ALBANY, NY (01/17/2008)(readMedia)-- As the 2008 state budget process begins, New York’s leaders need to keep in mind the consequences for seniors of budgets past, say leaders of the association representing New York’s not-for-profit and public providers of long term care services. According to a new report from the New York Association of Homes & Services for the Aging, annual Medicaid cuts to nursing homes and home care have put the state’s long term care system in jeopardy and the seniors it serves at risk of less access and lower quality of life.
Among the findings of the new NYAHSA report “Nursing Home Funding Cuts: A Threat to Quality and Long Term Care Reform” are:
“At a time when 6 million New Yorkers of the Baby Boom generation are poised to begin aging into the system, and consumers are seeking greater access to health care when, how and where they want it, now is not the time to make cuts that impact the elderly and disabled consumers who rely on the state’s long term health care system,” said Carl S. Young, president of NYAHSA. “Providers understand that the state is dealing with a large deficit, but sacrificing the needs of seniors is not the best strategy to accomplish the goal of fiscal stability.”
“New York made great strides towards a more flexible health care system when it approved changes to the state’s nursing home reimbursement methodology back in 2006,” said Carl S. Young. “Part of that commitment was to stabilize nursing homes’ finances to enable them to transition to other forms of care, such as home care and assisted living. Our seniors deserve these options, taxpayers deserve the long term savings that reform can provide, and our members are ready to work with the state to effect that change.”
Copies of the NYAHSA report “Nursing Home Funding Cuts: A Threat to Quality and Long Term Care Reform” are available by visiting the association’s Web site at www.nyahsa.org.
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Founded in 1961, the New York Association of Homes & Services for the Aging is the only statewide organization representing the entire continuum of not-for-profit and public continuing care providers, including senior housing, assisted living, adult care facilities, retirement communities, home care agencies, adult day health care programs, managed long term care plans and nursing homes.