LTSS Financing – Issue Brief

 

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LTSS Financing – A Narrative Introduction

The long-term services and supports we need during disability in old age cost an average of more than $100,000 per person during the last part of life. Around half of us have no savings in retirement. Left to drift, within a decade most Americans who lived in the middle class while working will be unable to afford housing, food, and medical care.

Yet few Americans are insured against these supportive-services costs in the familiar way that we insure against costs of a medical need, fire, or auto accident. Long-term care insurance is rarely even accessible, because the market for it has collapsed. Medicare does not cover long-term services and supports (LTSS) – although most Americans think it does. Federal and state governments instead cover a limitless amount of personal care through Medicaid, but qualifying for Medicaid depletes many of the disabled elder’s assets.

Large LTSS costs must come out-of-pocket until the elderly person qualifies for Medicaid, leaving American families with little protection from the loss of all assets and life savings built up during older generations’ career of work and savings. Better financing methods are available, but they must start very soon: accumulating savings takes years, and insurance typically must be purchased before old age.

LTSS Financing – Key Facts

LTSS Financing – Solutions

The nature of LTSS needs makes them ripe for insurance: needs are unpredictable, and expensive for those with sustained need (six-figure annual costs could rack up for anyone who survives with frailty long into old age). Current market failures could be overcome through a prudent, pragmatic combination of public insurance and market-based private initiatives. With new funding, infrastructure for community-based services can tamp down LTSS need and reduce the costs of medical care.

Insure most Americans against catastrophic LTSS needs.

  • Very few Americans can independently save enough to privately cover even 75% of the risks of LTSS needs, and almost no one can have assets enough to pay for two decades of retirement including ten years of around-the-clock care – which are real risks. Truly catastrophic coverage requires pooling savings across large populations, which is a natural function of government.
  • Without near-universal coverage of severe needs, insurance products will not be affordable enough to reduce care-related bankruptcy and reliance on Medicaid. Three consensus reports, each informed by Milliman Inc.’s actuaries, came to this conclusion as recently as 2016.
  • Catastrophic costs are different for persons with different assets and incomes, so a public program should recognize an array of thresholds at which governmental insurance kicks in. More than one year of around-the clock care is catastrophic for a low-wage and low-asset family, while a high-income family might be expected to absorb 4 years or more on their own before the public insurance starts picking up the costs. So, the federal government should initiate catastrophic coverage in a trust fund arrangement.
  • With universal catastrophic coverage, private savings and insurance products will have an important role in covering the first period of LTSS needs (front-end insurance).

Foster insurance coverage for other LTSS needs through private market reforms or public options.

  • Restructure the private market for broader participation in varied, high-value LTCI plans. Consumer advocates and industry have jointly suggested a suite of federal policies that either hinder affordability or could do more to assure consumer confidence in LTCI.
  • Employers could auto-enroll employees in viable LTCI plans, encouraged to do so through tax-reductions for LTCI purchases. Penalty-free use of tax-free savings to pay for LTCI premiums would double LTCI coverage and increase tax revenues on net. LTSS benefits could be sold alongside other government-facilitated insurance products like Medicare Advantage (MA), or Medigap plans.

Invest in infrastructure improvements for home- and community-based LTSS (called HCBS).

  • The federal Medicaid program could incentivize states to cover HCBS and continue simplifying requisite waivers. The federal and state governments should also promote HCBS capacity by funding state investments in housing, caregiving, and transportation supports. The HCBS Infrastructure Improvement bill before the 116th Congress would fund all three supports, to increase the cost-effectiveness of Medicaid HCBS and better coordinate other programs.
  • Public health offices could enable communities to guide improvement activities by generating useful data and convening stakeholders across their communities to manage their local eldercare arrangements, as exemplified by the MediCaring Communities model.
  • Federal appropriations for the Older Americans Act should match population needs as they grow.
  • Finally, non-medical benefits should extend to all Medicare beneficiaries. Under the CHRONIC Care Act of 2018, MA plans can cover non-medical benefits (for example, meals on wheels or rides to medical appointments). Most Medicare beneficiaries lack access, though: only private MA coverage can reimburse for these cost-saving services – and only a few MA plans have done so. Expanding these benefits could enhance the sustainability of Medicare and Medicaid programs by reducing total costs and could enhance population health by avoiding worsened disease and disability.

Original posting date: July 14, 2020

Date of last update: July 14, 2020

Author attribution: Nils Franco, Analyst, Program to Improve Eldercare, Altarum Institute

Copyright by Joanne Lynn, MD ([email protected]).

Content is provided with a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license. Learn more at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

This license authorizes you to share and adapt the material so long as you give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.

Requested citation: Nils Franco. “Financing Long-Term Services and Supports for the Elderly” MediCaring.org, July 14, 2020. https://www.medicaring.org/faq/ltss-financing

We welcome comments and suggested improvements. Please send them to [email protected].


References

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