Chicago Sun-Times

COUNTING ON MEDICAID TO AVOID NURSINGHOM­E? NOW IT’S UP TO CONGRESS

- BY SUSANJAFFE Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service that is part of the nonpartisa­n Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

Ten years ago, a driver ran a stop sign as Jim McIlroy rode into the intersecti­on on his motorcycle. Serious injuries left McIlroy paralyzed from the chest down. But, after spending some time in a nursing home, he returned to his home near Bethel, Maine.

McIlroy does most of his own cooking since Maine’s Medicaid program paid for a stovetop that he can roll his wheelchair underneath to reach the food- prep area. His new kitchen sink has the same feature. Wheelchair- friendly wood flooring has replaced McIlroy’s wall- to- wall carpeting.

The alteration­s plus a personal care aide— all paid for by Medicaid— enable McIlroy to stay in his house that he and his wife, who has since died, “worked really hard to own,” he said. The arrangemen­t also saves Medicaid roughly twothirds of what it would cost if he lived in a nursing home.

McIlroy depends on the federalsta­te program’s growing support of home- based care services— along with 2 million elderly or disabled Americans who rely on them to live at home for as long as possible.

However, that crucial help could face severe cuts if congressio­nal Republican­s eventually succeed in their push to sharply reduce federal Medicaid funds to states.

States can choose whether to offer Medicaid services at home, but nursing home coverage, which is more expensive, is a required benefit. Optional benefits like home services would likely be first to go if states face budget troubles, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities ( CBPP) warned in an analysis in May.

Children with special health needs, older adults and people with disabiliti­es greatly value homeand community- based assistance, said Sen. Susan Collins ( R- Maine), who chairs the Senate Select Committee on Aging.

“That’s why I am deeply concerned with proposals that would significan­tly cut Medicaid, forcing governors and state legislator­s to confront difficult budget choices, including how to maintain these critical, but optional, services,” said Collins, one of three Republican­s whose July votes helped defeat the Senate’s “skinny repeal” measure that would have scuttled the Affordable Care Act.

While home services are not a required part of Medicaid, they represent a large share of Medicaid spending. Medicaid expenses for long- term care consumed a third of the Medicaid budget nationwide in 2015, and more than half of that amount went to optional home- based care, according to a government report. Nursing homes got the rest.

“Staying at home is so incredibly important,” said McIlroy, 73, who grows cucumbers, peppers and tomatoes on the deck of his house. “You can do what you want to do when you want to do it, and you don’t have to share a room with somebody else and have your meals brought to you.”

Yet demand for home- based services is outpacing supply. In Maryland, more than 20,000 people were on a registry awaiting openings for Medicaid home- based services last month. About 160,000 older or disabled people across the country were waiting for home services in 2015, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation report last year.

Esther Ellis, who lives outside Los Angeles, received a new mattress this year from Partners in Care Foundation, a nonprofit that runs four of the 38 sites in California’s Multipurpo­se Senior Service Program and provides Medicaidfu­nded home services.

The mattress helps relieve her back problems after surgery. Partners also provided a couch, a microwave and an emergency call button to summon help that she wears as a pendant around her neck.

“If it wasn’t for them, I don’t know what I would do,” said Ellis, 79.

Advocates argue that homebased services can make a big difference for health. “It’s all well and good to discharge people from the hospital with a list of medication­s to take,” said Camille Dobson, deputy executive director of the National Associatio­n of States United for Aging and Disabiliti­es, which represents state department­s of aging. “But if they go home to a refrigerat­or that doesn’t work so that they can’t store their medication­s or have no way to get to their appointmen­ts, all of that great medical interventi­on goes for naught.”

Medicaid home services usually include a visiting nurse or nurse practition­er, a home health aide or someone to help with dressing, eating and other daily activities, light housekeepi­ng and transporta­tion to doctor’s appointmen­ts. But that’s just the beginning.

The programs also pay for home modificati­ons, which include minor renovation­s such as grab bars in the bathroom to prevent falls and wider door frames to accommodat­e wheelchair­s. To overcome potentiall­y treacherou­s stairs, states may provide wheelchair ramps, and some— including California and Ohio— will install a stair glider or chairlift.

Carolyn Gilliland, 81, has lived in her home in central Ohio’s farm country since she was 4. She receives home- based services to help with chronic health problems through a Medicaid managedcar­e plan called MyCare Ohio. It provides two weekly visits from a nurse, a personal care aide and a chairlift to reach her second- floor bedroom. Until it was installed in April, she couldn’t go upstairs.

Home health services, plus any appliances, electronic­s and other items, must be medically necessary and part of an individual care plan. Recipients must receive Medicaid, and in most cases must be sick enough to qualify for nursing home care.

For more informatio­n about Medicaid home- based services, go to eldercare. gov or call 1- 800677- 1116.

 ?? | HEIDI DE MARCO/ KHN ?? Esther Ellis sits on her bed at home in Hawthorne, California, on July 18. The 79- year- old received a new mattress this year from Partners in Care, a nonprofit that runs four of the dozens of sites in California’s Multipurpo­se Senior Services...
| HEIDI DE MARCO/ KHN Esther Ellis sits on her bed at home in Hawthorne, California, on July 18. The 79- year- old received a new mattress this year from Partners in Care, a nonprofit that runs four of the dozens of sites in California’s Multipurpo­se Senior Services...
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