted from that purpose by generous Medicaid income and asset eligibility rules. More importantly, if and when that wealth becomes liable for LTC funding due to changing Medicaid rules as recommended above, the public will act early and responsibly to protect it against LTC risk and cost thereby unleashing a long dormant market for private LTC insurance.

All that is needed is to resolve the glaring contradiction in public policies that on the one hand reward accumulation of wealth, such as tax-favored IRAs and 401(k)s that build nest eggs, subsidized mortgages and mortgage-interest tax deductions that grow home equity, and tax-deferred growth and tax-free death benefits that boost life insurance cash value, and on the other hand divert those private assets from LTC spending by making Medicaid financial eligibility so easy to achieve while preserving wealth. The secret to fixing LTC is to keep those public policies that grow wealth, but to repeal the policies that divert that wealth from paying privately for LTC. Doing that will flood the LTC service delivery system with desperately needed market-rate revenue and unleash the suppressed potential of private LTC insurance. Everyone will be better off including the genuinely needy who will receive better care from Medicaid and most Americans who will access better care as private payers.

Changes of this nature and magnitude are a big ask, but they are based on evidence and sound reasoning. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.

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Updated Monday, April 14, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-014:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Administration’s deregulation push gives skilled nursing providers an extra chance to shape the rules

  • Are We LTC Suckers

  • LTCi becoming more of a target for fraud

  • Medicare Advantage Payments to Increase Again

  • Getting Serious About Medicaid Reform + Several Biden Health Policies Fall

  • A fifth of Americans are on Medicaid. Some of them have no idea.

  • BREAKING: Judge tosses nursing home staffing rule

  • Study shows need for paid caregivers: 86 percent of people living with dementia lack formal support

  • Medicaid Eligibility Levels for Older Adults and People with Disabilities (Non-MAGI) in 2025

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Monday, April 7, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-013:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Senior living giant Pacifica files for Chapter 7 bankruptcy

  • Home care aides largest occupation in US as of last May, BLS reports

  • Retirement becoming ‘moving target’ as older adults wrestle with debt

  • CareScout Partners with Dr. Judy Benjamin on Her Walk Across America

  • Family Caregivers Need Help. These Are the Policies They Say Would Make the Biggest Difference

  • Is it time for the federal government to become more involved in assisted living?

  • Long-Term Care Planning: What Gen X Needs To Know Now

  • Memory Lane Games

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, April 4, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: CARESCOUTING LTC

LTC Comment: This year’s Genworth/CareScout cost of care survey is a marvelous tool. Details after the ***news.***

*** MORE CARESCOUT NEWS:

4/3/2025, “CareScout Partners with Dr. Judy Benjamin on Her Walk Across America,” Genworth/CareScout

Quote: “On Saturday, April 5, Judy Benjamin, PhD, a National Board-Certified Health and Wellness Coach, will take her first steps on the more than 3,000-mile journey across the country to raise awareness for alternative ways to stay healthy at any age. Over five months, she will walk from San Diego, California, to St. Augustine, Florida, following the Adventure Cycling Association Southern Tier route. … CareScout, a leader in long-term care and aging solutions, is proud to partner with and support Dr. Benjamin on this journey. This collaboration reflects and reinforces CareScout’s commitment to empowering individuals and families with the knowledge and resources to plan for aging with confidence and dignity.”

LTC Comment:  Go Judy! Go CareScout! ***


LTC BULLET: CARESCOUTING LTC

LTC Comment: The Boy Scouts’ motto is “Be Prepared.” When it comes to long-term care (LTC) planning, there is one tool all consumers should study carefully to become prepared.  Genworth and CareScout (Center-corporate-members) released their 2024 Cost of Care Survey results on March 4, 2025. This is the survey’s 20th annual iteration and it has evolved to be a highly valuable interactive tool.

As always, CareScout gives us the latest account of care costs by type showing the traditional categories as below. (I’m intentionally not focusing here on the data. Go to the source for that. For now, just consider how vast and valuable the extractable information is.)

In-home care

Homemaker services

Home health aide

Community and assisted living

Adult day health care

Assisted living community

Nursing home care

Semi-private room

Private room

How do you want to see the cost of care displayed? Hourly? Daily? Monthly? Annually? One click displays the relevant data however you want to read it.

Want to check costs in your state of residence? Simple. Just click your state on the U.S. map. Then, again, choose hourly, daily, etc.

Maybe your big concern is the trend in care cost. Scroll down to find a table showing 2024 and 2023 national median values for hourly home care, daily adult day health, and monthly assisted living and nursing home costs followed by their annual percent change (increase). None of these categories went down in cost. Some went up dramatically, such as hourly homemaker services (10 percent), monthly assisted living (10 percent) and monthly nursing home for a semi-private room (the level that Medicaid funds) (7 percent).

Keep scrolling down to find charts showing the increase in all the categories over the past two years. If that doesn’t scare you enough, try this …

Go back almost to the top of the website and look for “Calculate Future Cost.” Now pick any decade from 2024 to 2074 and click for the estimates of future costs from CareScout’s crystal ball. Want to fine tune even more? You can pick any year in between. On top of that, you can still choose whether to see hourly, daily, monthly or annual data!

But wait, there’s more! (I feel like a pitchman.) CareScout lets you choose your expected rate of inflation from one to five percent. Given that some care categories are rising in cost faster than five percent already, 1 to 5 percent, may be too conservative, so that should be taken into account.

By now, CareScout surely has your attention. But maybe it’s too late for these numbers to scare you straight into searching for a LTC insurance policy. In that case, CareScout offers a link to “Find Quality Care.” There you’ll find “726 CareScout Quality Network Providers.”

Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform has posted links to the annual Genworth/CareScout cost-of-care surveys on our members-only website (The Zone) every year since 2004. Click here to join the Center and get your own user name and password. You’ll find tons of useful information in The Zone and you’ll receive our weekly LTC E-Alerts and bi-weekly LTC Bullets. Want daily insights about everything happening in LTC? Become a premium member to receive our daily LTC Clippings. Find all our individual and corporate “Membership Levels and Benefits” here.

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Updated Tuesday, April 1, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-012:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Nursing homes fear states will be unable to fill Medicaid 'hole' without provider taxes

  • Major job cuts, restructuring at HHS raises many questions, industry group says

  • Can you use home equity to pay for long-term care?

  • A closer look at who relies on Medicaid

  • New Report: Addressing Medicaid Money Laundering

  • Aging farmers face long-term care challenges: OSU Extension offers planning tools

  • Another shot at redemption?

  • Red States Are Paying For California’s Illegal Aliens’ Health Care

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, March 24, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-011:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • What Potential Federal Medicaid Cuts Could Mean for States and Their Residents

  • Wave of long-term care insurance claims growing faster than age wave, expert says

  • The Big Secret About Medicaid: It’s a Middle-Class Benefit

  • MedPAC Members Will Hear Out Agents, Brokers After Slamming ‘Flawed System’

  • California’s Medi-Cal shortfall hits $6.2 billion with ‘unprecedented’ cost increases

  • U.S. Short-Term Care Insurance Market to Reach $110.1 Billion by 2033 | Persistence Market Research Report

  • American Voters Want Commonsense Medicaid Reforms

  • Opinion: Households [sic] plans for long-term care, but those plans may not reflect reality

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday March 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—
 

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LTC BULLET: ILTCI ’25 VIRTUAL VISIT

LTC Comment: ILTCI ’25 was another successful industry convocation. Your “virtual visit” to the conference follows the ***news.*** 

*** 3/6/2025, “Milliman’s annual U.S. industry LTCI claims projection,” by Rachel Marsiglio, Juliet Spector, and Robert Eaton, Milliman
Quote: “Long-term care insurance (LTCI) is almost 50 years old. In the 1990s, more than 100 companies were selling policies to individuals and to groups. In 2003, the pattern of annual increases in sales came to an abrupt end and LTCI policy sales began to decline rapidly. Between 2003 and 2009, individual policy sales declined by 9% per year. Fewer than 15 carriers remain in the market. As the U.S. population ages, the market for hybrid life and LTCI policies has been growing. In addition, we see new standalone LTCI products filed in 2025 from insurers that had previously ceased most sales.”
LTC Comment:  Click through for fascinating details including “the expected benefits (paid claims) that long-term care (LTC) insurers will provide over the remaining life of the policies as of year-end 2023.” ***

*** TWILIGHT WISH: Every year the ILTCI Conference supports a charity by donating funds and matching attendees’ gifts. Twilight Wish was this year’s recipient. Twilight Wish Foundation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to granting wishes to seniors aged 68 and older who live at or below the poverty level or reside in nursing facilities. Their mission is to honor and enrich the lives of deserving seniors through wish-granting celebrations that connect generations, aiming to make the world a "nicer place to age, one wish at a time." ILTCI reminds attendees: If you forgot to donate, or attempted to donate to Twilight Wish Foundation but experienced some internet issues, please use the link below to donate to this year's charity Twilight Wish so we can support the amazing work they do! Donate here.” I’m sure contributions from non-attendees would be equally welcome. *** 

*** ILTCI CONTEXT: For the history of long-term care insurance conferences through 2021, go here. But that’s 80 pages, so for a quick overview and analysis, check out this ten-minute “podcast.” If you’d like to see our most recent virtual visits to ILTCI conferences, go here for 2023, and here for 2024. ***
 

LTC BULLET: ILTCI ’25 VIRTUAL VISIT

LTC Comment: The 2025 Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened March 9-12 in Philadelphia at the Marriott Downtown. This year’s theme was “Getting Stronger.” Over 1000 registrants participated representing all aspects of the LTCI business and related fields.

This “virtual visit” to the conference is intended to give those who were unable to attend, especially the LTC insurance producers doing the hard sales work out in the commercial trenches, some idea of the content and mood of the meeting.

Exhibit Hall Opening Reception

The opening reception, Sunday night, March 9, was an excellent kick off. Free drinks and ample food sparked conversation and networking between participants, and with exhibitors and sponsors. Philly cheesesteak sandwiches, mussels in a garlic butter sauce, and a wide selection of Mediterranean food pleased palates.

Opening Session

The opening general session led by conference chair Jeff Levin of OneAmerica, began at 8am Monday morning, March 10, immediately after an excellent buffet breakfast. Levin recognized former leading lights of the industry by name and talked about how LTCI has grown, shrunk, and expanded again, getting better all the time. This year’s program included 219 speakers, 34 sponsors and 49 exhibitors. Mr. Levin observed that volunteers make the meeting happen and he recognized them. He graciously thanked conference staff Diane Fulton and Christi Trimble for their organizational work. This year ILTCI partnered with Twilight Wish, a charity to make wishes come true for seniors. ILTCI matched contributions to the charity by conference attendees. A drawing for a $1,000 gift card was in play for attendees who filled their “bingo cards” with stamps from each of the exhibit hall booths.

After Conference Chari Levin announced that Gina Betz of illumifin will be next year’s conference chair, she invited everyone to ILTCI ’26 that will be held in Orlando, FL at the beautiful Rosen Shingle Creek Resort, about which a marketing video for the property teased audience interest.

Next came the announcement of this year’s ILTCI Recognition Award recipients. Carroll Golden, Executive Director of NAIFA Specialty Centers and Denise Liston, Senior VP at illumifin received the honor this year. Both delivered thoughtful remarks in thanks for the recognition, the trophy and the honorarium. They join a proud group of former award recipients including Marc Cohen (2018), Stephen Moses (2019), and Ron Hagelman, Peter Goldstein and the company LTCI Partners (2024, after a five year hiatus without the award being granted).

Keynote Speakers

This year’s “keynote address” followed. It was unique. Instead of the usual motivational speaker, we were presented a series of video clips from a forthcoming Public Broadcasting System documentary highlighting the challenges of caregiving. The two-hour program, Caregiving, will air on 330 PBS stations across the country in June. Care Scout sponsored the keynote and CEO Samir Shaw introduced a panel of speakers who discussed the origin, planning and challenging creation of the program. This groundbreaking public media documentary delves into the personal stories of caregivers, shedding light on the challenges they face in providing short and long-term care, as well as palliative and end-of-life care for individuals of all ages. The four-person panel representing creators of the documentary and including one caregiver, whose story was especially moving, described how the program was conceived, how caregivers willing to tell their stories were found, and how they completed the project.

In the Q&A session that followed, the panel was asked how many of them own LTC insurance. Answer: Not one. That admission revealed the LTCI industry’s fundamental challenge, getting people, even those touched by the challenge of caregiving, to take concrete measures to prepare for the risk and cost of needing care one day themselves. On that issue, I have something to say in the Closing LTC Comment below.

Breakout Sessions

This year’s breakout sessions were presented in seven substantive tracks: Advisors, Agents, & Agencies; Actuarial & Finance; Claims & Underwriting; Legal, Compliance & Regulatory; Marketing, Engagement, & Research; Management & Operations; and Wellness & Aging in Place Solutions. Following are summaries of each of the breakout sessions I attended. 

10:45am, March 10: “How Can Behavioral Economics Change LTCI (For the Better)?”
Marketing, Engagement, & Research Track

Moderator: Jodi Anatole, Endeavour Consulting
Speakers:
Andy Freedman, Assured Allies
Richard Mathera, Irrational Labs
Monika Shvetz, Mindful Marketing Solutions LLC

Session description: Behavioral economics combines elements of economics and psychology to understand how and why people behave a certain way - and can be used to change behavior to create better outcomes. Learn the principles of behavioral science, examples from other industries, and how they can be applied to improve the experience for LTCI - for carriers, producers, and policyholders. Specifically: How do you capture attention and motivate people to make decisions? How do you communicate more effectively? What is the reaction when something doesn’t cost anything? What is a “Nudge”? And ways to adopt this concept into what we do. This will be an interactive session where the audience will have a chance to pose their challenges and experiences where adoption of behavioral economic principles have made an impact.

LTC Comment: I found this session fascinating. Richard Mathera explained the many ways people behave irrationally and how to recognize and adapt to those human foibles. Bottom line: Design for clients’ unique needs; reduce uncertainty. That’s how to think about behavioral science. Freedman of Assured Allies explained how his company employs behavioral strategies to help LTCI carriers reduce risk, bring solutions to policyholders, and help people stay at home longer. Behavioral insights helped his company go from “asking people to contact to us to concentrating on specific challenges like how to get dressed.” Monika Shvetz focused on behavioral psychology in advertising. She said “Know your customer is Rule 1. Rule 2 is you can’t be everything for everyone. Develop “mindful marketing strategies.”

2:00pm, March 10: “The Heavyweight Champions of LTC Planning Strategies”
Advisors, Agents, & Agencies Track.

Moderator: Elena Castor, AdvisorEdge Solutions
Speakers:
Zack Derryberry, ACSIA Partners
Jamie Mueller, OneAmerica Financial
Shawn Britt, Nationwide

Session description: Sit ringside for an exciting exhibition of Advanced LTC Planning Strategies. This three round event will spotlight the successful use of IRAs and Qualified assets in LTC Planning, Pension Protection Act (PPA) Qualifying LTC Annuities, and Small Business Owner and Carve-Out Planning. Tax savings and LTC planning are the ultimate ‘one-two’ punch combination; together they’re a knockout. See how these strategies incorporate protection and tax savings to produce 2X the planning value for your LTC prospects while opening an entirely new LTC premium resource.

LTC Comment: This session was a revelation to me. I had no idea how vital tax planning is to LTC financing strategy. Mueller from OneAmerica explained how non-qualified annuities and the Pension Protection Act “let us help people with these widely owned annuities.” ACSIA Partners’ Derryberry focused on how IRAs and Qualified Assets magnify the benefits of planning for LTC. He observed that, ironically, the SECURE Act may create greater taxation for an IRA beneficiary than if funds were withdrawn by the original IRA owner. “Using qualified assets and IRAs for premium dollars can be a more efficient IRA distribution strategy compared to ‘defer and die’ where the IRA is transferred at death.” Shawn Britt of Nationwide explained the tax advantages of long-term care insurance for Business owners and employees. She showed charts of allowable tax deductions by decade of age. Use LTCI to “recruit, retain, reward.” 

3:45pm, March 10: “Rumble in the Breakout Jungle! Short-Term Care v. Long-Term Care”
Advisors, Agents, & Agencies Track.

Moderator: Stephanie Moench, Oliver Wyman
Speakers:
Erin Bueltel, Wellabe
Corri Campbell, Mutual of Omaha
Kent Little, New York Life
Dennis Rinner, GoldenCareUSA an Integrity Company

Session description: If they were boxers, the short-term care insurance industry and the long-term care insurance industry would probably notice each other training in the same gym. While they would likely be in slightly different weight classes, they would share many of the same attributes, have similar goals, and ultimately their personal battles would occur in the same ring. As the extended care market evolves, the relationship between these two competitors may be changing. Are the long-term care insurance and short-term care insurance industries going to become sparring partners who make each other stronger? Will they start to compete head-to-head more often? Like Apollo Creed, will long-term care insurance be forced to reckon with a scrappy, humble, and strong short-term care insurance industry that has the potential for mass appeal? Or, like Rocky and Adrian, will the two industries embrace, express their love for each other, and walk hand in hand into the streets of Philadelphia? During this session, we’ll go to the canvas with an excellent panel of insiders and do a fresh weigh-in on these questions.

LTC Comment: As the session description explains, this program compared the roles, strengths and weaknesses of short-term care insurance (STCI) vs. long-term care insurance (LTCI). Moderator Moench of Oliver Wyman clarified key differences between STCI and LTC, such as  STCI covers no more than 360 days and is often employed as gap coverage for Medicare. Presenters discussed the question “Can STC and LTC co-exist?” They observed that it is more important to talk about goals and solutions, rather than about types of insurance. STCI can be an alternative for LTCI declines. Most people think of STCI as short term health insurance. It is not short-term major medical. LTCI’s Achilles’ Heel is affordability. The more options producers and prospects have, the better. There is an option for everybody. STCI is not available in every state. Compared to questions that really matter; the choice between STCI or LTCI is not one of them.

9:00am, March 11: “Innovation in Long Term Care Insurance – A Regulatory Perspective”
Legal, Compliance & Regulatory track. 

Moderator: Nolan Tully, Faegre Drinker
Speakers:
Shannen Logue, Pennsylvania, Department of Insurance
Ben Veghte, Washington State Department of Social and Health Services
Tomasz Serbinowski, Utah Insurance Department

Session description: This session will be a moderated panel discussion focused on putting forward the regulatory viewpoint on various existing and future innovations in long term care insurance. What do key regulators think about pre-claim wellness programs, new products aimed at continued engagement with policyholders, opportunities that might come from state based public insurance programs and other cutting-edge issues? Come to this session to find out!

LTC Comment: Shannon from PA-DOI opened the discussion with a poignant observation: after all these years, we’re still talking about same problems, such as affordability; new products, high care costs, adding LTCI to this, that and the other thing. Tomasz from the Utah ID observed that regulators are not natural innovators so this is not a natural place to look for innovation. That comment encapsulated my impression of this session. The old questions about how to reach the middle market; the regulatory quagmire; the fruitless search for a government program to solve all; and the unsatisfying fall back to identify a public/private combination; all these signal the absence of innovation. Veghte from WA Cares represented the best this kind of thinking can deliver, one more example of a compulsory, payroll-funded, centrally planned, dubiously financed entitlement program. Innovation is needed, but it does not look like we should expect much of it from regulators or government bureaucrats.

10:45am, March 11: “Thinking in the Middle: How do we serve the Underserved Middle-Income Market?”
Marketing, Engagement, & Research Track

Moderator: Eileen Tell, ET Consulting, LLC
Speakers:
Liz Christofer, HCG Secure
Chris Giese, Milliman, Inc.
Beth Ludden, CareScout
Dustin Plotkin, Oliver Wyman

Session Description: After decades of product innovation and industry effort, LTC insurance still remains a product largely purchased by a small segment of the more affluent Americans. There is large untapped market potential and great need for financial protection among the middle-class. Using data from a recent survey of middle-income consumers, this session will shed insights on the size and nature of demand of LTC coverage within this market segment, discuss some of the barriers to purchase and ways to overcome them. After a brief panel discussion, the audience will get creative and help evaluate, reject, or re-design four new product prototypes intended for appeal to middle-income consumers.

LTC Comment: Surveys to understand the LTCI middle market relative to the affluent market show, no surprise, that affordability is key. They indicate better education is needed. Middle income people are less likely to save or insure for LTC than others who are more prosperous. Two reasons: lack of awareness and misunderstanding. They are less likely to believe they will need LTC one day. What might incentivize the middle class to take LTC more seriously? The most important incentive is financial benefits. Middle income people place a high value on advice from personal advisors. So, bring financial advisors more into the mix.

After the opening general discussion, this session broke into smaller work groups to consider and evaluate different product models in terms of how they might behave given the challenges and concepts identified in the general session. I missed this portion of the program due to a previously scheduled networking appointment.

My impression is that experts have studied LTCI buyers and non-buyers six ways to Sunday for decades. What they rarely explore is the market context in which LTCI sales occur. That market is dominated by the primary LTC payers, Medicaid (44%) and Medicare (16%). Without addressing those elephants in the room, all the detailed research and analysis lead nowhere, beyond being very interesting and stimulating intellectually. 

2:00pm, March 11: “Carrier Perspective: The State of our LTC Industry”
Marketing, Engagement, & Research Track 

Moderator: Ramona Neal, Living Benefit Review
Speakers:
Joe Laskowski, CareScout
Scott Limes, Nationwide
MacKenzie Madsen, Lincoln Financial Group
Larry Nisenson, Assured Allies
Ryan Bivins, John Hancock
Brian Kendall, OneAmerica Financial

Session description: State of the LTCi industry. Taking a macro view of our industry - where is it today and where is it headed?

LTC Comment: The panel included representatives of  “pure,” traditional LTCI on the left, mixed LTCI (hybrids) in the middle and mostly life insurance products on the right. Moderator Neal complained “we need one name for the middle category,” which she called “MoneyGuard” to some objection. Larry Nisenson of Assured Allies had several observations about the past, present and future of traditional LTCI. It’s left a “bad taste in the mouth of clients and producers,” “has a history to overcome,” flagging sales say it all. Wellness and annuities offer a path forward. “Innovation is the root of all opportunity.” MacKenzie Madsen of Lincoln Financial Group spoke about the evolution of the hybrid marketplace, starting 35 years ago with Golden Rule, then OneAmerica, looking for younger customers and more affordability. The products need to simplify, offer more value. Joe Laskowski from CareScout opined how career agents dominated early on. Distribution is adapting away from “one size fits all” to “bespoke” products fitting specific clients’ unique needs and preferences. Brian Kendall of OneAmerica Financial observed “we have so many ways now to meet needs. We need to be more open- minded to nontraditional ways of doing things. Hear, hear!

3:45pm, March 11: “The Title Fight: The Good, the Bad, and the Knockout AI Tactics to Boost Marketing, Research, & Engagement”
Marketing, Engagement, & Research Track

Moderator: Winona Berdine, Continental General
Speakers:
Emilie Ansel, Private Health News
Aashima Kapoor, Homethrive

Session description: Participate in this this high-energy session where industry experts will coach you on how to transform your business approach using real-world AI tools and techniques. Learn how to work smarter, not harder, by making AI the foundation of your strategies. Discover how to avoid reinventing the wheel, how to ask the right questions (and what NOT to ask), how to tame the skeptics, and tap into AI's potential to simplify marketing, enhance content creation, and drive customer engagement. Whether you're new to AI or looking to expand its use, this session will empower you with actionable insights and takeaways to grow your revenue and audience effectively.

LTC Comment: This was a fascinating session unveiling a plethora of ways to put Artificial Intelligence (AI) to work in our professional lives. For example: using AI to answer questions for prospects and clients. Pointing them to specific ways to fill their needs. Ask yourself: “Where am I not using AI?” Then use it in those areas because AI is applicable virtually everywhere. In terms of how to use AI; ask for exactly what you want; provide context; give specific instructions; explain how you’d like the answer printed out. The more guidelines you specify the better results you’ll receive.

Here’s my two cents worth. I asked AI to read my 80-page “History of LTC Insurance Conferences,” summarize it, and present the results in the form of an interview. It took Google Illuminate 30 seconds to produce this 10-minute podcast. As Arthur C. Clarke said: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." 

Closing LTC Comment: The most telling and unfortunate occurrence of ILTCI ’25 was when the PBS producers of their moving story about caregivers acknowledged that none of them owned LTC insurance. That put the conference’s main shortcoming into stark relief. In none of the general and breakout sessions I attended, and I expect in few if any of the sessions I missed, was attention given to the broader market in which LTC insurance is sold. Medicaid and Medicare dominate that market, but were barely mentioned. I heard nothing about how easy access to Medicaid LTC benefits after care is needed anesthetizes future generations to LTC risk and cost. This reality crowds out demand from the same middle-market prospects LTCI marketers find so elusive. Nor was there any focus on the needs of LTC providers, such as nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and home health providers. They are desperate for private financing sources that pay market rates to relieve their excessive reliance on low Medicaid reimbursements that hamper care quality. Until the LTCI industry wakes up and addresses these public policy issues, no amount of surveys, focus groups, brainstorming, or WISHful Thinking for an easy government solution will succeed.

Another reality I found unaddressed at the conference was any recognition of the political and economic turmoil going on in America right now. Whether you like it or hate the current disruption, it is a time—the first time in at least two decades—when substantive change to the policies and rules governing Medicaid LTC eligibility and LTCI marketability is possible. Republicans want to cut $880 billion from Medicaid. Democrats want to protect low-income enrollees. Neither goal is wrong. Both are achievable. But not without more creative thinking and stronger political advocacy. I proposed a way to proceed in a recent column: “Disrupt LTC Now.” I welcome your feedback at smoses@centerltc.com.

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Updated Tuesday, March 18, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-010:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicaid Improper Payments Are Not a Measure of Fraud or Abuse

  • Life Insurance Products Could Slash Billions in Government Spending, Report Finds

  • California Borrows $3.4 Billion for Medicaid Overrun as Congress Eyes Steep Cuts

  • Medicaid’s True Improper Payments Double Those Reported by CM

  • More Than Two-Thirds Of Women Investors' Careers Impacted By Caregiving Responsibilities

  • California’s Insurance Tax Shuffle: How Federal Money Ends Up Paying for Medicaid for Illegal Immigrants

  • Representatives reintroduce bills supporting Medicare OT at home, long-term care catastrophic care fund

  • Milliman’s annual U.S. industry LTCI claims projection

  • Do older adults understand healthcare risks?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, March 10, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-009:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The EINSTEIN Option reimagines long-term care

  • illumifin CEO Peter Goldstein Joins Alzheimer’s Association Board of Directors

  • Costs increase across long-term care in 2024, with homemaker and assisted living taking lead, Genworth report finds

  • Genworth and CareScout Release Cost of Care Survey Results for 2024

  • As baby boomers turn 80, there aren’t enough doctors to treat ‘emergency levels’ of dementia patients

  • Alzheimer's May Develop Differently in Women

  • Is the ‘Age Wave’ a retirement tsunami? — With Ken Dychtwald

  • Dementia risk in the U.S. after age 55 higher than previously thought, study finds

  • California Has a Lot to Lose If Trump Slashes Medicaid

  • How would Medicaid cuts impact seniors in nursing homes?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday March 7, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—
 

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LTC BULLET: LTCI CONFERENCES ILLUMINATED

LTC Comment: On the eve of the 2025 ILTCI Conference, we celebrate the distinguished history of long-term care insurance conferences, after the ***news***

*** DON’T MISS this extraordinary AI-generated “podcast” recounting the history of LTC insurance conferences. Click here and listen to 10 minutes of commentary summarizing and analyzing a quarter century of professional LTC insurance meetings. ***

*** ILTCI ’25 convenes in Philadelphia March 9-12. Attendees can access the meeting’s mobile app here. Directions to the Philadelphia Marriott Downtown and parking information are available here. If you haven’t registered already, do so here. Hope to see you there. *** 

*** 3/3/2025, “Genworth and CareScout Release Cost of Care Survey Results for 2024,” Genworth and CareScout
Quote: “The cost of long-term care services increased across all care types, according to the 2024 Cost of Care Survey conducted by Genworth and CareScout. While homemaker and assisted living community costs increased the most at 10%, the increase for most care types continued to outpace inflation.”
LTC Comment:  Click through for the startling details and go here for the full report. As we do every year, we’ve posted the annual Genworth/CareScout LTC cost-of-care report in the Center’s members-only website (The Zone) for easy access anytime. ***
 

LTC BULLET: LTC CONFERENCES ILLUMINATED

LTC Comment: Today’s LTC Bullet is our 1400th since the Center for Long-Term Care Reform’s founding in April 1998. During those years we reported on every major LTC insurance conference. In April 2021, in the throes of the pandemic and shortly after a “virtual” conference replaced that year’s cancelled in-person gathering, we published a “History of LTC Insurance Conferences.” We encourage you to browse that history and remember (for those who lived them) or learn (for those new to the business) the extraordinary challenges, victories, defeats and progress we’ve shared. While you’re at it, check out a few photos of LTCI leaders, many of whom are still around, though maybe a little longer in the tooth.

To get you off to an easy start, listen to this 10-minute interview, generated by Google Illuminate, discussing the “History of LTC Insurance Conferences.” I think you’ll agree it’s pretty amazing what Artificial Intelligence can do in 30 seconds with an 80-page document that could take you several hours to read carefully and many more to analyze thoughtfully. See if you agree with the robots’ summary and analysis.

For my part, I attended and reported on almost every one of the LTC insurance conferences starting in 1991. You can find the Center’s real time coverage of the meetings, often called “LTC Embed Reports” or “Virtual Visits,” going back to January 2000, by searching for the word “conference” here. I watched the early “Private LTC Insurance Conferences” gradually co-opted by advocates of public LTC financing and eventually replaced by the Intercompany LTC Insurance Conferences (ILTCI) sponsored by the Society of Actuaries and honchoed by Jim Glickman. Among my favorite meetings over the years were the ones aimed at educating and inspiring LTCI producers. Thank Jesse Slome and Greg Luque for making those agent-oriented conferences happen. They’re included in the history.

I haven’t always been thrilled with the LTCI conferences’ evolution. In the early years, they took more notice of how private insurance fits into the broader LTC industry. Efforts were made to reach out to LTC providers such as nursing homes, assisted living and home care companies. There was great potential in linking the interests of businesses that supply LTC insurance with others that benefit from funding LTC privately. But that relationship never matured. Nor did an early focus on understanding, adapting to and changing public LTC financing policy for the better. After progress in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (a cap on Medicaid’s home equity exemption, longer and stronger transfer of assets restrictions, and unleashing the LTC Partnership Program), further Medicaid reform and stronger LTCI tax incentives were never achieved. Nowadays, we see a very positive focus on wellness initiatives, but otherwise the emphasis is on technical issues and marketing, important but not necessarily transformational topics. Still, the surviving ILTCI meetings are a great place to meet, network, and learn. Hope to see you in Philly.

To close, here are some highlights culled from the “History of LTC Insurance Conferences” selected for you by the Center’s Vice President for Administration, Damon Moses. He’ll be in Philly too, so say hello.

2001, Miami, FL: ILTCI #1

“John Hancock featured a guest celebrity, knuckleball pitcher Phil Niekro, signing baseballs for a line of fans stretching all the way out into the hallway. CHCS had perhaps the most unique hospitality suite. They created the illusion for each participant of an old age infirmity, such as smeared glasses to imitate cataracts, and then in true Florida style, let them try their luck at completing a punch card voter ballot with the correct answers to a delayed word recall test.”

 

“Steve Moses gave this talk [‘Long-Term Care's Race for Survival’] to the First Annual Society of Actuaries Intercompany LTCI Conference in Miami, Florida on January 23, 2001. In it, he summarizes the Center's recently published LTC Triathlon study. He diagnoses the malaise in America's long-term care service delivery and financing system. And he makes an appeal for greater communication and cooperation between the private sector financiers, providers and insurers of long-term care.

 

2002, Beverly Hills, CA

 

According to conference organizers: “A LONG, HARD LOOK at long-term care insurance reveals a product on the cusp of widespread acceptance. However, as LTCI has come of age, so too have the challenges facing insurers: the internet's effect on underwriting, claims practices, pricing assumptions, population eligibility, profitability management, and legislative initiatives, to name a few.”

 

2003, Las Vegas, NV

 

Unless LTCI specialists understand what nursing homes, home health companies, and assisted living facilities are up against, they cannot fathom why LTC providers (and the public) mostly ignore long-term care insurance and cling to government financing alternatives. For example, the conference offered no educational sessions on public policy, on long-term care service delivery, on competition from the 800-pound gorillas of long-term care (Medicaid and Medicare), on the Medicaid-driven fiscal crisis in the state and federal governments which practically begs for help from private insurance, on the drought in debt and equity capital facing long-term care providers, nor on the huge tort liability and liability insurance crisis facing LTC providers. …

“Monday, January 27, 2003: "Rate Stabilization - What Does it Mean to Me?" Moderated by David Benz of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans (see picture below). Panel: Al Schmitz of Milliman USA; Peggy Hauser of the LTC Group; and Dennis O'Brien of New York Life. This session anguished over rate stability challenges: What went wrong? Why are rates going up?

How can the industry set rates properly? What is the proper interaction between management, actuaries and regulators? …

 

2003, San Antonio, TX

 

The 16th Private Long-Term Care Insurance Conference: "Shaping the Future." This meeting convened at the Marriott Rivercenter Hotel in San Antonio, Texas from February 12 to 14, 2003. The Private Long-Term Care Insurance Conference was the grand-daddy of industry meetings in the LTCI field. Some say its name is a misnomer, because this conference catered as much to advocates of government long-term care financing as to manufacturers and purveyors of private LTC insurance. People still complain about its 1993 conference in Baltimore (during an ice storm) when Congressman Pete Stark bashed long-term care insurance agents and insulted the industry in an over-the-top "keynote" address. Check out all the details including many contemporaneous pictures of LTCI’s leading lights in The Zone here.

 

2003, New Orleans, LA

 

The National LTCi Producers Summit

Presented by LTCi Sales Strategies magazine, this 2½-day conference boasted a sold-out attendance of over 700 people, and featured 25 sessions, 50 LTC expert speakers, ample networking opportunities, over 100 exhibitors, cocktail receptions, breakfasts and lunches, the LTCI Sales Idol contest, the top 10 producers contest, and even optional sight-seeing tours.

The Next Financial Boom: Reverse Mortgages & LTC Protection. Presented by Peter Bell, President, National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association, Washington, D.C. In this session Peter explained how reverse mortgages can be used as an LTCi financing sales strategy to offer to prospects that are house rich and cash poor.

The following are brief "man-on-the-street" type of interviews. [Damon Moses] asked eight registered attendees two questions: 1.) why don’t more people buy private long-term care insurance; and 2.) what percentage of total nursing home and home health care expenditures are paid out of people’s assets (as opposed to any other source of funding, such as Medicaid, Medicare, personal income, etc.)? 

The purpose of asking these two questions together is to illustrate one point: that the majority of LTC services are not paid for by consumers, they are paid for by the government. If a relatively small percentage of total nursing home and home health care expenditures are paid out of people’s assets, then why would the average person save for and then buy long-term care insurance? Why would people buy something that the government is giving away? The answer is that they wouldn’t unless their assets were at risk. Here are the questions again:

1.)  Why don’t more people buy private long-term care insurance?

2.)  What percentage of total nursing home and home health care expenditures are paid out of people’s assets (as opposed to any other source of funding, such as Medicaid, Medicare, personal income, etc.) ?

To read these interviews and see the pictures of interviewees, check out our Virtual Visit to this conference. [This content is in the Center’s members-only content (The Zone.) You will need your user name and password, for which contact Damon@centerltc.com.

2004, Houston, TX

 

“The great thing about this conference is that it brings together all components of the long-term care insurance industry in a setting that encourages cross training and mutual understanding.

That's as opposed to the more adversarial settings that actuaries, marketing people, underwriters and management often find themselves in, fighting to discover the right balance between price and salability of a complicated, deeply conceptual product.

 

“Unfortunately, there is a slight pall on the conference. Everyone knows the long-term care insurance industry faces daunting challenges. In the past years, and especially recently, we've seen consolidation, companies exiting the business, level or declining sales, rate stability concerns, disappointing profitability, etc. Industry analysts have painted a less-than-bright and hopeful picture of the business for the immediate future. But, at least at this meeting, I find a strong sense of optimism and renewed commitment that trumps the downbeat perspectives and worries.”

“A long-term care producer with insight into the back-office aspects of the LTCi business opined that ‘This industry has seen some hard times, but the worst is behind us. Pricing is improving; public awareness is increasing; and the same promising demographics are still out there. Industry consolidation and belt tightening will prove to have been healthy and beneficial in the long run.’

Steve Moses made the case for private LTC financing while Dr. Judith Feder, then Professor and Dean of Public Policy at Georgetown University appealed for public financing in a session at the Fourth Annual Society of Actuaries Long-Term Care Insurance Conference in Houston, Texas on February 10, 2004.

 

2005, Orlando, FL

“Today's alert comes to you from the fifth annual Society of Actuaries Long-Term Care Insurance Conference in Orlando, Florida. The SOA-LTCi meeting has evolved into the premier industry event for executives involved in the nuts and bolts of long-term care insurance. We realize many of you can't or won't attend, so as we did last year from Houston, here's a brief report on the proceedings from Steve Moses on site. … LTC Bullet: Clueless in Orlando

 

2006, Anaheim, CA

 

Attendees heard a report on the "Medicaid Commission’s” findings. Like most commissions, it achieved nothing of consequence. Steve Moses delivered a speech titled "What I Believe About Long-Term Care." The Center's Vice President for Administration, Damon Moses, circulated at the conference interviewing attendees. Interview Question: What effect do you think the new Deficit Reduction Act will have on the marketability of private long- term care insurance? Can you put a percentage on that? Check out our Virtual Visit for answers.

 

2007, Dallas, TX

 

ILTCI #7 opened to a body blow from the New York Times: Aged, Frail and Denied Care by Their Insurers,” by Charles Duhigg, March 26, 2007. We responded immediately. Read our response and more about this conference in our virtual visit titled LTC Bullet: Sucker Punched in Dallas, Tuesday, April 10, 2007.

 

2008, Jacksonville, FL

 

A distinctive feature of this year’s conference was the presence, at the venue’s front door, of a small Airstream trailer emblazoned with the decals of companies sponsoring the Center for

Long-Term Care Reform’s 2008 “National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour.” Read all about it in LTC Bullet: The Jacksonville LTCI Conference. Enjoy this musical reminder of tour highlights.

 

2009, Reno, NV

 

The Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care again graced the entrance to the 9th Annual Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conference. We published one LTC Bullet and three LTC E-Alerts (here, here, and here) about the meeting.

 

2010, New Orleans

 

Gail Sheehy keynoted the conference, but later dissed LTCI on NPR. Despite some very strong panelists speaking on behalf of logic, evidence and actuarial sanity (Steve Schoonveld of LifePlans; Malcolm Cheung of Prudential; and Al Schmitz of Milliman), everyone seemed to be bending over backwards to give CLASS the benefit of the (clearly overwhelming) doubt.

 

2011, Atlanta, GA

 

Four breakout sessions focused on the CLASS Act including Steve Moses and John Greene debating CLASS with Connie Harner and Rhonda Richards (AARP). Find summaries of all four CLASS sessions and several other sessions in our Virtual Visit to the conference here. During the lunch break on the second day, the 3in4 Need More campaign had a press conference to introduce the LTCI industry's answer to dairy's "Got Milk" message. Spotted at the 3in4 Need More event and throughout the ILTCI conference was Glenn Ruffenach of the Wall Street Journal. Maybe there's hope for some good publicity for LTCI now.

 

2011, Las Vegas, NV

Here’s another non-ILTCI conference to remember. The 9th LTC Insurance Producers Summit, held April 3-5, 2011 in Las Vegas, had the theme "Get Over It!" Get over lagging sales, disappearing carriers, premium increases, and bad publicity. Get over it and, one might add based on the content of the conference: Get On With It! Proceedings got underway with a standing-room-only crowd for the "3 in 4 Need More" campaign's second press conference.

Cameron Truesdell, CEO of Long-Term Care Financial Partners, delivered the "Keynote Address." He pointed out the desperate need for responsible long-term care planning and insisted: It's up to us to make it happen. Echoing a patriotic appeal, he asked "If not us, who? If not now, when?

2012, Las Vegas, NV

 

For a full account of the conference’s highlight event, the “Clash of Titans” debate between Harley Gordon and Steve Moses, check out LTC Bullet: LTC Embed Report from the ILTCI Conference in Las Vegas.

 

Now to recount the most fun that was had at the conference. In the afternoon of DAY ONE, a great debate ensued titled “Clash of the Titans: Moses vs. Gordon on Medicaid and Other Dark Matter.” Ably produced and moderated by Federal Long-Term Care Insurance Program CEO Paul Forte, the program included a dramatic “fight poster” inviting the audience to attend, slides featuring great debates of the past, e.g. Lincoln/Douglas, etc., and a dual-podium presidential-style debate format.

Moses and Gordon each began with 3-minute opening statements. (Find a transcript of the “fable” I began with at the end of today’s Bullet.) After a coin flip to see who would get the first question, Forte pummeled the combatants in turn with six queries ranging from why the LTCI market languishes to what they’d advise presidential candidates to say about LTC financing. Answers were strictly enforced to no more than two minutes, with a one-minute rebuttal, and a final 30-second “re-direct” by the original answerer.

The program moved fast with lots of humor and more than just a little gentlemanly confrontation. In the second phase of the debate, the participants asked each other questions, with the same time limits applying. Neither knew what the other would ask so the questions and responses were totally spontaneous. Finally, the audience submitted written queries pinning down the debaters with new and different viewpoints. Bruised, bloodied, but upright, Moses and Gordon shook hands at the end and affirmed they remain friends. They look forward to continue pursuing their different paths toward the common goal to improve long-term care for all.

Who won? Just between you, me and the lamppost, here’s how LTCI producer and author Craig McCormick, a former college debater himself, scored the matchup: 13 to 4, for Moses. Now, I acknowledge that Mr. McCormick may have a bias in my favor. So I invite any of you faithful readers out there who may have attended the debate to weigh in with your own scoring of the event. I’d particularly like to hear from anyone who gave the win to Harley instead of me.

Well, I want to hear from anyone except you, Harley! I’ll publish any thoughtful comments or analysis of the debate in a future LTC Bullet. Let us hear from you.

The last session I attended was a post-mortem on CLASS titled “Meeting the Needs that CLASS Intended,” moderated by Prudential’s Malcolm Cheung with presentations by Bob Yee, lately CLASS’s actuary; Yair Babab from the University of Illinois, Chicago; and Mark Meiners, the father of the LTC Partnership Program. I came away convinced less-than-ever that anything about CLASS is salvageable and more convinced than ever that LTC financing solutions must come from reducing government interference in the market, not increasing it. Stop giving away LTC to people who should, could and would buy LTCI and the market will work its magic.

2013, Dallas, TX

Overall, the mood of the conference was one of optimism and motivation. In reference to this, Sally Leimbach states: “Several Exhibitors seemed to me to be relatively small providers vying to become a part of the process of underwriting LTCi or providing services at time of claim. To me, that showed optimism about the growth of the market among providers.” Sally continues by mentioning she encountered “[m]ore optimism than expected. It rubbed off. I have come back reenergized for educating people to plan for LTC and selling to assist to meet the ever important need.” What an excellent reminder of why events like this are so important to the industry.

Many conference attendees in Dallas expressed high satisfaction with the value of networking opportunities with industry professionals as well as the quality of educational content. Honey Leveen states:

For marketing people like me, the SOA [ILTCI conference] is valuable. I gain insight into the LTCi product, its actuarial, underwriting, and other elements I would otherwise not learn about. I learn about the latest LTCi sales approaches, both from the sessions and from colleagues. I learn about upcoming LTCi products. Also, I get breaking news on LTCi national politics. I feel my attendance at SOA conferences definitely gives me a competitive edge.

2014, Orlando, FL

The 14th Annual Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened in Orlando, Florida at the Rosen Centre Hotel from March 16-19, 2014.

We asked conference founder Jim Glickman for his highlights of the meeting. He responded:

1.  The 14th Annual Intercompany LTCi Conference in Orlando, FL (co-sponsored by the LTC Section of the Society of Actuaries) had over 900 attendees, an all-time record surpassing the 855 attendees in Jacksonville, FL in 2008. [NB: the Silver Bullet of Long- Term Care was parked outside the conference venue in Jacksonville as we were well underway with the Center’s 2008 “National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour.”]

2.  As usual, the largest representation from the 10 tracks (Actuarial, Claims, Compliance, Field Marketing, Group, Home Office Marketing, Management, Operations, Policy and Providers, and Underwriting) was from Field Marketing, followed closely by Actuarial and then Management).

3.  For the first time in several years, there were attendees from multiple insurance companies not currently participating in the LTCi marketplace, together with most of the larger companies, who have at least temporarily, stepped away from issuing new business.

4.  Also in attendance were several reinsurers not currently in the LTCi marketplace together with several representatives of the private equity world, apparently looking for new opportunities to consider.

5.  The two full days and two half days featured over 45 educational sessions, together with more than 20 hours of organized networking.

6.  The Exhibit Hall featured 54 Exhibitors, displaying all the latest innovations for insurance company home offices and their agents.

2015, Colorado Springs, CO

The 15th annual Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened March 22-25, 2015 at The Broadmoor resort in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The annual Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conferences are always something special. But this year’s meeting exceeded all that came before. It exceeded by breaking past records: over 1100 attendees, up from the 900s; 72 vendors, up from 56; 44 sponsors and 170 speakers. It exceeded by offering new programs including: demonstration rooms where exhibitors could make scheduled presentations; a “social media” room with Twitter feeds; a “future leaders” program; a new Sales and Distribution combination track; and a new “Alternative Solutions” track, honchoed by Eileen Tell and John O’Leary, which replaced Policy and Providers, and captured me for all seven break-out sessions on the agenda.

2016, San Antonio, TX

 

The conference’s closing general session was It's Not Me, It's You; A Consumer View on LTCI. Behavioral economist Jeremy Pincus and consumer insight expert Luisa Uriarte delivered new information about how our current approach and sales and marketing techniques are actually standing in the way a broader appeal for long-term care insurance. These fascinating presentations challenged everything we thought we knew about LTCI marketing, such as-- explain the problem, price the risk, scare the pants off ‘em and they’ll buy. Well, no, turns out that just drives people away. What’s needed is an approach that generates good feelings and makes people positive about preparing for what’s coming. Interestingly, this session was a perfect bookend for the conference, by providing evidence from behavioral research for some of the same insights about human behavior shared by the opening general session speaker about the turnaround he led at Harley Davidson.

2017, Jacksonville, FL

THE 17TH ILTCI CONFERENCE convened March 26-29 at the Hyatt Regency in Jacksonville, Florida, with the theme “Navigating the Future.” What follows are some quick impressions of the sessions I attended. These are not a representative sample of the conference content as I visited almost exclusively the program’s Alternative Solutions track. Special thanks to Eileen Tell and John O’Leary for the hard work they expended to put together the sessions comprising the Alternative Solutions Track. The other tracks were Actuarial & Finance; Claims & Underwriting; Combination Products; Legal, Compliance & Regulatory; Management, Operations & Technology; and Marketing & Distribution. The conference also featured a vast exhibit hall and special “demo rooms” where companies could present their products and answer questions.

This year’s keynote speaker, sponsored by Genworth, was Anat Baron, former head of Mike's Hard Lemonade, a change strategist and “disruptor.” Her bio calls her a “force of nature” and states “she spent her illustrious career moving at warp speed while shaping and defining the trends that form today's business world.” She turned around Mike’s Hard Lemonade by aiming its marketing at women who wanted something to drink out of a bottle while guys were quaffing beer. Her message to the LTCI industry? “Disrupt or Die: Reinvention in an Ever Changing World.” We live in a time of huge and rapid change. Facebook, Twitter, Skype, the Cloud, etc., are barely a decade old. Yet they’ve changed the world and how we survive, prosper or not in it. Social networking rules. Master it or expect failure and embarrassment (such as being identified in the audience as a flip-phone user or a non-texter.) Ms. Baron’s session was entertaining and interesting, but would have benefited from more effort on her part to apply her observations and analysis to the LTC insurance business and its challenges.

2018, Las Vegas, NV

The 18th Annual Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference was held March 18-21, at the Paris Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, NV. Attendance was high at over 1,000 attendees, 60+ exhibitors and nearly 40 sponsors.

 

Every year the Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference takes the pulse of the LTCi industry and offers direction forward. To that end, “A Matrix of Opportunities” was the tagline for this year’s conference and that optimism filled the agenda. According to the conference website’s homepage:

 

A quiet revolution is taking place in the long-term care insurance industry. More interest than ever is being focused on private sector solutions to the growing societal issues pertaining to long- term care. Planning choices for consumers are growing at a rapid pace. Insurance companies are developing new innovative approaches to providing long-term care liquidity at various life stages and insurance agents and financial advisors are showing renewed interest in talking to consumers about their long-term care planning needs.

 

With entitlements and social programs strained, longevity and healthcare costs increasing, caregiver supply decreasing and the age wave cresting, how we finance long-term care now and in the future is a demographic, political and fiscal Rubik's Cube. This year’s ILTCI conference contributed to solving that multi-dimensional puzzle by hosting the innovators who are offering new directions and products designed to save people from the risk and cost of long-term care.

2019, Chicago, IL

The 19th Annual Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened at the Sheraton Grand Hotel in Chicago, Illinois from March 24 to 27, 2019. Today’s LTC Bullet offers you a virtual visit to that event, the biggest of its nearly two-decade history.

My Million Dollar Mom, about Ross Schriftman’s movie he wrote and produced about caring for his mother through her Alzheimer’s Disease.

First order of business was presentation of the “ILTCI Recognition Award” to “a person(s) or organization that has made a significant, long-term contribution towards the attainment of the ILTCI vision” which is “to create an environment for aging in America that includes thoughtful, informed planning that takes into account the most effective and efficient use of resources in addressing the risks and costs of long term care for all levels of American society.” Steve Moses, president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, acknowledged the honor saying

I like to think my stuff is kind of edgy, so I was afraid the ‘boos’ might overwhelm the cheers after this announcement, but they didn’t, so thank you. I want to thank the nominators, the board for selecting me, all our wonderful friends and financial supporters. There are too many to list, so I’ll only mention one by name, my son, Damon, whom many of you know. I’ve heard this honor called a “lifetime achievement” award. That sounds like you’re putting me out to pasture. So, to my friends, let me assure you I’m not going anywhere. To those who disagree with me, don’t think this will stop me. Thanks again to all.”

 

Tue, March 26th, 7:30 PM - 9:00 PM

Whirled News Tonight Improv Show
General Conference Session

 

Our Tuesday evening entertainment will feature performers from Chicago’s Best Improv Comedy Theater – Improv Olympic! Improv Olympic will be bringing a seven person cast of performers to entertain the attendees of the ILTCI. The performance will be approximately 60 – 80 minutes in length. “ iO” is recognized as the birthplace of “long-form” improv and is home to some of the best improv comedy shows in the country. They have helped to train and develop an entire generation of America’s best and brightest comedic entertainers for over 30 years. Alumni include past and present cast members of Saturday Night Live and stars of some of your favorite small screen prime-time comedy and late-night shows – along with others who have gone on to write, direct and produce blockbuster Hollywood movies. This interactive show will include performance pieces including musical games, scenes that solve the audience’s problems and their signature piece, THE DREAM, based on the day in the life of one of the audience members. To learn more about iO, visit https://www.ioimprov.com/ It will be a improve show of Olympic proportions…we hope to see you there!

 

LTC Comment: And a good time was had by all at this closing session of the conference. Stay tuned to LTC Bullets for information about the 20the ILTCI Conference in Denver, Colorado March 29 to April 1, 2020 as it becomes available.


2020: Cancelled because of the pandemic

2021

LTC BULLET: 2021 ILTCI VIRTUAL CONFERENCE WRAP UP

LTC Comment: The 2021 Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance (Virtual) Conference is history. Organizers Barry Fisher and Vince Bodnar eased potential participants into the idea of a virtual conference with weeks of advanced notice and guidelines. They recruited sponsors for the overall meeting, for each track and even for each session. Virtual exhibitors were encouraged to sign and pay up. Somehow, Fisher and Bodnar managed to fund the effort, because beginning Tuesday, April 13, 2021, it kicked off successfully.

After an Opening General Session on the 13th, two different educational sessions began on the hour each Tuesday and Thursday for three weeks from 12pm 4pm EDT and ran for 50 minutes each, followed by 10-minute breaks. Find the agenda here. Sessions were recorded and are available to any and all through June 2021 using the password ILTCI*2021.

Here’s how to access those recordings: Open the ILTCIConf.org screen. Click “Schedule” on the navigation bar at the top of the page. Click the track name of the session you want to watch. Then find and click the session you’re looking for in the list of track sessions. Find and click the “Access Recording” button at the bottom of the session description. Fill out the information to identify yourself, click “I am not a robot” and you’re in … hopefully.

As might be anticipated with a complicated virtual conference, the outcome was not electronically flawless. The opening session was to be a talk by futurist Anders Sörman-Nilsson, who was actually in Australia speaking at 2am local time the next day. Interruptions and sound difficulties caused that session to be cancelled in the middle, but organizers expect a recording of it, done without the long-distance complications, will be available.

Session Title: The WISH Act: Addressing the Financing and Regulatory Needs Within LTC Public/Private Solutions
Track: Legal, Compliance, & Regulatory
Presenters: Peggy Hauser (PwC), Steve Schoonveld (Moderator, Lincoln Financial Group), Tom Suozzi (NY State)
Comments: This session discussed the implications of a proposed federal catastrophic long-term care program, the WISH Act. The session focused on the benefit to consumers, the financial soundness of the proposed program and the regulatory steps necessary to achieve the desired public/private insurance program goals.

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Updated Monday, March 3, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-008:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Older households at risk of not being able to afford long-term care, analysis finds

  • Unum Finds Reinsurer for Block of Individual Long-Term Care Policies

  • Generation X is ready for senior living. Here’s what they want

  • Why the Medicaid 'chainsaw' will come for your home

  • Disrupt LTC now

  • Capping Per Enrollee Spending Could Reduce Federal Medicaid Expenditures by $532 billion to Nearly $1 Trillion Over 10 Years Depending on How States Respond and Result in as Many as 15 Million People Losing Medicaid Coverage by 2034; Eliminating the Medicaid Expansion Match Rate at the Same Time Could Push Federal Medicaid Spending Declines to as Much as $2.1 Trillion and Cause 30 Million to Lose Medicaid Coverage

  • Medicaid’s Cost Growth + Trump Health EOs

  • GAO’s High Risk List Highlights Ways to Save Billions and Help Agencies Work Better

  • Is The American Dream In Crisis?

  • Stressed and confused, the new normal

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, February 24, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-007:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Residents to recover 25 percent of entrance fees as judge approves $86M sale of bankrupt CCRC

  • Trump Opponents Get Ready to Pounce on Medicaid Cuts

  • House budget resolution could cut up to $880 billion in Medicaid

  • 100-year lives – how age impacts the insurance industry

  • Nursing home quality ratings drop after new measures revealed

  • Young-onset dementia surges from 1990 to 2021 globally, data shows

  • 10 Things to Know About Medicaid

  • US healthcare spending hits record highs, led by senior care costs

  • What Recent Changes In MA Mean For Affinity Plans And Supplemental Benefits

  • Retirement Community Living: How to Pay for Your Next Chapter

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday February 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—
 

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LTC BULLET: LTC CENTER STANDING GUARD, NOW MORE THAN EVER

LTC Comment: The current turmoil in U.S. politics and economics has made change for the better more hopeful than in the past two decades. Some ways we’re helping to improve LTC financing policy, after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** THE 2025 ILTCI CONFERENCE session matrix is now available online! The Mobile App sponsored by Nationwide just went live also. Attendees will have received a notification on how to download the app and use its networking features. The meeting convenes March 9-12 in Philadelphia. Register here. Book lodging here. See you there! ***

*** GOOGLE ILLUMINATE is a program that can take an online document and turn it into a podcast. I experimented by asking Illuminate to analyze and report on “LTC Bullet: So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC, 2023 Data Update” that we published January 10, 2025. Check out the six-minute result by double clicking here. I expect listeners will find the result as illuminating or more so than reading the original Bullet which was full of data and technical analysis. ***
 

LTC BULLET: LTC CENTER STANDING GUARD, NOW MORE THAN EVER

LTC Comment: The Center for Long-Term Care Reform will celebrate the start of our 28th year in April. In that quarter century plus, we’ve analyzed, criticized and rebutted just about every study, report, article or commission that attacked private funding or promoted compulsory government financing of long-term care. We’ve identified ideological bias by scholars, think tanks, government agencies, advocacy organizations and the media. We’ve denounced their confirmation bias when they ignore evidence contradicting their preconceptions. We’ve refuted fallacies in their logic. Today’s LTC Bullet includes links to 119 LTC Bullets we’ve published taking these groups and individuals to task:

MediaConsumer ReportsNational Public Radio (NPR), Public Broadcasting System (PBS), New York TimesWall Street JournalWashington Post, Dow Jones MarketWatchHealth Affairs, National Affairs

Organizations: National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA, Medicaid planners’ trade association), AARP, Alzheimer’s Association, Leading Age (formerly American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, LTC provider trade association)

Think tanks or companies: Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), Georgetown Long-Term Care Financing Project, Urban Institute, Avalere, SCAN, Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC), Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, LTC Collaborative, Milken Institute, American Enterprise Institute, AI (Artificial Intelligence)

Government Agencies, Commissions and Politicians: Government Accountability Office (GAO), the Medicaid Commission, the Long-Term Care Commission, Congressional Research Service (CRS), Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Medicare Trustees, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Washington State’s “Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Act (Trust Act),” Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC), Representative Thomas Suozzi (D-NY), WA Cares Fund and Washington State politicians, Medi-Cal and California Governor Newsom

Scholars: Ellen O'Brien, Peter Kemper, Harriet L. Komisar, Lisa Alecxih, Timothy Waidmann, Korbin Liu, Judith Feder, Richard W. Johnson, Joshua Wiener, Mark Merlis, Lee Shirey Thompson, Anne Tumlinson, Christine Aguiar, Molly O'Malley Watts, Diane Rowland, David G. Stevenson, Marc A. Cohen, Janemarie Mulvey, Sudipto Banerjee, Richard G. Frank, Neale Mahoney, Howard Gleckman, Leora Friedberg, Wenliang Hou, Wei Sun, Anthony Webb, Gretchen Jacobson, Shannon Griffin, Tricia Neuman, Karen Smith, Norma B. Coe, Melissa M. Favreault, David C. Grabowski, Stephanie Kelton, Stuart Butler, The InLTCgentsia and The LTC Anointed, Robert P. Saldin, Laura Benzing, Hannah Godlove, and Megan R. Burke, Eileen Tell.

LTC Comment: Speaking truth to power is a mostly thankless job. Please review the efforts we’ve made to correct attacks on you for supporting responsible long-term care planning. Browse the following LTC Bullets’ titles and teasers. Pick a few to download and read in full. Then, if you find value in our work, please support the Center for Long-Term Care Reform by becoming a member or making a contribution. Become a member here or contact Steve at smoses@centerltc.com or 425-891-3640 or Damon at damon@centerltc.com or 206-283-7036 to join our fight for rational long-term care financing policy.

LTC Bullets Standing Guard 

(The following Bullets are listed in descending chronological order beginning with the most recent. If you prefer to start from the beginning, just scroll to the bottom and work your way back up.)

LTC Bullet: LTC Data Manipulation II, January 27, 2025
LTC Comment: “Statistics don’t lie, but liars use statistics.” Still!  

LTC Bullet: Catastrophic LTC Irony, October 25, 2024
LTC Comment: Another report insists we need a big new federal program to cover catastrophic LTC costs. Ironically, we already have one that makes a new one impossible to achieve. We explain. 

LTC Bullet: More KFF Data Misinformation, September 13, 2024
LTC Comment: Does KFF misunderstand, misinterpret, or misrepresent LTC insurance data? All three? See what you think.

LTC Bullet: LTC Data Manipulation, August 30, 2024 
LTC Comment: “Statistics don’t lie, but liars use statistics.” We explain how KFF distorts National Health Expenditure data to promote ideological conclusions.

LTC Bullet: There Is No “LTSS Gap”, August 9, 2024
LTC Comment: This Health Affairs article offers a solution without a problem. We provide a rebuttal.

LTC Bullet: KFF Hoisted Again, June 28, 2024
LTC Comment: A series of KFF “issue briefs” intended to show how poor Medicare beneficiaries are prove the opposite.

LTC Bullet: Progressive Bias Produces Regressive Policy, February 2, 2024
LTC Comment: Public officials and their advisers prefer government solutions to social problems, so their policies often produce deficient outcomes.

LTC Bullet: “Dying Broke” Was Dead Wrong, December 15, 2023
LTC Comment: Who knows more about long-term care (LTC) than KFF and the New York Times? Answer: anyone who deals in facts and logic instead of anecdotes and ideology.

LTC Bullet: You Pay for California’s LTC Profligacy and Structural Racism, August 25, 2023
LTC Comment: California’s Medicaid program (Medi-Cal) says come one, come all for free LTC, sends the bill to federal taxpayers, and institutionalizes structural LTC racism. What’s happening?

LTC Bullet: The LTC Narrative, June 30, 2023
LTC Comment: The dominant long-term care narrative crowds out inquiry, critical reasoning and creativity leaving conformity and groupthink. We explain. 

LTC Bullet: AI on LTC, May 5, 2023
LTC Comment: Artificial intelligence (AI) is all the rage these days. Does it help or hurt long-term care planning? We ask; AI answers; and we respond.

LTC Bullet: WA Cares Repercussions, October 28, 2022
LTC Comment: Washington State politicians and bureaucrats think they can do LTC insurance better than private sector professionals. What could possibly go wrong? 

LTC Bullet: LTC Strawman, September 30, 2022
LTC Comment: Disproving a claim no one has ever made contributes nothing to a crucial conversation about who should qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits, when and under what circumstances. We critique Marc A. Cohen and Jane Tavares: “Are Wealthy Older Adults who use Medicaid Opportunistically Accessing the Program?,” Journal of Aging & Social Policy

LTC Bullet: Biased LTC Scholarship Misinforms Policymakers, September 2, 2022
LTC Comment: Government-funded, ideologically biased research causes bad policy decisions, as we explain with this critique of Richard W. Johnson and Melissa M. Favreault, “Economic Hardship and Medicaid Enrollment in Later Life: Assessing the Impact of Disability, Health, and Marital Status Shocks,” published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, January 31, 2021, https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/economic-hardship-medicaid-enrollment-later-life#results

LTC Bullet: Begging the LTC Question, May 27, 2022
LTC Comment: Long-term care analysts routinely ignore, diminish and/or misrepresent the impact of Medicaid planning (artificial self-impoverishment to qualify for benefits) on the long-term care market. Here’s an example taken from Richard W. Johnson and Melissa M. Favreault, “Economic Hardship and Medicaid Enrollment in Later Life: Assessing the Impact of Disability, Health, and Marital Status Shocks,” HHS/ASPE/BHDAP, January 31, 2021.

LTC Bullet: Moses vs. Grabowski on Long-Term Care, February 25, 2022
LTC Comment: David C. Grabowski, PhD, is Professor of Health Care Policy in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School. Professor Grabowski is omnipresent in the news about long-term care. Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform. His media megaphone is more subdued. But both were featured yesterday in McKnight’s Long-Term Care News. Their differing views on what ails long-term care services and financing provide food for thought about this complicated topic.

LTC Bullet: Long-Term Care’s Fundamental Fallacy, February 18, 2022
LTC Comment: We explain the fundamental fallacy that leads LTC analysts and policy makers astray. 

LTC Bullet: The InLTCgentsia, September 3, 2021
LTC Comment: Should LTC intellectuals, politicians and bureaucrats who pay no price for being wrong direct long-term care financing reform? Considerations follow. 

LTC Bullet: WISHful Thinking, August 20, 2021
LTC Comment: Hope springs eternal among the LTC anointed that one more government program forced on the public at the expense of the productive economy can reduce the damage done by its many failed predecessors. Analysis of the WISH Act follows. 

LTC Bullet: Milken Groupthink Fumbles LTC Financing, April 16, 2021
LTC Comment: You might expect innovative ideas from the Milken Institute, but when it comes to long-term care financing, all you get is ideological retreads. 

LTC Bullet: MACPAC Captured, April 2, 2021
LTC Comment: Signs in the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission’s (MACPAC’s) estate recovery report point to its capture by the Medicaid planning bar.

LTC Bullet: The Key to LTC, March 19, 2021
LTC Comment: Solving the long-term care financing crisis isn’t so hard if you avoid ideology and take human nature into account. A better public/private partnership is an easy and available solution. 

LTC Bullet: Social Insurance is an Oxymoron, February 5, 2021
LTC Comment: Insurance is individualistic, so “social insurance” is a contradiction in terms. Meaning and consequences explained. 

LTC Bullet: Spousal Impoverishment, Then and Now, January 22, 2021
LTC Comment: The myth that access to Medicaid LTC benefits requires impoverishment is pervasive. A dose of reality concerning spousal impoverishment specifically follows.

LTC Bullet: Is Medicaid the LTC Solution or the Problem?, December 4, 2020
LTC Comment: Will more Medicaid funding and regulation help (short-term) and harm (long-term) America’s fragile long-term care system? Answers follow.

LTC Bullet: Modern Monetary Theory and Long-Term Care, October 23, 2020
LTC Comment: Finally, a solution for the long-term care financing crisis. Or not? Explanation follows. 

LTC Bullet: The Keystone Kops of LTC Insurance, October 9, 2020
LTC Comment: What happens when the Keystone Kops design a long-term care insurance plan? Answer: Washington State’s “Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Act (Trust Act),” enacted in 2019.

LTC Bullet: How Not to Redesign Long-Term Care, June 12, 2020
LTC Comment: Do we really need more government money and regulation for long-term care, as this Forbes columnist insists? Analysis and better choices follow. 

LTC Bullet: Where Long-Term Care Went Wrong and How to Fix It, January 3, 2020
LTC Comment: Officials and analysts attack the symptoms of long-term care dysfunction (exploding costs, nursing home bias, and poor quality) without addressing the cause (easy access to Medicaid for consumers and strong incentives for states to maximize federal Medicaid matching funds). Everything follows from that observation. 

LTC Bullet: The Battle Lines Are Drawn, October 25, 2019
LTC Comment: Two sides advocate diametrically opposite solutions for the long-term care crisis. Who are they? What do they want? Which will win? Answers follow.

LTC Bullet: To Fix Long-Term Care, Redefine the Problem, September 27, 2019
LTC Comment: Recent research suggests long-term care is not the gargantuan crisis previously thought. So, private sector solutions, including LTC insurance, may be far more effective than commonly believed.

LTC Bullet:  Why Too Little Home Care?, June 28, 2019
LTC Comment: Why is home care so unaffordable and hence unavailable to so many? Two views follow: more government money or better directing what we already spend to encourage more private financing.

LTC Bullet: Middle Market Mayhem, June 7, 2019
LTC Comment: LTC analysts, advocates, and providers are wringing their hands about the middle market’s future inability to afford senior living. We mitigate the problem and re-offer a 25-year-old solution. 

LTC Bullet:  Remember the Middle, Friday, May 10, 2019
LTC Comment: A recent Health Affairs article accurately assessed the plight of middle-income seniors whose resources will be inadequate to fund their senior living and long-term care. But the article proposed interventions that would exacerbate the problem.  

LTC Bullet: Amplify LTC Sanity, February 13, 2019
LTC Comment: In today’s echo chamber of irresponsible fiscal and monetary advocacy, a voice for responsible LTC planning and policy is more critical than ever. Join us!

LTC Bullet: How and How Much Medicaid Reduces Lifetime Medical Spending for Affluent Retirees, October 10, 2018
LTC Comment: Medicaid is welfare, so of course it reduces lifetime medical spending of the poor. But here’s evidence Medicaid radically reduces medical spending by the affluent, especially for those savvy enough to maximize “Medicaid planning.”

LTC Bullet: The New Fallacy of Impoverishment, June 29, 2018
LTC Comment: Government should declare success in the War on Poverty and eliminate policies that discourage personal responsibility and work. 

LTC Policy Blinders, May 25, 2018
LTC Comment: We explain why and how LTC policy analysts evade facts that contradict their predisposed positions in favor of compulsory government LTC insurance.

Feder/Cohen Proposal Ignores LTC Problems’ Cause, May 18, 2018
LTC Comment: We explain how government intervention caused the dysfunctions in long-term care that Feder/Cohen seek to correct with more government intervention, including institutional bias, poor access and quality, excessive dependency on family caregiving, inadequate financing, and lack of insurance. 

LTC Evasion, May 11, 2018
LTC Comment: We explain what LTC scholars evade and why. 

Feder Fantasy Fatally Flawed (Cohen Contribution Notwithstanding), May 4, 2018
LTC Comment: A new Feder/Cohen proposal would take long-term care out of the frying pan into the fire. 

LTC Bullet: Retirement Confidence and Asset Spend Down, April 27, 2018
LTC Comment: Two new EBRI studies shed light on how workers/retirees’ expectations and behavior differ.

LTC Bullet: Have Your Cake Until It Eats You, March 23, 2018
LTC Comment: Americans want to have their cake (entitlements) and eat it too, but trends show this cake will eat our economy first. Scary evidence follows.

LTC Bullet: Is it Spend Down or Medicaid Planning?, July 14, 2017
LTC Comment: A lot of what passes for Medicaid “spend down” in the scholarly literature is really Medicaid planning. We explain and give examples. 

LTC Bullet: Medicaid, Home Ownership and Long-Term Care Financing, July 7, 2017
LTC Comment: Medicaid’s estate recovery requirement induces aging Americans to reduce home ownership, decrease home equity and set up trusts in order to qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits.

LTC Bullet: Home Equity and LTCI Demand, June 30, 2017
LTC Comment: We explore the Professor Thomas Davidoff’s thesis that home equity “substitutes” for long-term care insurance demand and suggested instead that Medicaid’s large home equity exemption obviates LTCI demand by eliminating home equity’s liability for long-term care costs. 

LTC Bullet: Is it Really Hopeless to Reduce Medicaid LTC Costs?, June 23, 2017
LTC Comment: Kaiser Family Foundation researchers despair of reducing Medicaid LTC expenditures, but their “literature review” is incomplete, misleading and risky.  

LTC Bullet: The Broken Rhythm of Long-Term Care Reform, May 19, 2017
LTC Comment: Why did Medicaid long-term care eligibility reforms quickly follow economic recessions until the year 2000, but no longer? The answer follows. 

LTC Bullet: Hoist with its Own Petard , April 28, 2017
LTC Comment: This Kaiser Family Foundation “Issue Brief” blows up its own argument. We explain.

LTC Bullet: What’s Wrong with Bundled and Value-Based LTC Payments? January 20, 2017 LTC Comment: Big changes are afoot in government financing of post-acute and long-term care--changes that will rattle private LTC financing options as well. We present the big picture. 

LTC Bullet: Medicaid LTC Data Insights, October 14, 2016
LTC Comment: What’s happening with Medicaid LTC financing and why it matters. 

LTC Bullet: How Fiscal and Monetary Malfeasance Will Ruin Long-Term Care, October 7, 2016
LTC Comment: Fiscal malfeasance ($20 trillion federal debt) enabled by monetary malfeasance (artificially low interest rates) bode ill for the economy and for Medicaid LTC financing. Here’s why and how.

LTC Bullet: Behind AHEAD, September 2, 2016
LTC Comment: The people and organizations advocating a new, compulsory, payroll-financed government program to fund catastrophic LTC expenses base their arguments on dubious sources and reasoning. Details follow.  

LTC Bullet: Half a Century of Bad Medicaid LTC Policy, August 5, 2016
LTC Comment: Medicaid long-term care policy is a classic story of good intentions leading to unfortunate consequences.

LTC Bullet: How the Government Ruined LTC (and We’ll Fix It), June 10, 2016
LTC Comment: Government interference in the LTC marketplace since 1965 caused harmful unintended consequences that only clear analysis and bold action can fix.  

LTC Bullet: LTC at a Crossroads, June 3, 2016
LTC Comment: Long-term care financing policy is at a critical crossroads and may take a wrong turn. We explain. 

LTC Bullet: Losing Principles, April 29, 2016
LTC Comment: What’s happening to the basic principles of personal responsibility and self-reliance that validate private insurance? We reflect. 

LTC Bullet:  LTCI Defeatism, April 1, 2016
LTC Comment:  LTC insurance leaders should not surrender to government-financed long-term care based on ideologically biased policy analysis grounded in misleading data and fallacious arguments.  We say “Revolt!”

LTC Bullet: Three Cheers (But Two From the Bronx) for New BPC-LTC Recommendations, February 5, 2016
LTC Comment: The Bipartisan Policy Center’s new report on long-term care leads with LTCI (hear, hear!), but makes Medicaid even more tempting (boo!) and adds a new, expensive, mandatory government program (boo!) based on faulty premises. Our analysis and critique follow. 

LTC Bullet: The Arrogance of LTC Analysts' Elitism," December 4, 2015
LTC Comment: Arrogance, ideological bias and elitism spoil the recent research of abundantly endowed LTC analysts. We explain.

LTC Bullet: The Future of Long-Term Care Seen Through the Prism of History, November 13, 2015
LTC Comment: Big changes are afoot in government financing of post-acute and long-term care--changes that will rattle private LTC financing options as well. We cover the big picture. 

LTC Bullet: A New Revolution in Long-Term Care Financing . . . by Government, November 6, 2015
LTC Comment: Radical, disruptive changes in how government pays for long-term care are advancing rapidly. We provide background.

LTC Bullet: Another LTCI Hit Job?, October 9, 2015
LTC Comment: What shall we make of this new attack on private long-term care insurance? Answers follow.

LTC Bullet: Pandora Meets Rosy Scenario in CMS Projections, July 31, 2015
LTC Comment: The aging demographic evils in Pandora’s “box” don’t find their way into CMS actuaries’ health expenditure estimates for the coming decade. Quotes and our comments follow.

LTC Bullet: New Data on LTC Incidence, Duration, Cost and Financing Sources, July 24, 2015 LTC Comment: New numbers, better than the old numbers, but they require further clarification and explanation. 

LTC Bullet: Holding CMS’s Feet to the Fire, February 6, 2015
LTC Comment: When a federal agency fails to enforce the law hurting the poor it’s supposed to help and costing tax payers billions of dollars, bureaucratic heads should roll. Background and details follow.

LTC Bullet: When Bad Models Happen to Good People, January 16, 2015, guest Bullet by Stephen D. Forman
LTC Comment: We offer the last word on that Boston College fiasco of poor scholarship and bad economics.

LTC Bullet: How Careless Economists Boosted LTC Risk, December 12, 2014
LTC Comment: We explain how Boston College economists generated poor long-term care planning advice that national media unfortunately amplified. 

LTC Bullet: IG Report Reveals Medicaid Estate Recovery Weakness, December 5, 2014
LTC Comment—A newly released USDHHS Inspector General report shows few states do Medicaid estate recoveries well resulting in a potential annual loss, we infer, of $2.5 billion. Details, numbers, and why it matters follow.

LTC Bullet: IG Report Reveals Costly Medicaid Enforcement Failures, November 21, 2014 LTC Comment--The USDHHS Inspector General reports that many states failed to implement mandatory provisions in OBRA ’93 and/or DRA ’05 designed to discourage abuse of Medicaid LTC benefits. Details follow. 

LTC Bullet: Does Medicaid Solvency Matter?," October 31, 2014
LTC Comment: CMS says Medicaid solvency “is not an issue.” We beg to differ. 

LTC Bullet: CMS Health Expenditure Data Mask LTC Cost Growth, September 5, 2014
LTC Comment: CMS actuaries’ estimates of health expenditures for 2013-2023 downplay the big story, snowballing LTC costs. We explain. 

LTC Bullet: Entitlement Double Talk, August 1, 2014
LTC Comment: To read the major media coverage of the 2014 Medicare Trustees report, you’d think things are looking up for the 49-year-old mega-program. Think again.

LTC Bullet: GAO Punts on Medicaid Planning, July 3, 2014
LTC Comment: Another GAO report underplays dramatic findings about the role, methods and extent of Medicaid planning and loose LTC eligibility rules.

LTC Bullet: Will Bipartisan LTC Policy Be Better?, April 11, 2014
LTC Comment: Heads up! Consensus is coalescing around a bipartisan long-term care financing solution. Let’s be hopeful, but wary.

LTC Bullet: Who Gets Medicaid LTC?, March 28, 2014
LTC Comment: Is Medicaid a long-term care safety net for the poor, the middle class, even the affluent, all of the above? Questions remain, but answers abound. 

LTC Bullet: WSJ Misfires on LTC Insurance, February 14, 2014
LTC Comment: We dissect and correct a misbegotten column in the Wall Street Journal

LTC Bullet: PBS’s 6 LTC Tips Miss the Mark, November 8, 2013
LTC Comment: What’s wrong with the conventional wisdom about how to resolve America’s long-term care crisis?  

LTC Bullet: The LTC Blind, October 25, 2013
LTC Comment: “There are none so blind as those who will not see.” That proverb applies perfectly to a recent column about long-term care by the Urban Institute’s Howard Gleckman. 

LTC Bullet: Medicaid Spend Down that Isn't and Why it Matters," July 19, 2013
LTC Comment: Claiming “transitions” to Medicaid are evidence of catastrophic LTC asset “spend down” misrepresents the truth and should be publicly recanted. We answer who, what, when, where and why. 

LTC Bullet: What Should the LTC Commission Do?, June 21, 2013
LTC Comment: How should the LTC Commission prioritize its work and recommendations? Some thoughts follow. 

LTC Bullet: SCAN the LTC Possibilities, April 5, 2013
LTC Comment: SCAN is a fountainhead of ideas about long-term care financing, but are those ideas potable? We analyze.

LTC Bullet: Nursing Home Spend Down Misunderstood and Late-Breaking LTCI Industry News, July 20, 2012
LTC Comment: A recent EBRI study that claims nursing home stays are wiping out Americans’ savings is based on a fallacy and mistaken. What’s really happening? 

LTC Bullet: Moses Replies to Congressman's Questions (LTC Embed Report #11), October 13, 2011
LTC Comment: House Oversight and Government Reform Healthcare Subcommittee ranking member Danny Davis (D, IL) asked me some questions in writing after the 9/21 hearing on "Examining Abuses of Medicaid Eligibility Rules." His questions and my answers follow. 

LTC Bullet: Friendly Fire in the Class War (LTC Embed Report #6), September 22, 2011
LTC Comment: Steve Moses's Congressional testimony on Wednesday was well-received except for an ad hominem attack, "friendly fire" in the class war. An explanation, witness testimonies, and a video of the hearing follow.  

LTC Bullet: CLASSless Journalism, September 21, 2010
LTC Comment: Reporting only the CLASS program's dubious benefits and none of its inevitable detriments is negligent journalism. An example follows. 

LTC Bullet: New LTCI Report: Research or Propaganda?, June 8, 2010
LTC Comment: Is a newly updated report on LTC insurance by the Congressional Research Service really research, or CLASS Act propaganda? You decide. 

LTC Bullet: The Enemy of LTC Truth, February 8, 2010
LTC Comment: Albert Einstein said "Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth." See how this principle applies to long-term care. 

LTC Bullet: CLASS Consciousness, October 21, 2009
LTC Comment: To hear Kaiser Family Foundation speakers, the CLASS Act is a no-brainer for passage and implementation. We offer a wake-up call. 

LTC Bullet: We Reply to Washington Post Blast at Federal LTCI, August 14, 2009
LTC Comment: Read our reply to the Washington Post's "Federal Diary" criticism of Federal LTCI's premium increase. 

LTC Bullet: How Much More Wrong Can They Get It?!, July 21, 2009
LTC Comment: Another "report" from the usual suspects gets long-term care advice dead wrong.  

LTC Bullet: KFF Misfires on LTCI, June 9, 2009
LTC Comment: A new study of private long-term care insurance published by the Kaiser Family Foundation fails in the usual, predictable ways. Details follow. 

LTC Bullet: LTC Clueless, May 26, 2009
LTC Comment: Consumers' denial of LTC risk and cost is nothing compared to the naiveté of professionals who should know better.

LTC Bullet: New LTC Financing Study Uninterpreted or Misinterpreted, March 24, 2009
LTC Comment: A new report on LTC financing by Avalere Health was reported uncritically by many and mistakenly by one source.

LTC Bullet: We Critique WSJ on Medicaid Planning, January 16, 2009
LTC Comment: Within 24 hours, we replied to a Wall Street Journal column that promoted Medicaid planning for long-term care. 

LTC Bullet: NYT Asks Medicaid Planner to Advise on LTCI, July 18, 2008
LTC Comment: The New York Times added insult to injury by inviting a notorious Medicaid planner to advise readers on private long-term care insurance. We respond. 

LTC Bullet: WSJ Attacks LTCI, We Respond, February 26, 2008
LTC Comment: Today's front-page Wall Street Journal article criticizing long-term care insurance was as one-sided and misguided as a similar piece published by the New York Times also during a major industry conference. We reply, same day, as follows. 

LTC Bullet: Hillary Clinton on LTC, January 3, 2008
LTC Comment: Presidential candidate Senator Hillary Clinton has promised a cornucopia of LTC benefits if elected. Would our service delivery and financing system be better or worse if she delivered? We comment. 

LTC Bullet: The NY Compact: Analysis, Conclusions, and Recommendations, July 31, 2007
LTC Comment: Is the New York Compact the future of long-term care financing or the last gasp of an old, failed system? 

LTC Bullet: Medicaid Estate Recover. . .up, July 5, 2007
LTC Comment: Medicaid estate recovery could be a major source of non-tax revenue for the ailing LTC safety net for the poor, but AARP would tie the program in bureaucratic knots.  

LTC Bullet: GAO on LTCI Partnerships, June 20, 2007
LTC Comment: GAO drops the ball again on the issues of Medicaid, long-term care financing and private insurance.  

LTC Bullet: GAO AWOL on LTC TOA, May 2, 2007
LTC Comment: The Government Accountability Office has again displayed stunning miscomprehension of the Medicaid eligibility, Medicaid planning and transfer of assets issues.  

LTC Bullet: Take Georgetown's Facts With a Big Grain of Salt, February 15, 2007
LTC Comment: Three new "fact sheets" from the Georgetown LTC Financing Project are spoiled by ideological bias. This Bullet critiques Medicaid's Spousal Impoverishment Protections (February 2007) , Medicare and Long-Term Care (February 2007) and National Spending for Long-Term Care (February 2007) 

LTC Bullet: The DRA Bullets, January 9, 2007
LTC Comment: Two Medicaid planners lament the DRA we praised and defended in 21 LTC Bullets last year. Their whining, our replies plus links to all the DRA Bullets follow. 

LTC Bullet: Medicaid Commission Errs by Omission, August 9, 2006
LTC Comment: The national Medicaid Commission, appointed last year to fix Medicaid (including its dysfunctional LTC component) before the welfare program implodes financially, is way off track. 

LTC Bullet: Kaiser Cover-Up Continues," April 27, 2006
LTC Comment: Urban Institute "scholars," aided and abetted by the Kaiser Family Foundation, employed an underhanded straw man argument in the foundation's latest unsuccessful attempt to debunk the impact of Medicaid planning abuse.

LTC Bullet: Microsimulate This!, March 28, 2006
LTC Comment: The fundamental things apply as time goes by--like "garbage in, garbage out." Take for example a recent Inquiry article that estimates future public and private LTC costs. Our critique follows.

LTC Bullet: LTC Victory, February 2, 2006
LTC Comment: The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 passed yesterday curbing Medicaid abuse and unleashing LTC Partnerships. Celebrate? Sure. But don't take a victory lap until you consider what can go wrong.

LTC Bullet: Georgetown, GAO and Kaiser: The Bermuda Triangle of Good LTC Policy, January 25, 2006
LTC Comment: LTC doubletalk is not the exclusive province of Medicaid planners and AARP lobbyists. Otherwise often reliable analysts get long-term care policy wrong too.

LTC Bullet: NPR Defends Medicaid Planning, Attacks Messenger, January 4, 2006
LTC Comment: National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" show took a slanted swipe at responsible Medicaid reform yesterday while defending Medicaid planning abuse. Hear the broadcast version, followed by our side of the story.  

LTC Bullet: GAO on TOA Underwhelms, October 5, 2005
LTC Comment: The Government Accountability Office's new report on Medicaid asset transfers asks the wrong questions, uses the wrong data, and so provides few helpful answers.

LTC Bullet: Alzheimer's Association Shortsighted on LTC Financing, July 6, 2005
LTC Comment: The Alzheimer's Association's public position on Medicaid reform and long-term care financing is a classic example of how good intentions invite unintended consequences.

LTC Bullet: LTC Bombshell, June 29, 2005
LTC Comment: Results from a poll of state Medicaid programs by a Congressional office with subpoena power may blow the lid off a carefully orchestrated cover-up of Medicaid planning abuses. Lists, summarizes and analyzes studies that pooh-pooh Medicaid planning. 

LTC Bullet: Where There's Smoke, There's Fire, May 18, 2005
LTC Comment: Our critique follows of "Medicaid's coverage of nursing home costs: Asset shelter for the wealthy or essential safety net?" by Ellen O'Brien of the Georgetown Long-Term Care Financing Project.

LTC Bullet: Medicaid Planners Confess, October 2, 2003
LTC Comment: A survey intended to exonerate Medicaid planners is actually the strongest indictment of artificial impoverishment yet.

LTC Bullet: "Nursing Home Care Virtually Free For Life," Tuesday, May 7, 2002
LTC Comment: What follows is a transcription of excerpts from a professionally produced and mass-distributed videotape from a man and his company who promise lifelong free long-term care.

LTC Bullet: They're Baaaack . . . Medicaid Planners Rise Again, April 25, 2001
LTC Comment: Ever since Congress and then-President Bill Clinton nailed them with mandatory estate recovery (OBRA '93), "Throw Granny in Jail" (HIPAA '96) and "Throw Granny's Lawyer in Jail" (BBA '97), the Medicaid estate planning attorneys have laid low. No longer. 

LTC Bullet: More Bad Advice from Consumer Reports, November 15, 1999
LTC Comment: Individuals and organizations most critical of private long-term care insurance are usually the ones lining their pockets with Medicaid estate planning profits.

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Updated Monday, February 17, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-006:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Biggest Health Policy Decisions Now Facing the Trump Administration

  • Reverse mortgages could be ‘practical’ long-term care funding option

  • Responsible Governing Involves Making Tough Decisions – Here’s a Guide

  • Think Bigger: Meaningful Health Reform

  • US voters overwhelmingly support caregiver tax credit: survey

  • Report: Prevalence of older Americans without disabilities rose between 2008 and 2017

  • Sneak Peek of Long Term Care Success

  • How to Avoid Medicaid Estate Recovery

  • The Health Wonk Shop: What’s Next for the Affordable Care Act?

  • ILTCI Session Matrix

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, February 10, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-005:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Losing Focus: How the ACA’s Medicaid Expansion Left Traditional Enrollees Behind

  • Number of family caregivers helping older adults with dementia surged over 11-year span: study

  • The care crisis: Eldercare collides with childcare

  • Lawmakers push Trump to block Medicaid 80/20 rule

  • ILTCI Conference to Screen Powerful Caregiving Documentary at 2025 Keynote

  • The Nation's Fiscal Health: Strategy Needed as Debt Levels Accelerate

  • U.S. Short-Term Care Insurance Market to Reach $110.1B by 2033

  • New report details financial, emotional toll of Parkinson’s on family caregivers

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, February 7, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: MEDI-CAL’S ASSET TEST ELIMINATION

LTC Comment: We explore the topic of California’s Medicaid program (Medi-Cal) eliminating the asset test for long-term care benefit eligibility after the ***news.***

*** ILTCI ’25 Conference announced a special screening of excerpts from Caregiving, a compelling, two-hour documentary executive produced by Bradley Cooper and produced by Lea Pictures, Ark Media, and WETA, scheduled to air in primetime on more than 330 PBS stations nationwide in June 2025. This groundbreaking public media documentary delves into the personal stories of caregivers, shedding light on the challenges they face in providing short and long-term care, as well as palliative and end-of-life care for individuals of all ages. Join us March 10, 2025, from 9:00 - 10:15 am ET for the Caregiving Keynote Presentation, Sponsored by CareScout. ***

*** DOGE (the ad hoc, but influential “Department of Government Efficiency”) claims to have already cut over $64 billion according to the National Debt Clock. GAO says more is needed to address “our unsustainable fiscal path” as we reported in this LTC Clipping. Center for LTC Reform premium members receive LTC Clippings by email in real time. Regular members receive the same content compiled in weekly LTC E-Alerts. Join the Center, receive these publications, and help us change LTC financing policy for the better.

2/5/2025, “The Nation's Fiscal Health: Strategy Needed as Debt Levels Accelerate,” by GAO, GAO-25-107714

Quote: “The federal government is on an unsustainable fiscal path that poses serious economic, security, and social challenges.

We reported that:

  • As of September 30, 2024, publicly held debt was $28.2 trillion, or 98% of the size of the economy

  • Publicly held debt is projected to grow more than twice as fast as the economy, reaching 200% of the size of the economy by 2047

  • Government spending on net interest in FY 2024 exceeded federal spending on Medicare and national defense, and is projected to keep growing 

We continue to recommend that Congress develop a strategy to inform the difficult policy choices in addressing our unsustainable fiscal path.

For more information on federal debt, see our resource: How Could Federal Debt Affect You?

LTC Comment: Another dire warning from the Government Accountability Office (GAO). Likely to have the same impact as all the previous ones. Namely, none. Can the unofficial Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) do better? According to the National Debt Clock, DOGE has already cut over $60 billion. As Reagan said, “Trust, but verify.” We’ll see what’s real, if anything, in time.***
 

LTC BULLET: MEDI-CAL’S ASSET TEST ELIMINATION

LTC Comment: I’m researching Medi-Cal’s elimination of the asset test for LTC benefit eligibility. Before I put all the pieces together into an organized analysis, I thought readers might like to see some of the information I’m turning up. Following is a sampling with sources linked. Click through for eye-opening insights into the mind-boggling, budget-busting ideology behind this momentous policy change.

 

“As of January 1, 2024, Medi-Cal will no longer count assets to determine eligibility. This means that anyone, regardless of how much they own, may receive Medi-Cal benefits, including:

  • Individuals in skilled nursing or intermediate care facilities or those who qualify for home and community based services
  • People who are 65 or over, blind or disabled
  • Low-income persons with dependent children
  • Children under 21
  • Pregnant women

“SSI and other categorically-related recipients are also automatically eligible for Medi-Cal.”
(Overview of Medi-Cal for Long Term Care by California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, emphasis added)

“Asset Elimination Overview
• Assembly Bill 133 (Chapter 143, Statutes of 2021) was signed into law by the Governor on July 27, 2021. This law included a two-phased approach to eliminating the asset test used to determine eligibility for NonModified Adjusted Gross Income (Non-MAGI) Medi-Cal Programs.
• Phase I, implemented on July 1, 2022, increased asset limits for all NonMAGI programs to $130,000 per individual and $65,000 for each additional household member (up to 10).
• Phase II, effective on January 1, 2024, will eliminate the asset test entirely for Non-MAGI “Medi-Cal programs, including Long-Term Care and Medicare Savings Programs.”
(From webinar for “advocates”)

“Q: For which Medi-Cal programs will the asset limit be eliminated?
All non-expansion Medi-Cal programs, including Aged, Blind, and Disabled, Medi-Cal with a Share of Cost, 250% Working Disabled Program, long-term care, and Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs). MSPs include four specific programs: Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB), Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB), Qualified Income (QI), and Qualified Disabled Working Individual (QDWI) programs. The MSPs help low-income Medicare enrollees pay for Medicare out-of-pocket expenses including premiums and cost-sharing. (Note: those enrolled in Medi-Cal expansion already do not have an asset limit).”
(Justice in Aging)

“As Medi-Cal coverage is an essential lifeline in providing for the health care needs for millions of beneficiaries (including dental, vision, hearing, transportation, and long-term care), this win [elimination of the asset test] greatly increased the quality of life, health and economic wellbeing of tens of thousands of people.” (California Health Advocates, emphasis added)

“Starting January 2024, there will no longer be an asset limit for Medi-Cal eligibility. This change has significant implications, as it means that more individuals can now qualify for Medi-Cal and access home care services through the In-Home Supportive Services Program.” (Bet Tzedek, emphasis in the original)

“Some 36% of Californians are covered by Medicaid, compared with 19% of Floridians and 15% of Texans. The federal share of the Golden State’s Medicaid spending—nearly $120 billion—is more than Florida’s entire budget.” (WSJ column)

 “Consider California, where 37% of residents are covered by Medicaid. The state has extended Medicaid to undocumented immigrants and waived asset limits for beneficiaries. Mr. Newsom’s budget forecasts some $190 billion in Medicaid and other health spending this year, $119 billion of which will be picked up by the feds. The latter amount is greater than Florida’s annual budget.” (Wall Street Journal editorial, 1/24/25)

“A [transfer of assets] lookback period will no longer apply to transfers made on or after January 1, 2024.” (Overview of Medi-Cal for Long Term Care by California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform)  

“Medi-Cal applicants, beneficiaries and their spouses should always be aware of the Medi-Cal Recovery rules and plan ahead if they want to avoid recovery on their home or other assets. For detailed information on the Medi-Cal Recovery program, see CANHR’s consumer booklet on Medi-Cal Recovery, https://canhr.org/wp-content/uploads/Medi-Cal_Recovery.pdf
(Overview of Medi-Cal for Long Term Care by California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform)

“A new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that nursing home staffing has decreased from 2015-2024 and the number of federal deficiencies assessed per facility has increased. The KFF data show that staffing in California nursing homes has decreased from 4.54 hours of nurse staff per resident per day to 4.39 while the number of deficiencies per facility has risen from 10.5 to a whopping 16.7. Also from 2015 to 2024, the percentage of California nursing homes receiving a deficiency for actual harm or jeopardy nearly doubled, from 14% to 27%.”
(Staffing Down, Deficiencies Up in Nursing Homes Throughout the U.S.)

Recent Surge in Senior Caseload Driving Increase in Costs. From January 2024 through July 2024, we have observed a sharp increase in Medi-Cal enrollment among the senior population. Specifically, monthly growth averaged about 14,500 people, notably higher than the previous six months (averaging 1,600) or even during the continuous coverage period (averaging 6,200), when the state temporarily paused redeterminations of enrollee eligibility. We assume that the key driver of this caseload surge is the recent (January 1, 2024) full elimination of the asset limit test. (In addition to specific income limits, prior to July 2022, seniors and persons with disabilities faced strict asset limits for eligibility. Specifically, nonexempt assets could not exceed $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples. The 2021 budget package raised the asset limit to $130,000 for individuals and $195,000 for couples effective July 2022, and fully eliminated the asset test as of January 1, 2024.)” (From November 20, 2024, The 2025‑26 Budget: Medi-Cal Fiscal Outlook)

“As a result of the terms of the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid, the federal government currently discriminates against traditional Medicaid enrollees. With expansion, Medicaid resources have been diverted from children and individuals with disabilities to able-bodied, working-age adults. And existing Medicaid enrollees have a harder time obtaining health care appointments after expansion, with a large increase in emergency department use for non-emergency services.” (Source)

“Skilled nursing facility residents must agree to pay the facility a portion of their income each month. This is called the monthly resident cost and is treated much like rent. The resident is responsible for paying their monthly resident cost to the facility, and Medi-Cal will then cover the remaining costs for the month. …

“For example, under a legal settlement, Hunt v. Kizer, recipients may use old, unpaid medical bills that they have to reduce the monthly Medi-Cal resident cost. Original documentation showing the billing statement is an outstanding balance should be provided to the County eligibility worker. … The monthly resident cost will be adjusted to reflect the cost of the outstanding balance, which could, for example, mean no monthly resident cost until the old, unpaid bills are paid off. This is not automatic and should be discussed with the Medi-Cal county eligibility worker. 

“Under the Johnson v. Rank settlement, recipients may use their monthly resident cost to pay for medically necessary supplies, equipment or services not covered under the Medi-Cal program. This deduction is only applicable to long term care residents.” 
(Overview of Medi-Cal for Long Term Care by California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform)

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Updated Monday, February 3, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-004:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Spending on home healthcare grows twice as fast as total personal healthcare spending over past 18 months
  • Dealing with our Dickensian long-term care system
  • Waterlily, a startup using AI to predict long-term care needs, clinches $7M in seed round
  • The U.S. Has Reached The Peak Of Peak 65
  • Providers shaken by flip-flops, uncertainty as White House attempts broad freeze on federal spending
  • CMS goes after nursing homes’ third-party pay policies with updated guidance
  • Crisis in Long-Term Care Insurance: Financial Situation Reaches Critical Levels
  • People with family who need long-term care more likely to plan for their own potential assisted living expenses, survey finds
  • Long-term care continues to lead in healthcare bankruptcies
  • U.S. Short-Term Care Insurance Market to Reach USD 110.1 Billion by 2033 - Persistence Market Research
  • Medicare Advantage Enrollment Has Surged. Big Savings for Beneficiaries Help Explain Why
  • Revisions to WA Cares: What SB 5291 gets right and what it misses
  • Ask the Hammer: Secure Act 2.0: New Long-Term Care Funding Option
  • Medicaid Applicants: Protecting Your Healthy Spouse in 2025

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, January 27, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—
 

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LTC Comment: “Statistics don’t lie, but liars use statistics.” Still! We explain after the ***news.***

*** ICYMI: Read this latest of our 23-year annual series as context for today’s LTC Bullet: “SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2023 DATA” ***

*** 1/17/2025, “Where did the private payers go?,” by Stephen A. Moses, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “Bottom line, CMS sold LTC providers a bill of goods. Medicaid demands Ritz Carlton care but pays Motel 6 rates. It converts profitable private pay revenue into reimbursements too low to sustain providers, much less finance quality care. The major trade associations representing nursing homes should mobilize to demand market-based payment rates from Medicaid. That would eliminate both the current inadequate Medicaid rates and the excessively high private rates required now to compensate for Medicaid losses. It would also end the caregiver shortage by enabling providers to pay competitive wages.”

LTC Comment: The current, Medicaid-based financing system for nursing homes is unconscionable. Nothing is being done to fix it. Most of the usual proposals for LTC financing reform would only make the situation worse. Some of us are working on a new approach to revolutionize the LTC market. Stay tuned. ***

 

LTC BULLET: LTC DATA MANIPULATION II

LTC Comment: We published “LTC Bullet: LTC Data Manipulation" on August 30, 2024. In the meantime, new 2023 data have become available that make our point about KFF’s and CMS’s misinterpretation and manipulation of LTC data even more forcefully. So we offer the same analysis again below, but using the latest 2023 NHE data

National Health Expenditure data on long-term care (LTC) spending seem straight forward. Three NHE tables cover expenditures for Nursing Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) (Table 15), Home Health Care Services (Table 14) and Other Health, Residential and Personal Care Services (Table 13). Endnotes 1, 2, and 3 below describe those categories, respectively. We provide summary tables following our commentary that include all these spending sources for 2023 and 2022 data. They cover the LTC waterfront, but KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation) says they need some adjustments.

For example, in “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS),” published July 8, 2024, KFF explains that it “excludes spending from certain payers.” These excluded sources include “Medicare spending [$100.3B in 2023], most of which is post-acute care, but some of which is home health spending that might be considered LTSS.” Also “excluded is spending from private insurance [$59.7B in 2023] because much of those expenditures are for rehabilitation and not LTSS.” Private long-term care insurance is excluded “in most cases” because it “reimburses people for the expenses they pay out-of-pocket and would be classified as out-of-pocket spending in the NHE data.”

Backing out those sources has the effect of reducing total LTC spending in 2023 from the $629.3 billion reported by NHE to KFF’s $469.3 billion, 25 percent less. Let’s ask two questions. First, is there a rationale for leaving those sources in the total instead of excluding them? Yes. Take Medicare’s $100.3 billion for example. Of course Medicare doesn’t pay for LTC, but it is critical to America’s LTC financing system. LTC providers are heavily dependent on Medicaid which pays them 70 percent of private-pay rates on average and often less than the cost of providing the care. They survive financially only because Medicare pays more generously for a much smaller number of sub-acute and rehabilitation patients. Remove Medicare’s $100.3 billion and the whole financing system collapses. To see the complete LTC financing picture accurately, Medicare must be included in the total.

What about private insurance, including LTC insurance? True, some health insurance benefits, such as major medical coverage, go for rehabilitation, not LTC. But as in the case of Medicare, those payments help sustain a rickety LTC service delivery system, so they should not be excluded. For private LTC insurance specifically, isn’t it interesting that it gets lumped into the “out-of-pocket” bucket. Why might that be? That brings us to our second question.

Why do analysts and policymakers define LTC spending in some ways and not in others? What effect do the exclusions just described have on the big picture of LTC spending? Backing out Medicare and private insurance raises Medicaid’s contribution to total LTC costs from 44.2 percent in the table to 59.3 percent based on KFF’s reasoning. It increases out-of-pocket spending from 12.9 percent in the table to KFF’s 17.4 percent. In other words, these exclusions make Medicaid and out-of-pocket expenditures appear much higher. Giving that impression supports a specific policy agenda, what I’ve called the LTC Narrative. Specifically, that narrative is that LTC costs are impoverishing people all across America and driving up Medicaid expenditures excessively which is why, according to the narrative, we need a new, compulsory, payroll-funded LTC entitlement program.

KFF isn’t the only group pushing that agenda by tinkering with the data. In 2011, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) changed the definition of NHE categories to combine CCRCs with nursing homes. That created an apples/oranges problem. Nursing homes rely mostly on Medicaid and have few private payers. CCRC’s include mostly private payers for independent and assisted living. They have fewer nursing home residents and very little Medicaid. So this definitional change had the effect of dropping Medicaid’s share of spending for the category from over 40 percent in 2008 to under one-third (32.8 percent) in 2009. Back then, cutting costs was a priority. Likewise, this change drove out-of-pocket expenditures up to over one-quarter, below what they would be for CCRCs but far above what they would be for nursing homes. Making out-of-pocket expenditures look high supports the narrative of widespread catastrophic spend down and the demand for more government funding and regulation.

The tables below give a more accurate rendering of the LTC financing landscape. They show that when we leave in the funding sources KFF excludes, out-of-pocket costs clock in at only 12.5 percent in 2022, 12.9 percent in 2023. But those figures still overstate the impact of out-of-pocket LTC funding. Half of it is spend down of income, mostly from Medicaid recipients’ Social Security benefits. Only half, or about six percent, could come from savings. The vast majority of all LTC financing comes from third-party payors, mostly government. Out-of-pocket costs are nominal despite the widespread belief that Medicaid requires impoverishment and families across the country are being devastated by LTC costs. That lie is the real reason most people do not think about or plan for LTC and end up on public assistance. It is no reason to compound the error of relying too heavily on government funding and regulation by adding more of the same with a big new entitlement program.

There is much more to this story. To understand what is really wrong with LTC and what needs to be done to fix it, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution,” watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers and check out “Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak.”

Source: National Health Expenditures*

2023 (Billions) Total  Medicaid Medicare Priv Insur OOP Other Payers

NH + CCRC

211.3 +10.5%

100%

64.2 +9.7%

30.4%

44.0 +4.3%

20.8%

20.6 +13.2%

9.7%

55.1 +14.1%

26.1%

27.4 +13.7%

13.0%

HH

147.8 +11.2%

100%

51.2

34.6%

51.8

35.0%

21.5

14.5%

17.7

12.0%

5.6

3.8%

Other

270.2 +9.6%

100%

162.8

60.3%

4.5

1.7%

17.6

6.5%

8.9

3.3%

76.3

28.2%

Total

629.3 +10.3%

100%

278.2 +9.2%

44.2%

100.3 +6.8%

15.9 %

59.7 +13.3%

9.5%

81.7 +14.3%

12.9%

109.3 +11.6%

17.4%

 

2022 (Billions)  Total Medicaid Medicare Priv Insur OOP Other Payers

NH + CCRC

191.3

100%

58.5

30.6%

42.2

22.1%

18.2

9.5%

48.3

25.2%

24.1

12.6%

HH

132.9

100%

46.9

35.3%

47.5

35.8%

18.6

14.0%

15.4

11.6%

4.5

3.5%

Other

246.5

100%

149.3

60.8%

4.2

1.7%

15.9

6.4%

7.8

3.2%

69.3

28.1%

Total

570.7

100%

254.7

44.6%

93.9

16.5%

52.7

9.2%

71.5

12.5%

97.9

17.2%


* Note that CMS changed the definition of National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories in 2011, adding for example Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) to Nursing Care Facilities. This change had the effect of reducing Medicaid's reported contribution to the cost of nursing home care from over 40% in 2008 to under one-third (32.8%) in 2009. CMS also created a new category called "Other Third Party Payers" (7.1%) which includes "worksite health care, other private revenues, Indian Health Service, workers' compensation, general assistance, maternal and child health, vocational rehabilitation, other federal programs, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, other state and local programs, and school health." For definitions of all NHEA categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

 

1 Nursing Care Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities:
Covers nursing and rehabilitative services provided in freestanding nursing home facilities. These services are generally provided for an extended period of time by registered or licensed practical nurses and other staff. Care received in state & local government facilities and nursing facilities operated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs are also included. These establishments are classified in NAICS 6231-Nursing Care Facilities and NAICS 623311-Continuing Care Retirement Communities with on-site nursing care facilities.

2 Home Health Care:
Covers medical care provided in the home by freestanding home health agencies (HHAs). Medical equipment sales or rentals not billed through HHAs and non-medical types of home care (e.g., Meals on Wheels, chore-worker services, friendly visits, or other custodial services) are excluded. These freestanding HHAs are establishments that fall into NAICS 6216-Home Health Care Services.

3 Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care:
This category includes spending for Medicaid home and community based waivers, care provided in residential care facilities, ambulance services, school health and worksite health care. Generally these programs provide payments for services in non-traditional settings such as community centers, senior citizens centers, schools, and military field stations. The residential establishments are classified as facilities for the intellectually disabled (NAICS 62321), and mental health and substance abuse facilities (NAICS 62322). The ambulance establishments are classified as Ambulance services (NAICS 62191).

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Updated Tuesday, January 21, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-003:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Feds reject providers’ claims of ‘impossible’ standards in last push to defend nursing home staffing mandate

  • As Congress Looks to Reduce Federal Spending, Medicare and Medicaid Remain Broadly Popular, and At Least Twice as Many People Want to Increase Spending Rather Than Cut It

  • Protecting What Matters

  • Where did the private payers go?

  • Study: Medicare Advantage users largely in the dark about dental, vision, hearing benefits

  • Baby boomers aim to stay put as political climate drives others to contemplate moving in 2025

  • How do Medicaid Home Care Programs Support Family Caregivers?

  • GAO Cites Overlap, Fragmentation of Agency Programs for Older Adults

  • Combating rising premiums by addressing social determinants of health

  • Under Trump, Medicaid Faces a 'Reset Moment'

#############################

"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Monday, January 13, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

#############################

LTC E-ALERT #25-002:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • CMS proposes MA payment increase of 4.3 percent for 2026
  • Here's How Many Years You Can Expect to Live After Dementia Diagnosis
  • Trump presidency brings ‘mixed bag’ of regulatory wins, payment fears: McKnight’s 2025 Outlook, Part 3
  • [Updated] CMS program to offer RNs up to $50K each to work in nursing homes
  • National Health Expenditure Projections, 2023–32: Payer Trends Diverge As Pandemic-Related Policies Fade
  • Slowdown in household growth, housing demand anticipated, except for those 80+
  • What We’ve Learned About Dementia’s Toll on Family Finances
  • Senior living represented among 300+ groups imploring Congress to protect Medicaid as ‘backbone’ of health system

#############################

"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated Friday, January 10, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

 

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LTC BULLET: SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2023 DATA UPDATE

LTC Comment: Heads up! We're about to explain why long-term care insurance sales have disappointed, why people don't "use their homes to stay at home" and why LTC providers who depend on public financing are at risk. Details after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** 2025 ILTCI RECOGNITION AWARD nominations are open here. Organizers announced: “Now is your chance to nominate a person(s) or organization that has made a significant, long-term contribution towards the attainment of the ILTCI vision. Help us showcase the best of our industry and acknowledge their contributions. Nominees must have worked within the long term care insurance industry in some capacity for minimum of five years to qualify. Submissions will be accepted through February 1, 2025. More info is available on the Recognition Award page online, and through the nomination link.”
Prior Award Winners:
2024 Award Recipients: Ron Hagelman, President, Hagelman Consulting; Peter Goldstein, CEO, illumifin; LTC Partners
2019 Award Recipient: Stephen Moses, President of the Center for Long Term Care Reform (http://www.centerltc.com/)
2018 Award Recipient: Dr. Marc Cohen, Clinical Professor, Department of Gerontology and Director, Center for Long-Term Care Services and Supports at the University of Massachusetts (https://www.linkedin.com/in/marc-cohen-2487343/) ***

*** SPOUSAL IMPOVERISHMENT UPDATE: Center for LTC Reform members received the following update on 12/25/24. If you are not a Center member, join here. Find our membership levels and benefits here. We have the best opportunity in twenty years immediately ahead to change and improve LTC financing policy. Join the fight for better LTC!

11/15/2024, “2025 SSI, Spousal Impoverishment, and Medicare Savings Program Resource Standards,” Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services (CMCS)

Quote: “This CMCS Informational Bulletin provides an update on the 2025 Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Spousal Impoverishment Standards as well as the 2025 resource standards for the Medicare Savings Program (MSP) groups.”

LTC Comment: Here are the highlights:

  • The Medicaid home equity limit for 2025 is $730,000 in most states and $1,097,000 in nine others. There was no limit on home equity until the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. The DRA ‘05 established a home equity limit of $500,000, but allowed states to go as high as $750,000. Both limits increase annually with inflation. The median home equity of U.S. seniors is only $250,000, so the Medicaid limit is largely ineffectual in blocking eligibility for house-rich recipients who could have used their home equity to purchase LTC in the private market.
  • The Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance is the amount of the institutionalized spouse’s income that can be transferred to the community spouse. It ranges in 2025 from a minimum of $2,555 to a maximum of $3,948.
  • The Community Spouse Resource Allowance is one-half of the couple’s joint assets not to exceed $157,920.00 but it guarantees a minimum allowance of $31,584. The CSRA is the amount the community spouse can retain of the couple’s joint assets without disqualifying the institutionalized spouse.

The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 created these “spousal impoverishment” protections to prevent community spouses of institutionalized Medicaid recipients from experiencing destitution due to the Medicaid income and asset limits previously in effect. Although well-intentioned, these spousal impoverishment protections had the effect of removing another reason for families to take the cost of LTC seriously and to plan, save, invest or insure for the risk. ***

 

LTC BULLET: SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2023 DATA UPDATE

LTC Comment: Once a year around this time the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) report health care expenditure data for the latest year of record. Recently, CMS posted 2023 statistics on its website here. Click on this link NHE Tables (ZIP) to download the tables. Then,  click on the ones of interest, Tables 13, 14 and 15 for our purposes here.

Health Affairs has published a summary and analysis of this new data titled “National Health Expenditures In 2023: Faster Growth As Insurance Coverage And Utilization Increased." The article is “open access” so available free here. Unfortunately, the Health Affairs article has nothing to say about long-term care beyond the raw data, so read on to get that story.

Following is our annual analysis of the latest long-term care expenditure data. Note that we added Table 13, “Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care Expenditures,” to our analysis starting last year. This category includes Medicaid home and community based waivers and care provided in residential care facilities, so it is a vital part of the LTC marketplace. We focused only on nursing home* and home health expenditures before.

Heads Up: This may be the most important LTC Bullet we publish all year. It is the twenty-third in a row we’ve done annually to analyze the federal government’s enormous, and we argue, often detrimental, impact on long-term care financing. If you'd like to see the earlier versions, go here and search for “So What if the Government Pays.” You’ll find our yearly analyses of the data going all the way back to "So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC, 2002 Data Update."

------------------

"So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC, 2023 Data Update"

by

Stephen A. Moses

Ever wonder why LTC insurance sales and market penetration are so discouraging? Or why reverse mortgages are rarely used to pay for long-term care? Or why LTC service providers are always struggling to survive financially and still provide quality care? Read on.

Nursing Homes

America spent 211.3 billion on nursing facilities and continuing care retirement communities in 2023, a 10.5% increase compared to 2022. The percentage of these costs paid by Medicaid and Medicare has gone up over the past half century (from 26.8% in 1970 to 51.2% in 2023, up 24.4 % of the total) while out-of-pocket costs have declined in the same period (from 49.2% in 1970 to 26.1% in 2023, down 23.1% of the total). Source: Table 15: Nursing Care Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities Expenditures; Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2022.

So What? Consumers' liability for nursing home and CCRC costs has declined by almost half, down 47.0% in the past five decades while the share paid by Medicaid and Medicare has nearly doubled, up 91.0%.

No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care! No wonder they don't use home equity for LTC when Medicaid exempts at least $730,000 and in some states up to $1,097,000 of home equity (as of 1/1/25). No wonder nursing homes struggle financially—their dependency on parsimonious government reimbursements is increasing while their more profitable private payers are disappearing.

Unfortunately, these problems are even worse than the preceding data suggest. Over half of the so-called "out-of-pocket" costs reported by CMS are really just contributions toward their cost of care by people already covered by Medicaid. These are not out-of-pocket costs in terms of ASSET spend down, but rather only INCOME, most of which comes from Social Security benefits, another financially struggling government program. Thus, although Medicaid pays less than one-third of the cost of nursing home (and CCRC) care (30.4% of the dollars in 2023), it covers over two-thirds (67.0%) of all nursing home patient days.

So What? Medicaid pays in full or subsidizes nearly two-thirds of all nursing home patient days. Even if Medicaid pays nothing, with the entire amount due contributed from the recipient's income, the nursing home receives Medicaid's dismally low reimbursement rate.

No wonder the public is not as worried about nursing home costs as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care. No wonder nursing homes risk insolvency when so much of their revenue comes from Medicaid, often at reimbursement rates less than the cost of providing the care.

“We found that Medicaid payment rates for the average or median nursing home covered about 82 cents per every dollar of reported cost nursing homes incurred caring for Medicaid residents. For approximately 40% of nursing homes, Medicaid per diem payments covered 80% or less of their estimated per diem Medicaid costs." (Source: “In Case You Missed It: New HHS Report Reveals Significant Medicaid Shortfall For Nursing Homes,” AHCA/NCAL, October 22, 2024)

Private Health Insurance

Don't be fooled by the 9.8% of nursing home costs that CMS reports as having been paid by "private health insurance" in 2023. That category does not include private long-term care insurance. (See category definitions here.) No one knows how much LTC insurance pays toward nursing home care, because “In most cases, private long-term care insurance reimburses people for the expenses they pay out-of-pocket and would be classified as out-of-pocket spending in the NHE data.” (Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS),” KFF, July 8, 2024) Thus, a large proportion of insurance payments for nursing home care gets reported as if it were "out-of-pocket" payments. This fact further inflates the out-of-pocket figure artificially.

Assisted Living

How does all this affect assisted living facilities? According to the Genworth Cost of Care Survey for 2023, median ALF cost was $64,200 per year ($5,350 per month), up 1.4% from 2022, but up 24.4% since 2020. Although assisted living facilities remain mostly private pay, almost half of ALFs were “authorized or certified” to participate in Medicaid and only “a small minority of state Medicaid programs do not cover services in assisted living.” Furthermore, “Almost 1 in 5 residents relies on Medicaid to pay for daily services (18%).” (Find these latter two quotes under the source’s “Finance” tab.) Over time, assisted living facilities have followed nursing homes down the primrose path of accepting more and more revenue from Medicaid.

Many people who could afford assisted living by spending down their illiquid wealth, especially home equity, choose instead to take advantage of Medicaid nursing home benefits. Medicaid exempts one home and all contiguous property (up to $730,000 or $1,097,000 depending on the state), plus—in unlimited dollar amounts—one business, one automobile, prepaid burials, term life insurance, household furnishings, personal belongings and Individual Retirement Accounts not to mention wealth protected by sophisticated asset sheltering and divestment techniques marketed by Medicaid planning attorneys. Income rarely interferes with Medicaid nursing home eligibility unless such income exceeds the cost of private nursing home care.

So What? For most people, Medicaid nursing home benefits are easy to obtain without spending down assets significantly and Medicaid's income contribution requirement is usually much less expensive than paying the full cost of assisted living.

No wonder ALFs are struggling to attract enough private payers to be profitable. No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as they would be if they were more at risk for the cost of their care. This problem has been radically exacerbated in recent years because more and more state Medicaid programs are paying for assisted living as well as nursing home care, which makes Medicaid eligibility more desirable than ever.

Home Health Care

The situation with home health care financing is very similar to nursing home financing. According to CMS, America spent $147.8 billion on home health care in 2023, 11.2% more than in 2022 ($132.9). Medicare (35.0%) and Medicaid (34.6%) paid 69.6% of this total and private health insurance (not LTC insurance) paid 14.5%. Only 12.0% of home health care costs were paid out of pocket. The remainder came from several small public and private financing sources. Data source: Table 14: Home Health Care Services Expenditures; Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2022.

So What? Only one out of every eight dollars spent on home health care comes out of the pockets of patients and a large portion of that comes from the income (not assets) of people already on Medicaid.

No wonder the public does not feel the sense of urgency about this risk that they would if they were more personally at risk for the cost of their care.

Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care

This category includes a lot of long-term care spending that is not encompassed by the nursing home and home health NHE categories, such as Medicaid home and community based waivers and care provided in residential care facilities. The trends are very similar.

Americans spent $270.2 billion on these services in 2023, up 9.6% from $246.5 billion in 2022.

Medicare (1.7%) and Medicaid (60.3%) paid 62.0% of that total; private health insurance and other third parties contributed 34.7%; out-of-pocket expenditures amounted to only 3.3%. Data Source: Table 13: Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care Services Expenditures: Levels, Percent Change, and Percent Distribution, by Source of Funds: Selected Calendar Years 1970-2022

So what? Only one dollar out of $33 spent on these important LTC services comes out of the pocket of a private payer.

No wonder the public feels so little sense of worry about planning, saving, investing or insuring for long-term care.

Summary:

2023  (Billions)  Total  Medicaid Medicare Priv Insur OOP Other Payers

NH + CCRC

211.3 +10.5%

100%

64.2 +9.7%

30.4%

44.0 +4.3%

20.8%

20.6 +13.2%

9.7%

55.1 +14.1%

26.1%

27.4 +13.7%

13.0%

HH

147.8 +11.2%

100%

51.2

34.6%

51.8

35.0%

21.5

14.5%

17.7

12.0%

5.6

3.8%

Other

270.2 +9.6%

100%

162.8

60.3%

4.5

1.7%

17.6

6.5%

8.9

3.3%

76.3

28.2%

Total

629.3 +10.3%

100%

278.2 +9.2%

44.2%

100.3 +6.8%

15.9 %

59.7 +13.3%

9.5%

81.7 +14.3%

12.9%

109.3 +11.6%

17.4%

Across all three kinds of LTC services out-of-pocket expenditures account for only $1 in $7.75 spent. Half of this spending comes from income of people already on Medicaid. Thus only 6.45%, or $1 in $15.50 could have come from spend down of savings.

Bottom line, people only buy insurance against real financial risk. As long as they can ignore the risk, avoid the premiums, and get government to pay for their long-term care when and if such care is needed, they will remain in denial about the need for LTC insurance. As long as Medicaid and Medicare are paying for a huge proportion of all nursing home and home health care costs while out-of-pocket expenditures remain only nominal, nursing homes and home health agencies will remain starved for financial oxygen.

The solution is simple. Target Medicaid financing of long-term care to the needy and use the savings to fund education and tax incentives to encourage the public to plan early to be able to pay privately for long-term care. For ideas and recommendations on how to implement this solution, see www.centerltc.com.

Note especially:

Medicaid’s $100 Billion Plus Leak” (2024)

Long-Term Care: The Solution” (2023) with the Paragon Health Institute at https://paragoninstitute.org/research-paper-page-moses-ltc-solution-20231002/

Long-Term Care: The Problem” (2022) with the Paragon Health Institute at https://paragoninstitute.org/long-term-care-the-problem/

Medicaid and Long-Term Care” (2020) at http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/Medicaid_and_Long-Term_Care.pdf

How to Fix Long-Term Care Financing” (2017), at http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/How-To-Fix-Long-Term-Care-Financing.pdf

In the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Congress took some significant steps toward addressing these problems. A cap was placed for the first time on Medicaid's home equity exemption and several of the more egregious Medicaid planning abuses were ended. But much more remains to be done. With the Age Wave cresting and threatening to crash over the next two decades, we can only hope it isn't too late already.

* Note that CMS changed the definition of National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories in 2011, adding for example Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) to Nursing Care Facilities. This change had the effect of reducing Medicaid's reported contribution to the cost of nursing home care from over 40% in 2008 to under one-third (32.8%) in 2009. CMS also created a new category called "Other Third Party Payers" (7.1%) which includes "worksite health care, other private revenues, Indian Health Service, workers' compensation, general assistance, maternal and child health, vocational rehabilitation, other federal programs, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, other state and local programs, and school health." For definitions of all NHEA categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.

Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform in Seattle, Washington. The Center's mission is to ensure quality long-term care for all Americans. Steve Moses writes, speaks and consults throughout the United States on long-term care policy. Learn more at www.centerltc.com or email smoses@centerltc.com.

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Updated Monday, January 6, 2025, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #25-001:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Long prior authorization waits for HCBS erode trust in healthcare system, study finds

  • Advocates score ‘win-win-win’ with new law setting up test program of assisted living for veterans

  • Cut swing-bed pay rates to match skilled nursing reimbursement and save billions, OIG tells CMS

  • In pivotal case, federal court rules in favor of HCBS for people with disabilities

  • Minimum wage increases in 21 states

  • Alzheimer’s Association releases new dementia diagnosis guidelines

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, December 30, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-047:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Act Now, Say Americans On Social Security Shortfalls

  • 2025 SSI, Spousal Impoverishment, and Medicare Savings Program Resource Standards

  • The business case for selling LTC insurance to small-business owners

  • The symptoms of dementia families are being urged to look out for this Christmas

  • Washington State Voters Keep Long-Term Care Tax

  • Nursing home, CCRC spending increases 9.5 percent, CMS says

  • Home health visits, admissions fall nationwide, industry report finds

  • Nine in 10 direct care HCBS providers grappling with staffing shortages: report

  • AHCA, LeadingAge make final argument in legal fight over staffing mandate

  • The cost of long-term care in America has grown — here's how you can prepare

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, December 16, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-046:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • MedPAC advises cutting home health payments by 7 percent, freezing hospice payments in ’26

  • HCBS now offered by more than 60 percent of CCRCs: survey

  • Expanding Medicare Advantage co-pays may leave nursing homes without cash they’ve earned

  • MedPAC again presses for 3% nursing home cut, despite increasing Medicare Advantage pressure

  • Legislation would help WA Cares be less bad for some

  • Antipsychotic meds worsen behavior, study shows; MDs defend, call for alternatives

  • Number of nursing homes declines 5%, while penalties skyrocket

  • Planning ahead with Medicaid

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, December 13, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: PUBLIC POLICY PRINCIPLES FOR LONG-TERM CARE

LTC Comment: What matters most for long-term care and how to achieve it, after the ***news.***

*** ILTCI ’25 PHILLY is just around the corner (March 9-12). Register here now to lock in early-bird attendee discounts. Organizers report you can find “the working titles for all sessions currently proposed for ILTCI 2025” here. They’ll release the final schedule soon and the mobile app for attendees in late January. ***

 

LTC BULLET: PUBLIC POLICY PRINCIPLES FOR LONG-TERM CARE

LTC Comment: Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform closes 2024 with a new report. The paper’s Abstract follows. Find the full text here and the entire reports archive here.

Thank you for supporting the Center for nearly 27 years. We invite you to redouble your support for our work in 2025 as the challenges and opportunities are greater than ever before. Real public policy change for the better is more realistically possible right now than it has been for two decades. Seize the moment.

Long-Term Care: Principles, Policies, Proposals, and Petitions

Abstract: The challenge to provide and fund long-term care (LTC) for a rapidly aging population confounds scholars and policymakers. America’s current LTC system is expensive, dominated by public financing, and heavily regulated, but it fails to deliver the kinds and quality of care consumers prefer. Unintended consequences of well-intentioned public policies account for this poor outcome. In 1965, Medicaid funded LTC for everyone “whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical services … .” This open-ended LTC funding source caused excessive utilization of Medicaid LTC benefits, unleashed explosive public spending, obviated the need for people to plan for LTC risk and cost, led to cost control measures that caused access and quality problems, resulted in low provider reimbursements that created caregiver shortages, and impeded the development of the home and community-based services options consumers prefer. To reverse these negative outcomes and deliver an affordable LTC system that provides the care people want in the venues they prefer, Medicaid must (1) pay LTC providers market rates, (2) limit eligibility to the needy who have actually spent down private income and resources for medical or LTC expenses, (3) cover the full range of LTC services and venues, (4) ensure access and quality across the care continuum, (5) regulate minimally relying primarily on market competition to ensure quality, and (6) focus LTC spending back onto the aging and disabled instead of the young and able. Reconfiguring Medicaid around these public policy objectives will achieve the positive results described and explained below.

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Updated Monday, December 9, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-045:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicare spending jumps 27 percent when patients leave Medicare Advantage plans

  • Legislative leaders differ on causes of and solutions to Washington budget hole

  • Reintroduction of bill to cover catastrophic long-term care needs gets support from senior living advocates

  • Federal judge: Congressional action gives providers ‘legitimate argument’ against nursing home staffing mandate

  • Nursing Home Industry Wants Trump To Rescind Staffing Mandate

  • Homebound Seniors Living Alone Often Slip Through Health System’s Cracks

  • Lifestyle factors can predict dementia risk decades before diagnosis, study finds

  • What’s next for long-term care?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, December 6, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: MY LTC POLICY WISH LIST

LTC Comment: WA Cares survived but national politics is upside down. What’s happening and how can we make the most of it? My wish list after the ***news.***

*** REGISTRATION IS OPEN for ILTCI ’25. The Inter-Company LTC Insurance Conference will convene March 9-12, 2025 at the Philadelphia Marriott Downtown in Philadelphia, PA. Register here. Organizers say “Our agenda includes numerous educational sessions over two days across seven tracks with ample time for networking and reconnecting with colleagues. We still have room for exhibitors and sponsors! Please contact us at info@iltciconf.org if you are interested in either opportunity to showcase your products and services to our attendees.” ***

*** 12/2/2024, “What’s next for long-term care?,” by Stephen A. Moses, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “Most of long-term care’s problems — including impaired access and quality, institutional bias, interminable home-care waits, paid caregiver shortages, and excessive dependence on unpaid family and friends — are the direct result of too much reliance (61% of $400 billion in 2022 LTC spending) on Medicaid’s parsimonious reimbursements (70% of private-pay rates) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ overbearing regulation (such as uncompensated staffing mandates). This LTC market status quo has pertained for decades. But America is experiencing a political inflection point. A rare opportunity looms to move away from central planning toward freer markets, from government dependency toward individual responsibility, and from heavy-handed regulation toward unfettered competition. What would a LTC marketplace reflecting the full implementation of those changes look like?”

LTC Comment: Click through and read on for my formula to fix long-term care once and for all. ***

 

LTC BULLET: MY LTC POLICY WISH LIST

LTC Comment: As we close out 2024, like it or lump it, big changes are afoot. Reminds me of the definition of “crisis” that JFK popularized: “danger and opportunity.” As we enter a tumultuous period of political and economic change, it seems like a good time to imagine (1) what we would like long-term care (LTC) to look like in the future and (2) how we might achieve that vision.

Imagining the ideal LTC service delivery and financing system is the easy part. We envision every aging American having affordable access to high quality extended care in the venue of their choice—home care, assisted living, or a well-staffed nursing home when medically necessary. The sad fact is that today’s LTC looks nothing like that ideal. See “Long-Term Care: The Problem” for details.

The tough part of achieving our LTC vision, the part that has eluded scholars, think tanks, and special commissions for decades, is to reconfigure incentives in the LTC marketplace so that most people place a high enough priority on LTC planning and they prepare early to be able to pay privately for care when they need it. Long-Term Care: The Solution” explains how to make that happen.

Today, I want to address a different question. What would the LTC marketplace need to look like to achieve the elusive ideal LTC service delivery and financing system? Let’s take it step by step.

First and foremost, everyone should pay the same market-based price for LTC. No more Medicaid rates below the cost of care that have to be balanced by (i.e., cost-shifted into) exorbitant private-pay rates that regular people cannot afford. That single distortion ramifies through the whole LTC market causing access and quality problems and caregiver shortages due to inadequate compensation. It causes excessive reliance on institutional care (which people would rather avoid) to save the government money instead of the home care people prefer, but which Medicaid cannot afford (without long waiting lists). So, let Medicaid pay market rates for LTC. That would relieve the many problems the program’s meager reimbursement rates have caused.

But, “whoa,” all the experts will respond. Where will Medicaid come up with all the extra money to pay market rates? I say “no extra money is needed. Less will suffice in fact.” The problem is not that Medicaid spends too little, but that it covers too many enrollees. That’s not fixable overnight, but it is fixable. Here’s the underlying problem. The Social Security Act authorized Medicaid to provide LTC to individuals “whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical services … .” That open-ended mandate to fund LTC for anyone who cannot afford it overwhelmed Medicaid with too many recipients and created a moral hazard by desensitizing the public to LTC risk and cost. Thus, few people plan early for LTC and most depend on Medicaid if they encounter high LTC costs late in life.

From the start, Medicaid defined the inability to afford LTC in such a way that no one could afford it and nearly everyone qualified for assistance. High income was no problem because Medicaid deducts private medical and LTC costs from income before applying a “low-income” limit. High assets don’t interfere because most large assets, such as home equity and IRAs, are exempt. Any remaining countable assets are easily removed by using them to purchase exempt assets as explained in Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak.

So, Medicaid policy sent the message that “you don’t need to worry about LTC. If you ever need it, government will provide.” That message was never explicit. In fact, consumers were urged to insure for LTC so they would not lose their life savings to the cost of LTC. But because that risk was never real and most people ended up receiving paid care if and when needed, the thoroughly deficient Medicaid-dominated system prevailed and private LTC planning languished.

Here’s what needs to change to end this vicious downward cycle. We must eliminate the ways middle class and affluent people qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits while preserving wealth. These are the most critical measures to pursue:

Stop allowing the purchase of exempt assets to spend down unlimited resources artificially. Instead, treat asset spend down the same as income spend down, which is limited to deducting actual, documented private medical or LTC expenditures.

Bring seniors’ $14 trillion of home equity into the LTC financing system by eliminating or vastly reducing Medicaid’s home equity exemption. At its current level between $713,000 and $1.071,000, Medicaid’s misplaced generosity diverts nearly all home equity away from LTC funding, enough alone to solve most of LTC’s many access and quality problems.

Stop Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts and Medicaid Compliant Annuities from diverting vast sums of private wealth from LTC spending into taxpayer-financed Medicaid expenditures. These legal gimmicks, used exclusively by the affluent clients of Medicaid planning specialists, should be illegal.

Medicaid’s 5-year asset transfer look-back is too short to discourage intentional self-impoverishment to qualify for LTC benefits. Expand it to 20 years. As home ownership and transfers are publicly recorded by county assessors and recorders, a 20-year look back rule would be easily administered. It would end one of the most commonly recommended early LTC planning methods.

End systemic LTC racism. Today, affluent Medicaid planners’ clients access the best Medicaid facilities and services to the exclusion of needier groups, including racial and socio-economic minorities, by using “key money” to purchase red-carpet access the less privileged cannot afford.

Give Medicaid back to the vulnerable aged and disabled by reversing the program’s new focus on able-bodied, working-age adults—with a much higher federal reimbursement percentage for these enrollees.

Inform the public about the loss of Medicaid as a late-life wealth preserving safety net for the middle class and affluent. Establish and promulgate new LTC planning goals for consumers to achieve no later than age 65 as a condition for later Medicaid help with catastrophic costs.

Allow states to experiment with creative ways to do more with less by encouraging and approving waivers that exchange federal matching fund limits for more state-level LTC policy flexibility.

Closing LTC Comment: Achieving the ideal LTC service delivery and financing system is not as difficult as most believe. All that’s needed is to give LTC the priority it deserves. Eliminate Medicaid as a late-life wealth preserving welfare-based safety net. That will incentivize people to draw on sources of wealth they are accumulating anyway—home equity, retirement savings and life insurance—to fund LTC if needed. With those sources of wealth at risk for the first time, private LTC insurance in all its many forms will revive as a major source of LTC financing. Vast new sums of private funding for LTC at market rates will revitalize the system. To fix LTC once and for all this is what must be done.

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Updated Monday, December 2, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-044:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • New video series profiles struggles, successes of family caregivers

  • Affordability of long-term care systems in times of rapid population ageing

  • Planning for Long-Term Care: A Survey of Midlife and Older Women

  • Measuring income of the aged in household surveys: evidence from linked administrative records

  • DHS to offer nearly 65K additional visas for FY 2025, aiding long-term care

  • Larger nursing home chains linked to lower staffing

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, November 25, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-043:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Senior living groups pledge to educate incoming administration on importance of federal programs to older adults

  • Half of Americans in survey concerned about becoming a burden to loved ones

  • BREAKING: Trump taps Dr. Oz to head CMS

  • Study: Medicaid Reimbursements Don’t Meet Care Costs

  • More than 80% of US adults may be obese, overweight by 2050, study forecasts

  • Suspension on long-term care insurance enrollments will last until at least 2026

  • Confusing initiative titles should not be a thing

  • Report: Dementia deaths fell in nursing homes, rose in private homes from 2018 to 2022

  • Trump administration likely to kill Medicaid 80/20 rule, expert predicts

  • MA plans shed sickest patients in their final year of life, shifting costs back to government

  • WA Cares survives vote, but ‘work to be done’ on LTC program

  • Can I Protect Assets After My Mother is Admitted to a Nursing Home?

  • Medicare Part B Premium to Climb 5.9% in 2025

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, November 11, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-042:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • CMS gives nursing homes months more to complete onerous revalidation process

  • Unrecognized cognitive impairment in vulnerable older adults is ubiquitous, says study

  • Genworth Begins to File New Long-Term Care Insurance Policy

  • Nursing home staffing mandate ‘dead’ with Trump win, but workforce, pay challenges persist

  • Initiative to roll back Washington’s long-term care program fails

  • PHE Funds Wind-Down Raises Concerns of ‘Severely Restricting’ Access to Nursing Homes

  • Study: People with dementia more apt to be admitted to nursing homes with lower star ratings

  • Unhappy Medicare Plan Issuers Zero Out Agent Commissions

  • This long-term care provider has turned on an overseas golden spigot to fill its nursing ranks

  • Controlling your destiny

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, November 8, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: WA CARES STALKING HORSE SURVIVES

LTC Comment: Washington State ballot Initiative 2124 failed. So what? We opine below.

 

LTC BULLET: WA CARES STALKING HORSE SURVIVES

LTC Comment: All of a sudden long-term care (LTC) is politically relevant. Both Presidential winner Donald J. Trump and loser Kamala Harris promised to help struggling families care for their aging, frail or infirm loved ones. But the growing challenge to provide and fund LTC is nothing new.

For decades, policymakers sought to control the rising costs of LTC, which reached $400 billion in 2022, with Medicaid accounting for 61% of this amount. Innumerable analysts, commissions, and think tanks have proposed a variety of solutions. But nearly all of them gravitate in one direction.

The most common LTC policy recommendation is to add this service to Medicare or create a new mandatory, payroll-funded entitlement program similar to Social Security. While such a proposal is where most studies end up, the plan has never garnered much national political support.

Out of frustration with this federal-level dead end, several states began working on plans of their own. So far, only Washington state has implemented a statewide LTC program based on collecting compulsory payroll deductions. Under WA Cares, workers contribute 0.58% of their paychecks and may receive up to $36,500 in benefits if they need assistance with three or more activities of daily living, such as transferring, dressing, or bathing.

Advocates say WA Cares would relieve families of some of the LTC burden and save Medicaid money. Critics claim the program’s benefits are too small to make a difference and that Washingtonians need their incomes now, not in the form of another government promise of aid in the distant future.

WA Cares was on the ballot in Washington this year. Initiative 2124 proposed to make the program voluntary. Actuaries and LTC experts believe that would plunge the program into a fiscal death spiral. As the election approached, polls predicted diametrically opposite results.

survey of voters in July indicated approval of the initiative, thus dooming the program. A more recent poll found voters appeared more likely to reject the initiative, hence supporting the program as is. Another October poll showed 45% in favor of the initiative making the program optional, effectively killing it, 33% preferring to keep it as is, and 22% undecided.

We now know the outcome. Voters rejected Initiative 2124. WA Cares will remain a compulsory program to which workers must contribute regardless of their preference. Likely the program will encourage other states to follow a similar course and it could revitalize calls for a national-level program of the same kind.

Voters rejected WA Cares at the ballot box twice (Advisory Vote 20 and SJR 8212) after the state legislature and Governor Jay Inslee imposed it on them in 2019. Now they’ve changed course acceding to this partial socialization of LTC risk and cost.

One thing is certain, WA Cares is a trial run for progressives’ favored solution to socialize LTC risk and cost. On the positive side, we will now have a state-level test of this kind of program. Whether it succeeds or fails could have much wider ramifications for the prospects of such a program nationally.

Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, a visiting fellow with the Paragon Health Institute and the author of Paragon’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.”

LTC Comment: Here’s some post-election commentary from thoughtful analysts we follow.

Elizabeth New, Policy Analyst, Director, Centers for Worker Rights and Health Care, Washington Policy Center. Ms. New observed that people were confused about how to vote on 2124 if they wanted the tax to be optional. They would say to her "Yes! Vote no on this initiative. Get rid of WA Cares!" She tried to explain that a "yes" vote made the tax optional, thus dooming the program.
LTC Comment: Who knows how much of the final result was simply misunderstanding the options?

Stephen D. Forman, Senior Vice-President, Long Term Care Associates shared the following:

•   “WA Cares was designed to meet the needs of, at most, 2 out of 10 Washington adults. So, for the other 8 out of 10 residents who are not well-served by WA Cares, what’s your LTC plan?”

•   “As I wrote in my last piece [LTC Bullet: Guest Column, "Yes on I-2124"], an impressive cadre of organizations—including the state itself—emerged over the summer to evangelize about the value of LTC insurance—great! I hope they’ll keep the momentum going for LTC Awareness Month and beyond since, even with WA Cares, the majority of Washingtonians lack a plan for long-term care.”

•   “If WA Cares is going to be with us for the long-term, then it’s time for Washington to commit to basic consumer protections which have been lacking. Not only do consumers deserve better when it comes to transparency and disclosure regarding rates, limitations and exclusions, triggers, inflation, etc., but—given the quality of information I’ve encountered during hearings and forums—I’d recommend requiring LTC training of consumer-facing WA Cares representatives, if not the entire LTSS Trust Commission.”

“Why do I say WA Cares meets the needs of at most 2 out of 10 adults? The WA population is about 8 million, of whom 6 million are adults. Milliman shows as few as 2.7 million covered to as many as 3.4 million. The latest Fiscal Note shows 3.9 million enrolled. At the lowest estimate, 2.7/8.0 = 34% of all Washingtonians are covered. At the highest, 3.9/6.0 = 65% of all Washingtonians. In either event, WA Cares says its 1-yr benefit period is adequate to cover about 1/3rd of claims, and that 2/3rds of beneficiaries will need additional coverage. So… .33 * .34 = 1 out of 10 whose needs are fully met (low end), and .33 * .65 = 2 out of 10 whose needs are fully met (high end).

One other interesting note about I-2124. The last poll before the election showed 45% voting yes, 33% no, and 22% undecided. In the end, ALL of those undecided voted no. They broke 100% no. I suspect this had something to do with the massive amount of special interest money (SEIU primarily) that resulted in unavoidable and ubiquitous ads over the past few weeks. The $8 – 9 million contributed by the NO campaign would’ve ranked it among the larger standalone LTC insurers by new business premium (!)

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Updated Monday, November 4, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-041:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • 13 percent of direct care workers work in residential care settings such as assisted living: analysis

  • MA recipients have fewer unnecessary medical services compared with traditional Medicare beneficiaries: study says

  • Medicaid HCBS wait lists are getting longer: report

  • When LTC planning takes an unexpected turn

  • Majority of Gen X, baby boomers anticipate needing at least as much in retirement as current earnings

  • Amid Workforce Shortages, KFF Examines Characteristics of Direct Care Workers and Shares Their Perspectives

  • LeadingAge: Diverting patients from SNF to home health does more harm than good

  • LeadingAge CEO blasts ‘irresponsible’ political leaders, urges ‘courage’ to fix long-term care system

  • 2024 Election: 3 weeks out

  • Long-term care policies matter

  • Study links for-profit hospice with major savings for Medicare

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, October 28, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-040:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Washington's statewide initiatives saw big shift in support. What happened?

  • New Report Reveals U.S. Family Caregivers Perform Equivalent of a Staggering $873.5 Billion Worth of Labor, Would Surpass Revenue of Top Global Companies

  • My 74-year-old husband will likely go into a nursing home within the next 5 years or so — is it immoral to put our assets into a trust ASAP and protect them from the US government?

  • Boomers beware: Tapping home equity to pay for long-term care carries serious risks

  • Only 17 percent of older adults feel confident about their long-term care plans: study

  • 1-in-2 working Americans underestimates their life expectancy by 5-plus years, resulting in skewed retirement income goals — how to make your money last in later life

  • Over Half Of Americans Choose Their Benefits By Price During Open Enrollment

  • Should WA Cares be Optional? The case for YES on I-2124 - YouTube

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, October 25, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: CATASTROPHIC LTC IRONY

LTC Comment: Another report insists we need a big new federal program to cover catastrophic LTC costs. Ironically, we already have one that makes a new one impossible to achieve. We explain after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** LTC CLIPPING SERVICE. Damon highlighted this feature of the Center for LTC Reform’s suite of benefits in Long-Term Care News and Analysis, September 27, 2024. Here’s one more reason to subscribe as a premium member of the Center. Catch revealing articles like this one in real time.

9/11/2024, “Welfare Is What’s Eating the Budget,” by Phil Gramm and Jodey Arrington, Wall Street Journal (WSJ has a pay wall but this link goes to a free version of the article on the AEI website)
Quote: “Since funding for the War on Poverty ramped up in 1967, welfare payments received by the average work-age household in the bottom quintile of income recipients has risen from $7,352 in inflation-adjusted 2022 dollars to $64,700 in 2022, the last year with available household income data. This 780% increase was 9.2 times the rise in income earned by the average American household. … After counting all transfer payments as income to the recipients and taxes as income lost by taxpayers, and adjusting for household size, the average households in the bottom, second and middle quintiles all have roughly the same incomes—despite dramatic differences in work effort. With the explosion of means-tested transfer payments, the portion of prime work-age persons in the bottom quintile who actually work has fallen to 36% from 68%. In the second quintile, households with a work-age adult who actually works have declined to 85% from 90%. While work effort fell in the bottom two quintiles, the percentage of middle-income households with a prime work-age person who works has risen to 92% from 86%. … Demand for reform would be even stronger if the public understood how generous social-welfare benefits are. In reporting household income, the Census Bureau doesn’t count 88% of transfer payments made to households that are defined as being poor. The census doesn’t count refundable tax credits (for which the beneficiary receives a check from the Treasury), food-stamp debit cards, free medical care through Medicaid, or benefits from about 100 other federal transfer payments as income to welfare recipients. When those benefits are counted as income, 80% of those who are today counted as being poor are no longer poor, and almost half have incomes equivalent to American middle-income earners.” (Emphasis added)
LTC Comment: Don’t miss this extraordinary article. When the bottom three income quintiles have the same income after counting welfare benefits, but the middle quintile works and pays taxes while the bottom quintile mostly receives welfare, is it any wonder the two bottom quintiles’ work ethic is disappearing? ***

*** REPRESENTATIVE TOM SUOZZI (D-NY) plans a long-term care conference for this spring. He wants wide participation to create and enact legislation to address the LTC needs of the US population. His previous legislation, the WISH Act, would have created a public-private partnership, with the federal government responsible for 'catastrophic' costs. We thank Stephen D. Forman of Center-corporate-member LTC Associates for tipping us to this item. We can only hope the forthcoming conference attendees will consider the content of today’s LTC Bullet. ***
 

LTC BULLET: CATASTROPHIC LTC IRONY

LTC Comment: Kudos to Eileen Tell for writing and the Jewish Federations of America for publishing “A Dynamic Campaign to Educate and Engage Constituencies for a Federal Catastrophic Long-Term Care Insurance Program.” This final report published in December 2023 and circulated last month by Leading Age's LTSS Center does a worthy job of summarizing the challenges facing America’s LTC service delivery and financing system. It seeks consensus of “stakeholders” around a proposed new LTC program based on private sector solutions for the front-end LTC risk and a new government program to cover the back-end, catastrophic risk. This approach to the LTC challenge is not new, but may finally be getting some traction.

Marc Cohen and Judith Feder did early research proposing such a plan with financing to come from compulsory payroll deductions. In May 2018, we critiqued their proposal in Feder Fantasy Fatally Flawed (Cohen Contribution Notwithstanding), LTC Evasion and Feder/Cohen Proposal Ignores LTC Problems’ Cause. Nevertheless, then (and now again) New York Congressman Tom Suozzi introduced “The WISH—Well-Being Insurance for Seniors to be at Home Act,” largely embodying the Feder/Cohen catastrophic plan. That bill went nowhere but Suozzi, having returned to Congress after a failed run for NY governor, will likely reintroduce it. So it is important to remind ourselves what’s wrong with the approach.

To do that, we’ll pull a few quotes from the Tell report and respond with our “LTC Comments.”

Tell Report: “For the many reasons that will be discussed in this report, the current system of a separate private market for the few that can afford it and qualify for coverage and the option of spending down life savings to qualify for an already over-burdened public Medicaid program for the balance of those who cannot afford private financing fails everyone.” (p. 2)

LTC Comment: This is the first hint of what’s wrong with the analysis. The report presumes and repeatedly states that people must “spend down” their life savings for LTC before becoming eligible for Medicaid benefits. If that were true, people would worry about and plan for LTC. But it isn’t true and they don’t plan. For a full explanation, see “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.” Bottom line: people qualify for Medicaid LTC regardless of income level if their medical and LTC expenses are high enough as they usually are for seniors in need of expensive LTC. They qualify based on assets if they hold their wealth in exempt form. Most large assets seniors own are exempt, including home equity, one business, a vehicle, prepaid burial expenses, IRAs in payout status, etc. Countable assets are easily reduced by using them to purchase exempt resources. See Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak. Thus, the Tell report’s appeal for a new catastrophic LTC program is based on a false premise.

Tell Report: “Removing the catastrophic risk component would make plans less expensive and might enable more relaxed underwriting for certain kinds of risks. … A vibrant set of private sector product options that could serve consumers well during the non-catastrophic ‘waiting period’ within the context of a Federal Catastrophic program were identified.” (p. 2)

LTC Comment: This thinking is folly. Dumping the expensive catastrophic LTC risk on government, which is already hopelessly in debt (nearly $36 trillion) and beholden to huge unfunded liabilities for current entitlement programs, is fiscally suicidal. Furthermore, insurance is inherently private and individual, not social and collective. The purpose of private insurance is to inform people of the cost of the risk they are taking. So, when government eliminates catastrophic flood risk, people build irresponsibly on flood plains and in the path of hurricanes, unaware or uncaring about risk and cost. For the same reason, people ignore LTC risk and cost that government has removed. The role of insurance is to replace the small risk of catastrophic loss with the certainty of an affordable premium. That is properly a private sector role. Turning over the smaller, front-end, waiting-period LTC risk to the private sector obviates the value of private insurance. It turns LTC insurance into a clone of Medicare supplemental policies, similar to using car insurance for routine service instead of for crashes.

Tell Report: “Not only is there the matter of the program cost, but how it will be paid for. The ‘pay for’ is likely of paramount importance to gaining consensus. The political challenge is best characterized as opposition among Republicans to creating a new government entitlement, and broad opposition among both parties to a tax increase, despite the large and growing costs to all sides of ‘doing nothing.’”

LTC Comment: Well, yeah. That’s the history of LTC financing reform since Claude Pepper tackled the issue in 1990. Why expect anything different today when the debt and unfunded entitlement liabilities are so much higher? Looking for a new LTC funding source without asking and answering why LTC financing is so inadequate in the first place is a fool’s errand. Yet there is nothing in this report or in most of the legions of similar studies produced by interest groups, think tanks, commissions, committees and politicians to answer that question.

Tell Report: “LTC costs are not covered, unless you are poor or become poor paying for care. Even though it is there as a safety net, Medicaid has strict eligibility rules, and limited or no access to some of the more desired, and in many cases the most appropriate types of care (e.g., assisted living or in-home care). … Only 25% of people ages 40-69 said they had done any kind of planning for LTC (where even just talking to your family or doing research on-line counted as ‘planning’ steps.)” (p. 3)

LTC Comment: Here’s the reason this report misses the essence of both the LTC problem and its solution. Do people have to become poor by paying for care before Medicaid helps? That’s the “fallacy of impoverishment” I explained 34 years ago in The Gerontologist. Poor people qualify, but so do high-income and high-asset people. There is no systematic evidence that wide swaths of the aging public spend down their savings for LTC. The myth of Medicaid spend down relies only on anecdotes. Basing the need for a big new government LTC program on that false premise is unwise. Instead of searching for an elusive “pay for” as these analysts do, it makes much more sense to look at the potential LTC funding sources that are right in front of their eyes. There is more than enough wealth currently exempted by Medicaid in home equity ($14 trillion), retirement savings ($35.4 trillion) and life insurance ($21.2 trillion) to fund LTC for most people and relieve the fiscal strain on Medicaid. The solution is for Medicaid to stop protecting that wealth from LTC risk so that people have a stronger reason to plan, save, invest and insure for LTC while they are still young, healthy and affluent enough to prepare. For all the details on how to achieve this objective practically and flood the LTC service delivery system with desperately needed private financing read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers. To find enormous sources of private funds for LTC, check out Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak.

WISHing for elusive/illusive “pay-fors” with no comprehension of the LTC problem’s cause leads nowhere … just as it has through decades of the same academic wild-goose chases.

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Updated Monday, October 21, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-039:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • My sisters want to hide $170,000 of our mother’s money from Medicaid by adding their names to her bank account. What should I do?

  • Key Facts About Medigap Enrollment and Premiums for Medicare Beneficiaries

  • The Truth About Your Future

  • UnitedHealth, CVS and Humana increasingly deploy AI and deny post-acute care claims, Senate report finds

  • Millions of Aging Americans Are Facing Dementia by Themselves

  • WA voters poised to reject two initiatives, accept other two

  • Most seniors with cognitive impairment unable to access home care, researchers find

  • Prevention Is the Best Long-term Care Planning Strategy

  • Catching Up on Key Policy Developments

  • Report reveals how Medicaid payments stack up against nursing homes’ cost of care

  • KFF Examines Vice President Harris’ Proposal to Broaden Medicare Coverage of Home Care Services

  • Home health referrals increase but acceptances decline, report finds

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, October 14, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-038:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Long-Term Care Out of Reach for 6.5 Million 'Near Dual' American Seniors
  • A Bad Policy Proposal from Kamala Harris: Home Health Care Benefits in Medicare
  • Harris Home Care Plan: Right Problem, Wrong Solution
  • Distrust of assisted living helps drive older adults’ desire to age in place
  • Who Will Pay For Ms. Harris’s Long-Term At-Home Care Proposal?
  • This Surprising Hobby May Help Keep Your Brain Sharp Later in Life
  • LTCR Joins LTC Global
  • Prevention Is the Best Long-term Care Planning Strategy
  • Harris Wants Medicare to Cover Home Care for More Seniors

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, October 11, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC Comment: Today’s special Guest Column brings us Stephen D. Forman, Senior Vice-President of LTC Associates, who weighs in on Washington State’s currently-compulsory public long-term care insurance program, after this ***message.***

*** CLTCR Premium Membership  --  Center for Long-Term Care Reform premium members receive our full suite of individual membership benefits including:

  • All LTC Bullets and E-Alerts
  • Access to our Members-Only Zone website and Almanac of Long-Term Care
  • Subscription to our Clipping Service
  • Email/phone access to Steve Moses for 24-hour turnaround queries

Our Premium Membership is designed to give you a competitive advantage in your long-term care profession. Your increased knowledge of the critical issues and challenges we face in the field of long-term care service delivery and financing equals improved professional success for you and better LTC services for your clients and for those who have no choice but to rely on scarce public resources. 

Stay on the forefront of professional knowledge and help us fight for rational long-term care policy reform by contacting Damon at 206-283-7036 / damon@centerltc.com to start your Premium Membership immediately or go directly to our secure online subscription page and sign up for as little as $21 per month. ***
 

LTC Bullet:  Guest Column, "Yes on I-2124"

LTC Comment: The fate of Washington State’s WA Cares Fund hangs in the balance as voters will soon decide whether to make participation in the State’s long-term care insurance plan voluntary, putting at risk its long-term financial viability. Could WA Cares Fund go the way of the CLASS Act? For thoughtful analysis of such issues, we often turn to Washington State resident, author and long-term care insurance expert, Stephen D. Forman. For previous installments on the WA Cares Fund’s saga by Mr. Forman, see also: “LTC Bullet: The WA Cares Fund Gets a Bad Wrap” and “LTC Bullet: Kill or Cure WA Cares?.” In the meantime, here’s his latest.


"Yes on I-2124"
by
Stephen D. Forman

Spend any time listening to opponents of ballot Initiative 2124[1]—that is, those who are fighting to maintain mandatory employee participation in WA Cares—and a powerful message comes through. They believe passionately in long-term care insurance.

“Our loved ones can’t afford to lose our long-term care benefits,” says this ad.

“By ending our long-term care insurance program, I-2124 will take away help from family caregivers who help their older parents, spouses, and other loved ones remain in their homes for as long as possible, where they consistently tell us they would rather be,” says AARP of WA.

These WA Cares supporters not only love LTC insurance, but evangelize as if they always have, and already fear losing a benefit that’s not available until July, 2026. But if this is true, why haven’t these true believers been taking our calls?

Many would love insurance all right—just not from us. These consumers have no desire to buy from, or work in partnership with, Big Insurance, a market they’ve been told to distrust. One can take the temperature of the room from this paper-cliché villainizing “for profit insurance companies.”

But wanting is not the same as valuing.

Our profession has learned from decades of AHIP Buyer vs Non-Buyer surveys that non-buyers undervalue LTC insurance, just one-quarter of whom would be willing to spend what a policy actually costs. Most have some appreciation, but when shown the actual price, non-buyers backpedal: “Oh, in that case, I don’t value it that much.”

For most proponents—but not an insignificant minority we’ll get to in a moment—this has been their WA Cares dynamic.

Because an employee’s premium rises with income, most who’ve so far chosen not to contribute to WA Cares earn roughly 3.9x the median wage: $194,000/yr on average.[2] If more employees were given the opportunity to opt-out, and remaining insureds were asked to pay an unsubsidized rate—that is, would they still value WA Cares—I-2124 opponents seem convinced the answer would be, “Not at that price!”

Heck, here are I-2124 opponents in their own words: “It’s very difficult for any of us to imagine NEEDING [sic] services or support at home after an illness or injury so we will be tempted to not pay the premium.”

If I-2124 were to pass and WA Cares to become voluntary, you’ve been led to believe the sky will fall. You’ve been warned of an “insurance rate spiral.” But I find a measure of reassurance in Milliman’s modeling of a fully voluntary program. WA Cares could lose nearly 75 percent of its participants, and the resulting premium assessment might only need to double, to 1.14%[3].

The STC [short-term care] insurance market has been very rate stable, and their appropriately-rated blocks have tended to produce profits, not rate spirals.

Are there 775,000 motivated employees in Washington—25 percent of the original 3.1m—who value WA Cares sufficiently that they’d be willing to shell out—not 0.58%—but a 1.14% payroll tax—an average premium of $582 per year? Could WA Cares still command these glowing testimonials?

According to Ben Veghte, we may never know: “There’s no appetite in the Legislature to increase the premiums right now. And I don’t know if there will ever be.”

Perhaps I-2124 opponents are right to fear a voluntary program and its inability to lure even 775,000 people. After all, WA Cares already has a 100% voluntary program—the self-employed market. The state assumed that 40,000 self-employed would voluntarily opt-in during the first year, then another 25,000 every year thereafter. The last cumulative total I saw in April, 2024 had reached 620 volunteers.

Call me an optimist, but I actually think in a post-I-2124 world WA Cares could command a lot of voluntary interest—even 775,000 participants. The reason owes to that “not insignificant minority” I mentioned earlier. These are non-buyers with a quite understandable reason for “waiting” for WA Cares:

They’re commercially uninsurable.

The coalition against I-2124 has added groups such as the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and ALS Association to its roster, while making the point that it’s not about money: “Medical underwriting limits access to insurance regardless of the affordability of the policies.”[4]

On the other hand, “WA Cares covers all pre-existing conditions. That means that the 57% of non-elderly adults with pre-existing conditions can now get long-term care benefits if we need it, when we’d otherwise be stuck without an option.

There’s no denying WA Cares’ guaranteed insurability is its winningest proposition. The upshot is that—speaking in broad strokes—the individuals who are most vocally defending WA Cares are those who expect to file a claim on the first day they can, and to use the entire benefit. This is hardly breaking news: in the actuarial graphs it looks like a double black-diamond ski slope of claims.

Intuitively, it makes sense that if you removed most of the healthy insureds and left behind mostly claimants—and paid out $36,500[5] on each of them without even much time to earn interest—you’d soon have a problem on your hands. For context, the state anticipates paying out $1.87b in claims in FY 2027.

That’s why things couldn’t remain as they are if I-2124 passes: you’d have to take countermeasures. We’ll learn what contingencies the state has planned just six days before the election, on October 30th. I expect the LTSS Trust Commission will revisit the vesting provisions. The “3 of the last 6 years” rule has always felt like it was courting disaster, and lengthening the vesting period is one of the steps explicitly advised to counteract a rate spiral.

I exaggerate by saying everyone would file a claim immediately, of course, and as time goes on every new participant’s “immediately” can occur no sooner than three years after making their first premium assessment. Obviously, the longer the vesting period, the more defense against adverse selection. The part-time work requirement is another underwriting trick, borrowed from group/multi-life LTC.

As it is, not everyone agrees that rate spirals are inevitable, since not everyone agrees that we are good judges of our own future risk and need for care. Besides, the pool of money is not very substantial. To put the WA Cares benefit in perspective, it’s just 1/3rd the size of the maximum pool of money Penn Treaty was selling in WA eighteen years ago under its impaired risk policy series.[6] Some readers are allergic to the mention of Penn Treaty, but that policy series has had only a 20 percent rate increase, and its $263,525 benefit (2024, for those who bought inflation protection) is fully backed by the Washington Life & Disability Guaranty Association.[7] WA Cares is vulnerable to change every time the legislature meets, and nothing is guaranteed from year to year, not even so-called “vested” benefits, which the state could unwind prior to July, 2026.

I can’t tell you what will happen at the ballot box this November, when we celebrate the 24th LTC Awareness Month. No matter what happens, I say to our new friends, “Better late than never!”  I hope neither the state, its agencies, nor WA Cares surrogates lose their passionate belief in long-term care insurance.

(Many thanks to CLTCR friend Stephen D. Forman and corporate member Long Term Care Associates for this latest contribution to LTC Bullets.)


[1] The Fiscal Note for I-2124 can be found here.

[2] “Using the new ESD data, trended to 2022 levels, we project the average wages for the individuals opting out to be approximately $194,000 (as seen in Figure 3).”

[3] This represents the “full adverse selection” scenario: “To provide a specific example, take a 25% participation rate scenario. Under a 25% participation rate, for the high end of our results range, we assumed the individuals with both the 25% lowest wages, as well as the 25% poorest health status would be the only individuals to participate.”

[4] Some who think they are uninsurable may be mistaken: “If you have a pre-existing condition, such as cancer or diabetes, private insurers will not provide coverage.”

[5] “So $36,500 paid out on day one and we saw the tax, the the premium assessment, would need to be increased by 2 basis points… So changing the reimbursement on a daily level, we're just not seeing that moved the needle a significant amount since in general we're assuming that many beneficiaries will use the $36,500 benefit in total.” Annie Gunnlaugsson, March 21st, 2024.

[6] “We have also added a 3 Year Lifetime Maximum Benefit Period. You can still write up to a $100 a day in benefits and the same great Underwriting applies!” (August 1, 2006)WA-SR400(Rev)(7-06)

[7] SERFF Tracking LTCG-131225787, SERFF Tracking LTCG-131707810, SERFF Tracking LTCG-132437501
 

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Updated Monday, October 7, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-037:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • After recent increases, senior living resident fees projected to decline: Ziegler

  • Want to Retire on a Budget? Consider these U.S. Destinations with Affordable Health Care

  • Bipartisan bill would ease long-term care workforce shortage, advocates say, but ‘there’s more to be done’

  • Long-term care costs continue to rise, regardless of politics

  • Regulators Eye Rules for 600% Long-Term Care Insurance Rate Increases

  • Initiative 2124 would make WA Cares insurance program tax optional

  • Long-term care insurance: From crisis to opportunity

  • Nebraska woman spends $240K/year on care for husband with Alzheimer's - twice the cost of a private room in a nursing home facility. How aging at home is crushing Americans' finances

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, September 30, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-036:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Employees Desire Supplemental Health Benefits Amidst Rising Healthcare Costs, New York Life Survey Finds

  • 1-in-2 working Americans underestimates their life expectancy by 5-plus years, resulting in skewed retirement income goals — how to make your money last in later life

  • The Keys to Aging at Home? Frank Conversations and Financial Planning

  • 3 insurance types experts say seniors should buy now

  • America's Best Nursing Homes 2025

  • Expert says Medicaid, Medicare reform is critical and can save $2.1 trillion

  • 6 Key Retirement Changes Under SECURE 2.0 Act

  • What are the options for covering long-term care?

  • Nearly two-thirds of Americans fear Medicare will not be there when they need it

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Friday, September 27, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC Bullet:  Long-Term Care News and Analysis

LTC Comment:  Center for Long-Term Care Reform Premium members have the option to receive our LTC Clipping Service and weekly LTC E-Alerts newsletters.  Today, we’d like to share a sample of these members-only services with a wider audience.  Our topic is the news this week, so we’ll skip our usual ***news*** section and dive straight in.


LTC Bullet:  Long-Term Care News and Analysis

Many Center for Long-Term Care Reform Premium members are familiar with our LTC Clipping Service, and from what we hear, get great value from this benefit of Premium membership.

For those who don’t already know, our LTC Clipping Service is an excellent way to stay on top of current and critical long-term care news without having to spend hours a day researching on the internet.  We send our Clipping Service subscribers an average of 2-3 emails per workday with a must-read-article link, a pull quote and some brief analysis.  We’re sensitive to the fact that we all receive too many emails, so we’re very careful to send along only the most important LTC news items. 

If you’re reading this, chances are you play a valuable role in protecting people from the risk and cost of long-term care and to that end we think the Clipping Service allows our subscribers to be more effective doing so.  Based on their feedback, we think our subscribers feel the same.  For example:

In my entire 24- year career in the long term care insurance industry I have never seen such a spate of articles in popular media – including print, digital, radio, TV - highlighting long term care as one of the top worries of aging Americans facing retirement.  As a supporter of the Center for Long Term Care Reform and a subscriber to “LTC Clippings” I have been kept completely “in the loop” and fully up to date on the vastly increasing information flow about the need for LTC planning.  I can not only see what my prospects and clients are reading and hearing about the industry but also have good quality information to share with the “centers of influence” that depend on me for information.  The “clipping service” is just one of many benefits provided by the Center and I am grateful to Stephen and Damon Moses for providing a tool that has been so important over the years to the success of Franklin & Associates and Franklin Funding Reverse Mortgages. -- Barbara Franklin, CEO

Your clipping service is the best.  I seldom give out insurance company brochures to prospects, much preferring the third party endorsement of published articles that are far more believable than an insurance company brochure.  The news does a great job of creating urgency to act as well.  You bundle them and send to my inbox for me to use, wonderful!  I’m speaking to a group at lunch today and will be handing out an article that was published two days ago that you alerted me to.  Keep up the good work, saves me time, and makes me money. -- Romeo Raabe, www.TheLongTermCareGuy.com  

Please find below a sample collection of clippings we’ve sent to our Clipping Service subscribers over the past few months.  Read through them and if you think that receiving news items like these in real time would be valuable to you, please consider subscribing at the Premium membership level.  By doing so, you can stay on the forefront of professional knowledge and help us fight for rational long-term care policy reform. 

Contact Damon at 206-283-7036 / damon@centerltc.com to start your Premium Membership immediately or go directly to our secure online subscription page and sign up for as little as $21 per month.

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9/23/2024, “Nearly two-thirds of Americans fear Medicare will not be there when they need it,” by Nationwide, PRNewswire  

Quote: “Americans are increasingly concerned about the future of Medicare, with nearly two-thirds (63%) fearing the program will not be there when they need it, according to the annual Nationwide Retirement Institute® Health Care Costs in Retirement survey. When asked about their biggest retirement planning stressor, one in five (20%) selected Medicare running out of money.”

LTC Comment: Many people rely on the solvency of Medicare, but one particularly vulnerable group--nursing homes (and their residents)--depend on it to make up for low Medicaid reimbursements. Furthermore, the questionable financial viability of America’s entitlement programs is all the more reason to save, invest or insure for future healthcare and long-term care needs.

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9/22/2024, “You say you want a resolution?,” McKnights Long-Term Care News, by John O’Connor

Quote: “It’s clear the long-term care field is in a tough spot. At a time when worker shortages have never been more severe, regulators are pushing for minimum staffing benchmarks.

“One proposed response was a resolution to overturn the directive. But Republicans have now announced they won’t pursue that option, as it would face a certain veto from the Biden administration.

“The nursing home industry needs more than just regulatory demands — it needs real, targeted action. That means new policies where you invest in building a stronger long-term care workforce and ensure providers aren’t shortchanged by inadequate reimbursement.

The stakes are too high to rely on mandates that don’t address the core issues. What’s needed is a comprehensive, strategic plan to strengthen the long-term care industry — before things get really ugly.” (Emphasis added)

LTC Comment: One core issue that should be addressed is limiting access to Medicaid resources to those who truly have no other options and requiring those who can save, invest or insure for their long-term care needs to do so. This would divert many people away from overburdened and under-funded nursing homes and into care setting they prefer, thereby targeting scarce Medicaid resources to those who truly need it and improving conditions for all.

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9/19/2024, “Longer lives, divorces, smaller families mean more older adults are living alone,” Kathleen Steele Gaivin, McKnights Senior Living

Quote: “More older Americans are living alone, either by choice or by circumstances, than 50 years ago, according to the US Census Bureau.

“As of 2023, about 28% of people aged 65 and older lived by themselves, the agency said. That’s up from about 10% of older adults living alone in 1950.”

LTC Comment: The fraying of the familial safety net, combined with the demographic challenges brought by the cresting age wave, leaves LTCi poised as an even more valuable resource.

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9/16/2024, “What if Medicaid paid market rates?,” by Stephen A. Moses, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “Most of long-term care’s problems boil down to heavy dependency on low Medicaid reimbursement rates. The program paid 61% of total U.S. LTC spending in 2022 at about 70% of private-pay rates. Economists explain that government price fixing causes market disruptions. Set prices too low, and shortages occur.

“Providers are forced to compensate by compromising on services. Most complaints about questionable LTC quality, high cost, inadequate staffing, caregiver shortages, too much nursing home and too little home care, all the big challenges would improve or disappear entirely if Medicaid paid market rates.

“But something else will happen. Cost shifting to private payers in order to compensate for low Medicaid rates will no longer be necessary. The market rate for LTC will settle substantially below the private pay rate but well above the current Medicaid rate. Everyone, including private payers and Medicaid, will pay that market rate infusing the LTC service delivery system with desperately needed revenue and resolving most of the problems challenging LTC today.”

LTC Comment: Read this concise explanation of America’s LTC problem, and what to do about it, in Steve’s latest “Guest Column” for McKnights LTC News.

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9/12/2024, “The States Are Dangerously Dependent on Medicaid-Expansion Dollars,” by Gary D. Alexander, National Review

Quote: “A recent study by the Paragon Health Institute points out that a fundamental flaw with Medicaid expansion is its inequitable distribution of federal funds. As currently implemented, the program has the federal government covering 90 percent of the medical costs of able-bodied adults but only 50 to 75 percent of the costs of elderly, disabled, and child recipients — populations that tend to require the most expensive and intensive care. This creates a perverse incentive for states to prioritize the coverage of healthy adults, who are cheaper to care for, while the truly vulnerable are left underfunded. This imbalance isn’t just fiscally irresponsible — it’s morally wrong. The system effectively rewards many individuals who could seek insurance through other means, while it forces states to bear a heavier financial burden for those who genuinely depend on Medicaid for survival.”

LTC Comment: Upside down ethics and perverse incentives infect Medicaid in so many ways as we point out often here. Kudos to my Paragon Health Institute colleague Gary D. Alexander for shining the light of scrutiny on this example.

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9/2024, “Beyond the Numbers: Assisting Clients with LTC Concerns,” by Danielle Andrus, Journal of Financial Planning

Quote: “There are a lot of statistics that planners can employ to illustrate the risk that their clients will face regarding future care needs. A common one is that 70 percent of people who live to age 65 will need paid long-term care at some point. Bill Comfort, owner of Comfort Long-Term Care and director of training for the Certification in Long-Term Care (CLTC) designation and continuing education program, believes this overstates the true risk of needing care. ... Margie Barrie, a long-term care insurance specialist with ACSIA Partners, believes that whether you buy an insurance policy or not, everyone needs to have a plan for long-term care.”

LTC Comment: This article by the editor of the Journal of Financial Planning cites LTCI industry experts Bill Comfort and Margie Barrie at length. Click through to see what they have to say.

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8/28/2024, “I don't have a spare $150,000, so long-term care insurance is absolutely worth the cost,” by Angie Chapman, Business Insider

Quote: “With lifespans longer and families more spread out, it's essential that I think about long-term care. Long-term care insurance comes in many forms at many costs, including as part of a life insurance policy. I hope to have a long, comfortable life, but I'm preparing for whatever is ahead.”

LTC Comment: Short, sweet and to the point. And in a business magazine!

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8/25/2024, “Long-term care is in trouble,” by John O’Connor, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “The American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living released some updated supply and demand numbers last week.  To say they are concerning would be an extreme understatement. In a nutshell: Since the onset of COVID-19, nearly 800 nursing homes have closed, displacing almost 30,000 residents. ‘It’s not hyperbole to say access to care is a national crisis,’ said Mark Parkinson, the organization’s president and CEO. He’s right. Nursing homes are closing faster than new ones can open, and the challenges aren’t just logistical. They’re existential.”

LTC Comment: John O’Connor has edited McKnights’ LTC newsletters for decades. When he’s this worried about America’s nursing homes, we all should be. To make sense of what ails LTC, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers.

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8/2/2024, “Listen to Ken Dychtwald on the Georgetown CRI Podcast,” Age Wave

Quote:Age Wave is delighted to have partnered with the Georgetown Center for Retirement Initiatives for two events this year.  In June, Ken Dychtwald delivered a keynote presentation at their 2024 Policy Innovation Forum in Washington DC. He also just appeared on their podcast "The State of Retirement: Shaping the Future," where he was interviewed about ‘What is the New Retirement in an Age of Longevity?’”

LTC Comment: Click through for more insights from the inimitable Ken Dychtwald. ICYMI, check out the Paragon Health Institute’s “virtual LTC event” hosted by Ken Dychtwald and featuring yours truly.

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7/24/2024, “How States Can Support Individuals In The Long-Term Services and Supports Gap,” by Laura Benzing, Hannah Godlove and Megan R. Burke, Health Affairs

Quote: “But what about the large population of middle-income Medicare beneficiaries nationwide who do not qualify for Medicaid and cannot afford to hire a home health aide? These individuals fall into an ‘LTSS gap’ where care is difficult, if not impossible, to access. … Near Medicaid-eligible individuals who fall into the LTSS gap experience higher rates of disability and less access to potential family caregiver support compared to Medicare beneficiaries with higher incomes. … State policy makers can consider opportunities to address the LTSS gap under existing authorities including expanding Medicaid eligibility and State Plan Amendments, Section 1115 Demonstrations, Older Americans Act funding, and other state-driven initiatives.

LTC Comment: Health Affairs published my comment on this article. It begins: “Respectfully, there is no ‘LTSS Gap’.” It continues to explain how high-income and high-asset people routinely qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits, crowding out needier people from better care. Click through to read the article and my comment. Next Friday’s LTC Bullet will include a more detailed critique of the article and why its recommendation—ever more government spending on LTC—is exactly the wrong prescription for what ails LTC.

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7/12/2024, “States Set Minimum Staffing Levels for Nursing Homes. Residents Suffer When Rules Are Ignored or Waived.,” by Jordan Rau, KFF Health News

Quote: “An acute shortage of nurses and aides in the nation’s nearly 15,000 nursing homes is at the root of many of the most disturbing shortfalls in care for the 1.2 million Americans who live in them, including many of the nation’s frailest old people. They get festering bedsores because they aren’t turned. They lie in feces because no one comes to attend to them. They have devastating falls because no one helps them get around. They are subjected to chemical and physical restraints to sedate and pacify them. … Now the Biden administration is trying to guarantee adequate staffing the same way states have, unsuccessfully, for years: with tougher standards. Federal rules issued in April are expected to require 4 out of 5 homes to boost staffing. The administration’s plan also has some of the same weaknesses that have hampered states. It relies on underfunded health inspectors for enforcement, lacks explicit penalties for violations, and offers broad exemptions for nursing homes in areas with labor shortages. And the administration isn’t providing more money for homes that can’t afford additional employees.”

LTC Comment: Nursing homes are caught between the rock of inadequate reimbursement and the hard place of mandatory quality. Compulsory staffing levels won’t help any more than wage and price controls fix market imbalances. The fundamental problem is excessive government interference, i.e. funding and regulation, in the long-term care market. The only way progress will ever be made is to identify what causes the problem and address it with real market-based solutions. That’s what the Paragon Health Institute did in two reports: “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.”

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7/2/2024, “Older adults’ home equity tops $13 trillion in first quarter,” by Kathleen Steele Gaivin, McKnights Senior Living

Quote: “Homeowners aged 62 or more years saw their housing equity grow by $328.5 billion in the first quarter, according to data released Friday by the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association. The increase brings older adults’ housing equity to a record $13.19 trillion, according to NRMLA. Housingwire reported that the increase marks ‘a recovery after decreases observed over the past year.’”

LTC Comment: Good news indeed because home equity is America’s true LTC safety net when Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security fail.

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6/27/2024, “Battle Flares Over Long-Term Care Insurance Rate Hike Rules,” by Allison Bell, ThinkAdvisor

Quote: “Some regulators want special rules for the oldest insureds and phase-ins of big increases. Trade groups said regulators should stick with rules meant to keep insurers in business. Genworth said some moves to soften rate increase blows may create confusion or lead to bigger total increases. … ‘Deviating from actuarial principles may lead to inadequate premiums, jeopardizing insurer stability and consumer protection,’ according to a letter to the LTC Actuarial Working Group signed by Jan Graeber of the American Council of Life Insurers and Ray Nelson of America’s Health Insurance Plans.’”

LTC Comment: “Deviating from actuarial principles may lead to inadequate premiums?” Well, yeah. That’s exactly what’s happened to America’s big entitlement programs which are underfunded to the tune of many trillions of dollars. When the time comes to pay benefits, private LTCI carriers will be able to pay if regulators don’t hamstring them with un-actuarially-based requirements. Hard to imagine the government entitlements will be able to pay benefits, except in vastly deflated dollars.

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6/21/2024, “Protecting and Preserving Property When Paying for Long-Term Care,” by Christine A. Barone, The National Law Review

Quote: “‘I have to sell my house to pay for my nursing home care.’ This is a common misconception among persons requiring skilled nursing home care and/or their family members. Oftentimes a person requiring long-term care in a nursing home will require Medicaid benefits to pay for that care as nursing homes costs can average anywhere from $10,000 to $15,000 monthly. Selling one’s home and using the proceeds to pay the nursing home is not the only option in these cases. A proper long-term care and asset protection plan, even if your only asset is your home, can protect the value of your property for your loved ones and/or for your supplemental needs and care. … As such, it is important to meet with a qualified elder law attorney to discuss your options in regards to property and qualification for Medicaid benefits for long-term care.”

LTC Comment: Between this shyster and the hard-working LTC insurance agent, who do you think will make the sale? Still wonder why so few people pay premiums to get the coverage lawyers and Medicaid give away? Shame on The National Law Review.

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6/11/2024, “Revenue pressures driving home care consolidation, private equity’s growing influence, provider group says,” by Adam Healy, McKnights Home Care

Quote: “Pressures such as insufficient government reimbursement and rising Medicare Advantage penetration are contributing to consolidation in home care and hospice, LeadingAge told regulators last week in response to a February request for information surrounding healthcare market competition.”

LTC Comment: Crowding out small providers and commoditizing home health care does not bode well. The growing cozy alliance between big government and big business subverts the potential benefits from a freer LTC marketplace.

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6/8/2024, “Soaring premiums, denied benefits, delayed payments show crisis in long-term care insurance,” by Jeremy Olson, Star Tribune

Quote: “The Minnesota Department of Commerce has to approve any rise in premiums, but it's proving impossible for the agency to balance its goals of protecting consumers from massive monthly bills and keeping private insurers in business. … A key miscalculation by insurers: They didn't anticipate the five-year rise in U.S. life expectancy since 1980, so they underestimated the number of people surviving long enough to need long-term care. Many plans also came with inflation adjustments that exponentially increased the value of their benefits, especially as policyholders outlived projections. Insurers also overestimated the proportion of policyholders who would cancel their plans. … Policyholders can cut premium increases by agreeing to reduced benefits — waiving future inflation growth or capping the dollar amount of benefits or the number of years they can be used. … Denials of benefits are increasingly common as policyholders beset with disabilities or dementia — or adult children taking on new care-giving roles — struggle with insurance paperwork.”

LTC Comment: Hit pieces on LTC insurance are nothing new. I remember one especially virulent article that the New York Times brought to press on opening day of the 7th annual Intercompany LTC Insurance Conference in Dallas (LTC Bullet:  Sucker Punched in Dallas, April 10, 2007). Just once, it would be nice to find some balance in media coverage. Maybe compare how miserably Medicaid and Medicare have done in managing LTC financing. Or mention the Federal Reserve artificially dropping interest rates to zero and crushing returns on carriers’ reserves. Or how about recognizing how well and creatively the LTC insurance industry has managed its challenges, creating new hybrid products and dealing with premium increases responsibly, unlike the government programs that cannot pay future claims but have done nothing to adjust. It would be nice to see some recognition that the vast majority of complaints about failure to pay claims turn out to be specious, based on expecting carriers to pay when contractual policy conditions are unmet. Don’t hold your breath. But do soldier on fellow fighters for LTC reform!

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6/6/2024, “Ageless Aging: A Woman’s Guide to Better Healthspan, Brainspan, and Lifespan,” by Maddy Dychtwald, Age Wave

Quote:Ageless Aging presents a pioneering new way for women to feel energetic, purposeful. and vital while gaining the upsides of aging, including more happiness, wisdom, and resilience. It provides a holistic action plan based on cutting-edge research that helps women take advantage of the scientific, medical, psychological, and spiritual tools, tips, and advice available to help women live better longer. It’s available wherever books, ebooks, and audiobooks are sold. You might enjoy some of Maddy’s recent interviews where she addresses many of the themes in her book: LA Times ‘Want to live to 100? That May Depend on Your Sex,’ MarketWatch ‘Women Live Longer than Men, but there’s a ‘Dark Side,’ and Barron’s ‘Women’s Guide to Retirement and Aging.’”

LTC Comment: Another fine offering from the Dychtwalds, this time from Ken’s wife, Maddy.

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5/31/2024, “The Costs of the Rising Cost of Long-Term Care,” by Lee Pruitt, ElderLawAnswers

Quote: “Do you have a family member who is receiving some form of long-term care? If you don’t, the chances are good that someday you will – and that day may not be too far away. … Long-term care insurance offers a way to safeguard against the high costs of long-term care, providing financial protection, choice, and peace of mind. However, it’s essential to carefully consider the cost, benefits, and your unique circumstances before purchasing a policy. Consulting with an elder law attorney, financial advisor, or insurance specialist can help in making an informed decision tailored to individual needs and financial situations. Contact an experienced elder law attorney near you today to talk further about your options for affording long-term care. They can walk you through the options that may be available to you and help you understand the benefits and costs.”

LTC Comment: More Medicaid planner double talk. They used to pooh-pooh LTC insurance because it competes with their cash cow, Medicaid planning. But when putting affluent people on welfare got too much negative publicity, they changed their tune. Now they say, LTC insurance is wonderful, so come to us so we can tell you how expensive it is and that you should rejigger your income and assets to qualify for Medicaid. Legal fees are much less than insurance premiums.

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Updated Monday, September 23, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-035:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • You say you want a resolution?

  • House Committee Advances Important Bills For Nursing Home Workforce, Telehealth Flexibilities

  • Best Long-Term Care Insurance Companies of 2024

  • Longer lives, divorces, smaller families mean more older adults are living alone

  • Biden-Harris Administration Announces Nearly $100 Million to Grow the Health Workforce

  • Survey reveals knowledge gap in long-term care planning among income groups

  • Warning From Older Adults: Care for Aging in America Needs Urgent Rethinking

  • What if Medicaid paid market rates?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated Monday, September 16, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-034:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

·       Millennial sparks important discussion by admitting he can't take care of his mom in her old age

·       What is Medicaid Estate Recovery?

·       13 things to know about long-term care planning

·       Welfare Is What’s Eating the Budget

·       The States Are Dangerously Dependent on Medicaid-Expansion Dollars

·       You Aren’t as Sick as Government Claims

·       Half of home care workers have seen, experienced workplace violence, report finds

·       Massachusetts Long-Term Care Bill Passes After Efforts by Elder Advocacy Groups

·       Why home equity should be in the long-term care conversation

·       Report: More than one-third of nursing homes don’t have required medical director

·       Beyond the Numbers: Assisting Clients with LTC Concerns

·       The cost of senior care: Why aging farmers fear the nursing home

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, September 13, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: MORE KFF DATA MISINFORMATION

LTC Comment: Does KFF misunderstand, misinterpret, or misrepresent LTC insurance data? All three? See what you think after the ***news.***

*** ILTCI ’25 in Philly next March wants to hear from you. “Call for Speakers/Producers & Session Ideas or Topic Requests. The ILTCI Board and the Program and Education Committee are already working on bringing our attendees the best conference ever for 2025! Session development is just beginning now. If you have any topic requests, session ideas, or if you'd like to help by producing or speaking at a session this year, then now is your time! Please use this link for submissions. Registration for ILTCI 2025 will open sometime in October. We're now accepting applications for exhibitors and sponsors! See you in Philly in March!” ***

*** JOIN the Center and receive all our LTC Bullets and LTC E-Alerts. Become a premium member and get our daily LTC Clippings as well. Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform exists to promote policies that deliver quality LTC to all Americans. We conduct research and pursue advocacy toward increasing private financing and relieving public LTC spending with the goal to improve funding and quality for all levels and venues of long-term care. Join our campaign here. Check out all the individual and corporate membership options here. Read our 1384 LTC Bullets, organized by topic and chronologically, here. Following are sample LTC Clippings. Help continue the good fight. Support the Center for Long-Term Care Reform.

*** LTC CLIPPING SAMPLES:

9/4/2024, “You Aren’t as Sick as Government Claims,” by Charles Silver and David Hyman, Wall Street Journal
Quote: “Criminals and legitimate providers—hospitals, physician groups, drug manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers and insurers—raid the Treasury in other ways too. Within the past few weeks, it was reported that crooked brokers and insurers are helping five million ObamaCare enrollees enjoy $20 billion a year in premium subsidies by misrepresenting their incomes, and that half or more of Medicaid’s annual $217 billion budget for long-term care goes to people wealthy enough to cover their bills.”
LTC Comment: My July 1 “Paragon Prognosis” titled Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak was the source for this Medicaid reference.

9/2024, “Beyond the Numbers: Assisting Clients with LTC Concerns,” by Danielle Andrus, Journal of Financial Planning
Quote: “There are a lot of statistics that planners can employ to illustrate the risk that their clients will face regarding future care needs. A common one is that 70 percent of people who live to age 65 will need paid long-term care at some point. Bill Comfort, owner of Comfort Long-Term Care and director of training for the Certification in Long-Term Care (CLTC) designation and continuing education program, believes this overstates the true risk of needing care. ... Margie Barrie, a long-term care insurance specialist with ACSIA Partners, believes that whether you buy an insurance policy or not, everyone needs to have a plan for long-term care.”
LTC Comment: This article by the editor of the Journal of Financial Planning cites LTCI industry experts Bill Comfort and Margie Barrie at length. Click through to see what they have to say.

9/3/2024, “The cost of senior care: Why aging farmers fear the nursing home,” by Juliana Kim and Tim Evans, NPR
Quote: “Long-term care insurance exists, but it's deeply unpopular with older Americans. So, many seniors dip into their retirement or savings to get the care they need, while others apply for Medicaid, which has its own challenges. … Long-term care insurance is rife with its own problems, from complex underwriting to rising premiums. … Short-term care policies are a newer alternative to long-term care insurance, said Lance Boyer, a sales director at Farmers Union Insurance in North Dakota. But their benefits usually last no more than a year. … Another option is Medicaid, which is the largest single payer for long-term care in the U.S. In North Dakota, while the program completely covers nursing home costs, enrollees can only have a few thousand dollars to their name. They can keep some additional cash and their home and car if it's in their spouse's name, but generally no other property. That’s especially troubling for farmers, whose livelihood and families are often intertwined with their land.”
LTC Comment: This article is a confusing muddle. Here’s the truth. Medicaid exempts the home and the farm business, including its capital and cash flow. That’s how farmers paid for LTC since 1965. That’s also why so few of them purchased LTC insurance. While estate recovery is a concern for some, it is easily avoided by a Medicaid planning attorney. The big LTC problem for farmers nowadays is getting access to any care as Medicaid-dependent nursing homes go out of business and care of any kind becomes difficult to find anywhere nearby. So more and more care falls on unpaid families and friends. The whole sad, worsening mess derives from government trying to help and ruining the LTC market.
 

LTC BULLET: MORE KFF DATA MISINFORMATION

LTC Comment: Our most recent LTC Bullet, titled “LTC Data Manipulation,” analyzed KFF’s publication “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS).” We concluded KFF distorted National Health Expenditure data in service to an ideologically biased LTC Narrative. To wit: Medicaid and out-of-pocket LTC expenditures appear bigger when you exclude Medicare and private insurance from the data, which supports the mistaken conclusion that catastrophic LTC spend down is widespread and, therefore, America needs a big new, compulsory, payroll-funded LTC entitlement program.

Our essay triggered another analyst to opine further about faults in the same KFF publication. So we invited Stephen D. Forman, CLTC, Senior Vice President of Long Term Care Associates, Inc., to share his thoughts in today’s “Guest Bullet.” Following are quotes from the “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS)” article followed by Stephen’s “LTC Comments.”

KFF: “In 2021, just 80,000 people filed claims for private long-term care insurance benefits.”

LTC Comment: KFF seems perplexed by what they perceive as a low number of claimants. It’s not clear what the right number should be, but KFF does not believe the industry is paying much of a share.

KFF: “In 2021, about 7.1 million people nationwide paid premiums for private long-term care insurance (LTCI), including standalone LTCI and also an array of products that pair life insurance or an annuity with some long-term care coverage (Figure 6). The age and other demographics of those people are unknown.”

LTC Comment: I don’t always have the latest data, but I usually know someone who does (or knows someone who does). So if I can locate “the age and demographics of those people,” then KFF, which bills itself as “the independent source for health policy research, polling, and news,” can. Between BrokerWorld Magazine’s 2024 Survey, AHIP’s 2017 “Who Buys Long-Term Care Insurance?,” or AALTCI’s Fast Facts (2022) I think they can work it out.

KFF: “While those premiums may sound low relative to private health insurance premiums or to the costs of LTSS, LTCI is purchased before a person develops a need for LTSS and most people pay premiums for many years without using any benefits.”

LTC Comment: The idea that insurance is to be purchased before someone needs to file a claim is so obvious as to beggar belief what it’s doing here. What about the idea that “most people pay premiums for many years without using any benefits?” First, I’ve personally never liked this framing since I don’t subscribe to the belief that you have to file a claim to receive a benefit. The benefit is transferring risk and not being liable during the period covered, liberating money which would have otherwise been tied up. But I know most people don’t view insurance that way. I can’t tell if KFF conceptualizes LTC insurance as analogous to health insurance, and expects the product to behave the same. I do know that most people also pay taxes for many years without using particular benefits, for example Medicaid. Why KFF makes a big deal about the former, but not the latter is anyone’s guess.

KFF: “…most people pay premiums for many years without using any benefits. That is one of the reasons that only around 80,000 people filed a claim for LTCI benefits in 2021.” (Emphasis added.)

LTC Comment: That is not a reason, it is just making the same point twice.

KFF: “It is not uncommon for people to die without using benefits or to let their coverage lapse in response to rising premiums.”

LTC Comment: Not so fast—it’s not low lapse rates that have challenged assumptions, but high lapse rates. Here’s the NAIC: “A consequence of the limited data was that insurance companies overestimated lapse rates, or the number of policyholders who would voluntarily drop their policies.” (pages 18 – 19) In any event, I’m not sure how many insureds are forfeiting a benefit by lapsing in 2024. In the NAIC’s latest consumer research regarding how consumers would respond to a rate increase, “lapse” wasn’t even an option since people could receive either contingent nonforfeiture or a cash buyout.

KFF: “There are a number of limitations of LTCI. Many policies don’t have inflation protection, limit eligibility for services, do not cover all expenses, and have lifetime limits.”

LTC Comment: Here we go again. Medicaid has limitations, so does WA Cares. If “many” policies don’t have inflation protection, it’s because individuals chose not to add that mandatorily-offered option. If “many” policies have lifetime limits, others do not, and consumers can choose what they want. What does this even mean?

KFF: “Insurers could also go out of business before coverage is needed…”

LTC Comment: And programs like CalPERS and WA Cares can jeopardize the credit rating of their respective states, which is why we plan ahead. In the case of the private LTC insurance market—which has seen precious few insurers “go out of business,” consumers are protected by state insurance guaranty funds. It’s not a perfect system, but it’s one that insurers and producers are legally discouraged from promoting, although KFF is not. They could’ve done a service by explaining how this FDIC-like backstop functions.

Closing LTC Comment by your editor, S. Moses: We thank Mr. Forman for his thoughtful observations. KFF’s dismissive attitude about private LTC insurance displays ignorance and ideological bias unworthy of an objective source. We can’t help but wonder how careless KFF is about other topics in the health care policy sphere. When market-based analysis and solutions are ruled out thoughtlessly, we’re left with more of what we already have—a government-dominated LTC system that fails everyone.


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Updated Tuesday, September 03, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-033:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

·       Caregivers score worse than non-caregivers on most health measures, CDC finds

·       The impact of Medicaid Estate Recovery

·       I don't have a spare $150,000, so long-term care insurance is absolutely worth the cost

·       Assisted living edges out home care, nursing home as paid long-term care choice for middle class

·       ‘A devastating effect’: Aging care stakeholders warn of drastic repercussions of proposed home health rule

·       Year-over-year health spending growth highest ‘by far’ for home healthcare

·       Play on, Picklers! The health benefits of pickleball

·       Workforce participation expected to continue to decline, report finds

·       Long-term care is in trouble

·       Hi, Kids! We're Moving In

·       Study Reveals Long-Term Care Insurance Reduces Hospital Costs and Improves Care

·       Medicare Advantage Plans Get High Marks from Customers

·       More Annuity Owners Are Buying Their Contracts From Issuers

·       Here's Why Consumers Accept Hikes in Long-Term Care Insurance Rates

·       Study finds differences in home health usage between MA, traditional Medicare beneficiaries

·       No quick fix, but quality concerns demand nursing home reform: experts

·       Long-Term Care Costs Emerge as a Top Issue for Older Americans

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, August 30, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: LTC DATA MANIPULATION

LTC Comment: “Statistics don’t lie, but liars use statistics.” We explain after the ***news.***

*** 2024 LTC SURVEY. The current July/August issue of Broker World contains the 2024 Milliman Long Term Care Insurance Survey. This annual compilation of findings authored by Claude Thau, Nicole Gaspar and Chris Giese is the 26th consecutive review of stand-alone long-term care insurance published by the magazine. Check it out here. If you don’t already subscribe, definitely do so here. ***

*** ILTCI ’25, the Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conference, to be held March 9-12, 2025 in Philadelphia, has announced that Exhibitor & Sponsor Applications for ILTCI 2025 are Now Available! (With Early Bird Pricing) Get the Exhibitor & Sponsor Prospectus and the Exhibitor & Sponsor Form now. We’ll keep you posted as more information about the big industry conference becomes available. ***

*** SO WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT PAYS FOR MOST LTC, 2022 DATA UPDATE: Read this latest of our 20-year annual series as context for today’s LTC Bullet. ***
 

LTC BULLET: LTC DATA MANIPULATION

LTC Comment: National Health Expenditure data on long-term care (LTC) spending seem straight forward. Three NHE tables cover expenditures for Nursing Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) (Table 15), Home Health Care Services (Table 14) and Other Health, Residential and Personal Care Services (Table 13). Endnotes 1, 2, and 3 below describe those categories, respectively. The following table includes all these spending sources. They cover the LTC waterfront, but they need some adjustments according to KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation).

For example, in “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS),” published July 8, 2024, KFF explains that it “excludes spending from certain payers.” These excluded sources include “$94 billion in Medicare spending, most of which is post-acute care, but some of which is home health spending that might be considered LTSS.” Also “excluded is spending from private insurance [$52.7 billion] because much of those expenditures are for rehabilitation and not LTSS.” Private long-term care insurance is excluded “in most cases” because it “reimburses people for the expenses they pay out-of-pocket and would be classified as out-of-pocket spending in the NHE data.”

Backing out those sources has the effect of reducing total LTC spending in 2022 from the $571 billion NHE total in the table to KFF’s $415 billion. Let’s ask two questions. First, is there a rationale for leaving those sources in the total instead of excluding them? Yes. Take Medicare’s $94 billion for example. Of course Medicare doesn’t pay for LTC, but it is critical to America’s LTC financing system. LTC providers are heavily dependent on Medicaid which pays them 70 percent of private-pay rates and often less than the cost of providing the care. They survive financially only because Medicare pays more generously for a much smaller number of sub-acute and rehab patients. Remove Medicare’s $94 billion and the whole financing system collapses. To see the complete LTC financing picture accurately, Medicare must be included.

What about private insurance, including LTC insurance? True, some health insurance benefits, such as major medical coverage, go for rehabilitation, not LTC. But as in the case of Medicare, those payments help sustain a rickety LTC service delivery system, so they should not be excluded. For private LTC insurance specifically, isn’t it interesting that it gets lumped in the “out-of-pocket” bucket. Why might that be? That brings us to our second question.

Why do analysts and policymakers define LTC spending in some ways and not in others? What effect do the exclusions just described have on the big picture of LTC spending? Backing out Medicare and private insurance raises Medicaid’s contribution to total LTC costs from 44.6 percent in the table to the 61 percent KFF reports. It increases out-of-pocket spending from 12.5 percent in the table to KFF’s 17 percent. In other words, these exclusions make Medicaid and out-of-pocket expenditures appear much higher. Giving that impression supports a specific policy agenda, what I’ve called the LTC Narrative. Specifically, that narrative is that LTC costs are impoverishing people all across America and driving up Medicaid expenditures excessively which is why we need a new, compulsory, payroll-funded LTC entitlement program.

KFF isn’t the only group pushing that agenda by tinkering with the data. In 2011, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) changed the definition of NHE categories to combine CCRCs with nursing homes. That created an apples/oranges problem. Nursing homes rely mostly on Medicaid and have few private payers. CCRC’s include mostly private payers for independent and assisted living. They have fewer nursing home residents and very little Medicaid. So this definitional change had the effect of dropping Medicaid’s share of spending for the category from over 40 percent in 2008 to under one-third (32.8 percent) in 2009. Back then, cutting costs was a priority. Likewise, this change drove out-of-pocket expenditures up to over one-quarter, below what they would be for CCRCs but far above what they would be for nursing homes. Making out-of-pocket expenditures look high supports the narrative of widespread catastrophic spend down and the demand for more government funding and regulation.

The table below gives a more accurate rendering of the LTC financing landscape. It shows that when we leave in the funding sources KFF excludes, out-of-pocket costs clock in at only 12.5 percent. But that figure still overstates the impact of out-of-pocket LTC funding. Half of it is spend down of income, mostly from Medicaid recipients’ Social Security benefits. Only half, or about six percent, could come from savings. The vast majority of all LTC financing comes from third-party payors, mostly government. Out-of-pocket costs are nominal despite the widespread belief that Medicaid requires impoverishment and families across the country are being devastated by LTC costs. That lie is the real reason most people don’t think about or plan for LTC and end up on public assistance. It is no reason to compound the error of relying too heavily on government funding and regulation by adding more of the same with a big new entitlement program.

There is much more to this story. To understand what is really wrong with LTC and what needs to be done to fix it, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution,” watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers and check out “Medicaid's $100+ Billion Leak.”

Source: National Health Expenditures*   

2022 (Billions) Total Medicaid Medicare Private Insurers OOP Other Payers

NH + CCRC[1]

191.3

100%

58.5

30.6%

42.2

22.1%

18.2

9.5%

48.3

25.2%

24.1

12.6%

HH[2]

132.9

100%

46.9

35.3%

47.5

35.8%

18.6

14.0%

15.4

11.6%

4.5

3.5%

Other[3]

246.5

100%

149.3

60.8%

4.2

1.7%

15.9

6.4%

7.8

3.2%

69.3

28.1%

Total

570.7

100%

254.7

44.6%

93.9

16.5%

52.7

9.2%

71.5

12.5%

97.9

17.2%

* Note that CMS changed the definition of National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) categories in 2011, adding for example Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) to Nursing Care Facilities. This change had the effect of reducing Medicaid's reported contribution to the cost of nursing home care from over 40% in 2008 to under one-third (32.8%) in 2009. CMS also created a new category called "Other Third Party Payers" (7.1%) which includes "worksite health care, other private revenues, Indian Health Service, workers' compensation, general assistance, maternal and child health, vocational rehabilitation, other federal programs, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, other state and local programs, and school health." For definitions of all NHEA categories, see http://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/quickref.pdf.


 

[1] Nursing Care Facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities:
Covers nursing and rehabilitative services provided in freestanding nursing home facilities. These services are generally provided for an extended period of time by registered or licensed practical nurses and other staff. Care received in state & local government facilities and nursing facilities operated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs are also included. These establishments are classified in NAICS 6231-Nursing Care Facilities and NAICS 623311-Continuing Care Retirement Communities with on-site nursing care facilities.

[2] Home Health Care:
Covers medical care provided in the home by freestanding home health agencies (HHAs). Medical equipment sales or rentals not billed through HHAs and non-medical types of home care (e.g., Meals on Wheels, chore-worker services, friendly visits, or other custodial services) are excluded. These freestanding HHAs are establishments that fall into NAICS 6216-Home Health Care Services.

[3] Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care:
This category includes spending for Medicaid home and community based waivers, care provided in residential care facilities, ambulance services, school health and worksite health care. Generally these programs provide payments for services in non-traditional settings such as community centers, senior citizens centers, schools, and military field stations. The residential establishments are classified as facilities for the intellectually disabled (NAICS 62321), and mental health and substance abuse facilities (NAICS 62322). The ambulance establishments are classified as Ambulance services (NAICS 62191).


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Updated, Monday, August 19, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-032:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Long-Term Care Costs Emerge as a Top Issue for Older Americans

  • The Overextended Retirement State

  • CMS: Nursing Home Medicare Spending and Discharge Rates Vary Widely by Dual Enrollment Status, Race

  • Senior care leads in healthcare bankruptcies

  • Study shows LTC costs are seniors’ No. 1 health concern, but expert says no help in sight

  • MA penetration expected to top 64% by 2034, analysis finds

  • Homebound MA beneficiaries have higher readmission, mortality risk, study finds

  • Medicare Advantage Hits 32.8M Enrollees, 54% of Spending

  • How Medicaid cripples SNFs

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, August 12, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-031:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • House Bill Could Create an Unlimited LTCI Premium Deduction
  • Letter: Long-term care — my modest proposal
  • CDC releases new profile of assisted living residents
  • Medicare Advantage in 2024: Enrollment Update and Key Trends
  • As $90 Trillion "Great Wealth Transfer
  • How 'Home-Based Planning' Can Address Long-Term Care Costs
  • Researchers doubt Alzheimer’s drugs will make a dent in dementia reduction
  • Coffee-Dementia Link Continues to Unfurl
  • A fourth of Americans over age 50 are caregivers for family, friends
  • Government support of dementia caregiving across the continuum important: poll
  • Families headed by someone at or near retirement have more debt than in decades past

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, August 9, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC BULLET: THERE IS NO “LTSS GAP”

LTC Comment: This Health Affairs article offers a solution without a problem. We explain below.

LTC BULLET: THERE IS NO “LTSS GAP”

LTC Comment: A new Health Affairs “Forefront” article proposes solutions for a problem that does not exist. We offer the following rebuttal as part of our “Standing Guard” series. Those 101 LTC Bullets (to date) correct errors in “peer-reviewed” journal articles that occur because scholars ignore how Medicaid LTC actually works in practice. They cling instead to myths sustained by a short-sighted literal reading of the law and regulations. They ignore real-world evidence from outside their academic echo chamber. Here’s the latest example.

Laura Benzing, Hannah Godlove, and Megan R. Burke. "How States Can Support Individuals In The Long-Term Services and Supports Gap." Health Affairs Forefront, July 24, 2024. DOI: 10.1377/forefront.20240723.226615. You can find my comment on this article below it on the Health Affairs and at the end of today’s LTC Bullet.

Following are quotes from the LTSS Gap article followed by our LTC Comments.

LTSS Gap: “If your income is low enough, you might qualify for support in your home and community or a nursing facility through Medicaid, the primary payer of LTSS [long-term services and supports]. … But what about the large population of middle-income Medicare beneficiaries nationwide who do not qualify for Medicaid and cannot afford to hire a home health aide? These individuals fall into an ‘LTSS gap’ where care is difficult, if not impossible, to access. Today, nearly 40 million unpaid family caregivers provide 36 billion hours of care, but this is an unsustainable model as family members live further apart and balance multiple demands.” 

LTC Comment: This article begins by describing how hard it is for Americans to get assistance with activities of daily living. Medicare won’t pay for LTSS. Private care is excessively expensive. Low-income individuals turn to Medicaid. But middle-income people are presumed to be ineligible. Nor can they afford a private home health aide. Alas, they fall into an “LTSS gap.” Either they go without needed care or they become a burden on millions of unpaid family caregivers. Everything in this opening assessment is either completely wrong or misunderstood and misinterpreted as explained below.

LTSS Gap: “State Medicaid income eligibility for the aged, blind, and disabled population varies across states from 75 percent to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Because 138 percent of poverty is the top of the threshold, we define ‘near Medicaid eligibility’ as individuals who have incomes between 139 percent and 221 percent of poverty. We use 221 percent as the upper bound because, among states offering a ‘special income pathway’ to home- and community-based services (HCBS) for individuals with an institutional level of care need, the 300 percent federal benefit rate (which translates to approximately 221 percent of poverty) is a common income eligibility limit.”

LTC Comment: What’s wrong with this description of Medicaid’s ostensibly draconian income eligibility standard? It seems to come right out of federal and state laws and regulations. But it ignores how the system actually works in practice. Most state Medicaid programs allow applicant/recipients (ARs) to subtract their personal medical or LTC expenses from their income before applying a low-income standard. Other states cap income at 300 percent of the SSI monthly limit but allow ARs to shift excess income into diversion trusts, making them eligible despite having large incomes. The bottom line is the same everywhere. There is no firm upper limit on income. As a rule of thumb, income up to the monthly cost of a nursing home, often $8,000 to $10,000, rather high income, is not disqualifying. The article’s assertion that Medicaid LTC eligibility is limited to people with 75%, 138%, 221% of the poverty level … or any other set amount is wrong and worse, misleading.

LTSS Gap: “Some individuals may meet Medicaid income eligibility criteria but do not qualify for Medicaid because of the asset limit, which, in many states, means an individual can retain a minimal amount of personal assets (usually about $2,000).”

LTC Comment: Medicaid ARs are limited to $2,000 of countable assets. But most large assets held by the middle class are exempt, such as a minimum of $713,000 and a maximum of $1,071,000 of home equity depending on the state. Furthermore, an unlimited amount of countable assets can be converted easily to exempt status by purchasing any of a long list of exempt assets available from financial advisors or online. These non-countable assets include one vehicle, a business, prepaid burial plans, IRAs in payout status, home furnishings and all personal belongings. In 2014, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that 74 percent of its sample “owned at least some resources that were not countable as part of their financial eligibility determination … .” Reasonably $100 billion or more could be diverted from private LTC spending to a Medicaid liability nationwide in this way. For practical purposes, there is no limit to how much wealth Medicaid ARs may retain in or convert to exempt status.

LTSS Gap: “Individuals near Medicaid eligibility are unlikely to qualify for Medicaid or be able to afford LTSS out of pocket. … The literature refers to this broad population who cannot always afford LTSS as ‘the forgotten middle’ or ‘middle income.’ Understanding the characteristics and needs of individuals near Medicaid eligibility is the first step to addressing the LTSS gap.” 

LTC Comment: Neither high income nor high assets prevent upper-middle-income people from qualifying for Medicaid LTC benefits. The “forgotten middle” is a fallacy. At most, there remain only some “forgotten wealthy,” people with so much income and resources, they would not qualify in spite of Medicaid’s very generous financial eligibility rules. The problem is not too few people on Medicaid, but too many. By making government LTC benefits so easy to obtain late in life while preserving exempt wealth, Medicaid desensitized the public to LTC risk and cost leaving most Americans dependent on public assistance when they confront catastrophic LTC costs. By covering too many people, Medicaid’s resources became inadequate to ensure access to quality care, especially in the home and community-based settings citizens prefer. But the situation is even more tragic and ironic than that. Medicaid hurts most the very same people who need it most.

LTSS Gap: “Older adults of color are disproportionately represented in the near Medicaid-eligible population, potentially furthering disparities in care.”

LTC Comment: If there is a near-Medicaid-eligible population with low income and assets, it primarily includes socioeconomically marginalized groups, including racial minorities. Medicaid financial eligibility rules devastate such individuals and families. They lose everything quickly to sky-high private LTC costs. They tend to live in neighborhoods with nursing homes and home care providers that rely heavily on Medicaid’s low reimbursement rates and lack supplemental philanthropic funding. They receive the low-cost care of uncertain quality that Medicaid is reputed to provide.

Compare affluent people, who qualify for Medicaid as easily and with less financial disruption because they can reconfigure their income and assets. As they “spend down” by purchasing exempt assets, they retain “key money” so they can pay privately initially for care. Key money enables them to gain admission to the best nursing homes and other LTC providers that are desperate for private payers at rates 1.5 times what Medicaid pays. They co-opt the best care Medicaid offers to the exclusion of poor people who lack the private funds to buy their way into the better care. This reality is the root and cause of the “structural LTSS racism” widely reputed in the peer-reviewed academic literature to be endemic in America’s long-term care service delivery and financing system.

LTSS Gap: “As the first state to eliminate the asset test starting in 2024, California’s Department of Health Care Services used a mix of Section 1115 Demonstration authority and the State Plan authority granted to states by the Social Security Act (note 2).”

LTC Comment: By eliminating its asset test for Medi-Cal LTC eligibility, California threw the public welfare gates wide open for wealthy people to access and appropriate scarce resources formerly, and more appropriately, preserved for people in need. This policy reduces the incentive for people with substantial wealth to plan ahead and pay privately for long-term care. It exacerbates the problem of structural LTC racism by further crowding out socioeconomically marginalized groups from Medicaid’s better care options.

LTSS Gap: “State policy makers can consider opportunities to address the LTSS gap under existing authorities including expanding Medicaid eligibility and State Plan Amendments, Section 1115 Demonstrations, Older Americans Act funding, and other state-driven initiatives.”

LTC Comment: Solving an “LTSS gap” that does not exist in the first place makes no sense. In fact state Medicaid programs have pushed such “solutions” to the limit of their ability to pay for them already. Medicaid nursing home and home care expenditures continue to rise annually. Home care options that were supposed to save money have not. Medicaid home care waiting lists approach 700,000 and people who receive home care often need institutional care eventually anyway.

LTSS Gap: “One strategy for meeting the LTSS needs of individuals near Medicaid eligibility is to adjust Medicaid requirements so more people can access Medicaid. States could make Medicaid accessible to more individuals by increasing income limits, increasing or eliminating asset limits, or implementing medically needy programs through State Plan and 1915 Waiver authority.”

LTC Comment: Loading up Medicaid with more high-cost LTC enrollees is the worst possible idea. It would vastly worsen the already serious problem of structural LTC racism. Far better to retarget Medicaid LTC benefits to those who need them most and redirect the middle class and affluent to early LTC planning to become private payers eventually. For a complete analysis of why that solution is best and how to achieve it, see the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.”

 

Following is my reply to the Health Affairs article "How States Can Support Individuals In The Long-Term Services and Supports Gap” Although posted 10 days ago, none of the article’s authors have replied to my criticism.

Stephen Moses 

Respectfully, there is no “LTSS Gap.” The income and resource limits cited in this paper do not prevent affluent people from qualifying for Medicaid LTSS benefits. Most state Medicaid programs deduct private medical and LTSS expenses from income before applying a low-income standard. The others allow income diversion trusts to enable higher income people to qualify. A good rule of thumb: income below the cost of a nursing home, easily $8,000 to $10,000 per month, rather high income, is not disqualifying.

Likewise, the $2,000 resource limit cited in the article applies only to countable assets. But most wealth held by middle class and affluent people is exempt, including most home equity, a vehicle, a business, prepaid burial plans, IRAs in payout status, home furnishings and all personal belongings. Medicaid LTSS eligibility rules place no limit on exempt assets. All countable resources are easily converted to exempt status by using the former to purchase the latter. That method of spending down may account for $100 billion or more of excess Medicaid LTSS spending.

The real LTSS problem is not that too few people qualify for Medicaid, but rather too many do. By making LTSS benefits so easily available late in life for middle-class people, Medicaid created a moral hazard. It enabled the public to ignore LTSS risk and cost, avoid the necessity to save, invest or insure to prepare for extended care in old age, and still receive care when needed while preserving substantial exempt wealth. Consequently, few people prepare ahead for LTSS and most turn to Medicaid when they require care.

The tragic irony is that this system overloads Medicaid with too many enrollees causing scarce resources to be spread too thinly. Medicaid’s reputedly low-cost care of uncertain quality harms the program’s neediest enrollees most. Socioeconomically marginalized people, including racial minorities, tend to live in neighborhoods with nursing homes and other LTSS providers that are heavily dependent on Medicaid’s low reimbursements and unlikely to have supplemental philanthropic funding. Poor people receive the dregs of Medicaid LTSS care.

More affluent Medicaid enrollees live in nicer neighborhoods with better LTSS providers that are less dependent on Medicaid’s low reimbursements and more likely to have philanthropic support. As they “spend down” to Medicaid’s resource limit by purchasing exempt assets, these more financially comfortable applicants hold back “key money” so they can pay privately at admission. Because LTSS providers are desperate to attract private payers at 1.5 times what Medicaid pays, this key money ensures these better off enrollees have access to the best LTSS care Medicaid has to offer.

A large and growing peer-reviewed literature on “structural LTSS racism” reflects this system’s inequitable effects, hurting the economically disadvantaged while significantly benefiting more prosperous people. California’s unusually lenient financial eligibility system, including its recent elimination of any asset test for Medi-Cal (Medicaid), is the most egregious example of this problem. Nothing will change until scholars take into account how Medicaid LTSS financial eligibility really works in practice. They should stop assuming incorrectly that ostensibly strict rules in the statute and regulations actually prevail.

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Updated, Monday, August 5, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-030:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Listen to Ken Dychtwald on the Georgetown CRI Podcast

  • Reports reveal best, worst states for retirement, falls among older adults

  • Nearly half of dementia cases could be avoided or delayed by tackling 14 risk factors

  • How States Can Support Individuals In The Long-Term Services and Supports Gap

  • Just The Facts: Federal Staffing Mandate For Nursing Homes Threatens Access To Care For Americas Seniors

  • Nearly half of beneficiaries don't know the difference between Medicare and MA: survey

  • Study: Professional medication review is a must when older adults want to scale back meds

  • Nursing home employees among most likely to carry medical debt, related burdens: study

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, July 29, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-029:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Hidden Crisis in Long-Term Care

  • Gen X’s retirement woes may give rise to a generation of ‘silver squatters’

  • Medicaid Financing Reform: Stopping Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable and Reducing Bias Favoring Wealthy States

  • Lawsuit slams staffing rule

  • Find long-term funding solution for Social Security now, 87 percent of respondents to survey say

  • New York City’s Biggest Job Engine Has Become a ‘Racket,’ Hochul Says

  • New poll sees if WA cares about payroll tax to fund WA Cares program

  • Stop Talking About Nursing Homes

  • Dementia rate decline accelerates during COVID-19 pandemic

  • Paragon Prognosis: Housing Isn’t Health Care

  • Who is eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, July 26, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: WHAT IF THE LTC MARKET WERE FREE?

LTC Comment: Government dominates long-term care services and financing in the U.S. What if it were otherwise? Reflections after the ***news.***

*** JOIN THE CENTER. If you receive today’s LTC Bullet from a friend or colleague, please consider joining the Center for LTC Reform in your own right. You’ll receive our bi-weekly LTC Bullets and our weekly summaries, LTC E-Alerts, of our daily LTC Clippings. There is no better way to stay abreast of everything happening in the LTC policy space. On top of that, you will support and be part of our mission to reform LTC public policy. Our goal is to encourage responsible LTC planning instead of rewarding consumers’ denial that leads to excessive reliance on Medicaid. Find all the membership options here. Join and contribute here. ***

*** PREMIUM Center members also receive our daily LTC Clippings. Steve Moses scans the academic and popular media. He identifies the reports, data, and articles you need to see to stay at the forefront of professional expertise. He sends an email with the title, author, a link and a key quote followed by his brief analysis of its meaning. Here are some examples:

7/24/2024, “Medicaid Financing Reform: Stopping Discrimination Against the Most Vulnerable and Reducing Bias Favoring Wealthy States,” by Brian Blase, PhD and Drew Gonshorowski, Paragon Health Institute
Quote: “The Affordable Care Act (ACA) created a new eligibility category for Medicaid—able-bodied, working-age adults—with a much higher federal reimbursement percentage for these enrollees. This has led to a host of problems, including 1) a diversion of resources away from traditional Medicaid enrollees, particularly low-income children, and people with disabilities, that has reduced their access to health care services; 2) a near quadrupling of Medicaid’s improper payments; and 3) a surge of spending that has significantly contributed to large and growing federal deficits.”
LTC Comment: The ACA tipped the Medicaid scales against traditional aged, blind and disabled enrollees in favor of new, younger, able-bodied recipients, simultaneously causing expenditures and error-rates to rise perilously. Don’t miss this informative study by my colleagues at the Paragon Health Institute.

7/23/2024, “Lawsuit slams staffing rule,” by Josh Henreckson, McKnights LTC News
Quote: “A federal lawsuit filed by providers seeks to throw out the national nursing home staffing mandate, charging that it exceeds the authority of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and ‘creates impossible-to-meet standards that will harm thousands of nursing homes and the vulnerable Americans they serve.’ Some industry and legal experts have boldly predicted a straightforward provider victory.”
LTC Comment: It’s been decades since the nursing home business put up a real fight against bureaucratic government over-reach. Thanks to the recent Supreme Court Chevron decision, they have a shot. But, alas, the bureaucracy is fighting back: “Bill Introduced In Senate To Override Supreme Court’s Ruling On Chevron Doctrine.” We’ll watch and report to you as this plays out.

7/23/2024, “New poll sees if WA cares about payroll tax to fund WA Cares program,” by  Claire Withycombe, The Seattle Times
Quote: “For about a year, many Washington workers have paid a 0.58% tax on their wages to fund a first-in-the-nation long-term care insurance program, an attempted antidote to the looming cost of caring for an aging population. But a new statewide poll suggests a narrow majority of likely voters, 52%, would support a ballot initiative making the tax optional, while 27% said they were certain to vote no and 22% of voters said they were undecided.”
LTC Comment: Voters who rejected WA Cares twice before when asked are likely to do it again. Will the politicians finally get the message? Compulsory, payroll-funded, financially vulnerable entitlement programs are so 20th century.

***

 

LTC BULLET: WHAT IF THE LTC MARKET WERE FREE?

Free markets with unencumbered exchange between willing buyers and sellers generate price data that reflect preferences such as how much of which kind of a good or service people want and what the price should be to deliver the optimal supply for any given demand. When government tips the scale to encourage certain preferred outcomes, unforeseeable consequences, often undesirable, invariably occur.

LTC in a Free Market

What would the LTC market be like with no government regulation or funding? Certainly people would take the risk and cost of expensive extended care late in life more seriously than they do now. Without Medicaid to pick up the tab for catastrophically expensive nursing home or long-term home care while protecting practically unlimited exempt assets, planning for LTC would become a personal finance priority on a par with life, health, auto and fire insurance.

Without government limiting LTC providers and consumers to nursing homes or home care with 7000-person-long waiting lists, entrepreneurs would offer amazing new venues and practices for LTC service delivery. Home and community-based care would dominate because that’s what people want and people can demand what they want when they’re spending their own money or their insurer’s with no government bureaucrats intervening.        

Of course, in a free market, you must pay for what you get. No more gaming Medicaid to access free or subsidized care while holding back “key money” to buy your way into the best nursing homes and home care to the exclusion of the needier people Medicaid was supposed to help. It won’t be cheap, but it will be a lot less expensive than private-pay LTC is now when Medicaid pays too little and private payers have to make up the difference by paying much more.

In a free market the cost of LTC will be as high as needed to clear markets. That is, prices will rise until they suffice to support enough providers at sufficient wages to meet the LTC needs of individuals and families. Caregiver shortages will therefore disappear. On the other hand, prices will decline to reach a balance reflecting market competition. Capitalism’s creative destruction removes inefficient, high-cost providers leaving only the most efficient, lower-cost operators.

So much for the rosy scenario. What about “market failure?” Capitalism and free markets harm the poor, don’t they? What happens to people who cannot afford the great new LTC choices the free market provides? What about the bad actors who overcharge for poor care. They’ll emerge without government regulation, right?

Those problems arise because, not in spite of, government funding and regulation as explained below. With a free LTC market in place, most people will prepare to pay for their own LTC. Few will remain in need of outside help from government or private charity. Without government to co-opt natural generosity, private philanthropy will revive and thrive. Private individuals and organizations will fill in to provide a better safety net than government welfare ever did.

LTC with Government Involvement

America has never had a long-term care system remotely approaching a free market. But there was a time long ago when left to its own devices a system more like the one described above might have developed. Instead, little by little, government intervened with more and more funding and regulation. You see the depressing results all around you today.

As people lived longer and longer in the 20th century, they died slower and slower, often with debilitating chronic illness, physical frailty or cognitive impairment. Families, who formerly provided most care for their own elders, could no longer manage. Mom and Pop residential care supplemented, but did not become a huge corporatized nursing home industry until public financing flooded the market with capital.

Many people could not afford care. Available care was often dubious as a nascent private LTC market floundered. Instead of letting the market find its way over time, government stepped in to “fix” it. Early well-intended financial infusions and regulatory interventions snow-balled into the current overweening state and federal government behemoth.

It started with money. State and federal funds poured in, enabling people to pay for residential care, which quickly supercharged the nursing home industry. In 1965, that trend vastly increased as Medicaid made LTC available to anyone unable to afford it. Medicaid did not require poverty or catastrophic spend down as often claimed. It made free or subsidized LTC available to anyone with too little income and too few resources to pay private market rates.

Medicaid chose winners and losers. It paid exclusively for nursing home care, which unleashed that sector. It paid nothing for home and community-based care, which suppressed the care venue the public prefers. Later efforts through “waivers” to rebalance from institutional to home-based care exacerbated Medicaid’s exploding cost. It turned out that home care did not save money, despite expectations that it would, because too many people who received care at home ended up needing a nursing home eventually anyway.

Having pumped virtually unlimited state and federal funding into the nursing home industry and having made that high-cost care available to anyone who could not afford it otherwise, Medicaid became fiscally unsound. It could not afford to pay adequately to ensure quality nursing home care, much less home and community-based care. Quality deteriorated becoming a crisis by 1987 when the Nursing Home Reform Act mandated better care and more caregivers but without increasing reimbursements.

Easy Medicaid LTC eligibility enabled the public to ignore LTC risk and cost, leaving them dependent on public financing when stricken. Decades of relying on Medicaid if and when catastrophic care costs occurred deflated demand for private insurance to cover such costs. Publicly financed nursing home care delayed development of care options such as assisted living and impaired the private market for home care.

Government tried to ameliorate the damage easy access to Medicaid did by closing financial eligibility loopholes, imposing transfer of assets restrictions and mandating estate recoveries. But nothing worked. A cottage industry of private Medicaid planning attorneys always found creative ways around such efforts. High-income and high-resource people not only qualified for Medicaid, they could access the best care the program offers by holding back “key money” to buy their way into the best facilities and providers. That inequity crowded out the poor from Medicaid’s best care condemning them to the worst care often highlighted in media exposes and giving rise to widespread accusations of “structural LTC racism.”

Today, the LTC system government created is a total mess. Few people worry or plan for LTC. When they need it they qualify easily for Medicaid. But the available system pays too little to ensure quality care, leaving them with very limited options. They can pay privately for good care in preferred venues, which few can afford; or rely on Medicaid’s deficient choices; or burden their friends and families with unpaid, unprofessional care. Unable to tax or spend more to better fund the system it created, government continues to mandate better care and more caregivers without providing adequate funding.

Bottom line, America’s government-dominated LTC system is tragically dysfunctional. A free or freer LTC market would likely produce much better results. We will probably find out by default when the public system collapses and we have nowhere to turn but to a freer market. It would be so much better to experiment with alternatives on purpose.

If you find anything in this short essay dubious or if you want more evidence and detail, please read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers.

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Updated, Monday, July 22, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-028:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Home health sees spending, utilization decline as hospice equivalents grow, MedPAC reports

  • CDC report: Cognitive disability tops list of disabilities in US adults

  • My Dad Was Diagnosed With Dementia. Medicare's 7-Word Response Baffled Me

  • Home care spending outpaces nursing home spending ‘by far’

  • Biden Administration Backs Off From Medicare Agent Pay Fight

  • How Likely Are You to Need Long-Term Care?

  • A New Way to Pay for Long-Term Care Insurance

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, July 15, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-027:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Trump shooter worked at nursing home

  • Genworth launches first LTC insurance plan in 5 years as Washington state residents consider ‘crazy’ plan that could end mandatory program

  • GOP calls for agency regulation review in wake of Supreme Court overturning of Chevron doctrine

  • States Set Minimum Staffing Levels for Nursing Homes. Residents Suffer When Rules Are Ignored or Waived.

  • Biden’s condition? It’s called aging, folks

  • LTSS increasingly expensive, with fewer guardrails and more demand to come: new KFF analysis

  • Genworth Unit Moves to File New Long-Term Care Policy

  • What nursing homes need, versus what they get

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, July 12, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: UNDERSTANDING MEDICAID SPEND DOWN

LTC Comment: To fix long-term care you must understand Medicaid spend down. We explain after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** TWO BIRDS, ONE STONE. McKnights is a national news brand specializing in institutional long-term care, senior living and home care. This week McKnights published the same column I wrote about senior living with different titles in two of its venues. You can read “What assisted living needs versus what it gets” in McKnights Senior Living or “What nursing homes need, versus what they get” in McKnights LTC News depending on your interest. Same piece. Thanks to McKnights for this unique dual coverage. The Paragon Health Institute republished the article making it a trifecta. ***

*** AI TOLD YOU SO. Today’s LTC Bullet claims people can qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits without spending down assets for medical or long-term care expenses. If you don’t believe me, then consider this reply from Perplexity.ia to my query.     

Question: “How do people spend down to qualify for Medicaid LTSS benefits without spending wealth on medical or LTSS expenses?”

Answer from Perplexity.ia: “People can spend down to qualify for Medicaid long-term services and supports (LTSS) benefits through several methods that do not involve directly spending wealth on medical or LTSS expenses:

  1. Purchasing exempt assets: Individuals can convert countable assets into exempt assets that are not counted towards Medicaid eligibility. Common examples include:
  • Paying off the mortgage on a primary residence
  • Making home improvements or modifications
  • Purchasing a new vehicle
  • Buying household goods and personal effects
  • Prepaying funeral and burial expenses
  1. Gifting assets: Some people choose to gift assets to family members or others. However, this strategy must be done carefully, as Medicaid has a ‘look-back’ period (typically 5 years) during which gifts can result in transfer penalties.
  2. Establishing trusts: Certain types of irrevocable trusts can be used to protect assets while still qualifying for Medicaid. These may include special needs trusts or pooled income trusts.
  3. Spending on non-medical necessities: Using funds for travel, entertainment, or other personal expenses that improve quality of life but are not directly related to medical care or LTSS.
  4. Paying off debts: Reducing or eliminating outstanding loans, credit card balances, or other debts.
  5. Purchasing long-term care insurance: Some states have partnership programs that allow individuals to protect more assets if they purchase qualifying long-term care insurance policies.
  6. Spousal transfers: In cases where one spouse needs LTSS and the other does not, transferring assets to the community spouse can help protect those assets while allowing the institutionalized spouse to qualify for Medicaid.

It's important to note that Medicaid eligibility rules are complex and vary by state. Additionally, some spend-down strategies may have tax implications or affect future eligibility for other benefits. Individuals considering spending down to qualify for Medicaid LTSS should consult with elder law attorneys or financial advisors familiar with Medicaid planning in their state to ensure compliance with all regulations and to develop an appropriate strategy for their specific situation.” ***

*** ARTIFICIAL SPEND DOWN. For more on the damage done by widespread practice of qualifying for Medicaid by purchasing exempt assets, read this “Paragon Prognosis” I wrote for the Paragon Health Institute: “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”

 

LTC BULLET: UNDERSTANDING MEDICAID SPEND DOWN

LTC Comment: The Social Security Act says Medicaid’s role in long-term care (LTC) is “to furnish (1) medical assistance on behalf … of aged, blind, or disabled individuals, whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical services, and (2) rehabilitation and other services to help such … individuals attain or retain capability for independence or self-care … .”

In plainer language, Medicaid’s LTC job is to provide medical assistance, rehabilitation and related services to individuals “ … whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical services … .” Note there is no requirement, as so often claimed, that people become “destitute” or “impoverished” to qualify. Anyone is eligible for Medicaid’s help who faces private medical or LTC expenses, but has too little income and resources to pay for them.

How does Medicaid decide whether an applicant for LTC benefits has insufficient income and resources to pay privately?

On the income side, most state Medicaid programs (34) require applicant/recipients (ARs) to prove that they spent down nearly all of their income for private medical or LTC expenses. Other states cap total income but permit higher-income applicants to divert their excess income into special trusts. Under either system there is no upper limit on how high starting income can be as long as documented private medical and LTC expenditures suffice or an income diversion trust is used. A good rule of thumb is that income below the cost of a nursing home, $8,000 or $9,000 per month, fairly high income, is not disqualifying.

Medicaid’s procedure to determine whether ARs have insufficient resources to pay privately for care is entirely different. Unlike for income, Medicaid requires no evidence that people spend down their resources for private medical or LTC expenses. They can expend their wealth on anything they wish, including products or services that Medicaid considers exempt from its very low resource limit, usually only $2,000. Because most large assets seniors own are exempt, such as home equity, a business, a vehicle, IRAs in payout, etc., and remaining countable assets are easily convertible to noncountable by purchasing exempt resources, such as home improvements, a new car, personal belongings or home furnishings, there is no upper limit on how much wealth Medicaid ARs can retain. For an estimate of how much value is diverted from private LTC spending into a Medicaid expenditure by means of purchasing exempt assets, see “Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak.”

Thus, despite its reputation as a program for the poor that requires spend down into impoverishment, Medicaid actually places no upper limit on how much income and resources ARs may retain. Bottom line, financial eligibility for Medicaid LTC benefits is not difficult to achieve. Beyond their income, which is Medicaid’s co-insurance, consumers have little “skin in the game.” This reality has terrible consequences for America’s foundering LTC services and financing system.

Financial Consequences

Nearly six decades of easy access to Medicaid LTC with the added benefit of preserving wealth created a moral hazard. It enabled the public’s denial of LTC risk and cost. Fewer people, in fact hardly any, plan early to save, invest or insure for LTC. Why bother when Medicaid has bailed out generations of elders when they face catastrophic LTC costs? As a result, we see spiraling dependency on Medicaid, with generations of adult children ignoring LTC planning as their inheritances are protected by Medicaid’s paying for their parents’ LTC.

Excessive reliance on government funding and regulation delivered a dysfunctional LTC system based on too much central planning. Heavy regulation by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) hamstrings LTC providers. It demands Ritz Carlton care but pays only Motel 6 rates. Government micromanagement, such as a recent staffing mandate without commensurate compensation, deflates morale as it exacerbates providers’ dilemma, pinched between the rock of inadequate reimbursement and the hard place of mandatory quality. Lacking market incentives to experiment with new care strategies, LTC providers offer only those care options for which the government will pay. 

Access and Quality Consequences

Because Medicaid LTC benefits are so easy to qualify for financially, too many people rely on the program for its most expensive service. State and federal Medicaid LTC budgets are spread so thin and program resources are so limited that reimbursement levels for LTC providers must be kept notoriously low, often less than the cost of delivering the care. Low wages cause caregiver shortages. Care access and quality suffer, especially for the neediest recipients. The financial strain on institutional and home care providers reduces profitability and discourages private investment in LTC.

Medicaid’s long-standing institutional, i.e. nursing home, bias lingers despite decades of efforts to rebalance toward home care for two reasons. The public’s aversion to nursing home care helps restrain growing Medicaid expenditures. The hope that home care would save money did not prove out because too many people who receive home care end up needing a nursing home eventually anyway. Long waiting lists, upwards of 700,000, for Medicaid’s waivered home and community-based services (HCBS) further exacerbate access problems. Desire to avoid Medicaid’s low cost care of uncertain quality leads to excessive reliance on unpaid caregivers, severely stressing families and friends financially and emotionally.       

Ethical Consequences

Perhaps most tragic of all is the structural LTC racism Medicaid causes. The program’s deficient access and quality is well known. Everyone who depends on the program suffers. But some suffer more than others. Marginalized, socioeconomic groups, including racial minorities, are quickly impoverished by Medicaid’s financial eligibility rules. They are already Medicaid dependents when they seek nursing home care or HCBS. More affluent people, who also qualify easily as explained above, are able to pay privately for a while before applying for Medicaid. That is important because revenue-starved LTC providers are desperate to attract market-rate private payers who contribute half again as much revenue per person as Medicaid provides.

What this means is that more affluent people who qualify for Medicaid have first access to the best care Medicaid provides. They tend to live in nicer neighborhoods where the best nursing homes and home care providers are found. LTC providers that are less dependent on Medicaid’s low reimbursement rates and that have greater philanthropic funding and higher Medicare and private pay census are known to provide the best care. Lacking the “key money” to buy their way into such care providers and tending to live in neighborhoods with fewer of the best providers, the poor, including racial minorities, have access only to the least desirable Medicaid-financed care. For these reasons, a large and growing academic literature condemns Medicaid as a primary cause of structural LTC racism.

Bottom Line

By funding most LTC, not only for the poor but for the middle class and affluent as well, Medicaid is the direct cause of most of America’s LTC problems. By covering everyone who is unable to pay privately for LTC, the program crowded out personal planning and responsibility, became the dominant payor for LTC, is unable to pay adequately to ensure good access and high quality, and favored the affluent over the needy whom it should have benefited most.

To improve LTC, Medicaid’s scarce resources should be re-directed to the needy and away from others who can and should pay for their own care. That policy change will quickly incentivize those who are able to plan early and take personal responsibility for LTC risk and cost. For more detailed analysis and a full explanation of how to achieve these goals see, the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.

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Updated, Monday, July 8, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-026:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • What assisted living needs versus what it gets

  • Federal Court Blocks Medicare Agent Pay Cap Regulations

  • Medicaid Efforts to Address Racial Health Disparities

  • Medicaid’s $100+ Billion Leak

  • Supreme Court Decision Limiting the Authority of Federal Agencies Could Have Far-Reaching Impacts for Health Policy

  • Older adults’ home equity tops $13 trillion in first quarter

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, July 1, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-025:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicaid's 80/20 Rule: New Restrictions on Funding for Home and Community Based Services

  • BREAKING: Supreme Court’s Chevron ruling could defang CMS

  • Battle Flares Over Long-Term Care Insurance Rate Hike Rules

  • Medicaid Long-Term Care: Future And Current Retirees Need To Prepare

  • Keep an eye on Washington state initiative, long-term care insurance expert cautions

  • ‘Deteriorating’ outlook for CCRCs to continue for rest of year: Fitch

  • How much long-term-care insurance do I need?

  • Is this the end of the line for nursing homes?

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, June 28, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: KFF HOISTED AGAIN

LTC Comment: A series of KFF “issue briefs” intended to show how poor Medicare beneficiaries are prove the opposite. We explain after the ***news.***

*** JOIN the Center and receive all our LTC Bullets and LTC E-Alerts. Become a premium member and get our daily LTC Clippings as well. Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform exists to promote policies that deliver quality LTC to all Americans. We conduct research and pursue advocacy toward increasing private financing and relieving public LTC spending with the goal to improve funding and quality for all levels and venues of long-term care. Join our campaign here. Check out all the individual and corporate membership options here. Read our 1384 LTC Bullets, organized by topic and chronologically here. Following are sample LTC Clippings. Help continue the good fight. Support the Center for Long-Term Care Reform.

*** LTC CLIPPING SAMPLES:

 6/27/2024, “Keep an eye on Washington state initiative, long-term care insurance expert cautions,” by Kathleen Steele Gaivin, McKnights Senior Living
Quote: “As the one-year anniversary of the effective date of the country’s first publicly operated, tax-based long-term care insurance program approaches July 1, voters in Washington state ‘are being given the choice to make the program optional, and early polling shows that’s very likely to happen,’ Jesse Slome, director of the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, said Wednesday.”
LTC Comment: It looks like WA Cares will follow the Pepper Commission, CLASS, and a series of Medicaid and LTC Commissions into the sinkhole of failed compulsory government takeover plans.

6/25/2024, “How much long-term-care insurance do I need?,” Dow Jones
Quote: “The way to get a more accurate figure is to look closely at the sick person's family history and current medical circumstances, and also their financial situation. This is not something you can do in a back-of-the-envelope way or even with a spreadsheet. Waterlily said it is able to help by crunching through decades of case studies to more accurately pinpoint the length of care needed, and also the range above and below that number to create a cushion. The service mostly is available through advisers, insurance companies and care facilities to help clients, rather than directly to consumers. With the help of an adviser, a family can then take the data and map out the costs of various care options against that time frame. Chen converts the future dollar amount to the value that has to be saved today, using the standard formulas of financial planners; then he can tell them how much they need to earmark and invest.”
LTC Comment: Intriguing idea. If you want to learn more, check out the forthcoming LTC Discussion Group meeting focused on this topic. “Using Data Science to Predict Individual LTC Needs and Identify Solutions,” Thursday, June 27, 2024, 1:00 PM  2:00 PM. The Group requires pre-registration. Learn more at www.ltcdiscussiongroup.org. ***

 

LTC BULLET: KFF HOISTED AGAIN

LTC Comment: To set the stage, read “LTC Bullet: Hoist with Its Own Petard,” April 28, 2017. In it we critiqued KFF’s April 2017 “Issue Brief” titled “Income and Assets of Medicare Beneficiaries, 2016-2035.” KFF argued that “Medicare beneficiaries are so poor that it behooves policymakers not to consider ‘decreasing federal Medicare spending’ when they are ‘addressing the federal debt and deficit.’” We explained that “what they inadvertently prove instead is that most Medicare beneficiaries are actually quite well off” and “what they miss entirely is that affluent [Medicare] beneficiaries capture a disproportionate share of Medicaid’s long-term care benefits.” Neither income, assets nor home equity stand in their way.

We concluded: “This KFF issue brief tries to sidetrack policymakers from addressing Medicare’s fatal fiscal flaws by focusing on beneficiaries below the financial median. But, contra the KFF argument and conclusions, most Medicare beneficiaries are doing quite well financially. Furthermore and ironically, with tragic consequences for the genuinely needy half of beneficiaries, the better off group is co-opting desperately needed long-term care resources that should go to the needier group. The fact that affluent whites live longer than poor minorities, consume a disproportionate share of Medicaid’s scarce resources, and plan for that eventuality as a result of incentives created by existing policies raises serious ethical questions—not because Medicaid forces people into impoverishment as usually assumed, but for precisely the opposite reason.”

That’s where we left the matter seven years ago. But KFF is back again with another issue brief promoting the same mistaken views: “Income and Assets of Medicare Beneficiaries in 2023,” by Alex Cottrill, Juliette Cubanski, Tricia Neuman, and Karen Smith, published February 5, 2024. Here’s a quote from the press release for that publication: “A new KFF analysis shows that most Medicare beneficiaries live on relatively low incomes and have modest financial resources for retirement – posing a risk to their economic well-being, particularly if they were to have a major, unanticipated expense, such as a need for long-term nursing home care. The financial picture is especially bleak among Black and Hispanic Medicare beneficiaries, who tend to have lower incomes, savings, and home equity than White beneficiaries, the analysis shows. Women have lower incomes and less savings than men, and beneficiaries’ income and savings tend to decline with age. … Some Medicare beneficiaries may be eligible for additional support from Medicaid, including those with very low incomes and limited savings, and others who spend down their assets to pay for their medical or long-term care costs. Medicaid offers coverage for nursing home care and other long-term care services and supports that are not generally covered by Medicare. However, for lower and middle income beneficiaries who do not qualify for Medicaid, the high cost of unanticipated medical and long-term services and supports may simply be unaffordable.”

This is cock-eyed analysis. The truth is that most Medicare beneficiaries are eligible for Medicaid LTC benefits. They do not have to have “very low incomes and limited savings” and they do not have to “spend down their assets to pay for their medical or long-term care costs.” Medicaid does not require applicants/recipients to spend down assets for care. They can reduce wealth to the countable level allowed, usually $2,000, by purchasing anything. As long as what they purchase is something Medicaid considers exempt, their eligibility is unobstructed and their net worth undiminished. What does Medicaid exempt? Almost every large asset the affluent elderly possess, including most home equity, home repairs and updates, a business, a car, prepaid funeral expenses for the whole family, and many more listed on websites and provided by Medicaid planning attorneys.

To make sense of what’s really wrong with LTC in the USA, read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers.

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Updated, Monday, June 24, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-024:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Protecting and Preserving Property When Paying for Long-Term Care

  • New Resident Health Data Show Value of Senior Living to CMS, Medicare Advantage Payers

  • What Long Term Care Professionals See as the Greatest Operational Risks

  • Financing Long-Term Care

  • Poll indicates voter support for three initiatives on Washington’s fall ballot

  • Medicaid Eligibility and Enrollment Policies for Seniors and People with Disabilities (Non-MAGI) During the Unwinding

  • Director’s Statement on the Updated Budget and Economic Outlook for 2024 to 2034

  • Ensuring Sustainability in Long-Term Care: Challenges and Strategies for the European Union

  • Nation’s older adult population changing, federal report shows

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, June 17, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-023:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Medicare will recalculate quality ratings of Medicare Advantage Plans, WSJ reports

  • 4 percent of those aged 65+ have dementia diagnoses: report

  • CMS: Home healthcare spending estimated to grow by 7.1 percent from 2025 to 2026, surpassing other sectors

  • US healthcare spending for NFs and CCRCs to reach $337.4 billion by 2032, CMS says

  • MACPAC wants Congress to force states to disclose Medicaid financing streams

  • Congress takes aim at White House nursing home staffing quotas

  • Revenue pressures driving home care consolidation, private equity’s growing influence, provider group says

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, June 14, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: REIMAGINING LTC FINANCING

LTC Comment: See long-term care financing more clearly through a new theoretical lens, after the ***news.***

*** JOIN the Center and receive all our LTC Bullets and LTC E-Alerts. Become a premium member and get our daily LTC Clippings as well. Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform exists to promote policies that deliver quality LTC to all Americans. We conduct research and pursue advocacy toward increasing private financing and relieving public LTC spending with the goal to improve funding and quality for all levels and venues of long-term care. Join our campaign here. Check out all the individual and corporate membership options here. Read our 1383 LTC Bullets, organized by topic and chronologically here. Following is a sample LTC Clipping in which we take poor, biased reporting on LTC insurance to task. Help continue to good fight. Support the Center for Long-Term Care Reform.

*** LTC CLIPPING SAMPLE:

6/8/2024, “Soaring premiums, denied benefits, delayed payments show crisis in long-term care insurance,” by Jeremy Olson, Star Tribune

Quote: “The Minnesota Department of Commerce has to approve any rise in premiums, but it's proving impossible for the agency to balance its goals of protecting consumers from massive monthly bills and keeping private insurers in business. … A key miscalculation by insurers: They didn't anticipate the five-year rise in U.S. life expectancy since 1980, so they underestimated the number of people surviving long enough to need long-term care. Many plans also came with inflation adjustments that exponentially increased the value of their benefits, especially as policyholders outlived projections. Insurers also overestimated the proportion of policyholders who would cancel their plans. … Policyholders can cut premium increases by agreeing to reduced benefits — waiving future inflation growth or capping the dollar amount of benefits or the number of years they can be used. … Denials of benefits are increasingly common as policyholders beset with disabilities or dementia — or adult children taking on new care-giving roles — struggle with insurance paperwork.”

LTC Comment: Hit pieces on LTC insurance are nothing new. I remember one especially virulent article that the New York Times brought to press on opening day of the 7th annual Intercompany LTC Insurance Conference in Dallas (see LTC Bullet:  Sucker Punched in Dallas, April 10, 2007). Just once, it would be nice to find some balance in media coverage. Maybe compare how miserably Medicaid and Medicare have done in managing LTC financing. Or mention the Federal Reserve artificially dropping interest rates to zero and crushing returns on carriers’ reserves. Or how about recognizing how well and creatively the LTC insurance industry has managed its challenges, creating new hybrid products and dealing with premium increases responsibly, unlike the government programs that cannot pay future claims but have done nothing to adjust. It would be nice to see some recognition that the vast majority of complaints about failure to pay claims turn out to be specious, based on expecting carriers to pay when contractual policy conditions are unmet. Don’t hold your breath. But do soldier on fellow fighters for LTC reform! ***

 

LTC BULLET: REIMAGINING LTC FINANCING

LTC Comment: People are living longer often in need of extended help with basic activities of daily living due to frailty, chronic illness or cognitive impairment. Such care is expensive. Most people cannot afford it. Currently, Medicaid, a means-tested public assistance program, is the dominant LTC payer.

If Medicaid’s means test really required people to pay their own way before relying on the public program, it would operate in keeping with wholesome principles of independence and personal responsibility. But that is not how Medicaid LTC benefits work.

Income rarely prevents Medicaid LTC eligibility because private medical and LTC expenses are deducted from income before a low income standard is applied. Nor do large resources obstruct eligibility because most big assets, such as home equity and IRAs, are exempt from spend down requirements.

Easy access to Medicaid LTC benefits while preserving personal wealth for heirs created a moral hazard that discouraged early and responsible planning for LTC risk and cost. Medicaid’s availability for most Americans’ LTC needs over decades enabled their denial of personal responsibility.

The resulting excessive dependency on Medicaid caused LTC’s deficiencies, including nursing home bias, insufficient home care, and poor provider reimbursements that led to caregiver shortages, access and quality problems. Understanding what caused these dysfunctions is the key to fixing them.

That key is to remove Medicaid as the dominant LTC payer and replace it with private financing at market rates. That will enable and incentivize nursing homes and home care agencies to supply the kind and quality of care consumers prefer and will demand when they pay their own way. How can we achieve that objective?

Theoretically, this is the easy part. Eliminate all Medicaid rules that enable people with high incomes and assets to qualify for benefits. But politically, that’s the hardest part. Although it will save Medicaid for the poor, enabling the program to pay market rates for more and better care, it would leave the middle class and affluent with huge LTC liabilities that Medicaid no longer alleviates.

The political challenge therefore is to show prosperous people how they are better off without the option to ignore LTC and rely on a poverty program. On the plus side, if they pay privately at market rates, they will have better access to higher quality care in the venue—home care, assisted living or nursing home—that best satisfies their need and preference.

But that is small consolation if they must pay out of pocket for services that Medicaid financed before. Most cannot afford that now and they lack the incentive to safe, invest or insure against the future risk and cost. But with Medicaid removed as an option, that incentive will develop far stronger than ever before.

So the essential ingredient is to give people a reason and a way to save, invest or insure for LTC early in life at a time when LTC planning competes with other priorities. How can families keep up with car and house payments, save for children’s education and their own retirement, and still prepare for LTC?

Some creative public policy changes could replace the current slippery slope onto Medicaid dependency with positive incentives to prepare for LTC. Step one is to set the planning goal at an achievable level. Instead of expecting people to prepare against the small risk of a catastrophically expensive LTC cost, set the expectation on each to meet their average risk. For the average American, setting aside $70,000 by age 65 would suffice according to recent research.

How could people meet that new, lower level of preparation? In “Long-Term Care: The Solution” we identified seven “LTC Choices” that public policy might offer to ease the way. These include … lower premium LTC insurance policies covering reduced average risk; new, tax-advantaged savings accounts; and especially, creative methods to carve out funds for LTC from other savings, such as home equity, retirement savings, life insurance, and estates, if and only if LTC becomes necessary.

With Medicaid removed as a late-life LTC financing source, people will plan early to prepare for LTC risk and cost. With new LTC Choices, they will be able to meet their expected LTC risk and cost without having to come out of pocket at a time when other financial responsibilities are pressing. When the time comes that they do need LTC, they will have the resources to purchase the kind of services they prefer in the private market.

If and when their LTC needs do exceed their funds available, the genuine Medicaid safety net, relieved of covering too many people, will be available to provide services of equal quality. With all their revenue coming at market rates, both for private and Medicaid patients, LTC providers will be relieved of the caregiver shortages caused by low reimbursements.

LTC Comment: For a fuller development of these ideas, see the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution.”

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Updated, Monday, June 10, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-022:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Soaring premiums, denied benefits, delayed payments show crisis in long-term care insurance

  • Medicare among top voting issues for Gen Xers, millennials, report finds

  • Ageless Aging: A Woman’s Guide to Better Healthspan, Brainspan, and Lifespan

  • HHS Delivers Strategic Framework for National Plan on Aging

  • More older Americans worried about Medicare future: Survey

  • Is Mom late on bills? Could be sign of dementia, report finds

  • Emerging Opportunities for Hospitals in the Long Term Care Sector: Structuring Models and Key Considerations

  • ‘A Troubling Trend’: Sudden Closures, Bankruptcies, Displaced Residents in State Put Extra Pressures on Nursing Homes

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, June 3, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-021:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • After A Settlement, Steady Sales For LTC

  • Insights from a Certification For Long-Term Care (CLTC) webinar

  • The Costs of the Rising Cost of Long-Term Care

  • KFF Introduces Health Policy 101—A Primer on U.S. Health Policy

  • Medicaid HCBS utilization linked to reduced SNF use, study finds

  • The Perils of Self-Funding Long-Term Care

  • ACL Releases 2023 Profile of Older Americans

  • ‘Daunting’ concerns about nursing home cost escalation dominate 2025 pay rule comments

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Tuesday, May 28, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-020:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • BREAKING: AHCA files lawsuit to dismiss nursing home staffing rule

  • Black Americans are underrepresented in residential care communities, AP/CNHI News analysis finds

  • California takes top spot as worst state for retirees

  • Improvements in socioeconomic status associated with dementia-free years over lifespan, study finds

  • Ultra-processed foods linked to cognitive decline, stroke

  • Insurance on Insurers: How State Insurance Guaranty Funds Protect Policyholders

  • In 45 States, Fewer Than Half of Nursing Facilities Have Enough Staff to Meet New Federal Requirements

  • Senior living referral site accused of using manipulated reviews, listing communities providing substandard care

  • More boomers favor renting, with little interest in buying homes: report

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com). 

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Updated, Friday, May 24, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: HOW MEDICAID HELPS THE AFFLUENT AT THE EXPENSE OF THE POOR

LTC Comment: How does a “poverty program” divert billions of parents’ long-term care costs to their affluent heirs at taxpayers’ expense? Answers after the ***news.***

*** BELATED HAPPY BIRTHDAY. On April 1st the Center for Long-Term Care Reform celebrated 26 years in operation. No fooling! To date, the Center and Steve Moses have published 1,382 LTC Bullets, provided a continuous supply of LTC E-Alerts, conducted many state and national studies and educated through countless speeches, media interviews, and articles. Most recently, Steve published “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” with the Paragon Health Institute, which also produced this “virtual LTC event” covering those papers’ issues in depth. All of this while remaining only a phone call or email away to answer questions about why long-term care faces mounting challenges in the U.S. and what to do about it. This work has been in service of our mission: to ensure quality long-term care for all Americans by promoting public policy that targets scarce public resources to the neediest, while encouraging people who are young, healthy and affluent enough, to take responsibility for themselves. To our many supporters, both financial and “moral,” individual and corporate, thank you for ensuring our longevity to this point. We would not be here without you. For anyone looking to become a new member or to renew a membership, please consider doing so and help us continue our work. You’ll find our membership schedule here. Join the Center and show your support here. Please contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com with any questions. Thank you so much. *** 

 

LTC BULLET: HOW MEDICAID HELPS THE AFFLUENT AT THE EXPENSE OF THE POOR

LTC Comment: We covered this same topic a decade ago in “LTC Bullet: GAO Punts on Medicaid Planning,” July 3, 2014. That Bullet linked to four others which describe GAO
“studies that downplay the impact of Medicaid’s loose and easily manipulated long-term care eligibility rules.” Specifically:

LTC Bullet: GAO on LTCI Partnerships, June 20, 2007: GAO drops the ball again on the issues of Medicaid, long-term care financing and private insurance.
LTC Bullet: GAO AWOL on LTC TOA, May 2, 2007: The Government Accountability Office has again displayed stunning miscomprehension of the Medicaid eligibility, Medicaid planning and transfer of assets issues.
LTC Bullet: Georgetown, GAO and Kaiser: The Bermuda Triangle of Good LTC Policy, January 25, 2006: LTC doubletalk is not the exclusive province of Medicaid planners and AARP lobbyists. Otherwise often reliable analysts get long-term care policy wrong too.
LTC Bullet: GAO on TOA Underwhelms, October 5, 2005: The Government Accountability Office's new report on Medicaid asset transfers asks the wrong questions, uses the wrong data, and so provides few helpful answers.

Why would an agency charged with ensuring “accountability of the federal government for the benefit of the American people” dodge key issues and downplay its own findings? Could it be that affluent people vote more than poor people do? So benefiting the affluent is more expedient politically. Whatever the reason, the evidence is overwhelming. Government stacks the LTC deck against the needy and GAO is complicit.

Here’s one more example: 

“How Medicaid Helps the Affluent at the Expense of the Poor”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Medicaid spends huge sums on long-term care (LTC), $217 billion for 5.6 million recipients in 2020. Reputed to be a program for the poor, Medicaid still allows affluent people to shelter billions while consuming its LTC benefits. Arguably half or more of what Medicaid spends on LTC protects uncounted wealth retained by recipients, exempt from asset spend down.

Medicaid LTC applicants and recipients can usually have no more than $2,000 in countable assets. Countable assets are cash or anything else easily convertible to cash. But most large assets seniors own are not countable. Such exempt assets include most home equity, one vehicle, a business, prepaid burial expenses, personal care contracts, annuities, and others.

Countable assets are easily made non-countable by purchasing exempt assets. Medicaid planners, who help their clients qualify for Medicaid without spending down for medical or long-term care, provide them extensive lists of exempt assets to purchase. Books and the internet offer similar advice.

We know little about how much wealth that could have been used to purchase LTC privately has been converted to become a Medicaid cost and a taxpayer liability. No systematic study has ever been done. In 2014, however, four members of Congress asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to examine methods people use to reduce countable assets in order to qualify.

GAO responded with a report full of intriguing facts and potentialities. For example: GAO found that14 percent of approved Medicaid applicants … had over $100,000 in total resources; 75 percent owned noncountable resources with a median amount of $12,530; 31 percent owned homes with a median value of $68,350; 3 percent owned real property other than their primary residence with a median value of $47,300.

GAO explained that these findings were based on a small sample of cases in only three states and were not generalizable. GAO did not stress the findings’ significance, seeming rather to downplay their importance. But what if we imagine these results actually were generalizable nationwide? Would they justify further study to find out for sure?

Medicaid covered 5.6 million LTC recipients in 2020. If 14 percent of them had over $100,000 in resources, then $78.4 billion went unused for private LTC financing at Medicaid’s expense. That’s a lot of wealth for a poverty program to protect, fully 36.1 percent of the total $217 billion Medicaid spent on LTC.

If 75 percent of LTC recipients owned a median average of $12,530 each, then $52.6 billion found its way into sheltered wealth, largely as prepaid burial expenses. That is a giant subsidy for the funeral industry at the expense of LTC financing for the poor, fully 24.2 percent of total LTC expenditures.

If 31 percent of 5.6 million Medicaid recipients owned homes with a median value of $68,350, then $118.7 billion of real estate value was diverted from private LTC financing. Given that Medicaid exempts a minimum of $713,000 up to a maximum of $1,071,000 in home equity, it is evident that Medicaid replaces practically all potential LTC liability from personal home equity. The loss to Medicaid equals 54.7 percent of what it spends on LTC.

If 3 percent of recipients own real property other than their primary residence, such as vacation homes, with a median value of $47,300, then $7.9 billion is diverted from private LTC financing into a Medicaid liability while preserving a personal luxury. That’s where 3.6 percent of Medicaid LTC expenditures go.

We have no way to know how realistic GAO’s state-level estimates are. But we can say they are probably very conservative. GAO acknowledged that its results were based solely on information in case records none of which they verified independently. GAO made no attempt to interview recipients’ families or to analyze outside bank or tax records. Nor were assessors’ offices checked for ownership records or recorders’ offices for property transfers. A thorough analysis of their sample employing these tried and true investigative methods would surely have identified substantially more sheltered wealth.

Even though GAO’s findings are not generalizable, aren’t they significant enough to suggest we ought to investigate further? It is long past time to conduct a study based on a valid random sample of Medicaid LTC cases large enough to generalize to the whole United States. Whatever such a study would show, it is already incontrovertible that Medicaid diverts billions of dollars from private LTC financing into heirs’ inheritances.

There is no better reason than that to support mandatory Medicaid estate recoveries. They recoup at least some of this lost wealth to support the program’s truly needy recipients. Proposals to repeal or restrict Medicaid estate recoveries only redound to the benefit of more prosperous others. They reward failure to take responsibility privately for LTC.

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Updated, Monday, May 20, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-019:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • House Republicans introduce measure to overturn nursing home staffing rule

  • All important questions and answers: Why a bankruptcy of nursing care insurance affects us all

  • Premiums for long-term care insurance rise 3.5% for elderly

  • Task force recommends state reduce reliance on nursing homes

  • The War on Prices: How Popular Misconceptions about Inflation, Prices, and Value Create Bad Policy

  • Ageless Aging: A Woman’s Guide to Increasing Healthspan, Brainspan, and Lifespan

  • A solution to the crisis in long-term care? The Big Story

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, May 13, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-018:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Paragon Prognosis: Nursing Bad Policy

  • Nursing homes wield pandemic immunity laws to duck wrongful death suits

  • Program standard for income and resources

  • Long-term care: Options and considerations

  • Staffing mandate costs estimated at $6.5B annually, with 1 in 4 residents at risk of displacement, AHCA warns

  • IRS Releases 2025 Contribution Limits for HSAs

  • Why supporters of Washington’s long-term care program are worried

  • Growing Cost of Obamacare, Dire Medicare Trustees Report, and More

  • A gene long thought to just raise the risk for Alzheimer’s may cause some cases

  • Letting Heirs Bilk Medicaid Is Bad Policy

  • Social Security, Medicare solvency improves slightly, but ‘significant financing issues’ remain: reports

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, May 10, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: CUI BONO LTC?

LTC Comment: Who benefits from Medicaid LTC? Ironically, not the poor, but instead, the affluent. We explain after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** JOIN the Center. If you receive today’s LTC Bullet from a friend or colleague, please consider joining the Center for LTC Reform in your own right. You’ll receive our bi-weekly LTC Bullets and our weekly summaries, LTC E-Alerts, of our daily LTC Clippings. There is no better way to stay abreast of everything happening in the LTC policy space. On top of that, you will support and be part of our mission to reform LTC public policy. Our goal is to encourage responsible LTC planning instead of rewarding consumers’ denial that leads to excessive reliance on Medicaid. Find all the membership options here. Join and contribute here. ***

*** PREMIUM Center members also receive our daily LTC Clippings. Steve Moses scans the academic and popular media. He identifies the reports, data, and articles you need to see to stay at the forefront of professional expertise. He sends an email with the title, author, a link and a key quote followed by his brief analysis of its meaning. Here’s an example: 

5/7/2024, “Letting Heirs Bilk Medicaid Is Bad Policy,” by Stephen Moses and Brian Blase, National Review
Quote:
“More than a dozen members of the House of Representatives have introduced legislation that would increase federal Medicaid spending by ending “estate recoveries.” The proposal, which was discussed at an Energy and Commerce Committee legislative hearing on April 30, would let individuals secure their inheritances by putting their parents on Medicaid and forcing taxpayers to fund their long-term care (LTC).”
LTC Comment: Repealing Medicaid estate recoveries would be terrible public policy as we explained recently in “LTC Bullet: The Fiscal Imperative and The Moral High Ground of Medicaid Estate Recoveries,” April 26, 2024. Hopefully, this piece in National Review will help to quell that idea once and for all. ***

 

LTC BULLET: CUI BONO LTC?

LTC Comment: Cui bono, “who benefits?,” is a Latin term with two related meanings: 1: a principle that probable responsibility for an act or event lies with one having something to gain; and 2: usefulness or utility as a principle in estimating the value of an act or policy. When it comes to long-term care (LTC), cui bono?

Medicaid dominates America’s LTC service delivery and financing system. Ostensibly, Medicaid benefits the poor and under-privileged most. It has a means test with limits on applicants’ and recipients’ incomes and assets. People with wealth exceeding these limits are supposed to pay for their own LTC until they “spend down” to Medicaid’s low income ($943 per month) and asset ($2,000) standards.

The often stated intent of this system is to ensure that the scarce resources of this Great Society poverty program go primarily to its intended, neediest beneficiaries. But it has another objective as well: to incentivize more affluent people to plan ahead for LTC risk and cost. Surely most people would rather save, invest or insure for LTC than to be forced to expend their incomes and savings until they become impoverished and eligible for Medicaid.

But is this how the system really works? Cui bono? Whom does this system benefit and whom does it hurt the most?

Ironically, Medicaid hurts the poor, its intended beneficiaries, most. They have low incomes and assets at the start. High LTC costs consume what little they have very quickly. Poor people usually lack the advice of lawyers and financial experts. So they do not learn about ways  to protect and preserve what they have by circumventing the spend down rules. Once on Medicaid, they tend to receive nursing home care in the least desirable facilities, have reduced access to home and community-based services, and suffer many other deficiencies compared to private-pay patients.

Why is this true? Is Medicaid underfunded? Does it lack the resources to provide care access and quality comparable to what is available to people who pay privately for LTC? I don’t think so. Medicaid LTC is enormously expensive and its expenditures continue to grow steeply every year. What else could explain why such a richly funded program does such a poor job for the people who need it most?

The answer lies in understanding who really benefits most from Medicaid LTC. Medicaid’s supposedly draconian income and asset limits are a myth. Income rarely obstructs eligibility because states either subtract private medical and LTC expenses before they apply a low income standard or they allow income diversion trusts to achieve the same outcome. Nor do assets stand in the way of eligibility for the affluent. Most large assets, such as home equity, a business, and IRAs, are exempt. So people with big incomes and assets actually qualify for Medicaid LTC more easily and with less financial disruption than the poor.

But why would they? Why would people with substantial wealth choose to take advantage of Medicaid’s financial eligibility loopholes to qualify for a welfare program widely considered to be deficient in so many ways? Financial and legal advisers show them how to preserve their wealth, evade “mandatory” Medicaid estate recovery, and gain access to the very best LTC providers, the ones to which poor people have little or no access.

How can they do that? Restructuring high income and assets to qualify a prosperous client for Medicaid LTC and to avoid estate recovery is easy and routine. Getting the same client access to the best LTC Medicaid has to offer requires a second step. Instead of going directly onto Medicaid, the affluent applicant is advised to hold back enough money to pay privately for at least a few months. This “key money” gains access to the best nursing homes and home health providers, who have relatively few Medicaid “beds.” They are less dependent on Medicaid’s extremely low reimbursements, so they are able to provide better care. But they are desperate for private payers at much higher rates than Medicaid pays to make up the difference. So the best facilities welcome all private payers to the exclusion of poor people already on Medicaid. Once in a good facility, federal and state laws prevent residents’ expulsion based solely on a change of payment source from private to Medicaid.

So, bottom line, cui bono from Medicaid LTC? Not the poor. They lose everything quickly. They are shunted into the worst facilities and services Medicaid provides. The affluent get the best of what Medicaid offers. That has been true since Medicaid came on the scene in 1965. It is why so few prosperous people plan early for LTC.

Medicaid tries to do too much for too many and ends up doing worst for the poor and best for the affluent who take advantage. The system is upside down and backwards, but easily fixed by understanding what’s wrong (see “Long-Term Care: The Problem”) and changing policies in ways that follow logically (see “Long-Term Care: The Solution.”)

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Updated, Monday, May 6, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-017:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • ‘No time to mislead the public’ on nursing homes, Biden told; experts offer solutions

  • Government shouldn’t micromanage nursing homes

  • Genworth's CEO Aims for 2025 Long-Term Care Insurance Launch

  • Brain function of older adults catching up with younger generations, finds study

  • Restraining Medicaid’s Budget-Busting Waivers

  • State panel approves nursing home worker minimum wages, including $24 hourly for CNAs

  • The Coming Elder Care Crisis

  • US long-term care costs are sky-high, but Washington state’s new way to help pay for them could be nixed

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, April 29, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-016:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Promoting WA Cares is unnecessary, questionable

  • The Path Bill Gates Sees to Overcoming Alzheimer’s Biggest Remaining Challenges

  • Dementia care comes with ‘catastrophic’ costs for older adults, families, study finds

  • Nursing Homes, HHS on Collision Path Over Staffing Mandate

  • Analysis finds 4 in 5 nursing facilities don’t meet staffing requirements

  • Medi-Cal Now Considers Income, Not Assets, of Enrollees

  • States lack resources to support new Medicaid waiver programs, association asserts

  • BREAKING: CMS increases hours to 3.48 in final staffing rule

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, April 26, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: THE FISCAL IMPERATIVE AND THE MORAL HIGH GROUND OF MEDICAID ESTATE RECOVERIES

LTC Comment: The affluent qualify easily for Medicaid LTC benefits. So recovering the cost of their care from their estates is necessary to discourage excessive use of the program by the non-poor, protect scarce resources for the needy, incentivize responsible LTC planning, and prevent taxpayer financed windfalls for heirs who put their parents on welfare. More after the ***news.***

*** March 2024, “Data-Driven Pre-Claim Wellness Programs Bend the LTCI Claims Cost Curve: The Numbers Are In.,” by Assured Allies and Faegre Drinker

Quote: “With the average age of nearly 7 million long-term care insurance policyholders above 80 and the rising cost of care, insurance carriers and regulators must work together to offer solutions that bend the claims cost curve. This report presents the groundbreaking success of one such solution—designed and executed by Assured Allies—based on the findings from an analysis of its program deployed with five long-term care carriers and 135K lives for over three years.

“The results of our analysis show that the program delivered not only consistent claim reduction patterns across all five carrier program deployments but also an impressive ~10% overall reduction in claims payments in our longest-running program.

“In addition to the financial impact of the program, the policyholder benefit has been overwhelmingly positive, both measured by customer satisfaction (average Net Promoter Score of 50+) and strong clinical outcomes measured by Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs).”

LTC Comment: Click through for all the details in this ground-breaking report. It documents Center-corporate-member Assured Allies’ data-backed success enhancing policyholder satisfaction while reducing claims ten percent. Remarkable! ***

*** BARRY FISHER RADIO: On April 23, 2024, Steve Moses appeared on “Protecting What Matters with Barry Fisher” on KPRL, Paso Robles, CA, 12:25 – 1:00pm

Listen to a recording of the show here.

Stephen Moses, President, Center for Long-Term Care Reform: Topics

  • Why and how current methods of paying for long-term care cannot continue.

  • Saving Medicaid/Medi-Cal for the truly needy.

  • Commonsense solutions for America’s aging population.

“Protecting What Matters, is the broadcast that helps you become better shoppers & buyers of services and products to protect various aspects of your life, health and property. We also explore current events, our history, community, institutions and local treasures that are notable and worth preserving.”

Barry invited Steve to do quarterly updates as a “regular” on the show. Stay tuned! ***
 

LTC BULLET: THE FISCAL IMPERATIVE AND THE MORAL HIGH GROUND OF MEDICAID ESTATE RECOVERIES

LTC Comment: I got my start in long-term care analysis with a study for the Health Care Financing Administration in 1985. HCFA suppressed that work, but the USDHHS Inspector General and the General Accounting Office did national studies based on it. I conducted the IG’s study, wrote its report and consulted on GAO’s review. In the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, most of our recommendations in those reports became federal law. OBRA ’93 made Medicaid estate recoveries mandatory. But it also made qualifying for Medicaid LTC benefits a little harder to achieve and it discouraged divesture of assets to quality. The plan behind these studies and the legislation they inspired was to keep Medicaid eligibility generous but to encourage the public to plan early for LTC and avoid Medicaid dependency. This “kinder and gentler” approach to encourage private LTC planning and preserve Medicaid resources for the needy is under attack again. So we need to revisit the issue and explain why estate recoveries are even more necessary today than they were 30 years ago.

The Center for Long-Term Care Reform has published 14 LTC Bullets about and defending estate recoveries since 1998.

Here’s our latest appeal for rational public policy on LTC based on keeping the affluent off Medicaid and recovering from their estates when they do take advantage of the program.

“The Fiscal Imperative and The Moral High Ground of Medicaid Estate Recoveries”
by
Stephen A. Moses

State officials are "picking the bones of the elderly."

That's how one critic described "estate recoveries," the mandatory recoupment of benefits legally paid by Medicaid from the estates of deceased recipients.

This vital revenue source is periodically under attack, and now again. Calls for repeal have failed before and are being proposed again.

But, like most things in life, this issue is complicated. Here's a primer and fair warning about a government program that is almost certain to touch you or a loved one sooner or later . . . unless you take the proper financial planning steps to avoid it.

Medicaid is a means-tested, public assistance program. In a word, welfare. It is very expensive. Nationally, Medicaid cost over $805 billion in 2022, almost as much as Medicare ($944 billion).

At the state level, Medicaid is the second largest spending category after primary and secondary education. States must balance their budgets, so they need more, not less, estate recoveries. Undue hardship waivers protect the truly needy while these recoveries help fund benefits for all.

Medicaid is a critical health care safety net for poor women and children. But the program is also the primary payor for long-term care (LTC), the mostly custodial assistance critically needed by frail or infirm elderly and disabled people.

LTC consumes a disproportionate share of Medicaid expenditures. While 79% of Medicaid recipients are low-income children or adults, they consume only 44% of the program's costs. Just 21% of Medicaid recipients are aged, blind or disabled, but they consume 55% of Medicaid expenditures, mostly for long-term care.

Why should you care? Many reasons, the first and foremost of which is: you are paying for Medicaid long-term care with your state and federal taxes. You can feel good about that. After all, Medicaid is America's safety net ensuring access to long-term care for the vulnerable poor.

But, Medicaid has become much more than that. It is the principal payor of long-term care for nearly everyone, including many of the well-to-do. How can that be true if Medicaid is welfare?

Over the years, Medicaid eligibility "bracket creep" has expanded the program to cover even upper-middle-class people whom it was never intended by Congress to serve.

For example, income is rarely an obstacle to Medicaid long-term care eligibility because all medical expenses, including expensive nursing home costs, are deducted from people's income before Medicaid’s “low income” standard is applied.

Assets are limited to $2,000 except that home equity, one business, an automobile, prepaid burial costs, term life insurance and IRAs are exempt in unlimited amounts. Many additional assets are exempt within limits.

On top of all that, thousands of attorneys and financial planners specialize in sophisticated techniques to impoverish their affluent clients artificially to qualify them for Medicaid LTC benefits.

Bottom line, there is no limit on how much income or assets people can have while receiving Medicaid LTC benefits as long as their medical expenses are high enough, their assets are held in exempt form, or they hire a "Medicaid planner."

Maybe you're thinking: "You mean I can ignore the huge potential risk and cost of long-term care, avoid the premiums for private insurance, keep most of my wealth, and the government will pay if I ever need care? Sounds pretty good to me."

Not so fast. Leaving aside the critical fact that Medicaid has a dismal reputation for problems of access, quality, reimbursement, discrimination and institutional bias, there are other critical downsides for you to consider.

Ever since 1993, the federal government has required state Medicaid programs to recover the cost of their care from the estates of deceased recipients. Most states have not pursued these "estate recoveries" aggressively before, but that will surely change as Medicaid's enormous fiscal pressure on the state and federal coffers continues to mount.

Expect government at all levels to constrain Medicaid eligibility and to pursue estate recoveries far more aggressively in the future. Their goal is to make sure Medicaid survives as a safety net for the poor without bankrupting taxpayers and the economy. Over time, everyone with any significant wealth will be expected to plan early for long-term care; save, invest or insure against that risk; and pay their own way when the time comes.

When the massive baby boom generation finally needs long-term care, Medicaid will not be an option for any but the most needy, if it survives at all. In the future, the only way to obtain quality long-term care, especially in the preferred settings of one's own home or an assisted living facility, will be to pay privately. The only way to pay privately will be to spend your own wealth including your home equity or to own private long-term care insurance.

So, here's the bottom line about Medicaid estate recoveries.

First: estate recoveries are a fiscal necessity to preserve Medicaid as America's long-term care safety net for the poor as long as possible.

Second: if you want to preserve your own wealth against the cost of long-term care, don't expect a free ride on the public welfare system. Plan to use your savings, home equity or buy private long-term care insurance.

The question to ask yourself about estate recoveries is this: should Medicaid help the needy with LTC costs or give heirs a windfall for placing their ailing parents on public assistance?

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Updated, Monday, April 22, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-015:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • CMS finalizes controversial 80/20 rule

  • Here's Why Extended Care Planning Remains Critical for Women

  • Medicare’s push to improve chronic care attracts businesses, but not many doctors

  • Routine jobs raise the risk of cognitive decline by 66% and dementia by 37%, study says

  • Data-Driven Pre-Claim Wellness Programs Bend the LTCI Claims Cost Curve: The Numbers Are In

  • Democrats push new LTC workforce bill as offset to nursing home mandate

  • Setting the Record Straight on Long-Term Care Policy

  • Bill would end federal mandate for states to recoup Medicaid costs for HCBS, care

  • Rethinking Insurance for an Aging Population

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Tuesday, April 16, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-014:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The Medicaid LTC snafu

  • Home care sees largest price jump in history, BLS report finds

  • Setting the Record Straight on Long-Term Care Policy

  • Health advocates decry changes to long-term home care program

  • Home healthcare for elderly sees largest price increase ever

  • Working conditions, not personal reasons, causing nurses to leave long-term care: study

  • Immigration reform needed to solve caregiver shortage: Brookings

  • Calif. consumer group asks NAIC to lead on U.S. long-term care financing issue

  • California’s senior living and care sector at ‘critical juncture’

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, April 12, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: LONG-TERM CARE DISPARITIES: ARE THEY RACISM OR ONLY ECONOMIC INEQUITY?

LTC Comment: Are LTC disparities due to racism, economic inequity, or both? We address this sensitive, but compelling question after the ***news.***

*** JOIN the Center; SUBSCRIBE to LTC Clippings. Join the Center for Long-Term Care Reform and receive our bi-weekly LTC Bullets and weekly LTC E-Alert summaries of our daily LTC Clippings. For a little extra, get the Clippings by email in real time. Check out our “Membership Levels and Benefits” schedule for all the details or contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com. If you’re not a member yet, here are the subjects of the Clippings you missed last week. Each Clipping included the following information plus a representative quote from the source and Steve Moses’s brief analysis of why it matters.

4/5/2024, “Report: Medicaid Payment Variability Hinders Access To Home- and Community-Based Services,” by Patrick Filbin, Home Care News

4/5/2024, “Researchers call to reform long-term care as Israelis live longer,” Jewish News Syndicate

4/3/2024, “Medicare, Medicaid authorized $100B in improper payments last year, GAO reveals,” by Adam Healy, McKnights Home Care

4/2/2024, “Changing Perspective Part 1: My Day as a Post Acute Care Resident,” by Doug Farmer, Provider

4/1/2024, “Can a Nursing Home Take Our Savings? We Have $350,000 in IRAs,” by Mark Henricks, Yahoo!Finance

4/1/2024, “Aging In Place: The New American Dream,” by Larry Nisenson, Advisor Magazine

4/1/2024, “Senior Housing Rebounds as Boomers Move In,” by Peter Grant, Wall Street Journal (pay wall)

Your Center for Long-Term Care Reform membership will get and keep you up to speed on everything happening in LTC services and financing. Join now! ***

 

LTC BULLET: LONG-TERM CARE DISPARITIES: ARE THEY RACISM OR ONLY ECONOMIC INEQUITY?

LTC Comment: Last summer I came across a webinar titled “A Matter of Justice: Racism as a Fundamental Cause of LTC Inequities.” Dubious, but intrigued, I watched this well-organized and documented presentation by Professor Shekinah Fashaw-Walters of the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health. Afterwards, I followed the links she provided to scholarly articles on the topic. Those sources led me to many more. I’m working on a paper, provisionally titled “Structural Long-Term Care Racism: The Cause and the Solution.” In the meantime, facing criticism that “it’s not racism, but only economic inequity,” I decided to think through that distinction. This essay is the outcome of that reflection.

 

“Long-Term Care Disparities: Are They Racism or Only Economic Inequity?”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Imagine if Jim Crow were a state Medicaid director today. We would not be surprised to see this quote about racial disparities in his domain.

[B]lacks are much more likely than whites to be located in nursing homes that have serious deficiencies, lower staffing ratios, and greater financial vulnerability.[1]

We might also expect that deficiencies experienced disproportionately in Crow’s state by “Black, Indigenous, and persons of color (BIPOC)” users would include segregation;[2] less access to HCBS,[3] assisted living,[4] mental health services,[5] pain medication,[6] influenza vaccinations,[7] hospital and hospice care[8] and ADRD care;[9] more physical restraints;[10] higher COVID-19 incidence, hospitalization and death counts;[11] and more pressure ulcers.[12]

We would reasonably attribute these disparities in long-term care access and quality to blatant racism by the authority in charge. That is, to Medicaid Director Crow and his racially prejudiced minions.

Thankfully, no current state Medicaid program to my knowledge is run by a blatant racist. But every one of those race-based disparities listed above persists in America today according to the peer-reviewed academic journals cited.

Is it racism? If not, what else is at work? The obvious answer is that socially and economically marginalized groups, regardless of their racial make-up, suffer poor care disproportionately. But that is a distinction without a difference. Racial minorities are often among socially and economically disadvantaged groups.

So the question becomes: why are economically disadvantaged people, including racial minorities, treated less well in terms of medical and long-term care? Is it deliberate animus? Hatred of the poor? Racism?

An explanation has evolved in the literature that blames entrenched laws, regulations and policies without holding contemporary individuals culpable for deliberate bias. It goes by different names—institutional, systemic or structural racism—each term having nuanced differences, but the basic idea is this.

Structural racism operates through laws and policies that allocate resources in ways that disempower and devalue members of racial and ethnic minority groups, resulting in inequitable access to high-quality care.[13]  

Could it actually be that disparities in long-term care are unintended consequences of well-intentioned, even noble objectives of fundamentally good, certainly non-racist individuals? Consider one example among many possible involving Medicaid long-term care eligibility.

Medicaid is designed presumably to benefit the poor and underprivileged, including racial minorities, most. Income must be very low ($943/month) and assets $2,000 or less. Clearly the intent of these rules is to ensure that scarce public resources go to those most in need.

But there are other benevolently intended rules that have the opposite effect. People with much higher incomes and assets also qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits. That’s because Medicaid deducts personal medical and LTC expenses before applying its low income cap and most larger assets, such as home equity, are exempt.

The net effect of Medicaid LTC law, regulations and policies is that the poor, middle class, and even the affluent qualify for benefits. In fact, Medicaid planning experts specialize in artificially impoverishing even the wealthy so they too can take advantage of the public assistance program ostensibly targeted to the poor.

The obvious consequence of these laws and policies is that more people rely on Medicaid than would be the case if the program were only available to the neediest. That means fewer resources are available to help those most in need. The result: low provider reimbursements, caregiver shortages, nursing home bias, access and quality problems.

While these deficiencies affect everyone dependent on Medicaid, they impact the underprivileged and racial minorities most. That is because more affluent people, including the racial majority, are able to get the best care Medicaid has to offer, essentially crowding out recipients with less money and influence.

For example, affluent families can subsidize a relative’s Medicaid-funded care by paying extra directly to a nursing home to purchase special meals or a private room. Prosperous people tend to reside in upscale neighborhoods where the better LTC providers are. So, when they qualify for Medicaid, they have immediate access to the best facilities that are least dependent on low Medicaid reimbursements. People with “key money” are often advised to pay privately for a while before converting to Medicaid. That assures them access to the best institutional and home care providers who are desperate to supplement meager Medicaid funding with private payers at market rates.

Bottom line, Medicaid policies try to do too much for too many and end up doing too little for the people who need the help most. That’s where the egregious discrepancies in care access and quality that hurt underprivileged people including racial minorities most, come from.

Is it racism? Not in the Jim Crow or Bull Connor sense. But the consequences may be indistinguishable from the structural long-term care equivalent.


 

End Notes

[1] David Barton Smith, Zhanlian Feng, Mary L. Fennel, Jacqueline S. Zinn, and Vincent Mor, “Separate and Unequal: Racial Segregation and Disparities in Quality Across U.S. Nursing Homes,” Health Affairs, 26, no. 5, (September/October 2007), p. 1448, https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.26.5.1448.

[2] Momotazur Rahman and Andrew D. Foster, “Racial Segregation and Quality of Care Disparity in US Nursing Homes,” Journal of Health Economics, 39, (January 2015), p. 3, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4293270/.

[3] Chanee D. Fabius, Jessica Ogarek, and Theresa I. Shireman, “Racial Disparities in Medicaid Home and Community-Based Service Utilization among White, Black, and Hispanic Adults with Multiple Sclerosis: Implications of State Policy,” Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, 6, (December 2019), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31359384/.

Zhanlian Feng, Mary L. Fennell, Denise A. Tyler, Melissa Clark, and Vincent Mor, “Growth of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in US Nursing Homes Driven by Demographics and Possible Disparities in Options,” Health Affairs, 30, no. 7, (July 2011), https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/full/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0126.

Rebecca J. Gorges, Prachi Sanghavi, and R. Tamara Konetzka, “A National Examination of Long-Term Care Setting, Outcomes, and Disparities Among Elderly Dual Eligibles,” Health Affairs, 38, no. 7, (July 2019), https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/full/10.1377/hlthaff.2018.05409.

[4] Meghan Jenkins Morales and Stephanie A. Robert, “Black–White Disparities in Moves to Assisted Living and Nursing Homes Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries,” Journals of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 75, no. 9, 2020, https://academic.oup.com/psychsocgerontology/article/75/9/1972/5610255.

[5] Maricruz Rivera-Hernandez, Amit Kumar, Gary Epstein-Lubow, and Kali S. Thomas, “Disparities in Nursing Home Use and Quality Among African American, Hispanic, and White Medicare Residents With Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias,” Journal of Aging and Health, 31, no. 7, (August 2019), https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0898264318767778.

[6] Deborah S. Mack, Jacob N. Hunnicutt, Bill M. Jesdale, and Kate L Lapane, “Non-Hispanic Black-White disparities in pain and pain management among newly admitted nursing home residents with cancer,” Dove Press Journal of Pain Research, 11, (2018), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29695927/.

[7] Jasmine L. Travers, Krista L. Schroeder, Thomas E. Blaylock, and Patricia W. Stone, “Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Influenza and Pneumococcal Vaccinations Among Nursing Home Residents: A Systematic Review,” The Gerontologist, 58, no. 4, (2018), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28329831/.

[8] Nan Tracy Zheng, Dana B. Mukamel, Thomas Caprio, Shubing Cai, and Helena Temkin-Greener, “Racial Disparities in In-Hospital Death and Hospice Use Among Nursing Home Residents at the End-of-life,” Medical Care, 49, no. 11, (November 2011), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22002648/.

[9] Rivera-Hernandez, et al., “Disparities in Nursing Home Use and Quality Among African American, Hispanic, and White Medicare Residents With Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias.”

[10] Kimberly M. Cassie and William Cassie, “Racial disparities in the use of physical restraints in U.S. nursing homes,” Health & Social Work, 38, no. 4, (November 2013), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24432487/.

[11] Rebecca J. Gorges and R. Tamara Konetzka, “Factors Associated With Racial Differences in Deaths Among Nursing Home Residents With COVID-19 Infection in the US,” JAMA Network Open, 4, no. 2, (February 2021), https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7876590/.

Rohan Khazanchi, Charlesnika T. Evans, and Jasmine R. Marcelin, “Racism, Not Race, Drives Inequity Across the COVID-19 Continuum,” JAMA Network Open, 3, no. 9, (September 2020), https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2770954.

[12] Shubing Cai, Dana B. Mukamel, and Helena Temkin-Greener, “Pressure ulcer prevalence among Black and White nursing home residents in New York State: Evidence of racial disparity?,” Medical Care, 48, no. 3, (March 2010), https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20182267/.

[13] Ruqaiijah Yearby, Brietta Clark, and José F. Figueroa, “Structural Racism in Historical and Modern US Health Care Policy,” Health Affairs, 41, No. 2, (February 2022), p. 187, https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2021.01466.
 

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Updated, Monday, April 8, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-013:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Report: Medicaid Payment Variability Hinders Access To Home- and Community-Based Services

  • Medicare Advantage Program to Restructure Agent, Broker Pay

  • Researchers call to reform long-term care as Israelis live longer

  • Medicare, Medicaid authorized $100B in improper payments last year, GAO reveals

  • Changing Perspective Part 1: My Day as a Post Acute Care Resident

  • Can a Nursing Home Take Our Savings? We Have $350,000 in IRAs

  • Aging In Place: The New American Dream

  • Senior Housing Rebounds as Boomers Move In

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, April 1, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-012:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • The seven most important questions about Medicaid

  • The Long-Term Care Planners' Club Meeting

  • Americans Reducing Retirement Savings And Taking On Debt Due To Inflation

  • Providers applaud long-awaited update to Older Americans Act programs

  • Rates for nursing homes, in-home care down: report

  • State is gathering stories about long-term care

  • Why the New Old Age Could Be Different

  • ‘Money Out of Our Pockets’: $274.9M in Nursing Home Revenue Lost For Every Percentage MA Plans Grow

  • It's Late, You're Tired, and All You See Are No Vacancy Signs

  • 2 senior living companies file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

  • SNF, home care spending outpaced by overall personal healthcare spending

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, March 29, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC Comment: ILTCI ’24 was another successful industry convocation. Your “virtual visit” to the conference follows the ***news.***

*** OUR OBJECTIVE in offering these “virtual visits” to the conference is to give those who did not attend some of the flavor of the experience. We’ve published dozens of these reports over the years. You can find many of them by going here and searching for “virtual visit.” Check out our History of LTC Insurance Conferences (2021) for an overview of LTCI industry conferences going back to ILTCI #1 in January 2001 at the Hyatt Regency in Miami, Florida. If you know some of the leading lights in the industry, you’ll recognize their younger selves in several pictures. Happy reading! ***

 

LTC BULLET: ILTCI ‘24 VIRTUAL VISIT

LTC Comment: The 2024 Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convened March 17-20 at the Town & Country resort in San Diego, California. This year’s theme was “We’re Up to Something Good” and the program delivered in full measure.

For me, the meeting kicked off on Sunday, the 17th with a visit to the Society of Actuaries Long-Term Care Section meeting.

Discussion of the section’s 2024 initiatives covered their planned webcasts on international LTC programs, standalone or combo products, and/or an update on state LTC programs. Other topics included podcasts, past and future, and a proposal for a Medical LTC Symposium, presented by Sally Leimbach.

The opening reception Sunday night from 5pm to 7pm featured ample food and drink provided by conference sponsors that fueled amiable networking, allowing participants to renew old friendships and make new professional contacts.

The conference opened in earnest on Monday morning, March 18. Karen Smyth, 2024 Conference Chair, welcomed the 950 attendees. She recognized and thanked the many staff, volunteers and sponsors who planned and executed the program.

ILTCI Recognition Award

A highlight of the 2024 conference was the renewed offering of the ILTCI Recognition Award to “showcase the best of our industry and acknowledge their contributions.” The honor was bestowed on Marc Cohen in 2018 and Stephen Moses in 2019, but had not been awarded since, due to pandemic disruptions. To make up for those lost years, two individuals and one company received the award, including a $1,000 honorarium and a trophy. Receiving the ILTCI Recognition Award this year were:

Ronald R. Hagelman, “a teacher, cattle rancher, agent, brokerage general agent, corporate consultant, and home office executive” as well as the author of a long-running monthly column in Broker World.

Peter Goldstein of illumifin received and acknowledged the award, presented a $10,000 donation check to the Alzheimer’s Association, and introduced the meeting’s keynote speaker.

LTCI Partners received the company award. Managing Director Tom Riekse acknowledged the award on behalf of the company.

These exceptional individuals and companies are a tribute to ILTCI and represent the achievement of its “vision.” The Intercompany Long Term Care Insurance Conference Association’s (ILTCI) vision is to create an environment for aging in America that includes thoughtful, informed planning that takes into account the most effective and efficient use of resources in addressing the risks and costs of long-term care for all levels of American society. 

Keynote Speech

Peter Goldstein introduced keynote speaker: Dr. Maria Carrillo, chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Association. She delivered a highly relevant and meaningful update on the state of scientific research on Alzheimer’s disease, a welcome change from more general motivational speakers in the past. Her key message was that research considered only “hopeful” and “futuristic” as recently as a few years ago is now a reality. Alzheimer’s is a disease, not normal aging, we can do something about it. There are modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors. Focus on risk reduction. Forty percent of cases could be prevented or delayed by targeting modifiable risk factors. Onset is earlier and slower than previously believed. Exercise, nutrition brain exercise, aggressive cardio vascular activity are critical. There is no ROI (return on investment) so big pharma won’t take this part on. Can diagnose Alzheimer’s before death now. So much happening in this space. Blood tests. New approvals for new drugs. Outcomes: slowing disease progression; being able to do what I want longer. Only a beginning. But Alzheimer’s research is on the move. Finally, there is reason to hope for real progress.

March 18 Breakout Sessions

The first I attended was 10am: “Data Science and AI in Action: Driving Modernization and Enhanced Outcomes.”
Presenters: Joe Long; Doug Elfers; Dan Marsh; and Paddy Horan
Discussion: The use of data science and AI, including machine learning [ML] and innovative data sources, to improve outcomes in the long-term care insurance industry.
Insights: What AI means to them. Everyone psyched up. Broad terms, lot of different methods. Neural networks. Background of AI umbrella. What’s out there? New products and different ideas. Machine learning models. Around for a long time. More data, cheaper costs. Building a model. AI about using a model. Trying to find associations; optimizing outcomes. Supervised vs. unsupervised learning. Generative AI generates new content that is similar to but not identical to data it has been trained on. How can data science leverage AI/ML to improve outcomes of wellness programs in the LTC industry? Get wellness programs to the right people. How ML can optimize LTC insurance claim processes such as eligibility or recertification. How can LTC actuaries use predictive models to expand their analytic capabilities and improve their methods. Policy holder experience side. Cost savings vs. customer experience. Don’t let chatbot interfere with customer experience.

11:15am “Recent Research Findings
Presenters: Matt Majewski; John O’Leary; Celeste Cobb; Trish Shuhilo; Vince Bodnar moderated.
Discussion: Panel of experts shared findings from four recent studies that cover emerging consumer sentiments about long-term care, long-term care insurance, and the burdens of family caregiving.
Insights: Best research of the past year. 10 minutes each. Matt from Lincoln. Trying to understand consumers; help them overcome obstacles. Motivate advisors. Cost is main obstacle. Consumers underestimate the risk of LTC to retirement savings. Medical and care costs on the rise. More referrals from women 1.5X. Pandemic brought LTC more attention. Consumers want to plan but need help. Family members in conversation is win-win-win. Top barrier to purchase is affordability. Take aways: hard to pinpoint when to bring to client. No life stage. When to have need. Impact on portfolio. Think about emotional sale.
Celeste Cobb from Insurance Marketing Solutions. 2022 industry studies. Survey focusing on caregivers. How caregiving influences decisions. Does caregiving induce future planning? Yes, 93%. What future planning are they most likely to do. These are caregivers. Deferment insight. 62% said take care of it themselves. 32% said talk to financial planner or look into LTCI. Traits of caregivers who say they’ll do future planning. Sandwich generation; owning a home; having planner; financial products; higher education; familiarity with LTCI; assets to protect. Caregivers more likely to consider buying LTCI: Men. Married. Higher income. Homeowner. Higher education. Why hasn’t caregiving motivated caregivers to plan? In a word. Denial. Message. People don’t get it. Most people think health insurance will pay. Comes back to education. Traits of people not interested in LTCI:  Female, divorced, no children, retired, no life insurance. Next study, middle America vs. affluent America. Education is end all and be all.
Patricia Shuhilo from One America. Paying for LTC. 1. Cost of LTCI; 2. Medical support for LTC; 3. Not believe they’ll need it. Only 23% said LTCI for payment source. More: self-fund; medicare. Biggest gap, only 18% worked with a financial professional. Only 54% of financial professionals talking about LTC. 25% said used to talk about it but don’t anymore.
John O’Leary’s from O’Leary Management Associates. Unfortunately, I had to leave this session before John presented. 

12:30pm “Center for Long-Term Care Reform
Presenter: Stephen Moses
Discussion: Stephen Moses (Center for LTC Reform president) presented findings from two papers: “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” (both published by the Paragon Health Institute. He explained why LTC financing reform has languished since the Great Recession, but will flourish anew soon. He previewed his forthcoming paper “Ending Structural Long-Term Care Racism.”
Insights: This presentation provided a retrospective on what went wrong with LTC services and financing in the U.S. and a forecast of what is likely coming next. 

2pm “Projecting the 5th Decade of LTC Insurance from its First 40 Years
Presenters: Al Schmitt, Jim Glickman, Claude Thau, Bruce Stahl
Discussion: A lively discussion from industry experts sharing thoughts of where the industry has been, where we are currently, and what the future holds form an actuarial lens.
Insights: Advice to a new CEO?  Bruce: always disagree. Claude: avoid gotcha claims provisions. Don’t use provisions that sound better than they are. Challenge staff to explain how product remains good if interest rates go up. Assumption settings, missteps of past. How to train actuaries. Claude has concern about genetic testing. Underwriting: What learned over years: Jim: Doing rate increases. How to get into the middle market. 25% miss rate both ways. Distribution: Past v. future. Claude: Coming back to specialists. Too complicated for financial planners. Liability. Paperwork. Variety of products compounds problem.  

3:30pm “LTCI 101 Family Feud
Presenters: Steve Serfass, Karen Smyth, Sandra Jones and others.
Discussion: Modeled after America’s hottest game show, this session featured Steve Serfass reprising the role of Richard Dawson as two families showed off their LTC knowledge. Karen Smyth led the ILTCI Board Member family facing off against a family populated by audience participants led by Sandra Jones.
Insights: Questions and answers were derived from responses to surveys completed by ILTCI attendees. A good time was had by all.

March 19, 2024 Breakout Sessions

8:45am “LTC Legislative Update
Presenters: Diane Boyle (NAIFA), Leah Walters (ACLI), Carroll Golden (NAIFA Limited and Extended Care)
Discussion: This polling-format session looked at Federal and State LTC legislation and other initiatives, including wellness programs and the use of external consumer data and information sources.
Insights: Leah: important to understand the states. Governor, legislature, run by one party. Only 10 states with divided government. 80% of country lives in one-party state. 25 insurance commissioners have 3 years of experience or less. Can’t get their attention. 11 elected; 31 appointed. 80% of all legislators up for election in November. Lot of turnover. Have to go in and educate. Background.
Diane: Little done in LTC space. Congress, Medicare for all has greatest interest. 113 members and 14 senators signed on. Introduced. All democrats. Divided government; hard to get anywhere. Other proposals not getting any traction. The last time we had comprehensive legislation: Tom Suozzi. CLASS act before that. Actuaries found would not work. Suozzi is back. Maybe LTC will get traction. But he got Homeland for committee. No groundswell. Bad news on federal side that anything will get done.
Leah: WA Cares. Collections started July 1. Initiative to make optional. Hot issue for Rs and Ds in WA. Keeping lists of who supports and opposes. Don’t want to be on that list. Initiative to make optional expected to pass. Many other states looking at what WA is doing. CA well along. Doing actuarial study. 5 or 6 other states, CT, MD, PA. Not moving. Seeing more studies.
Diane: 64 bills in 29 states. Garnering interest.
Leah: should be actuarially sound, not depend on interest groups.
Diane: Some general health care bills that would include LTC. Wellness programs:
Leah: Consumers want more direct, electronic access to life insurance.

10am “State Tax Mandates: Selling LTC in Face of Legislation
Presenters: Stephen Forman, Gary Forman, Tom Riekse, Carolyn Olson
Discussion: What does it mean to you and your clients that states are exploring publicly financed LTC solutions? Topics included: talking points for client conversations; can the industry work with states to develop supplemental products; what about a public/private partnership?
Insights: Gary Forman introduced the topic. Tom Riekse: how do you want to position? Get in touch with associations. We didn’t know what reaction would be for opt out. Details fuzzy. Didn’t know how to prepare. Had relationships with brokers. Carolyn, first learned in 2019. Had to get ready. Changed business model to get more people interested. Adjusted as things happened. Had infrastructure to handle it. “Went to town.” Positioned website. Gary: spread like wildfire. Much preparation. Tom: just laid out the facts. Kept our team informed. Steve: Approached carriers. Told them this coming. In couple years, things are going to get crazy. This will be tax avoidance driven. People looking for smallest possible policy. You need systems in place to handle volume. You can do this in other states coming up. Get in front of state legislators. What opt out provision? Look around. If don’t have a seat at the table, you’re on the outside looking in. We spent a lot of time trying to educate. Try to be good educators. Get ahead of the process. Tried to be in front of WA Cares. They were putting out notoriously wrong information. We were getting more traffic to our information than the state. That’s something you can do in other stages. Tom, tried to show people better options. Look at more comprehensive plan. People looking a smaller plans. How much of million dollars place still in force. Carolyn: 1200 cases. 9% have cancelled. $76K premium gone away. Gone back to people and upgraded 8%. Tom, above average drop off. Gary: we work in regulated world. Politicians back into decisions. Legislative process. Steve: WA removed the cap on income. Very small group of high earners responsible for supporting the program. High tech industry, all opted out. CA says we  can’t do that.
From audience, Joe Pulitano asked: what will happen with initiative. Switch to voluntary program. Fear is would undermine solvency. Milliman: death spiral. What we’ve heard. Scrap program flat. Sense on the ground; overestimated popularity; tremendous opposition; genuine expectation leaning toward passing. WA Cares goes down in flame. Lot can happen between now and November. Could change. Gary: ship has sailed, nothing happens in the other states. How did you talk about uncertainty? Carolyn: acknowledged didn’t know. Tried to be logical about it.
Steve: look at what these states are doing. Let me tell you what’s happening and why you should be aware. All the urgency things apply. It could be too late. Started 2019 in WA but constant changes. Steve: great publicity. Everyone knows benefit not enough. So shows public need to think about LTC. State of WA puts out information. That is awareness we can’t afford to buy. People call us. Basic strategies. Sell with intention of exempting yourself. Cooperate with us, need something in addition. Maybe if own something at least get a break on the tax. Steve: CA much more vigorously researched. WA eschewed the help of experts. Original sin of WA was not accepting help from experts. Now they’re paying for it. CA learned from that. Lots of creative ideas. Legislators can do anything. Things take so long because elections happening all the time. Whole new crop of legislators.

11:15am “Can WE Chat (GPT) Using AI and Predictive Modeling to Engage with Customers
Presenters: Robert Eaton, Doug Elfers, Karan Chawla
Discussion: How can we tap into the intersection of artificial intelligence, predictive modeling and personalized experiences to ethically and wisely improve engagement and ROI?
Insights: Robert: Large language model predicting next word in a sentence. Generative AI does more. Using data, multimodal models. Fill in the gaps, pictures, etc. Using models to predict the next thing. Computer based. Chatbots engaging in conversation. Predictive Analytics. Likelihood of future outcomes.
Karan: Customer experience. AI makes like talking to a social worker.
Robert: We use AI to develop machine learning models. Perplexity.ai is one of the best. Gets articles about a subject and summarizes them. How were we 10 years ago vs. now.
Karan: Evolution of what we’re thinking. More simplistic before. At one time, not having to do long form division was amazing. But now can do so much more. Big data sources. Automation. Seeing now where it is going.
Robert: 2014 starting to see new actuarial models. Segmented many ways. Morbidity. Models now much more complicated. More insight into the data. Needed more computer power.
Why be optimistic?
Karan: Only going to make the world more efficient. Make better outcomes for customers.
Robert: A lot of skepticism. He asked for a poem about superhero actuary. Not copying, creating. Marketing LTCI, telling better stories. Easier to get. Power of words. All going to have more access. Using these tools opens new problems and solutions. Very optimistic.
Concerns? Legitimate. Misuse.
10 years ahead? Hard to think in years when changes are weekly.
Robert: All robots.

12:45pm, “Building LTC State Reform Proposals for Collaborative Success
Presenters: Stephanie Moench (Oliver Wyman) and Steve Schoonveld (FTI Consulting)
Discussion: A brief “think tank” for LTC enthusiasts to speak their minds and generate creative public/private LTC financing solutions.
Insights: Steve: Put CA and MN together. Want to be part of the solution. Data. No names. What is needed; who are eligible? What are current coverage options? Where gaps? Medicaid, Alternative care, out-of-pocket costs, private insurance. By income. All based on supposition of cost of care. High level ball park estimates. Looking at projections of Medicaid use and payments. 10 year time horizon. Costed services and projected increases. Nursing facilities going higher and faster. HCBS and ALF are potential cost savings. Simulate changes in population and other factors. What is new normal after Covid?
Second panel: CA and MN combined. Emily Smith; Stephanie Moench; Peterson; John O’Leary
State approaches to innovation. Steve question: federal vs. state role. Middle income reliant on Medicaid. More affordable financing options for the middle class. John: systematic reforms. Stephanie, culturally competent. Value proposition for all income levels. How to evaluate options. Collaboration of groups in LTC space. John, stakeholder input. Everyone citizen of MN. Expert witnesses too. Interaction between, input process. Integrate data into discussion. WA threw something at the wall and some stuck. Took more time with it in CA. How to evaluate impact of proposals? Funding less of a problem than care navigation. Some states are unprepared. Resistance to change. MN high LTCI penetration. What is the value proposition? What are people expecting? Provide quality LTSS. People don’t want to have to spend down. Go through their assets. How to make it more equitable or all. Educating. Consumer expectations are very low. Don’t think about until personal experience in family. 

3:30pm “Live Focus Group Session: Engaging with LTC Policyholders
Presenters: Winona Berdine, Rachel Kudler
Discussion: Watch a live focus group session of persons aged 75 to 85. Learn what it takes to engage with them on wellness, care coordination and caregiver support programs. What services are they interested in? What messaging resonates with them? How do they prefer to be reached? How do they prefer to interact with us? This is the only session we have a recording of from the conference this year. [Strongly recommended session; link to the recording here.]
Insights: Several LTCI policy holders answered questions about their experiences with caregiving, why they purchased LTCI, what their experience has been as policyholders, what they would like the industry to do to improve the product. Typical responses: bought because of own parents’ asset spend down; premiums way up; would like more communication from carrier, but not clear about what; all trying to stay active and healthy; their own challenging experiences with caregiving; frustration with nursing homes, assisted living and caregivers; one respondent had great experience with LTC in France; regarding wellness programs: very little interest, even if free, carriers should stick to their knitting, focus on good coverage, getting care when needed, many other sources for “wellness,” marketed as free, but premiums already high and this will increase them; no phone calls, no texts, rather prefer email or hard copy; information needed about what to do, where to go to find and manage care; no contact from agents after sale.

LTC Comment: I strongly recommend watching the video of this session. It provides clear insights into what this group of policyholders think and feel about their experience with the coverage. What struck me most is their lack of interest in the kinds of wellness programs the industry is promoting. Most of the respondents felt that the carriers should stick to improving the product and reducing premiums rather than promoting ancillary services that are available elsewhere and would only add to costs if provided by the carriers. Industry leader, actuary Vincent Bodnar shared this thought: “A good analogy that I've shared with other attendees: The industry is like an estranged father now wanting to have a relationship with his child after being gone for decades. Based on the recording and other interactions I listened to, the policyholders do want a relationship with the insurers, but it will take time to gain trust. So far, all they've received from insurers is rate increase notices. New efforts need to start with little things and win over that trust over time. After the industry regains trust, policyholders will be open to these programs.”

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Updated, Monday, March 25, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-011:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • There’s a huge Medicaid problem in California: Most doctors just won’t see those patients

  • Long-Term Care Insurance Association Releases 2024 Short-Term Care Price Index

  • First-time grants will help connect new Americans with long-term care careers

  • State Medicaid offices target dead people’s homes to recoup their health care costs

  • Ensuring Families Have the Resources To Care for Older Adults

  • CMS delivers providers payment lifelines in the wake of Change Healthcare outage

  • Personal care workers received most Medicaid fraud convictions in 2023: OIG

  • Poor neighborhoods tied to higher dementia risk, faster brain aging

  • Private equity sets sights on home care, hospice, new report finds

  • Older adults’ net worth surges following pandemic

  • Long-term care rates up 1 to 10 percent: survey

  • Proposal would add Kentucky to mix of states trying to address long-term care financing

  • Genworth Releases Cost of Care Survey Results for 2023: Twenty Years of Tracking Long-Term Care Costs

#############################

"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

#############################

 

Updated, Friday, March 15, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: YOUR LTC QUESTIONS ANSWERED

LTC Comment: Center for Long-Term Care Reform president Stephen Moses will speak at next week’s ILTCI conference in San Diego. Find some of the questions he’ll answer, after the ***news.***

*** 2024 ILTCI CONFERENCE convenes March 17-20 in San Diego. Check out the general schedule here and print the full session matrix here. CLTC offers its Masterclass at a reduced rate ($700) on Sat. and Sun. before the conference kicks off (register online). The Center for Long-Term Care Reform will cover the meeting for LTC Bullets. So if you cannot attend yourself, watch for our LTC Bullet “Virtual Visit” to the conference the following week. Steve Moses will speak on Monday, March 18 from 12:30 to 1:30pm in Room D. To all 2024 ILTCI attendees, he says: “Come listen and say hello.” (View the event invitation.) ***

*** GENWORTH publishes 20th annual cost-of-care summary and the results, especially for home-based care, are stunning: 

3/13/2024, “Long-term care rates up 1 to 10 percent: survey,” by Kathleen Steele Gaivin, McKnights Senior Living
Quote: “Year-over-year rate increases in long-term care ranged from 1% to 10% across setting types, according to the results of Genworth’s Cost of Care Survey 2023, published Tuesday. …The average national rate for a private nursing home room inched up 4.9% to $116,800 a year, which equates to $9,733 per month or $320 per day, in 2023. The rate for a semi-private room rose 4.4% to $104,025 annually, which equals $8,669 per month or $285 per day. The average hourly rate for home health aide services has risen by 15.38% year over year to approximately $33, according to the data. Homemaker services average $30 per hour. … State-by-state information and other details of the report can be found using the Genworth online tool.”
LTC Comment: More on Genworth’s 20th annual cost-of-care survey that we reported yesterday. Center members can always find the latest Genworth survey here. If you need your user name and password, contact us at damon@centerltc.com. ***

 

LTC BULLET: YOUR LTC QUESTIONS ANSWERED

LTC Comment: Long-term care services and financing policy in the United States has a long and mostly failed history. Nursing home bias still dominates despite consumers’ preference for home care. Access and quality problems persist despite the ready availability of outstanding services for people who can pay. Medicaid (i.e., welfare) financing dominates LTC despite trillions of dollars lying fallow in the economy that could fund high quality private home-based LTC. Perverse incentives in public policy still discourage responsible planning for LTC risk and leave most Americans unprotected and dependent on Medicaid if they need expensive LTC. Neither policies to target Medicaid to the needy nor campaigns for a big new LTC social insurance entitlement program have succeeded.

To understand why these conditions persist and show no signs of improving in the third decade of the 21st century, certain questions must be asked and answered. That’s what Steve Moses will do at a special session on Monday, March 18, 2024 from 12:30 to 1:30pm PDT in Room D at the Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference in San Diego. For answers, come to the presentation. If that’s not possible, consult last week’s “LTC Bullet: What Happened to Long-Term Care?,” read the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” and watch this “virtual LTC event” featuring age wave visionary Ken Dychtwald and leading LTC researchers. Here are some of the questions Steve will tackle. How fitting to discuss long-term care’s life or death struggle on the Ides of March.

What was long-term care like in 1982?

Why did nursing homes dominate although consumers preferred home care?

How did a welfare program with a terrible reputation for access and quality come to dominate LTC services and financing?

Why was private LTC insurance so slow to develop? What holds it back still?

When did Medicaid stop allowing people to give away assets to qualify for LTC?

When did Medicaid start requiring estate recoveries?

Why did efforts to target Medicaid LTC to the needy fail?

How do affluent people qualify for Medicaid LTC benefits while preserving wealth?

How did economic recessions affect LTC financing policy reform?

When did assisted living and private home care finally become available and why did it take so long? What holds them back still?

What is “Medicaid planning” and why is it so widespread despite Medicaid’s flaws?

What is “structural LTC racism?” Is it real? What can be done about it?

What has to happen for LTC services and financing to improve?

Will a big new government social insurance program or many, smaller, state-level, tax-based programs succeed?

What is the fatal flaw that dooms all social insurance plans to eventual failure?

What happened since the dot.com bust and the Great Recession to hold back progress toward better LTC policy?

LTC Comment: Tough questions? To be sure. But until they’re asked and answered by the powers-that-be, little or no progress will be made to improve LTC services and financing. Fortunately, these and more questions are asked and answered in the Paragon Health Institute’s “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” papers as well as in this “virtual LTC event.

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Updated, Monday, March 11, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-010:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • More than half of nursing home workers caught in ‘vicious cycle’ of workplace violence, burnout

  • Older Adults With Moderate Income Cannot Afford The Dual Burden Of Housing And Care

  • Group Asks White House to Stop Picking on Medicare Agents

  • 12-facility strike raises stakes as workforce board gets to work on wages

  • HCBS needs better Medicaid funding to bolster workforce, reduce waitlists, ANCOR report finds

  • Wisconsin seniors face housing upheaval as assisted living homes reject Medicaid

  • Study proving longevity benefits of senior living is something for operators to ‘jump up and down’ about

  • Scary ‘state’: Two-thirds of nursing home operators fear closure without staffing relief

  • Genworth’s CareScout Hopes Home Care Networks Will Help Consumers Cut Through ‘Noisy, Fragmented’ System

  • Containing Medicaid Costs at the State Level

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Monday, March 4, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-009:  LTC NEWS AND COMMENT

LTC Comment:  Do you spend hours searching the internet for useful articles, key data, and relevant reports to keep you on the forefront of professional knowledge?  Do you lose business because you’re blindsided by clients or competitors who learn critical information before you do?  Here’s an antidote:

LTC Clippings:  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform notifies subscribers to our LTC Clippings service daily of information you need to know.  Each message contains only the critical facts about new publications:  a title, representative quote, a link to the original, and our analysis in a sentence or two.  To inquire or subscribe, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  Read testimonials by satisfied subscribers here.  To subscribe online, please click here.

LTC E-Alerts:  Once a week, we compile our daily LTC Clippings into a summary, email it to Center for Long-Term Care Reform members, and archive it in The Zone, our password-protected members-only website.  Center members also receive our weekly LTC Bullet op-ed.  To join the Center and receive all these benefits and more, contact Damon at 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com.  

We no longer post our LTC E-Alerts on the Center’s public access website, but here’s what today’s LTC E-Alert contained:  links, quotes and comments on the following articles, reports, or data:

  • Fact Check: Will making WA Cares optional force seniors into poverty?

  • Workforce improvement No. 1 target in final OIG report on nursing home pandemic effects

  • ‘Real Heartache’: Medicaid Redetermination Post-PHE Causing Nursing Homes Serious Cash Flow Problems, Anxiety

  • Report: Dementia comes with a high price tag that’s only rising

  • FedPoint announces retirement of longtime CEO Paul Forte

  • Assisted living? No thank you, investors and developers say

  • Transamerica Wins Long-Term Care Benefits Appeal

  • Nursing Home Reimbursement Pressure ‘Flat Out Profound,’ Necessitating Innovative Models

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"LTC E-Alerts" are a feature offered by the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. to members at the $150 per year level or higher.  We'll track and report to you news and analysis regarding long-term care financing, service delivery, and research.  We hope The LTC E-Alerts will help you attain and maintain a high level of knowledge and competency in this complex field.  The Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Inc. is a private institute dedicated to ensuring quality LTC for all Americans (www.centerltc.com).

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Updated, Friday, March 1, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—


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LTC BULLET: WHAT HAPPENED TO LONG-TERM CARE?

LTC Comment: I’ve watched our country struggle to improve long-term care since 1982. Observations after the ***news.***

*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau (BackNine Insurance). BackNine gives you a free personalized website at no cost. Your clients (& family & friends) can, with as little or as much of your involvement as you or they want, buy life insurance and LTCi, and can speed issue by scheduling a paramed and uploading medical records immediately. We quote stand-alone LTCi, linked-benefit and life with a LTC rider side-by-side. Claude is the lead author of Milliman’s annual Broker World LTCi Survey & a past Chair of the Center for Long-Term Care Financing. Contact him at 913-707-8863 or claude@back9ins.com to learn about more great BackNine features and services. ***

*** ILTCI NEWS:  The 2024 Inter-Company Long-Term Care Insurance Conference convenes in San Diego, CA – March 17-20, 2024 – at the newly renovated Town & Country Resort. This year’s keynote speaker is Dr. Maria C. Carrillo, Chief Science Officer of the Alzheimer’s Association. The program includes 58 educational sessions, the most ever; scores of exhibitors and dozens of sponsors. Late breaking: Lifeline Screening will offer hypertension and osteoporosis risk screenings to all attendees from 8:00am, to 6:00pm on Monday, March 18, and Tuesday, March 19, 2024 at their exhibit booth in the Golden State Ballroom. On Monday, March 18 at 12:30pm, Center for Long-Term Care Reform president Steve Moses will present two papers and preview a third, recounting LTC’s past and forecasting its future. Last year’s conference chair, Steve Schoonveld invites attendees to a discussion on “Building LTC State Reform Proposals for Collaborative Success” on Tuesday, March 19 at 12:30pm.  Finally, suspense is building! Who will receive the 2024 ILTCI Recognition Award? The winner will be announced at the San Diego meeting. Organizers say “If it’s happening in LTC… It’s happening at the ILTCI Conference!” Hope to see you there. ***
 

LTC BULLET: WHAT HAPPENED TO LONG-TERM CARE?

I’ve followed long-term care since 1982. Back then nearly all formal, paid LTC services were provided in nursing homes. Medicaid was the dominant payor, but paid too little to ensure quality care. Nicer private-pay options like assisted living were becoming available, but most people could not afford them. A budding new product, LTC insurance was gaining traction slowly but was constrained by the dominance of subsidized Medicaid nursing home care. Much of the care burden fell on unpaid family members by default.

Before 1980 the Medicaid program allowed unlimited asset transfers to qualify. People ignored LTC risk and cost until care became necessary and then moved seamlessly onto public assistance. Medically needy eligibility rules allowed high income people to qualify by deducting their private medical and LTC expenses, enabling them to become “low income.” Despite its dismal reputation for poor access and quality, Medicaid nursing home care was the path of least resistance for people needing expensive long-term care. Its availability impeded the  development of home-based care options and private-pay alternatives like insurance.

At the time, I was working for the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), the predecessor of the current Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). As I analyzed the LTC marketplace in the early 1980s, I concluded that easy access to Medicaid nursing home benefits trapped elders in underfunded nursing homes, discouraged service delivery and financing alternatives, and would bankrupt the economy as the age wave crested and crashed over time. Something had to be done to break this cycle of perverse incentives leading to bad outcomes. Why prepare for LTC when you could ignore the risk, avoid insurance premiums, and get the government to pay if and when you needed care?

I conducted a study and wrote a paper for HCFA in 1985 suggesting that Medicaid LTC income and asset eligibility criteria should be stricter, liens and estate recoveries should be mandatory, and consumers should be urged to buy private LTC insurance. The insurance would give them access to quality care of their choice and enable them to avoid Medicaid dependency with its newly required payback from estates. No longer would Medicaid provide a windfall for heirs by protecting their inheritances. Families would instead work together to avoid Medicaid and protect their legacies.

HCFA management suppressed that paper. They didn’t think a mid-level Seattle regional office staffer should be writing national policy papers. But the Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services (IG) and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) both picked up on my paper and conducted national studies from the same analytical perspective. The IG hired me out of HCFA to conduct their study and write its 1988 report. I also consulted on GAOs 1989 report. Both national studies recommended tightening Medicaid financial eligibility rules and requiring estate recoveries as a means to reduce expenditures and encourage private LTC financing alternatives.

At first, it looked like this strategy would succeed. Federal legislation passed year after year to target Medicaid LTC to the needy while encouraging the affluent to plan early and avoid public assistance. COBRA ’85 prohibited “Medicaid qualifying trusts”; MCCA ’88 required states for the first time to penalize asset transfers for the purpose of qualifying for Medicaid; OBRA ’93 made estate recoveries mandatory. So by the mid-1990s the key elements were in place to revolutionize LTC policy, eliminate the perverse incentive trapping elders in nursing homes on Medicaid, and breathe new life into the private home care and LTC insurance markets.

Alas, history did not play out as we hoped. The states didn’t implement the new rules fully or aggressively; the federal government didn’t enforce the tighter eligibility and mandatory estate recovery measures; the media didn’t cover the new system’s incentives to plan for LTC and avoid Medicaid; and elder law Medicaid planners  found evermore creative ways to circumvent the rules. So consumer behavior didn’t change. People continued to ignore LTC risk and cost, waiting to see if they would ever need expensive LTC, and then turning to Medicaid when high cost care became necessary. That common result relieved the LTC financial burden on heirs further entrenching their tendency to ignore LTC until needed and then rely on Medicaid.

A Republican Congress and President Clinton became so frustrated by skyrocketing Medicaid LTC costs benefiting the affluent as much as the poor that they made it a crime to transfer assets to qualify for Medicaid in HIPAA ‘96. Outrage at this “Throw Granny in Jail” law led to its repeal by BBA ’97 and replacement with the “Throw Granny’s Lawyer in Jail” law. The latter did not survive judicial scrutiny as it was deemed unenforceable to hold attorneys legally culpable for recommending a practice (asset transfers) that were no longer illegal. Nothing more happened to target Medicaid to the needy and incentivize LTC planning by the affluent until a last gasp effort in DRA ’05, which capped Medicaid’s home equity exemption for the first time ever.

Every one of these beneficial federal statutes achieved during the preceding years occurred after and in response to an economic recession. When federal and state budgets were tight during recessions, politicians and policy makers were forced to look for ways to constrain Medicaid expenditures while preventing care access and quality from deteriorating. That’s when the measures recounted above to lengthen and strengthen asset transfer penalties, enforce estate recoveries, and encourage private LTC insurance gained traction. “LTC Partnerships” and LTC insurance tax deductions were also passed in those years and for those reasons. But once the recessions ended, and budget constraints relaxed, the pressure for wiser policies receded, and higher spending to mollify advocacy groups returned.

Then came the Great Recession of 2007-2009 and all progress stopped. This big recession did not lead to beneficial legislation as in the past. Why? Starting a few years before, but accelerating after the Great Recession, the Federal Reserve began pushing interest rates down toward zero. The resulting artificially low interest rates distorted incentives throughout the economy including in the LTC market. Deficits and debt didn’t matter so much when the cost of servicing the debt was nominal because interest rates were negligible. Pressure to control Medicaid LTC expenditures abated and costs grew with few constraints. Medicaid expanded to provide more desirable home and community based services making it more attractive to consumers. The LTC insurance market suffered as carriers could not obtain anticipated returns on their reserves and were forced to raise premiums, thus angering current insureds and alienating prospects.

These conditions continued and worsened until a government spending blow out during the Covid pandemic caused deficits and debt to skyrocket and inflation to spike. A return to artificially low interest rates and continued unbounded spending is unlikely. The national debt currently exceeds $34.3 trillion, a six-fold increase since 2000 and up $200 billion in just the past month. The interest rate to service the national debt doubled between January 2022 (1.56%) and January 2024 (3.15%). Debt service cost is already 18% of total federal spending and 2.4% of GDP. It will increase in tandem with the rising debt. The U.S. government will soon spend more on interest payments than defense. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare, and other federal health care programs consumed 46% of all federal spending in 2022. These costs will continue to rise at least until statutory entitlement cutbacks begin in the late 2020s and the 2030s. The staggering unfunded liabilities of Social Security ($26.6T) and Medicare ($40.9T) alone guarantee these programs will encumber the productive economy for decades ahead. On top of everything, boomers start turning 85, their age of greatest medical and LTC need, in 2031.

To paraphrase the late economist Herbert Stein, “Trends that can’t continue, won’t.” The price of irresponsible fiscal and monetary policy that characterized the first two decades of the 21st century is coming due. State and federal budgets will have to be set again and met. Challenging economic conditions, especially during and after recessions, will compel serious attention to Medicaid LTC spending as they did before the Great Recession. The time is coming again when politicians and policymakers will have to listen to proposals that constrain spending while enhancing LTC access and quality.

Coming up with those policy proposals is the task before us. But we can’t continue doing more of the same. Keeping Medicaid LTC financial eligibility generous, allowing big income and asset exemptions, and threatening estate recovery to persuade the public to plan and insure for LTC did not work. Government gave the carrots but withheld the sticks, so consumers ignored LTC until they needed it and then turned to Medicaid. Consequently LTC services and financing in the U.S. are as bad or worse today as they were in 1982. Long-term care in America remains broken, marked by nursing home bias, too little home care, dubious access and quality, inadequate funding, caregiver shortages, stressed out unpaid family caregivers, and growing complaints of structural racism. A radical new approach to LTC financing policy is needed.

My October 2022 paper for the Paragon Health Institute (PHI) titled “Long-Term Care: The Problem” offered this diagnosis. Easy access to Medicaid LTC benefits after the insurable risk occurs while retaining wealth created a moral hazard that discouraged early and responsible LTC planning and left most Americans dependent on public assistance by default. My October 2023 paper for PHI titled “Long-Term Care: The Solution” proposed a radical change. Eliminate the moral hazard by ending all Medicaid rules that enable people to receive Medicaid LTC benefits while retaining wealth. In other words, turn Medicaid into the program for the poor most believe it was originally intended to be and many believe it still is. What does that mean specifically?

Medically needy income eligibility, which allows high income people to qualify for Medicaid if their medical and LTC expenses are high enough, must end. Likewise Miller income diversion trusts, that achieve the same purpose in states that do not use the medically needy income system, should not be allowed. Such policies divert Medicaid funds that should support the underprivileged to people who could pay a portion, often a large portion, sometimes their entire LTC bill privately. Medically needy policies also mean that nursing home and home health providers receive their revenue at notoriously low Medicaid rates instead of at market rates that are half again as high on average. This heavier dependency on Medicaid impedes care access and quality for the affluent as well as the poor.

Another income policy that needs to end is the requirement people on Medicaid contribute nearly all their income, including their Social Security benefits, to offset Medicaid’s cost for their care. This policy makes Medicaid vulnerable to Social Security’s precarious financial condition. When statutorily required 23% benefit cuts occur in the 2030s, state Medicaid programs and the already financially strained LTC providers they support will be devastated. A better policy is to have all people pay LTC providers at the market rate up to their ability to do so and for Medicaid to make up the difference when recipients fall short. That will ensure higher revenue for LTC providers allowing them to improve care and alleviating caregiver shortages as they are able to pay higher wages.

Asset eligibility rules also need to change. Current rules allow applicants to reduce their countable wealth by purchasing exempt assets. Because exempt assets, including home equity, IRAs, a business, a vehicle, home furnishings, personal belongings, etc. are virtually unlimited, countable assets in any amount are easily eliminated in this way. Medicaid should require that asset spend down be for medical or LTC expenses in order to count as it does for income spend down now. The huge Medicaid home equity exemption, $731,000 in every state where it isn’t $1,071,000, should end. Home equity is easily converted to liquid cash flow to purchase top quality LTC in the private market. Obviously, abusive Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts and Medicaid friendly annuities, that allow even the wealthiest families to co-opt Medicaid to fund their LTC, should end.

Once all income and asset exemptions are eliminated, Medicaid LTC benefits will be available only to the truly needy. More affluent people will pay their own way. The extra private revenue flowing through the system will improve care for everyone and eliminate the caregiver shortage by paying higher wages. Faced with a real spend down requirement, that has never existed in the U.S. before, consumers will take the risk and cost of LTC seriously for the first time. Many will plan early and save, invest or insure for LTC. Others, if they continue to ignore LTC will face serious consequences if they need LTC later in life. These consequences will signal to others that planning for LTC is imperative because the costs of failing to do so are too great.

But isn’t this plan too draconian? Can a humane society really refuse to provide long-term care unless and until people have used up all their own income and assets paying privately? Yes, but only if we reconceptualize LTC and reprioritize it among life’s necessities. As I explained in “Long-Term Care: The Solution,” LTC risk and cost are not as great as we once thought. For example, nearly half of Americans turning 65 will never need paid care. See the paper for more on this point. Likewise, it turns out that aging Americans have much more wealth they could use for LTC if they had a reason to do so, including $12 trillion in home equity, $35 trillion in retirement savings, and $21 trillion in life insurance. See the paper on this point too. LTC is the single biggest financial risk aging Americans face, but it has been treated as an afterthought, easy to ignore, because Medicaid was always there to cover the cost if and when expensive care became necessary. With Medicaid gone as an asset-protecting, long-term care fail safe, people will put a much higher priority on planning for the risk.

So, having created the necessity for people to plan ahead for LTC, what is needed is a way for them to do so without being devastated financially at a time of their lives when other financial responsibilities, such as raising children and making car and mortgage payments, have always taken precedence. In the LTC Solution paper I proposed seven LTC Choices designed to enable people to prepare for future LTC expenses without impinging excessively on their current cash flow. The basic ideas are (1) to focus on preparing people to pay for their average expected LTC liability, instead of their having to plan for the unlikely, but devastating catastrophic cost if the worse happens and (2) to allow savers to earmark a portion of the wealth they are already accumulating to be used for LTC if and only if such care becomes necessary.

So here are the seven LTC Choices in their barest form. See the paper for details. (1) Buy less LTC insurance at lower premiums to cover average LTC risk instead of the full catastrophic risk as now. (2) Establish a new tax-favored account for long-term care. Carve out enough retirement savings (3), home equity (4), life insurance (5), or estate wealth (6) to cover average LTC risk. (7) Incentivize younger people to start LTC planning earlier with easier goals reflecting their longer time to prepare. Each of these LTC Choices is intended to make it easier for people to cover their expected lifetime LTC risk and cost. Private organizations or companies, similar to Underwriters Laboratories (UL), should evolve to help consumers define their average LTC risk and to set goals to achieve it.

With the moral hazard of easy access to Medicaid gone; with consumers expected only to cover their average LTC risk; and with the ability to tap existing sources of funds established, most people will prepare privately for LTC. Private revenue at market rates flowing to LTC providers will improve LTC access, quality and choice. With most people prepared to pay for care, families will be relieved of providing the heaviest and most intimate kinds of LTC. They will be able to focus on giving love and support. Caregiver shortages will disappear as wages for the profession rise from bare minimums now to private market rates. Medicaid LTC expenditures will decline radically as the program refocuses on helping only the remnant who have no other means to pay for private care. With Medicaid program resources relieved, it should pay market rates for care thus improving access, quality and choice for the smaller number of remaining recipients.

An additional benefit of refocusing Medicaid LTC on the needy in this way is that it will end the problem of structural LTC racism. In its current form, Medicaid benefits the affluent to the detriment of the underprivileged. Prosperous people gain access to Medicaid’s best LTC providers by holding back “key money” when they spend down assets to qualify. This key money enables them to pay privately for a time. Nursing homes and home care providers are desperate for private payers, so they roll out the red carpet for anyone who can pay privately even for a while. Poor people don’t have key money. Their scarce savings are quickly consumed. They only have access to the mostly Medicaid facilities and services that have the worst reputations for care. By diverting affluent people to private pay, Medicaid will be able to provide better care to people in need thus eliminating the structural racism that pervades the system now.

The many deficiencies of today’s LTC service delivery and financing system have been self-inflicted by perverse incentives in public policy. Whether well-intentioned or simply unintended, policies that invited prosperous people to ignore LTC until they need it and then qualify for public assistance distorted the LTC marketplace. Efforts to change policy to encourage responsible planning failed. They will always fail as long as consumers can ignore LTC, get government to pay, and retain wealth for inheritances. “Long-Term Care: The Problem” and “Long-Term Care: The Solution” explain what’s wrong and how to fix it in greater detail.

What will it take to achieve this radical transformation of LTC policy and Medicaid eligibility? Most likely it will take a commensurately radical downturn in the economy. Only desperate measures to make budget ends meet will compel change of the magnitude needed. But such measures may soon become unavoidable as servicing the national debt at ever increasing interest rates becomes impossible; more deficit spending, money printing and borrowing further increase the debt relentlessly; and the resulting inflation finally shows the public how it is forced to pay for decades of irresponsible fiscal and monetary policy. As these pressures grow, the oncoming crisis of unfunded entitlement liabilities will hit just as the boomer generation’s greatest medical and LTC need arises in the 2030s, making that decade as bad or worse than the 1930s.

As bleak as the current situation is, it will improve. As economic conditions deteriorate, policymakers will either respond with thoughtful changes along the lines described above. Or economic reality will compel such changes by making the current system fiscally unsustainable and such changes therefore unavoidable. The only remaining question is whether America can fix Medicaid LTC by returning the program to its roots as LTC protection for the needy or whether the current system has to collapse before that happens anyway by default. When and how will this process play out? In the same way Hemmingway described going bankrupt: gradually at first, then suddenly.

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Updated, Monday, February 26, 2024, 10:03 AM (Pacific)
 
Seattle—

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LTC E-ALERT #24-00< 206-283-7036 or damon@centerltc.com. Examples below:

8/2/2025, “Study: Medicare spends billions on medically unnecessary procedures,” by Donna Shryer, McKnights LTC News

Quote: “A new study reveals that Medicare beneficiaries are receiving billions of dollars worth of medical care that offer little to no clinical benefit and may lead to harm. Researchers found that Medicare spent $4.4 billion annually between 2018 and 2020 on 47 different low-value medical services, with seniors paying an additional $800 million out of their own pockets.”

LTC Comment: When government is the payer, the provider is the customer, and the patient is caught in between, this is what you get.

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8/2/2025, “German nursing homes see cost for care explode,” by Volker Witting, DW

Quote: “The cost of a stay in a nursing home has risen to an average of €3,248 ($3,760) per month, according to the German Association of Nursing Homes (vdek), an association that represents the interests of several statutory health insurance providers.”

LTC Comment: We warned over 20 years ago that Germany’s LTC “insurance” plan would not be the end all and be all it was being made out to be: LTCI in Germany and Don't Look to Germany for a Long-Term C