When you imagine
living well into your hundreds,
imagine living at
home or in a home like setting.
WHY
Only a third of Americans say they want to live to a
hundred.
Why? They imagine living to a hundred means being disabled
and living in a nursing home with its depersonalization,
lack of privacy,
and institutional food. Nursing homes often are a necessary
evil
for step down nursing care after hospitalization, but they
are a
terrible place to call home.
The marketplace caught on and now offers a cornucopia of
home-based services including housekeeping, nursing care,
and physical therapy. There are often tax breaks, utility
subsidies,
and meals of wheels programs to help low income seniors
stay at home.
Independent living facilities and assisted living
facilities are popping up
everywhere. Some are homelike. Some are very luxurious and
like
a resort. (Some are unfortunately look institutional and
have a medical
feel with nursing stations and medical carts.) Americans
whose
finances give them a choice are increasingly choosing to
live at home
or in homelike communities. Baby Boomers in particular are
likely
to insist on a homelike or resort-like atmosphere.
Now federal and state governments are doing the math and
finding
that housing seniors in nursing homes often wastes money. In
Pennsylvania,
for example, nursing homes bill Medicaid $144 a day per
resident.
Home based care only costs $56 a day. Certainly a sizeable
number
of nursing home residents are bedridden or in fragile
health and are better
served
in a nursing home. Many, however, are in nursing homes because
they
have health problems, only have Social Security income, and
can’t
afford to live on their own. They need some assistance but
don’t
need the intensity of a nursing home.
Often indigent and low income seniors with health problems
have
to choose between trying to make it in the community vs.
giving up
their privacy and independence to share a tiny room in a
nursing home.
It is probably just a matter of time before the government
catches on
that the middle ground of assisted living is more humane,
more
dignified, and more cost effective. Perhaps the fear is that
people
who would otherwise live at home will flock to more
comfortable
assisted living facilities. I doubt it. In most assisted
living facilities
most residents pine for living at home.
To conclude, more
and more seniors are living at home or in
homelike facilities. While you may spend a few weeks in a nursing
home for a knee replacement, you are not likely to have to live out
your later years in a nursing home.
Oh, Auntie Em – there’s no place like home!
~Dorothy’s last line in the Wizard of Oz
Human beings are the only creatures
that allow their children to come back home.
~Bill Cosby
This article was from:
Anti-Aging
PsychologyThe following newsletter articles may be reprinted in E-zines, newsletters, newspapers, and magazines provided they the content is not edited and the attribution below is given. Formatting may be changed and you may use one of the web site pictures of the author to accompany the article.
"Dr. Michael Brickey, The Anti-Aging Psychologist, teaches people to think, feel, look and be more youthful. He is an inspiring keynote speaker and Oprah-featured author. His works include: Defy Aging, 52 Baby Steps to grow young, and Reverse Aging (anti-aging hypnosis CDs). Visit www.NotAging.com for a free report on anti-aging secrets and a free newsletter with practical anti-aging tips."