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A
Ten-Year Retrospective Look at Ohio’s Long-Term
Care System
S.A.
Mehdizadeh & R.A.
Applebaum
May 2003
Full
Report (PDF, 16 pages)
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Over the past ten years the state has experienced
a continued shift in the way older Ohioans receive
long-term care. More older people are receiving
long-term care in their own homes and in assisted
living facilities. Ohio's home care program for
older people, PASSPORT, increased from serving
6,000 individuals in 1992 to 24,500 in 2001. The
number of residential care beds, driven by the
expansion of assisted living, grew from 8,700
in 1993 to 34,000 in 2001. At the same time, despite
an increase of 50,000 Ohioans age 85 and older,
the average number of nursing home residents served
in the past ten years has dropped by almost 5,700
per day, and the number of Medicaid supported
residents has dropped by more than 2,700 per day.
These numbers indicate that Ohio has begun to
change its approach to delivering long-term care.
Although critics suggest that Ohio's expenditure
ratio of nursing home to home care lags behind
the majority of states, substantial changes have
occurred in the system. As Ohio prepares for future
population increases it will need to continue
its efforts to provide a range of long-term care
options for its citizens. Ohio simply cannot afford
to expand the current long-term care system to
meet the needs of our growing aging population.
This research was supported by the Ohio Department
of Aging and as part of a grant from the Ohio
General Assembly, through the Ohio Board of Regents
to the Ohio Long-Term Care Research Project.
Paper reprints are available from Scripps Gerontology
Center, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056;
(513) 529-2914; fax (513) 529-1476; scripps@muohio.edu
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