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CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER TWO. Clients of the Continuum. Subsets of LTC Clients. Functional Status Need vs. Demand Static vs. Dynamic Short-Term LTC vs. Long-Term LTC Institutional vs. Community-Based Care. Functional Status. The primary consideration that makes an individual appropriate for LTC

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CHAPTER TWO

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  1. CHAPTER TWO Clients of the Continuum

  2. Subsets of LTC Clients • Functional Status • Need vs. Demand • Static vs. Dynamic • Short-Term LTC vs. Long-Term LTC • Institutional vs. Community-Based Care

  3. Functional Status • The primary consideration that makes an individual appropriate for LTC • Multiple Dimensions • physical • cognitive • emotional • social

  4. Functional Status • Activities of Daily Living (ADL) • most commonly used measure of physical functioning; basic activities necessary for personal care • bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence control, and eating • scale • 1 = totally independent • 2 = requiring mechanical assistance • 3 = requiring assistance from another person • 4 = unable to do the activity at all

  5. Functional Status • Instrumental Activities of Daily Living • activities necessary to live independently in the community • preparing meals, grocery shopping, personal shopping, managing money, telephoning, housekeeping, and doing chores

  6. Functional Status • Both ADLs and IADLs decline with advancing age • 65-70 y.o. • 10% men; 11% women • 75-84 y.o. • 18% men; 28% women • 85+ y.o. • 46% men; 62% women

  7. Need vs. Demand • Need • considered to be the result of a professional judgment that a specific service or treatment should be provided to an individual in order to improve his condition • Demand • an individual’s overt request for a service or treatment, presumably the result of a perceived deficit and a belief in the benefits of the requested service or treatment

  8. Need vs. Demand • Not perfectly correlated • professional’s judgment vs. client’s needs • Distinction important in LTC because needs are multidimensional • difficult for providers to recognize need • clients may not want to admit a loss of independence, demand may be weak

  9. Dynamic vs. Static • Static perspective • no immediate needs; functionally independent, have a well-established support network, and stable health conditions • modest needs; relatively complicated problems that require more assistance than their informal networks can provide • severe needs; more complicated ongoing problems or acute flare-ups of otherwise manageable problems

  10. Dynamic vs. Static • Dynamic perspective • needs can range over time from no need, to moderate need, to acute need--and back again

  11. Short-Term vs. Long-Term LTC • Short-term LTC • clients whose complex problems are rapidly changing and who require care for a short period of time but with greater coordination than the patient or family can expect to handle without formal or professional assistance • in need of an integrated continuum of care due to functional disabilities • use of formal services is finite

  12. Short-Term vs. Long-Term LTC • Short-term LTC • clients are characterized by their rapidly changing patterns of needs, by an expectation of recovery or rehabilitation, and by their shorter reliance on an integrated continuum • etiologies of their present conditions are specific and of short duration (recent stroke, surgery, accident, or change of family situation that causes temporary dysfunctioning

  13. Short-Term vs. Long-Term LTC • Long-term LTC • clients whose complex problems likely will require multifaceted care over an extended or indefinite interval • clients tend to have chronic, persistent, multiple problems with etiologies that are permanent • clients functional abilities may vary of time, but tend to decline rather than improve • the majority of clients that are able to stay in their own homes with specific types of assistance have worked out informal relationships with friends and families to provide the assistance they need

  14. Short-Term vs. Long-Term LTC • Long-term LTC • some clients depend on the formal system and pay out-of-pocket for help on a regular or intermittent basis • a relatively small number of clients --about 5%-- have health conditions and/or functional disabilities too great or support systems so minimal that they cannot remain in their homes and reside in institutions (e.g., nursing homes, adult group homes)

  15. Short-Term vs. Long-Term LTC • Providers may serve both short-term LTC and long-term LTC clients, as well as acute patients • Reasons for making distinctions include • staffing assignments • reimbursement policies • efforts to educate patient and family about self-care

  16. Institutional vs. Community-Based Setting • Factors that determine setting include • family support and social structure • marital status • home owner status • financial situation • state and federal regulations

  17. Institutional vs. Community-Based Setting • Long-term care services can be provided to people regardless of their location of residence • 30% of people admitted to nursing homes leave within 90 days; 50% leave within one year

  18. Subsegments of LTC Clients • Older Adults • People with Disabilities • Mentally Impaired, Mentally Retarded, Developmentally Disabled • AIDS/ARC • Acute Episode Patients

  19. Older Adults • Characterized by advanced age, particularly age 75 and above • Largest group of potential users • numerous undiagnosed and diagnosed pathologies that impair independent functioning • chronic illnesses • frailty of advanced age • acute episodes with long recovery periods • In 1997, 1.5 m persons 65+ were in nursing homes, representing 4% of the older population

  20. Number of Persons 65+

  21. Older Adults • Older population will continue to grow significantly in the future • By 2030, there will be about 70 million older persons, more than twice the number in 1998 • People 65+ are projected to represent 13% of the population in the year 2000 but will be 20% by 2030 • In the US, 21.5% of civilian, noninstitutionalized persons are 60+; 13% are 65+; 1.2% are 85 years and older

  22. Older Adults • Elderly population is growing at a faster rate than the population as a whole • The population 85+ is growing faster than the elderly population as a whole • between 1960 and 1994, their numbers rose 274% • the elderly population in general rose 100%; the entire US population grew only 45% • 1/2 of the current elderlyresidents of nursing homes were 85+

  23. Older Adults • During the 1990s, the number of centenarians nearly doubled • from about 37,000 counted at the start of the decade, to more than an estimated 70,000 today • This per-decade doubling trend may continue • the centenarian population in the US could possibly reach 834,000 by 2050

  24. Older Adults • Limitations on activities because chronic conditions increase with age • In 1996, over 1/3 (36.3%) of older adults reported that they were limited by chronic conditions • Among all elderly, 10.5% were unable to carry on a major activity • In contrast, only 10.3% of the population under 65 were limited in their activities • only 3.5% were unable to carry on a major activity

  25. Top 10 Chronic Conditions Among Older Adults (1996) Chronic Condition45-6465+ Arthritis 240 483 Hypertension 214 364 Hearing Impairment 132 303 Heart Conditions 116 269 Cataracts 23 172 Orthopedic Impairment 178 158 Sinusitis 174 117 Diabetes 58 100 Tintinitus 60 88 Visual Impairment 48 84

  26. Top 10 Chronic Conditions Among Older Adults (1996) Chronic Condition19871996 Arthritis 480 483 Hypertension 394 364 Hearing Impairment 296 303 Heart Conditions 277 269 Cataracts 141 (7) 172 Orthopedic Impairment 173 (5) 158 Sinusitis 169 (6) 117 Diabetes 98 (8) 100 Tintinitus 85 (10) 88 Visual Impairment 95 (9) 84

  27. Older Adults • Accounted for 36% of all hospital stays and 49% of all days of care in hospitals in 1997 • ALOS was 6.8 days for older people, compared to only 5.5 days for people under 65 • Averaged more contacts with doctors in 1997 than did persons under 65 (11.7 contacts vs. 4.9 contacts)

  28. Functional Disability • In the US, 17.3% of persons 60+ and 49.8% of those 85+ have a self-care or mobility limitation or both • 1.2 million fewer older adults were disabled in 1994 than would have been expected based on disability rates observed in 1982 • the number of older adults with functional problems in 1994 stood at 7.1 million, not the 8.3 million who would have been impaired if health had not improved over the last few years

  29. Functional Disability • Many factors may be involved in the decline in disability • public health measures and nutrition • higher levels of education • improved economic status • medical advances • In order to maintain and accelerate the decline, we need to pinpoint how each of these factors is contributing to the improved health of older adults

  30. Functional Disability (1987)

  31. Functional Disability (1995)

  32. Functional Disability • In 1996, 27% of older adults assessed their health status as fair or poor • Over 4.4 million (14%) had difficulty in carrying out ADLs and 6.5 million (21%) reported difficulties with IADLs • Percentages with disabilities increase sharply with age; race and gender are also factors • women more likely than men to be disabled • blacks more likely than whites to be disabled

  33. People with Disabilities • Children or adults with permanent disabilities • neurological diseases • degenerative conditions • accidents resulting in paralysis • children with congenital dysfunctions • paralyzing strokes • end-stage cancers • blindness

  34. Mentally Impaired & Retarded, Developmentally Disabled • Biomedical and technological advances in treatments and management now allow large numbers to live long lives • Difficult to estimate precisely the number of people in this group who might be clients for a long-term continuum of care • Although the majority are treated on an outpatient basis, an integrated continuum oriented toward mental health services would be appropriate

  35. AIDS/ARC • Unless substantial inroads are made in the search for a cure or a vaccine, the numbers of infected people are expected to grow dramatically • the CDC estimates that between 650,000 and 900,000 people are living with HIV • at least 40,000 new infections occur each year • through December 1998, a total of 688,200 cases of AIDS had been reported to the CDC

  36. AIDS/ARC • The majority of HIV+/AIDS/ARC people will be clients for an effective continuum at some stage of their illness • new treatments have extended the healthy lifespan of many people with AIDS

  37. Acute Episode Patients • Total number difficult to estimate because it is a composite of all of the people who have certain acute illnesses that may involve long-term care

  38. Alzheimer’s Disease • Affects an estimated 4 million Americans • Approximately 19 million Americans say they have a family member with Alzheimer’s and 37 million know someone with it • Manifested initially by mild forgetfulness, this devastating disease eventually erodes all cognitive and functional abilities, leading to total dependence on caregivers and, ultimately, to death

  39. Alzheimer’s Disease • Prevalence increases dramatically with age • age 65-74 have 1 in 10 chance of having it • age 85+ have 1 in 2 chance of having it • 14 million Americans will have Alzheimer’s by the middle of this century unless a cure or prevention is found • US society spends at least $100 billion a year on Alzheimer’s Disease • neither Medicare nor private health insurance covers the type of LTC most patients need

  40. Alzheimer’s Disease • A person with Alzheimer’s lives an average of 8 years and as many as 20 years or more from the onset of symptoms • More than 7 out of 10 people with Alzheimer’s live at home • almost 75% of home care is provided by family and friends; remainder is “paid” care costing an average of $12,500 per year, most of which is covered by families • Half of all nursing home patients suffer from Alzheimer’s or a related disorder

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