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More Hispanic, Black and Asian elders Are Moving Into Nursing Homes says Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect lawyer Steven Peck

More Hispanic, Black and Asian elders Are Moving Into Nursing Homes says Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect lawyer Steven Peck

As the nation’s elderly population balloons, nursing homes across the country have seen a demographic shift in their residents. More Hispanic, black and Asian elders are moving into nursing homes while white residents choose other options.

Between 1999 and 2008, the number of elderly Hispanics living in U.S. nursing homes climbed by 54.9 percent while the number of Asians increased by 54.1 percent. The number of black residents rose 10.8 percent. During the same 10-year period, the number of white nursing home residents in the U.S. dropped by 10.2 percent.

In the Los Angeles/Long Beach region, the residency increases were also significant with a 56 percent increase in the Asian population and 41 percent rise among Hispanics. The increase for blacks was slight, only 1 percent.

California currently has more than 7,600 residential care facilities, up from about 5,500 a decade ago, she said. The average rate for those facilities, which generally offer more freedom and personal attention to residents, can cost $5,000 a month.

These demographic shifts in the composition of nursing home populations are taking place within a rapidly shifting long-term care landscape. There are currently 76 million baby boomers in the nation; the oldest of them will turn 65 years old in 2011. The Census Bureau projects by 2030, 20 percent of the U.S. population will be sixty-five or older. Today that figure is 13 percent.

The population of older racial and ethnic minorities is slated to grow particularly swiftly. The number of older Hispanics, for instance, is projected to jump from under 1.8 million in 2000 to over 8.6 million by 2030. The number of elderly Asians is expected to balloon from 0.8 million to 3.8 million.

At the same time, elderly people don’t have the support at home or the social structures of previous generations. People don’t live as close to their relatives as they did in the past. Couples are having fewer children and often both have to work outside the home and are unable to provide full time care to their elderly or ill parents.

These dramatic societal changes have prompted the government to alter certain policies and priorities. There has been a shift in support from nursing home care to favoring home-and community-based services, the study said, which cost significantly less than institutional care. A significant change was the passage of the Medicaid “waivers” authorized in 1981 in the Social Security Act. It allows recipients to use their Medicaid dollars to pay for personal care and other supportive services, enabling more beneficiaries to live at home or in a residential setting.

Older adults and those with disabilities prefer living independently at home or in community-based alternatives, according to a related study published in Health Affairs that examined what people want from long-term care. Assisted living allows people to have more freedom; a skilled nursing facility is more confined and has more supervision.

Assisted living has become quite popular and it’s also very expensive, When it comes to economics, white folks are able to afford a different level of care.”

Nursing Home Abuse & Neglect Attorney Steven Peck

About the Author

Attorney Steven Peck has been practicing law since 1981. A former successful business owner, Mr. Peck initially focused his legal career on business law. Within the first three years, after some colleagues and friend’s parents endured nursing home neglect and elder abuse, he continued his education to begin practicing elder law and nursing home abuse law.


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