1st Edition

The Affordable Care Act Advancing Long-Term Care Policy in the United States

Edited By Edward Miller Copyright 2013
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    Long-term care in the United States and other countries suffers multiple problems. Many people find it difficult to afford the high costs of services available and there is often inadequate care coordination, which compromises care quality, particularly amongst those eligible for multiple public programs. Recruitment and retention of a well-trained, stable workforce is also considered a challenge that needs to be addressed.

    The policy debate leading up to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) drew attention to prevailing deficiencies in the way long-term care is delivered, regulated, and financed in the United States. This collection reviews what was accomplished by the legislation and what still remains to be done. Just how effective is the ACA likely to be in addressing the challenges plaguing the long-term care sector? Did it result in meaningful change or make little impact? This book answers these questions, drawing contributions from among the most eminent long-term care experts in the United States.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Aging & Social Policy.

    1. Introduction: The Affordable Care Act and Long-Term Care: Comprehensive Reform or Just Tinkering Around the Edges? Edward Alan Miller, University of Massachusetts Boston, Brown University, USA

    2. The CLASS Act: Is It Dead or Just Sleeping? Joshua M. Wiener, RTI, USA

    3. A 10-Foot Rope for a 50-Yard Drop: The CLASS Act in the a Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act William G. Weissert, Florida State University, USA 

    4. Partnership Long-Term Care Insurance: Lessons for CLASS Program Development Mark R. Meiners, George Mason University, USA

    5. Medicaid Home- an d Community-Based Services: Impact of the Affordable Care Act Charlene Harrington, Terence Ng, Mitchell LaPlante, H. Stephen Kaye, University of California, San Francisco, USA

    6. Impact of Health Care Reform on the Workforce Caring for Older Adults Robyn I. Stone, Natasha Bryant, LeadingAge, USA

    7. Nursing Homes and the Affordable Care Act: A Cease Fire in the Ongoing Struggle Over Quality Catherine Hawes, Darcy M. Moudouni, Rachel B. Edwards, Charles D. Phillips, Texas A & M, USA

    8. Care Coordination for Dually Eligible Medicare-Medicaid Beneficiaries under the Affordable Care Act David Grabowski, Harvard Medical School, USA

    9. Medicare and the Affordable Care Act Marilyn Moon, American Institutes for Research, USA

    10. Conclusion

    Biography

    Edward Alan Miller, Ph.D., M.P.A., is an Associate Professor of Gerontology & Public Policy and Fellow of the Gerontologist Institute at the McCormack Graduate School for Policy & Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston, USA. He is also Adjunct Associate Professor of Health Services, Policy & Practice, at Brown University, USA. His research focuses on understanding the determinants and effects of federal and state policies affecting vulnerable populations. Previous publications include Digital Medicine: Health Care in the Internet Era (2009).