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Public Policy &
Aging E-Newsletter
Volume 2, Number 4, July 2008
This bimonthly e-newsletter highlights key developments
and viewpoints in the field of aging policy from a wide variety
of sources, including articles and reports circulating in the media,
academy, think tanks, private sector, government and nonprofit organizations.
The goal of this email publication is to reach teachers, students,
and citizens interested in aging-related issues, especially those
who may not have sufficient access to policy information disseminated
both in Washington and around the country.
I. WHATS HAPPENING IN WASHINGTON?
A. CMS To Rate Nursing Home Quality: The Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) announced it will soon launch a ground-breaking
"five-star" ranking system of America's nursing homes.
The ratings will be posted on the agency's Nursing
Home Compare Web site by the end of this year. (A sample screen
shot of the proposed star ratings is available here).
CMS is requesting comments
on the system designed to provide patients and their families an
easy to understand assessment of nursing home quality, making meaningful
distinctions between high performing and low performing homes.
B. Leading By Example: The Senate Aging Committee recently held
a hearing
to discuss how the nation's largest employer-the federal government-might
serve as a role model for hiring and retaining older workers. The
Government Accountability Office (GAO) presented testimony
that examined (1) the age and retirement eligibility trends of the
current federal workforce; (2) the strategies federal agencies are
using to recruit, hire, and retain older workers; and (3) their
observations on how these strategies position federal agencies to
engage and retain older workers.
C. Safety of Seniors Act: President Bush recently signed legislation
aimed at preventing falls among older adults. Under the Act,
the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) will develop
education strategies to raise awareness about elder falls, encourage
research to identify at-risk populations and evaluate falls interventions,
and support demonstration projects. The
Falls Free Coalition and other advocates are now calling on
Congress to provide $20.7 million funding in FY 2009.
II. WHATS HAPPENING AROUND THE COUNTRY?
A. State Handbook of Economic, Demographic, and Fiscal Indicators
2008: Up-to-date state-level data on population, poverty rates,
per capita state personal income, state tax rates, property tax
relief programs, and state and local government revenues and spending
programs are provided in this new edition of AARP Public Policy
Institute's easy-to-use, biennial reference
book.
B. Perspectives on State Health Reform: This essay
from Kaiser Family Foundation President and CEO Drew Altman discusses
the critical factors that influence state health reform efforts.
Questions examined include: What lessons can be drawn from the Massachusetts
health coverage law and California's failed health reform effort?
And, if comprehensive federal health reform legislation fails in
2009, what can be done to spur more state-based health reform efforts?
C. The Administration on Aging (AoA) Nursing Home Diversion Program:
This report
from the National Senior Citizens Law Center describes the national
aging services network's Nursing Home Diversion Modernization Grant
Program-a demonstration project currently underway in 12 states-associated
with AoA's new mandate to expand community-based long-term care
options.
III. THIS ISSUE'S MAJOR POLICY STORY: HEALTH CARE REFORM
One of the remarkable things about the issues being highlighted
thus far in this presidential campaign is how little attention has
been focused on the contours of "societal aging." As was
true in the past, the concept seems almost exclusively associated
with "senior citizens." Why do we ignore the extent to
which citizens with congenital defects or afflicted with debilitating
chronic illnesses or accidents in youth and middle age depend on
institutional and familial support? As has been the case for more
than a quarter century, when pundits and candidates talk about the
need to reform Social Security and Medicare, they typically speak
in dire terms, pitching their message to one age group or another.
Why do they pay so little attention to policies and programs that
affect our intergenerational reserves and resources? Re-thinking
policies that make sense as the median age of the population rises,
altering the resilience of networks, forces us to think beyond the
commonplace. If we want to improve the quality and extent of tong-term
care in the U.S., we must look at private initiatives as well as
public reforms at the state level. The resources that follow will
assist us.
- Andy Achenbaum
A. Viewpoints: The Health Care Debate: This new series
from The Kaiser Foundation features interviews with leaders of organizations
representing health care providers, insurers, policymakers, employers,
labor unions and consumers sharing their views on shortcomings in
the nation's health care system and how it could be improved. These
leaders also share their views on the prospects for change after
the 2008 election and what the next President and Congress should
do to make the health system work more efficiently.
B. Planning for the Future-Long-Term Care and the 2008 Election:
This article
from The New England Journal of Medicine outlines three key questions
that the author argues the presidential candidates must inevitably
confront in outlining their visions for the reform of long-term
care in our country.
C. Financing the U.S. Health System-Issues and Options for Change:
The Bipartisan Policy Center has released a report
cataloguing the range of financing reform options that policymakers
will have to consider in any major health reform effort. The report
explores the principal financing alternatives proposed by presidential
candidates Senator John McCain and Senator Barack Obama, as well
as other systematic approaches that have been proposed to restructure
the health care finance system.
D. Health Care Reform in Massachusetts-Expanding Coverage, Escalating
Costs: This article
from The New England Journal of Medicine examines the impact of
the far-reaching health care reforms that Massachusetts enacted
in April 2006.
E. How Can We Improve Long-Term Care Financing?: This brief
reviews several options for reforming the system for financing and
delivering long-term care in the United States. These options include
enhancing private long-term care insurance, replacing the current
welfare-based system with a public social insurance program, and
introducing a hybrid public-private system.
IV. WORTH NOTING
A. This paper
from the Urban Institute examines how potential changes in the tax
treatment of retirement saving, Social Security benefits, and income
from assets outside retirement accounts may affect boomers' retirement
incomes. Changes in the income thresholds for taxing Social Security
benefits have the largest impact on middle-income boomers, while
changes in contribution limits for retirement saving plans and tax
rates on capital gains and dividends have the largest impact on
the highest-income boomers.
B. The Economic Slowdown's Impact on Middle-Aged and Older Americans:
Results
of a nationwide survey of adults age 45 and older commissioned
by AARP show that a majority of respondents believe the economy
is in bad shape and that many have adapted their behaviors in response
to the floundering economy. And, compared to all Americans 45+,
middle-aged and older Hispanics report a relatively greater impact
of recent economic pressure.
C. SeniorDecision.com: The nation's largest web
service providing consumer reviews and ratings of nursing homes,
assisted living centers, retirement communities, and home health
agencies. There is no charge to post or read reviews and advertising
from senior care and housing providers is not accepted.
V. WHAT'S HAPPENING ABROAD?
A. The WHO Global Report on Falls Prevention in Older Age: The
World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a report
which describes the prevalence of falls around the world and provides
an action plan for making progress in reducing falls among the older
adult population. The model proposes specific strategies for building
awareness of the importance of falls prevention and treatment; improving
the assessment of individual, environmental, and societal factors
that increase the likelihood of falls; and facilitating the design
and implementation of culturally-appropriate, evidence-based interventions
that will significantly reduce the number of falls among older persons.
B. Frameworks of Integrated Care for the Elderly: A Systematic
Review: The Canadian
Policy Research Networks has released a report
which presents the findings of an extensive review of models of
integrated care for elders. The report identifies four common elements
in successful models of integrated health and social care for the
elderly that can result in improved outcomes, client satisfaction
and/or cost savings or cost-effectiveness.
C. What's New in Global Aging?: This new user-friendly "Aging
Everywhere" interactive
world map developed by AARP International allows users to access
aging-related resources by region and country.
VI. PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: ROB HUDSON, EDITOR, PP&AR
The current issue of PP&AR explores the ways in which population
aging and environmental awareness have come together in a manner
that promotes both elder and environmental well-being. The connection
between the two can be seen through three lenses central to the
gerontological enterprise: a life-cycle view finds older people
wishing to be "generative" and leave a sustainable planet;
a cohort perspective sees today's elders as having contributed to
and benefited from an era marked by high energy usage and damage
to the environment; and an historical or period perspective brings
to light the emerging issues associated with global warming and
greenhouse gases.
In this issue, Rick Moody makes the case why the environment is
an aging issue. His article addresses how older adults have a crucial
role to play as "gatekeepers to the future" around two
seemingly disparate issues: the environment and entitlements. Karl
Pillemer and Linda Wagenet review the limited research literature
addressing older people and the environment, taking particular note
of how engaging in environmental protection activity is physically
and mentally sustaining for them as well as for their surroundings.
Historian Andrew Achenbaum traces elders' concern with the environment
from the Scriptures through Rachel Carson, finding seniors no Johnnies-come-lately
to the environmental movement. Kathy Sykes and her co-authors review
initiative taken by the Environmental Protection Administration,
noting in particular the EPA-supported work of LIFE (Legacy Institute
for the Environment) around the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Finally,
Paula Dressel documents the endeavors of the Jefferson Area Board
for Aging in Charlottesville, Va., using as a metric the Viable
Futures Toolkit developed by her organization, JustPartners, Inc.
This issue of PP&AR speaks to Gray and Green coming together
and, in so doing, highlights the indivisibility of environmental
concerns across time, generation, age, and space. To purchase the
current issue of PP&AR, or to subscribe, click here.
The Public
Policy & Aging E-Newsletter is a free bimonthly email publication.
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Newsletter Editors: Sarah Frey and Greg O'Neill, National Academy
on an Aging Society; Andy Achenbaum, University of Houston.
The Public Policy and Aging E-Newsletter is supported in part
by a grant from the AARP Office of Academic Affairs.
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