400 likes | 548 Views
Alaska Commission on Aging. Presentation to the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority September 6, 2007. Overview. Our Mission, Members, and Activities FY 07 Accomplishments Characteristics of Older Alaskan Beneficiaries FY 08 Budget Summary and Impacts FY 09 Budget Recommendations
E N D
Alaska Commission on Aging Presentation to the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority September 6, 2007
Overview • Our Mission, Members, and Activities • FY 07 Accomplishments • Characteristics of Older Alaskan Beneficiaries • FY 08 Budget Summary and Impacts • FY 09 Budget Recommendations • FY 09 Policy Recommendations • Questions and Closing
Our Mission and Primary Activities • The Alaska Commission on Aging advocates for policies, programs, and services that promote the dignity and independence of Alaska’s seniors and help them maintain a meaningful quality of life. • The ACoA advances this mission by engaging in planning, advocacy, promotion of public awareness, and inter-agency coordination on behalf of all older Alaskans.
Alaska Commission on Aging Members: • Banarsi Lal (Fairbanks) – Board Chair for FY 08 • Frank Appel (Anchorage) • Patricia Branson (Kodiak) – Provider • Sharon Howerton-Clark (Homer) • Tara Jollie (Anchorage) – DCED Designee – NEW(Aug. ’07) • Lillian Boen Kasnick (Sitka) – NEW (Sept. ‘06) • Betty Keegan (Wrangell) • Iver Malutin (Kodiak) • Rod Moline (Anchorage) – DSDS Designee • Paula Pawlowski (Anchorage) – NEW(Sept. ’06) • Ed Zastrow (Ketchikan) – Pioneers’ Homes Advisory Board Chair Staff: • Denise Daniello, Executive Director • MaryAnn VandeCastle, H&SS Planner II • Lesley Bullock, H&SS Planner I (NEW) • Administrative Assistant (currently vacant)
FY 2007 ACoA Accomplishments: • Completion of the Alaska State Plan for Senior Services, FY 2008-2011 • Publication of “Report on the Economic Well-Being of Alaska Seniors” • Successful Advocacy for Senior Benefits, WWAMI Program Expansion, Flexible Long-Term Care Supports Budget • Over $9 Million in Capital Project Funding for Senior Centers, Pioneer Homes, AHFC Senior Housing, and Other Senior Programs • Successful Legislative Audit of the Commission • Creation of the Alaska Aging Advocacy Network
Characteristics of the Alaska Commission on Aging’s Beneficiaries
Alaska has the largest net out-flow of seniors of any state.
Older Alaskans have higher mean and median incomes than U.S. seniors – without adjusting for cost of living.
The percentage of seniors receiving Senior Care cash benefits varied considerably by region of residence.
Alaskans’ life expectancy is below the median among U.S. states. • 1. Hawaii – 79.8 years • 2. Minnesota – 79.1 years • 3. North Dakota – 78.7 years • 29. Alaska – 76.7 years • 49. Louisiana – 74.4 years • 50. Mississippi – 73.7 years • 51. District of Columbia – 72.6 years
Older Alaskans have higher suicide rates than U.S. seniors as a whole.
But older Alaskans have lower overall age-adjusted death rates than U.S. seniors.
Top Causes of Non-Fatal Hospitalized Injuries for Alaskans Age 65+ • 1. Falls • 2. Motor Vehicle Accidents – Occupant • 3. Suicide Attempts • 4. Water Transport Accidents • 5. Snow Machine Accidents • 6. Motor Vehicle Accidents – Pedestrian • 7. Assaults • 8. Hypothermia/Frostbite • 9. ATV Accidents; Cuts (TIE) • 10. Machinery Accidents
Some 4,919 Alaskans age 65 and older, or 10.8% of that age group, may have Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD), based on national prevalence rates.
Alaska seniors are more likely to drink heavily and to smoke than are U.S. seniors as a whole.
Seniors with mental illness may be almost invisible. • An estimated 18.5% of seniors suffer from depression – that’s as many as 13,261 Alaskan seniors. Some Canadian research indicates significantly more depression among those living in cold, dark environments. • An estimated 26.2% of all American adults suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder in a given year – that’s 18,769 older Alaskans. • But older persons with a mental illness rarely seek treatment for the disease. They may not recognize the symptoms, or may fear that it indicates a character flaw that could stigmatize them. • Many people (seniors and caregivers) incorrectly assume that depression is a normal part of aging.
Nationally, the number of elderly mentally ill is projected to almost quadruple from 1970 to 2030. • “A national crisis in geriatric mental health care is emerging. The present research infrastructure, health care financing, pool of mental health care personnel with appropriate geriatric training, and the mental health care delivery systems are extremely inadequate to meet the challenges posed by the expected increase in the number of elderly with mental illness.” -- Archives of General Psychiatry, September, 1999
FY 08 Budget Summary and Impacts: • Senior Benefits Program – new, enhanced program is a major improvement over previous Senior Care program – provides monthly cash to low-income seniors, including Trust beneficiaries and potential beneficiaries, to help pay costs of food, fuel, medicine, housing, and other basic needs • Flexible Long-Term Care Supports – added $125.0 to budget base for total of $250.0 to support HCBS for seniors with ADRD cared for at home by family and friends • WWAMI Program Enhancement – legislation doubled the number of slots for Alaskans in the WWAMI medical school program from 10 to 20 per year – will increase the number of physicians practicing in Alaska, helping prepare the state to address the health care needs of Alaska’s growing senior population
FY 09 Budget Recommendations: • 1. FACES – Family and Community Elder Supports (Senior HCBS Grants Increment) • 2. Senior Crisis Intervention Services • 3. SOAR Project (Senior Outreach, Assessment and Referral) • 4. Primary Care Clinics – Alaska Primary Care Association • 5. Healthy Body, Healthy Brain Campaign • 6. Senior Fall Prevention
1. FACES (Family and Community Elder Supports) • $1,500.0 in GF/MH for HCBS senior grants increment – to provide additional funding for existing grant services, including home-delivered meals, congregate meals, assisted and unassisted transportation, care coordination, adult day services and education, respite care, chore service, and family caregiver support • Services help seniors remain in their own homes and communities as they prefer, help prevent the development or progression of disease and disability, and prevent the need for much more costly nursing home care • Alaska’s senior population has increased dramatically in the past decade and will continue to do so over the next 25 years – but state funding for services has declined per capita\ • Average costs of grant-based services per seniors is less than one percent of the cost of nursing home care
Senior Grant Funds Have Not Kept Pace with an Increasing Population
Per Capita Expenditures for State Grant-Funded Services, in 2006 Dollars, Have Decreased by Over One-Third in the Past Decade.
Cost of Providing Grant Services is Minimal Compared with Nursing Home Costs.
Unit costs for services are rising significantly. 2006 Average Unit Costs: • Congregate Meal - $14.21/meal • Home-Delivered Meal - $15.73 / meal • Assisted Transportation - $18.61 / ride • Unassisted Transportation - $13.78 / ride • Family Caregiver Support - $34.23 / hour • Chore/Homemaker - $18.40 / hour • Adult Day Service - $115.65 / day
EXAMPLE: Grant support for ADRD education and support has remained the same for the past decade. • FY 1998: $115,000 • FY 2008: $115,000 • Includes outreach, information and referral, awareness presentations, support groups, education for professionals, etc. • Meanwhile, Alaska’s senior population has grown by approximately 60%
2. Senior Crisis Intervention Services • $500.0 in GF/MH for crisis intervention for mentally ill seniors in Pioneer Homes and assisted living facilities, and training for assisted living home administrators • Providers report increasing cases of severe mental illness (most previously undiagnosed) among residents – dozens in the Pioneer Homes alone; facilities are not properly staffed or licensed to provide adequate care for these individuals; only nine assisted living homes statewide are appropriately licensed to care for mentally ill seniors (all located in the SouthCentral region)
3. SOAR Project (Senior Outreach, Assessment, and Referral) • $300.0 for outreach, assessment and referral services targeted to the unique needs of seniors, coordinated statewide, with special focus on six communities (a mix of regional hubs and urban centers) • Senior centers and other service providers are reporting an increase in aggression and substance abuse among seniors; isolation, depression, and other mental health problems among those who do not attend any programs are also thought to be increasing • 70 to 75 percent of seniors who commit suicide saw a primary care provider in the month preceding their deaths • Will work with Division of Behavioral Health to provide a statewide coordinator and community clinicians in six communities; in conjunction with community gatekeepers, they will identify vulnerable seniors and connect with them to provide assessment and referral to treatment resources; they will also do community education and work with primary care providers to increase behavioral health screening opportunities • Project staff will collect data on clients, services provided, individuals trained, and services that are needed but unavailable in their communities
4. Primary Care Clinics • $350.0 GF/MH appropriation for the Alaska Primary Care Association for help in providing primary care to seniors, many of whom cannot find a primary care provider outside the Community Health Center system • The inability of many Alaska seniors on Medicare to find a primary care physician reached epic proportions in the past year, receiving statewide news coverage and triggering a special Congressional hearing in February 2007. Private physicians claim that Medicare’s reimbursement rate is too low. • As the number of seniors in Alaska increases, and the state continues to attract too few physicians, this problem is likely to grow. • CHCs do not turn patients away, regardless of their ability to pay or their coverage by Medicare. CHCs do offer a sliding fee scale and encourage patient responsibility. • In 2005, Alaska’s Community Health Centers served 5,468 seniors age 65 and over – 7 percent of the patients seen. This number was up 12 percent from 2004. • Alaska is one of 14 states that does not currently provide any direct funding for Community Health Centers • With sustainable funding, the CHCs can continue to increase the number of patients and encounters
5. Healthy Body, Healthy Brain Campaign Enhancement • $150,000 in GF/MH to expand the Healthy Body, Healthy Brain Campaign to offer healthy lifestyle programs at fifteen senior centers or community health centers • Received $25,000 in MHTAAR for FY 08/09 for a public awareness campaign to alert baby boomers and seniors to the lifestyle connection to ADRD risk; in process of producing posters, bus signs, bookmarks, and ads to bring this message to the public • Fifteen $10,000 grants to senior centers or community centers would assist them in providing programs that reward physical activity, healthy eating, mental challenges, and socializing with friends.
6. Senior Fall Prevention • $200.0 in GF/MH to support fall prevention activities in rural Alaskan communities with the Alaska Brain Injury Network and Behavioral Health • The highest percentage of brain injury survivors in Alaska are seniors age 75+ • Falls are the #1 cause of brain injury in seniors. Reasons for falls may include: • medications affecting perception and balance • medical conditions that make falls more likely (visual limitations, orthopedic problems, etc.) and • external factors such as lack of exercise, improper footwear, and hazards in the home • Physical changes in older individuals make their brains more vulnerable to injury and reduce their chances to recover • The only “cure” for a brain injury is prevention
Advocacy Strategies • Engage the Alaska Aging Advocacy Network – a committed group of about 130 senior advocates • Coordinate with senior providers and assisted living home administrators to invite legislators to their agencies to directly observe clients, programs, and services • Team up with AARP, AgeNet and the Trust to educate legislators about the need for services through meetings, support letters, and legislative committee presentations • Encourage letters to the editor, op-ed articles, Senior Voice coverage, and highlight issues in the ACoA newsletter
FY 09 Policy Recommendations: • A. Support Alaska Commission on Aging “sunrise” legislation and associated statutory changes • B. Begin statewide broad-based strategic long-term care planning process • C. Create a brain-based disorders (ADRD, TBI) Medicaid waiver • D. Support equitable Medicaid waiver rates (underway) • E. Consider Long-Term Care as a future focus area for the Trust to benefit all beneficiaries • F. Support for the Trust’s advocacy priorities including the Housing Trust and Workforce Development initiatives
Thank you. • Questions?