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Long-Term Services and Supports for Older Adults: A Position Paper From the American College of Physicians

Ryan Crowley, Omar Atiq, David Hilden, Micah Beachy, Heather C. Brislen, William A. Curry, Lee S. Engel, Matthew Hollon, Suja Mathew, Molly B. Southworth, Michael J. Tan, Pranav Mellacheruvu, Christiana Shoushtari, Ankita Sagar, Micah Beachy, Heather C. Brislen, William A. Curry, Lee S. Engel, Matthew Hollon, Suja Mathew, Molly B. Southworth, Michael J. Tan, Pranav Mellacheruvu, Christiana Shoushtari, Ankita Sagar, Omar Atiq, David Hilden

2022Annals of Internal Medicine14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The number of Americans aged 65 years or older is expected to increase in the coming decades. Because the risk for disability increases with age, more persons will need long-term services and supports (LTSS) to help with bathing, eating, dressing, and other everyday tasks. Long-term services and supports are delivered in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, the person's home, and other settings. However, the LTSS sector faces several challenges, including keeping patients and staff safe during the COVID-19 pandemic, workforce shortages, quality problems, and fragmented coverage options. In this position paper, the American College of Physicians offers policy recommendations on LTSS coverage, financing, workforce, safety and quality, and emergency preparedness and calls on policymakers and other stakeholders to reform and improve the LTSS sector so that care is high quality, accessible, equitable, and affordable.

Topics & Concepts

WorkforceMedicineLong-term carePreparednessAssisted livingAging in the American workforceEconomic shortagePosition (finance)Quality (philosophy)NursingAging in placeGerontologyGovernment (linguistics)BusinessFinanceEconomic growthLinguisticsEpistemologyPolitical scienceEconomicsPhilosophyLawGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesFrailty in Older AdultsHealthcare Policy and Management