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Public Policy & Aging E-Newsletter
Volume 4, Number 3, May 2010
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.
Want the most up-to-date access to aging policy resources?
Follow us on Twitter @Aging_Society! 
I. WHATS HAPPENING IN WASHINGTON?
A. Health Care Utilization Among Adults Aged 55-64 Years: How Has
It Changed Over the Past 10 Years?: The National Center for Health
Statistics released a data
brief describing the recent increases in chronic illnesses and
inpatient health care among those ages 55 to 64. That this Baby-Boom
vanguard differs from its counterparts a decade earlier raises questions
about how its pattern of health care utilization will impact future
health care policy. To view a summary of key findings, click here.
B. The Impact of the Recession on Older Americans: This Population
Reference Bureau report
summarizes how the financial crisis since 2008 has contributed to
reduced incomes, declines in consumer wealth, record unemployment,
and increased poverty for older adults. For more discussion on the
recession's impact on older Americans, listen to this interview
by Michael Hurd, director of the Center for the Study of Aging at
the RAND Corporation.
C. The 2010 Retirement Confidence Survey: Confidence Stabilizing,
But Preparations Continue to Erode: This Employee Benefit Research
Institute issue
brief examines individuals' confidence levels related to securing
a comfortable and financially secure retirements. The survey finds
that the record-low confidence levels during the past two years
of economic decline have bottomed out, but workers still report
a lack of savings and investments and expectations of working longer.
For an executive summary of the results, click here.
II. WHATS HAPPENING AROUND THE COUNTRY?
A. Maximizing the Potential of Older Adults: Benefits to State
Economies and Individual Well-Being: This issue
brief released by the National Governors Association outlines
ways states can engage older adults in paid employment and volunteerism.
It suggests strategies such as developing public-private partnerships
and strengthening engagement opportunities in workforce, aging,
and education state policies. Through innovative programs in work,
volunteering, and education, state economies can benefit from tapping
into this skilled population and addressing challenges like reduced
tax revenues and a smaller pool of experienced workers.
B. The Best and Worst State Practices in Medicaid Long-Term Care:
In its new policy
brief, the Direct Care Alliance explains the differences among
state Medicaid policies and how these translate into state variations
in services offered. The brief compares each state's coverage of
long-term care services and the amount of spending per recipient
on home and community-based services versus nursing homes.
C. Promoting Preventive Services for Adults 50-64: Community and
Clinical Partnerships: The CDC just released an interactive online
report that allows users to obtain summaries of national, regional,
state, and local data for 14 preventive services, such as screenings
and immunizations. Users can instantly retrieve comparison data
between geographic locations, and can create and print customized
reports featuring indicator data, graphics and calls to action.
The data and resources aim to inform public health and aging services
professionals, researchers, journalists, clinicians and policymakers
about key health issues for older adults and proven preventive services
programs.
III. THIS ISSUE'S MAJOR POLICY STORY: HOUSING
I taught this last term's policy class at University
of Houston's Graduate College of Social Work. While problems to
be analyzed were wide-ranging, I was struck by how frequently housing
issues emerged. Housing becomes a central issue under the 1980 Adoption
Assistance and Child Welfare Act and amendments to the Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families. Being able to pay rent in a stable
neighborhood or maintain a safe, inviting residence costs more money
than many Americans can afford. Many cases of elder abuse are caused
or exacerbated by filth, crime, and inadequate shelter. I have reached
the age at which my friends talk about remodeling their homes to
accommodate access to kitchens, baths, and bedrooms--or relocating
to more hospitable settings. The policy stories that follow provide
a lagniappe (as greater numbers of people in Louisiana used to say
before Katrina devastated homesteads) to the foundational role that
housing plays in considering policies for an aging society.
--Andy Achenbaum
A. Meet the Housing Needs of Older Adults: With more and more older
adults wishing to maintain independence and autonomy, supportive
services are crucial to allow seniors to remain in their own homes.
This online toolkit,
produced by AARP and housingpolicy.org, explores the housing challenges
facing older adults, including a lack of accessible features, high
costs, and long distances to important destinations and amenities.
In addition, the toolkit outlines promising policies that communities
across the country are using to address these issues.
B. Strategies to Meet the Housing Needs of Older Adults: This AARP
Public Policy Institute report
provides policy recommendations to address the obstacles older adults
face in housing and community design. Looking beyond the shortcomings
of home structure and services, the report considers the community
as a whole in addressing these problems. It discusses accessible,
safe, and affordable housing, access to social services and transportation,
and housing models that help allow aging in place. Click here for
a summary
of the report and a list of related fact sheets.
C. American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (AAHSA)
Unveils Design for 2010 Idea House: Designed to represent the future
of senior housing, AAHSA's 2,600 square foot Idea House features
the latest in senior housing technology and aims to accommodate
the changing physical and mental needs of older adults. The model
home will be built for the October 2010 AAHSA Annual Meeting and
Exposition in Los Angeles. The design operates on three guiding
principles to empower older adults to remain independent: aging
in place, technology, and sustainability. For more information and
to view pictures of the design, click here.
D. The Return of the Multigenerational Household: The Pew Research
Center found that 16 percent of the U.S. population live in family
households that contain two generations of adults. This substantial
increase in the number of multigenerational households represents
a sharp reversal of a longstanding trend of older adults living
alone. The report
explains the economic, demographic, and cultural reasons behind
these changes, and outlines the implications for older adults in
each living situation.
E. Demographics of Homelessness Series: The Rising Elderly Population:
Research suggests growing numbers of homeless elderly, in part due
to increasing number of baby boomers turning 65. This National Alliance
to End Homelessness report describes the recent and projected changes
in homelessness among older adults and assesses the ability of public
affordable housing programs to handle the projected growth in elderly
persons at risk for housing instability and homelessness. The report
outlines the need for an increased supply of subsidized affordable
housing, permanent supportive housing, and better research to understand
the homeless elderly population.
IV. WORTH NOTING
A. Long-Term Care Policy Simulator: The SCAN Foundation's interactive
website empowers everyday citizens to make choices that shape
a public long-term care insurance (LTC) program. The model illustrates
how a particular set of choices that go into creating a public LTC
insurance program will influence key elements such as premiums,
participation rates, and benefits.
B. Chronic Care: Making the Case for Ongoing Care: The Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation released an updated chartbook
and presentation
examining the impact of chronic conditions on individuals and their
caregivers. The data highlights the problems encountered by people
living with chronic health conditions, and describes the shortcomings
in the current health care model. Although the data show some improvement
in services for chronic conditions, they also demonstrate the growing
prevalence and cost of chronic care.
C. Still Out, Still Aging: The MetLife Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
and Transgender Baby Boomers: This MetLife Mature Market Institute
report
shows how the experiences and discrimination faced by many LGBT
boomers shape their approaches to retirement and old age. The report
finds the LGBT cohort to be similar to the general boomer population
in many key areas, including expectations about working and caregiving
responsibility. But, LGBT boomers are almost twice as likely to
live with a parent and are far more reliant on close friends than
are members of the comparison cohort. For a summary of the findings,
click here.
V. WHAT'S HAPPENING ABROAD?
A. The Changing Canadian Workplace: This report,
released by TD Economics, examines the upcoming shift in the Canadian
workplace due to macroeconomic changes, demographic trends, and
altering workplace standards. The approaching retirement of the
baby boom generation will cause the decline of more than a third
of the labour force over the next two decades. This will result
in new policy incentives for underrepresented groups, such as immigrants,
women, and older workers to enter industries with the greatest shortages.
Furthermore, the shift will cause changes relating to pension plans,
highly skilled labour, educational obtainment, and income gaps.
B. Older-Age Parents and the AIDS Epidemic in Thailand: Changing
Impacts in the Era of Antiretroviral Therapy: This United Nations
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific report
describes how HIV/AIDS is becoming a chronic but manageable condition
due to increasing access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) in low-
and middle-income countries. The report finds that by 2010, about
150,000 Thai parents will have a surviving HIV-infected adult child
on ART. This has important policy implications for parents and other
family members living with HIV/AIDS, including the need for long-term
drug treatment and supportive programs.
C. U.S. Social Security Administration Office of Policy International
Update: This monthly
publication covers recent developments in public and private
pensions around the world. April's report features updates from
Belgium, Ireland, and Australia.
VI. PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: ROB HUDSON, EDITOR, PP&AR
This important topic of housing brings to mind a recent issue of
Public Policy & Aging Report that examines "Livable
and Sustainable Communities." The issue reviews community-based
housing options for older adults and some of the controversies associated
with these types of living situations.
In the lead article, Jon Pynoos and Caroline Cicero track the United
States' progress in the development of aging-friendly communities.
These include home modification and community-level innovations
designed to lessen isolation and increase social interaction. Stephen
Golant's article offers support for appropriate community alternatives
for seniors, while suggesting that "aging in place" may
be an inappropriate option for many elders due to flawed data about
its actual appeal, financial barriers, and local policies promoting
aging in place. Next, Kathryn Lawler and Cathie Berger explore the
Atlanta Regional Commission (ARC)'s engagement in comprehensive
planning and design activities to promote the idea that "place
matters." Finally, Andrew Blechman profiles "The Villages,"
an age-restricted community in central Florida. He critiques this
upscale option, noting that private ownership impinges on traditional
public functions and that troublesome intergenerational and racial
issues lurk in the background of such a community.

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Newsletter Editors: Dani Kaiserman, 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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