RESEARCH
INFORMATION ON INDEPENDENT LIVING
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Elderly Care Options
Volume
1, Issue 8
In the past decade, admissions to nursing homes— the
typical prescription for elder care — have dropped 10% even though the number
of Americans over age 75 grew by 27%.
Nursing homes
are no longer as prominent among long-tem care options used to be," said
Christine Bishop, a professor in the Schneider Institute for Health Policy at
Brandeis University.
While nursing
homes were the dominant long-term care option as recently as the early 1990s,
new options that provide lower-level care — such as adult daycare and assisted
living — have grown in
prominence,” Bishop said. “Nursing homes have become more narrowly
specialized, catering to those requiring the greatest assistance."
Other options
have joined nursing homes and opened up more choices for elderly people needing
some form of care. For example, while just over 1.5 million people live in U.S.
nursing homes, 800,000 live in assisted-living facilities in which care may be
as minimal as prepared dinners.
The downside of
assisted living is its high entry-level price tag. A lot of people also don’t
want to take the chance of paying the high entry fee that can be forfeited un
leaving the community. Also, while assisted living helps the elderly maintain
independence, social interaction, transportation, and activities, it lacks
regulation facilities. Services for people who have dementia, too, are not
usually offered.
Group homes and
adult foster care are two more care options. Of course, a great number of
chronically ill and disabled older people live at home with assistance from
family members and home-health agencies. Many can live at home even with
dementia or other intensive care needs by attending adult day-care centers.
Others may require only assertive technology or home modifications.
That's also
true in Germany where many people with disabilities live in nursing homes. This
is because they don’t have support to live in the community. As an experiment
to return people to the community, German researchers held training sessions in
an accessible "smart house" and had technologies such as an emergency
call system and adaptable cupboards.
Before program
entry, an individual had to move independently in a wheelchair, transfer
independently, eat without the help of another person, have enough endurance to
take part, and be motivated. To aid in transition, the researchers devised
independent living training in three phases starting with an assessment.
In phase two,
independent living training occurred with weekly documentation and final
assessments at the end of on-site training. The last phase consisted of home
adaptation, follow-up visits, and documentation.
In summary,
long-term care options for the elderly, include:
·
assistive
technology
·
home
modifications
·
assisted
living
·
group
homes
·
adult
foster care
·
personal
assistants
·
adult
daycare centers
—
Cindy Higgins, The Research and Training Center on Independent Living,
The University of Kansas, 1000 Sunnyside Ave., Room 4089 Dole Center, Lawrence,
KS 66045-7555, (785) 864-4095, E-mail:[email protected]. This project funded by
National Institute on Disability Rehabilitation Research grant #H133A980048.
Information for
this review came from the interactive Research Information on Independent Living
(RIIL) database at www.GetRiil.org,
which contains research summaries related to independent living with
disabilities. A special effort has been made to include information that
independent leaders in the field said they wanted, namely topics regarding
accessible, affordable housing, effective advocacy for rural areas, effective
transition from schools and nursing homes, accessible, affordable
transportation, reaching underserved populations, policies that impede
independent living, rural health care services, and Medicaid/Medicare
regulations for durable equipment.
RIIL is a joint
effort of the Research and Training Center on Independent Living at the
University of Kansas and the Independent Living Research Utilization (ILRU)
Program of TIRR.