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A Good Death? Changing Expectations and Plans Osher Lifelong Learning Institute

A Good Death? Changing Expectations and Plans Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. John Amson Capitman , PhD. Nickerson Professor of Health Policy Central Valley Health Policy Institute California State University, Fresno. A Good Death: Preliminary Outline. Day 2:

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A Good Death? Changing Expectations and Plans Osher Lifelong Learning Institute

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  1. A Good Death?Changing Expectations and PlansOsher Lifelong Learning Institute John AmsonCapitman, PhD. Nickerson Professor of Health Policy Central Valley Health Policy Institute California State University, Fresno

  2. A Good Death: Preliminary Outline Day 2: Review of worksheets from Day 1 Anticipating Long-term Care Needs Caring for Caregivers Living Will: the 5 wishes Long-term Care Insurance

  3. Review of worksheets from Day 1 • D-I-Y Obituary • Anything learned or relearned • Any new questions • Recipes for a good death---medical consensus • Anything learned or relearned • Any new questions

  4. Anticipating Long-Term Care • Compression of Mortality? Morbidity? Because of epidemiological transition, more people live to old age, and more people live to the natural limits of human life ===Smaller part of life course associated with most deaths====Compression of Mortality • BUT is there a compression of morbidity? Later onset of disability?

  5. Anticipating Long-Term Care Lifetime Risk of Disability • Risk of current disability increases with age: for a person aged 85 (35 %) is more than 7x greater than for a person aged 74 (4.6 %). • The lifetime risk of developing a disability in at least two primary activities of daily living for at least 3 months or becoming cognitively impaired is 44% for males and 72% for females at age 65. • Women face a 64% higher risk than do men. • Lifetime risk of developing a disability declines slightly with age.

  6. Anticipating Long-Term Care 1. Disability insurance and long term care (LTC) insurance cover the same things. 2. The average lifetime chance of needing long term care for an individual 65 years or older is more than 40%. 3. People have to spend all or almost all of their assets to get Medicaid benefits. 4. Medicare is not the primary funding source for most seniors’ long term care costs. 5. Most long term care is provided in a nursing home. 6. Medicaid covers long term care services received at home. 7. Nursing home expenses for Alzheimer’s Disease patients are covered by Medicare. 8. The average length of stay in a nursing home is more than four years. 9. Nearly 40% of the long term care population is under the age of 65. 10. On average, a one-year stay in a nursing home costs about $30,000.

  7. Caring for Caregivers • Over 7million Americans provide 120 million hours of informal care to approximately 4.2 million severely disabled elders each and every week. • About 38 million adult caregivers (age 18 or older) provided unpaid care for ADL/IADL • Caregivers provided an average of 21 hours of care per week, or 1,080 hours per year. • An estimated $350 billion/year to replace informal caregiving • Out-of-pocket, lost wages, lost retirement income, lost productivity, costs associated with health effects

  8. Caring for Caregivers • If you are run down, tiring more than usual, will you be able to provide good care? • If you have a cold or the flu, will your loved one catch it from you? • If you become depressed will you be able to make good decisions, will life become unbearable? • If you are not well, who will fill your shoes, whether temporarily or permanently? BASIC TIPS • Take a daily vitamin supplement • Get exercise — make it a priority for both your mental and physical well-being. • Get regular check-ups and do not ignore possible symptoms of ill health. • Take a break from caregiving – respite time is crucial. • Watch for signs of depression – more information • Stay involved in hobbies • Laugh with a friend

  9. Coping Tips for Caregivers • Educateyourself about the disease your family member is facing and how it may affect his or her behavior, pain level, etc. • Find sources of help for caregiver tasks. Contact family, friends, neighbors, church/synagogue, workplace, Area Agency on Aging or other organizations. Keep looking! • Protect your personal time for something you enjoy or something you need to get done. Try to find time for exercise, eating well and sleeping enough. • Watch out for symptoms of depression (such as crying more, sleeping more or less than usual, increased or decreased appetite or lack of interest in usual activities). Notify your doctor if symptoms of depression are present. • Considerhow you will feel and what you will do after the caregiving ends.

  10. Caring for Caregivers • In-home supports (home health, homemaker, independent living aide) • Out-of-home, community care (adult day care, outpatient rehabilitation) • Supportive/Transitional Housing • Board and care • Assisted living • CCRC • Nursing homes

  11. Financing Long-Term Care Figure up to $150k in long-term care costs if needed for average time/mix of in-home and facility 3 primary options • Save money—dedicated savings • Prepare to qualify for MediCal • Purchase LTC Insurance

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