Government-administered long-term care insurance is long overdue

Since the start of the novel coronavirus pandemic, more than 46,000 people have died in nursing homes.  The private health care market is failing, and government-administered long-term care insurance, ensuring government oversight, is long overdue.

Alexander Sammon makes the case in the American Prospect that the private long-term care insurance market has failed Americans more than any other piece of the health insurance market. Long-term care is the term used to describe an array services and assistance provided to older adults and people with disabilities. It includes help with activities of daily living such as bathing, feeding and toiletting, as well as nursing and therapy services.

For sure, the number of deaths of older adults in long-term care facilities are easy to track and horrifying. Though, without good data and knowing that out-of-pocket costs keep people with complex conditions from getting medical and hospital care, it is not at all clear that the number of deaths of working people with serious illnesses and injuries stemming from their private health insurance is not equally chilling.

What the long-term care story reveals is how a for-profit health care market endangers people’s lives by putting profits first and cannot be relied upon to guarantee our health. More than one in ten long-term care residents are no longer with us, in large part because long-term care facilities were not prepared to care for them.

At some point in your life, there is a good chance that you will need long-term care. Seven in ten people 65 and older require long-term care. Most people rely on family and friends or Medicaid for long-term care. Only about three percent of Americans have long-term care insurance; it is expensive, often not available to people with pre-existing conditions, and generally not worth the cost, delivering little bang for your buck.

Because the cost of long-term care is so high, private insurers are hard-pressed to profit from selling coverage and the market has shrunk considerably.

When it was being drafted, the Affordable Care Act included government coverage for long-term care. But, it was designed as a voluntary program with high costs. And, it would not have paid for itself. So, it was dropped from the law before enactment.

Sammon reports that Americans do not appreciate how likely it is that they will need long-term care. And, many also do not know that Medicare only covers a limited set of long-term care services: up to 100 days of care in a skilled nursing facility if certain qualifying criteria are met, some home care for people for whom leaving home is extraordinarily difficult and who need skilled nursing or therapy services, and durable medical equipment.

The cost of long-term care keeps rising. It costs seven times more in 2015 ($225 billion) than it did in 2000 ($30 billion). The private market is not up to the task of providing good coverage.

There are smart ways to provide everyone long-term care coverage through social insurance. Washington state enacted a social insurance program, imposing a small payroll tax on workers’ salaries. It will pay out $100 a day for up to a year of in-home care. Hawaii did something similar. It’s time that the federal government stepped in and offered similar or better coverage to everyone in the nation through social insurance.

Here’s more from Just Care:

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