Showing posts with label Assisted Living. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assisted Living. Show all posts

06 September 2010

Nursing Homes Broaden Offerings to Turn a Profit

Associated Press

 
MIAMI — Seniors amble the nursing home's halls, while children from around the world visit for biofeedback treatments. One floor down from the hospice, middle-aged workers fill its pain management clinic. A rehabilitation center attracts people of all ages.

For decades, the mission at Miami Jewish Home and Hospital was simple: To care for the old. But like nursing homes around the country, the facility is changing how it does business because of consumer demands and the economic realities of selling a service nearly no one wants.

"This is a place of life. This isn't a place of impending death," said Blaise Mercadante, chief marketing officer at Miami Jewish. "And that's fundamentally the mindset change."

Other companies whose core business has been housing the elderly are also coming up with new ways to make money, but Miami Jewish has taken the innovation further than most. While similar providers have expanded senior-related offerings like in-home care or assisted living, the South Florida home took a gamble in recent years by hiring specialists in fields that attract younger patients.

The moves are paying off: Miami Jewish expects to break even in 2011 after several years of losses.

"Nursing homes are waking up more and more to the reality that their old model of doing business is not going to hold up in the 21st century," said Elinor Ginzler, an expert on long-term care at AARP.

Another provider that's changed its mix of services is Ecumen, which operates 70 senior communities in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, North Dakota and Idaho.

In 2004, Ecumen derived more than 80 percent of its $99 million in revenues from traditional nursing homes. Five years later, revenues climbed to $126 million while nursing homes' share fell to less than 60 percent, as Ecumen markedly expanded assisted living complexes that allow seniors to be more independent. A $2.5 million loss in 2005 became a $937,000 profit last year.

"We were heavily invested and reliant on a product that wasn't very popular," said Mick Finn, one of the company's a vice presidents. "That's a no-win proposition for any business."

Meanwhile, managers of its facilities were challenged to find new ways to make money off their existing services.

Nursing homes are waking up more and more to the reality that their old model of doing business is not going to hold up in the 21st century
 
One began offering meals from its cafeteria pickup service to community members. Another started an online business selling incontinence products. A third opened its fitness classes to nonresidents.

"It was either diversify or die," said Eric Schubert, another Ecumen vice president.

Even as the number of older Americans surges with the aging of the massive baby boom generation, demand for nursing homes is decreasing. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that the number of nursing home residents fell from 1.63 million in 1999 to 1.49 million in 2004, the last year for which data is available. Meanwhile, the number of nursing homes decreased by nearly 16 percent over the two decades ending in 2004.

Demand for services like assisted living, in-home care and adult day care, meanwhile, is booming. Nursing homes have expanded their offerings to cope with shortfalls after finding that in many cases they are unable to provide care for less than the amount they are reimbursed under Medicaid, the main governmental provider of long-term care.

Brian Williamson, an analyst for Standard & Poor's who follows nursing homes, said facilities have been branching out to deal with lower occupancy rates. "Where before you may have been able to keep your facility 97 percent full, now maybe it's 92 percent," he said. "You have to figure out how do I compensate for that lost percentage of beds."

While some facilities have shuttered, observers say there will always be a need for nursing homes. Neil Kurtz, CEO of Golden Living, one of the largest nursing home operators in the U.S., said the emphasis has shifted from providing a place where seniors can grow old and die, to a place where seniors can recover from illness or surgery before moving back home or elsewhere.

"The concept where we're just warehousing patients and this is where they go to die is just the furthest from the truth," Kurtz said.

Nancy King, who oversees home and community programs for Ohio Presbyterian Retirement Services, said demand has roughly doubled in the past five years for services it offers outside its nursing homes, including transportation, meal delivery and home health care. Those services now account for about one-fifth of revenues, which were once wholly generated by onsite services.

At Miami Jewish, the broadening of services began when its executives' saw a market for services such as pain management and biofeedback, which uses electrodes to increase mobility in paralyzed limbs. The hospital built a staff of experts in those areas mostly from scratch, adding more than 50 specialists to staff its pain, biofeedback and rehabilitation centers.

It even changed its name last year — to Miami Jewish Health Systems — to reflect its broader focus.

CEO Jeffrey Freimark estimates the $35 million deficit of 2009 will fall until it reaches the break-even point next year. For the fiscal year that ended June 30, the facility posted a loss of about $12 million.

The center's success with patients of all ages is evident in a tour of its buildings. At the pain center, 101-year-old Tilly Harris receives therapy a few feet from 54-year-old Tony Pukewitz, who has traveled from Cape Town, South Africa, for treatment.

Harris is a resident, but says it doesn't feel like a nursing home to her. And for those who think of Miami Jewish as just a place for the old, Pukewitz has some simple advice.

"Look deeper," he said.

22 April 2010

Let's Talk about Long-Term Care

Atlanta Post


Emotions can run high when the topic of conversation turns to the care of an elderly loved one.   In my life, the care of my grandmother is the center of our family discussion.  The conversation generally relates to one of the following questions: How are we going to take care of her? Who will volunteer his or her time? When am I going to be asked to help? What am I supposed to do? Why am I always the back-up person?

These are real questions that families must answer while managing relatives’ failing health, living arrangements and financial obligations.  These issues and a host of unforeseen circumstances can devastate a family’s wealth and strain the relationships within the family.  As an increasing number of clients shared their challenges in covering the care of aging relatives, I decided to incorporate long term care insurance in my financial analysis.

Long term care is an insurance policy designed to alleviate some of the costs associated with nursing home and home health care for individuals unable to care for themselves.  Most policies provide coverage for a specified number of years, though some offer lifetime coverage.  Policy premiums vary widely depending upon the age of the insured, conditions and services covered, length of coverage and location.  A great website to review costs in your area is genworthfinancial.com.

In addition to determining how to finance coverage, families must decide what type of care their relative needs.  Raleigh assisted living facilities, similar to children’s day care centers, are a viable option for individuals capable of routine travel.  Assisted living facilities allow residents regular access to medical attention, prepared meals and organized activities, while maintaining much of their autonomy.  Individuals who decide to care for his relative himself may realize some tax benefits and should consult a tax advisor when weighing this option.

To learn more about elder care options in your community visit eldercare.gov.  For assistance with a broad range of issues, one should consider contacting a lawyer specializing in elder care. In the meantime, review your financial situation.  Can you afford to start putting some extra money aside now for yourself or for the needs of a parent?

13 April 2010

Caring for Aging Loved Ones Explained

North Jersey.com

 
Do you know that most people spend more time planning for their annual family vacation than they do on planning for their senior years?

With healthcare concerns at the forefront of our minds and with time and money a major factor in deciding what to do and where to go as we age, preparing and planning for our future has evolved into an extremely complex process that most often involves misinformation, stress and loss of precious time.

To ease this tension and stress and give much needed guidance to those preparing for their own futures and adult children caring for their senior loved one(s), a group of local experts have joined forces to form the Information Network on Aging.

The group is comprised of local professionals who are experts in their various fields and provide guidance and answers to important questions concerning the various stages of aging for yourself or for your loved one.

The members of the Information Network on Aging provide comprehensive information for the expanding world of senior care and all that is needed to successfully prepare for it. They break down the process by addressing the shared concerns of seniors and their family members.

The group spotlights the variety of options available when it comes to preparing for senior living.

They encourage a proactive approach to exploring options based on financial needs and care level at a variety of stages.

The group is being introduced to the community at a resource fair Sunday, April 11 from noon to 5 p.m. at Sunrise Assisted Living at 184 Berdan Ave. in Wayne.

The fair will consist of demonstrations and private time with experts to answer your specific questions. Refreshments provided by Greenberry's Coffee & Tea Company and Positano's Restaurant will be available. Gift bags, door prizes, blood pressure screenings and more will be available.

The event is being sponsored by Coldwell Banker and AAA Travel. All donations received will be given to the Wayne Ambulance EMT.

Caregiving, financial planning, exploring options available based on your particular care level and financial position; non-medical and medical home care, assisted living, retirement and independent living, skilled nursing homes and hospice care are just some of the topics that will be addressed. The group will share their expertise on financing your care, VA benefits, selling and buying of real estate in your senior years, eldercare legal matters - including which documents are essential, dealing with healthcare stress through yoga, massage and effective communication with your family.

Chilton Hospital will answer all of your questions on caring for a loved one with dementia. An expert in chair yoga will conduct lively and fun yoga sessions throughout the day.

"Senior care options have expanded almost beyond recognition in the last 20 years, even into Raleigh assisted living,  yet most residents in our area are still only familiar with nursing homes or family care at home," said Steve Tyburski, home instead senior care and president of the Information Network on Aging. "Our group presents the multitude of options now available while at the same time helping people hold together their family and preserve their own well-being," he added.