Increasing Prevalence of Assisted Living as a Substitute for Private-Pay Long-Term Nursing Care

TitleIncreasing Prevalence of Assisted Living as a Substitute for Private-Pay Long-Term Nursing Care
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsSilver B.C, Grabowski D.C, Gozalo P.L, Dosa D., Thomas K.S
JournalHealth Serv Res
Volume53
Issue6
Pagination4906-4920
Date PublishedDec
ISBN Number0017-9124
Accession Number30066481
Keywords*Assisted living, *Long-Term Care, *Medicare/economics/statistics & numerical data, *nursing home, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Assisted Living Facilities/*statistics & numerical data, Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data, Humans, Insurance Claim Review, Long-Term Care, Medicaid/economics, Nursing Homes/*statistics & numerical data, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, United States
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Given the tremendous growth in assisted living (AL) over the past 20 years, it is important to understand how expansion has affected the demand for long-term care (LTC) provided in nursing homes (NHs). We estimated the effect of a change in county-level AL beds on the prevalence of private-pay residents and private-pay resident days at the NH-level. DATA SOURCES: National census of large AL providers (25+ beds), and Minimum Data Set combined with Medicare enrollment records and claims from 2007 and 2014. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective longitudinal analysis of LTC markets. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Mean AL beds per county increased from 285 to 324, while NHs exhibited a decrease in private-pay residents (20.1 to 17.7 percent) and resident days (21.3 to 17.5 percent). An increase of 1,000 AL beds at the county level is associated with a reduction of 0.44 percentage points in private-pay resident days but is not significantly associated with percent of private-pay residents. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that increases in AL capacity have potentially allowed NH residents to delay or decrease their privately financed lengths of stay. As demand for AL continues to grow, it will be important to assess the effects on other LTC sectors.

DOI10.1111/1475-6773.13021
PMCID

PMC6232444

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6232444/

Short TitleHealth Serv ResHealth services research
Alternate JournalHealth services research