Federal LTC panel offers policy suggestions, no consensus on funding
Commission was formed after the demise of the voluntary long-term care program created by the federal health law
The federal Commission on Long-Term Care released recommendations Friday but did not reach a consensus on how to pay for these often expensive services.
The proposals were part of a report that received bipartisan support from nine of the 15 commissioners, five Republicans and four Democrats. It also was rejected by a bipartisan minority, five Democrats and a Republican. The commission was created by Congress to address the country’s surging need for long-term care.
The group's full report is expected to be released this week.
The three-page summary of recommendations tackles a wide-ranging list of concerns but offers few specific remedies. Among its many proposals, the panel calls for supporting criminal background checks for long-term care workers, ensuring that family caregivers are included in care planning, using more technology to share information; revising scope of practice rules to allow nurses and others to provide medical services and improving working conditions and opportunities for direct care workers.
The panel did not agree on a recommendation for a program to help families pay for long-term care services. However, it makes some suggestions for improvements to current options, including allowing disabled workers access to Medicaid to pay for services they need in order to keep working. It also recommends eliminating Medicare’s requirement that beneficiaries spend three days in the hospital as admitted patients in order to receive nursing home coverage.
[See also: The coming crisis in long-term care.]
"I'm hoping there are members of Congress who will look at this and say this makes sense," said Grace-Marie Turner, president of the Galen Institute, an Alexandria, Va., think tank, who was appointed to the commission by House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio). "Almost all of the recommendations have equal support from Democratic and Republican appointees."
But Judith Feder, a health policy scholar at Georgetown University Public Policy Institute appointed by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), said the commission did not fulfill a key assignment.
She and other four Democratic-appointed members who voted against the recommendations later offered their own plan, including establishing a national social insurance program that would help cover long-term care expenses, setting better pay scales and training for direct care workers and changing the Medicare system to help beneficiaries get more coverage for services and improvements in Medicaid benefits.
"The fundamental issue in getting people the long-term services and supports they need is an issue of financing," she said. "And this commission did not address that issue."
Mark Warshawsky, the commission's vice chairman appointed by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), disagreed and said that even though the commission couldn't come to a consensus, it produced "many new ideas for financing long-term care."
Turner said she argued "vociferously" for recommendations to encourage people to buy their long-term-care insurance. If middle class Americans depend on Medicaid for long term care, she said "the safety net will be shred." The six Republicans on the panel late Friday issued a letter to Obama and congressional leaders stressing their belief that new private insurance options for families dealing with long-term care expenses could "alleviate pressure" on Medicare and Medicaid. They also emphasized that new programs should not increase state or federal government spending and new taxes should not be considered.
Feder, however, countered that consumers need help with these expenses. "Medicaid is there for them only after they impoverish themselves," said Feder. "We can do better than that."
[See also: Long-term care group urges Super Committee to preserve federal funding.]
Chris Jacobs, a senior policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation appointed to the commission by Senator McConnell, was the only Republican who voted against the report. He objected to its substance as well as the commission’s process for adopting it. Despite the hundreds of pages of comments the commission received from national organizations and individuals, he said the public was excluded as the commission considered its final recommendations in a private meeting. The commission "spent more than twice as much time in private deliberations than it has in public sessions," Jacobs said.
The commission only had 100 days, said the panel's chairman Bruce Chernof, president of the SCAN Foundation who was appointed by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). "In a very short time frame, the commission did all it could to be transparent while also completing its work and to try to engage the public," he said.
The commission faced a daunting challenge: It had meager financing for its operations, few staff members and little time. Congress established the panel as part of the Jan. 2 fiscal cliff deal, but it took three months for congressional leaders and President Barack Obama to appoint the members. The commission held its first meeting June 27 and was directed to report back by Sept. 12.
One member appointed by Obama was unable to attend meetings after assuming a new job at the White House. The president named a replacement, disability expert Lynnae Ruttledge, on Aug. 30. Her first meeting was the commission's last.
The commission had the option to prepare legislation. If they had, it would have been required to be introduced in the U. S. Senate and House of Representatives. "We didn’t have the resources or time to get that done," Turner said.
The commission was formed after the demise of the voluntary long-term care program created by the federal health law, called the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act, or CLASS. The Obama administration cancelled CLASS after determining that it was unfeasible because high premiums would discourage healthy people from joining. If enough people did not voluntarily enroll, the program would not have been self-sustaining. Congress repealed CLASS and replaced it with the commission, which was added to the fiscal cliff compromise law by Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.).
"Improving our long-term care system will require a multi-faceted approach that takes into account all those who may depend on it, especially the most vulnerable among us," Rockefeller said Friday. He was disappointed that the commission did not address affordability "because this system must work for everyone."
Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.