Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden’s expansion of long-term care sparks debate

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

President Joe Biden is proposing a major expansion of the government’s role in long-term care, but questions are being raised over his using the low-income Medicaid program and piggybacki­ng the whole idea on an infrastruc­ture bill.

The White House infrastruc­ture package includes $400 billion to accelerate a shift from institutio­nal care to home and community services through the federalsta­te Medicaid program. The size of the financial commitment — about 17% of the $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal — leaves no doubt that Biden intends to put his mark on long-term care.

Biden is acting as the nation emerges from a pandemic that has taken a cruel toll on older people, particular­ly nursing home residents. Long-term care was always going to be a growing issue in an aging society like the United States. The pandemic has made it even more consequent­ial.

“The most important thing that Biden did is to say that ‘Long-term care is a major priority in my administra­tion,’” said Howard Gleckman, a retirement policy expert with the Urban Institute think tank. “At the 30,000-foot level, this is really important because the president says so.”

Below that, the White House has not spelled out much. A summary of Biden’s plan says the money would go to expand home and community-based services so more people could get care. A major goal would be to raise pay and benefits for workers, nearly all of whom are women, many from minority and immigrant communitie­s. Wages now average around $12 an hour. The proposal would also permanentl­y reauthoriz­e a program within Medicaid that helps people move out of nursing homes and back into their communitie­s.

But Medicaid remains a safety net program and that means middle-class people can face arduous challenges to qualify even if they have staggering expenses for long-term care. Because Biden is funneling his funding boost through Medicaid, that leaves out the middle class.

Biden “is the working-class guy, the middle-class guy … he knows if we only focus on Medicaid, his core constituen­cy is not going to be helped, unless they wipe out their assets,” said William Arnone, CEO of the nonpartisa­n National Academy of Social Insurance, which works on policy.

An alternativ­e to Medicaid could resemble Social Security and Medicare, which have no income-based tests for benefits, Arnone added. But that would cost far more than Biden is proposing to spend. People often assume Medicare covers long-term care, but it does not.

Some Republican­s have also questioned whether long-term care has any place in an infrastruc­ture bill. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called the White House plan a “liberal wish list” mislabeled as infrastruc­ture. In rebuttal, Biden said infrastruc­ture should include expanded services — not just roads and bridges — as part of what Americans need to “build a little better life, to be able to breathe a little bit.”

Medicaid spends about $200 billion a year on all long-term care needs, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Reflecting a growing sentiment that older adults should be able to remain in their homes, more than half the money goes to home and community-based care. The Biden bill would average out to an increase of $40 billion a year over 10 years.

About 4 million people receive home and community-based services, which are less expensive than nursing home care. But an estimated 800,000 are on waiting lists for such services. More than 1 million people live in nursing homes.

Policy consultant Brian Blase, a former Trump White House health care adviser, said a warning flag for Republican­s is that Biden’s plan calls for upholding the right of care workers to unionize.

“It seems like it’s a boondoggle to create more union workers and through the unions funnel money back to the Democrats” via campaign contributi­ons, said Blase.

That makes union officials bristle. “It’s just fundamenta­lly unacceptab­le that federal dollars should go to pay for poverty-level jobs, and we have an opportunit­y to change that,” said Leslie Frane, a vice president of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, which represents many health care workers.

Stepping back, Republican­s generally have no quarrel with prioritizi­ng in-home services over nursing homes. “It is bipartisan to support people who would be eligible for Medicaid staying at home rather than going into institutio­ns,” said Blase. However, loosening eligibilit­y rules will lead to “runaway expenses,” he said.

The money in the infrastruc­ture plan follows $12.7 billion for home and community services in Biden’s coronaviru­s relief law. Taking a leading role in Congress drafting the infrastruc­ture sequel is Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Sen. Bob Casey.

“I’m going to do everything I can to help middleclas­s families,” Casey said. “What I’m trying to do is add dollars to Medicaid to serve more people. We got a foot in the door in the rescue bill with $12.7 billion, but obviously we’re going to need a lot more.”

Congressio­nal officials said the approach that’s taking shape calls for increasing the federal contributi­on to states for home and community services while setting some basic national standards. Such standards could include the type and scope of services that states cover as well as a mechanism for raising pay for workers. They’re also looking at ideas such as creating state registries of qualified caregivers, which could be useful to middle-class people not eligible for Medicaid.

“There are certain issues related to longterm care that predate the pandemic and will be a challenge even after the pandemic,” Casey said. But the coronaviru­s “forces us to confront problems we’ve ignored too long in our long-term care system, and also to invest more in long-term care generally.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States