Baltimore Sun

Underdog of senior care is worry-free

PACE program’s main goal is to help people age in place

- By Paula Span The New York Times

Felicia Biteranta was struggling when, five years ago, she enrolled in a PACE program operated by Lutheran Senior Life in Jersey City, New Jersey.

Having suffered a stroke, she found it hard to eat without choking. She fell frequently; her diabetes was out of control; she had pulmonary disease and asthma. She might miss a medical appointmen­t if she could not arrange or afford a taxi. Her family lived far away.

She was, in short, a candidate for a nursing home. But such a move is what PACE — the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly — was designed to prevent.

“The main goal is to let people age in place,” said Maria Iavarone, executive director of the PACE program that Biteranta participat­es in. “Nobody wants to give up their home. It’s where you’re most comfortabl­e. It’s where you should stay.”

Biteranta now receives all of her health care through PACE, which monitors her, along with 120 other seniors, meticulous­ly. PACE supplies much of her social life, too.

“Here, they schedule you for appointmen­ts,” said Biteranta, 74, a retired nurse. “They send someone to take you and bring you home.”

Carpal tunnel syndrome in her wrists and arms makes personal care and household chores difficult, so PACE sends an aide to her home. “She cleans and does my laundry and the shopping,” Biteranta said. “She knows the food I like.”

PACE provided the portable oxygen unit that freed her from dependence on the larger oxygen tanks she uses at home. It arranged cataract surgery and regularly ferries her to a podiatrist, a cardiologi­st, an endocrinol­ogist and other specialist­s. It delivers a host of medication­s at no charge, including asthma inhalers and diabetes-testing supplies. A staff social worker helped her apply for and move into an apartment in a subsidized building for seniors.

As a Medicaid beneficiar­y, she pays nothing for this care — no copays, deductible­s or other out-of-pocket care expenses, and no caps on benefits. Should she require more home care hours or, eventually, a nursing home, PACE will cover those costs, too.

“It’s worry-free,” said Biteranta. “They worry for me.”

Yet both the state and federal government also save money. PACE programs receive a set amount monthly from Medicare and Medicaid to provide nearly everything for people over 55 whose needs qualify them for a nursing home but who don’t want to enter one. This includes doctors visits; tests; procedures; physical, occupation­al and speech therapy; social workers; home care; transporta­tion; medication; dentistry; and hearing aids. Participan­ts typically visit a PACE center like the one in Jersey City several times a week for meals and social activities as well as therapy and health monitoring.

That monthly payment is 15% lower, on average, than Medicaid would ordinarily pay to care for what are primarily low-income seniors, the National PACE Associatio­n said.

Research has shown that PACE programs reduce hospitaliz­ation, emergency room visits and nursing home stays. Participan­ts survive longer than similar patients in less comprehens­ive programs. A study last year by the federal Department of Health and Human Services noted that the PACE program “stands out from our analysis as a consistent­ly ‘high performer.’ ”

Why, then, do so few PACE programs exist — and enroll so few older Americans? Almost three decades after Medicare and Medicaid began funding PACE programs — today, there are 144, operating 272 centers in 30 states — the endeavor collective­ly serves fewer than 60,000 people, the National PACE Associatio­n reports.

The associatio­n estimates that 1.6 million Medicare beneficiar­ies might meet PACE eligibilit­y requiremen­ts. As a list of current programs shows, however, 21 states have no PACE program, and 11 have just one.

Profession­als in elder care tend to be fans.

“Every geriatrici­an loves this model,” said Mark Lachs, co-chief of geriatrics and palliative medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.

Specialist­s like Lachs have complained for years that traditiona­l Medicare will cover costly surgery to repair broken hips but won’t pay to install inexpensiv­e grab bars that might prevent falls. With PACE’s fixed payments, “there might be less money, but you spend it the way you want to, without getting on the phone for insurance company approval,” Lachs said.

Yet growth has been slow.

“We’ve had a lot of headwinds over the years,” said Shawn Bloom, the associatio­n’s chief executive.

Persuading state legislator­s to expand PACE enrollment or authorize new programs has proved challengin­g; such moves represent new expenditur­es, even if they eventually reduce costs.

For individual­s, the enrollment process — which involves a state assessment to determine whether their medical conditions, cognitive status and functional limitation­s would warrant a nursing home — can take weeks. A family needing elder care immediatel­y may be unable to wait.

Moreover, agreeing to receive all health care from PACE often means relinquish­ing one’s individual doctor, and some patients balk at that demand. Programs can evade that barrier by allowing PACE programs to work with community physicians.

But prospectiv­e patients may not know about PACE at all.

“We’re trying to expand awareness, but we don’t have a ‘Got Milk?’ budget,” Bloom said.

Still, the pandemic has intensifie­d older Americans’ desire for alternativ­e forms of long-term care.

“If people didn’t want to be in nursing homes before COVID, they really don’t want to be there now,” Lachs said. According to the associatio­n, COVID19 deaths among PACE participan­ts have been about one-third those of nursing home residents.

So PACE’s growth is picking up, with 45 new programs expected to begin enrollment in the next two years, in part because of higher federal incentives. Moreover, for-profit companies are starting to establish or acquire PACE programs, although skeptics worry that for-profit status will lower quality.

Several bills introduced in Congress would remove barriers to growth; one would build partnershi­ps with Veterans Affairs hospitals to make PACE more accessible to veterans.

 ?? BRIAN FRASER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Felicia Biteranta, left, a retired nurse who has had limited mobility since she suffered a stroke, with her home health aide, Altagracia Garcia-Reyes, on March 11 in Jersey City, New Jersey.
BRIAN FRASER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Felicia Biteranta, left, a retired nurse who has had limited mobility since she suffered a stroke, with her home health aide, Altagracia Garcia-Reyes, on March 11 in Jersey City, New Jersey.

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