Aging

Audit Finds Widespread Use Of Antipsychotic Drugs In Nursing Homes

About 14 percent of elderly nursing homes residents receives a so-called atypical antipsychotic medicine despite an increased risk of death when the medicines are used to manage dementia in older people.

Medicare Patients Aren’t Taking Advantage Of Some Newly Free Tests

This year, seniors enrolled in Medicare no longer have to pay for more than a dozen tests and services to prevent disease thanks to the health law. Many, however, aren’t lining up for mammograms or colonoscopies though free wellness checks are luring many.

States Pushing Managed Long-Term Care For Elderly And Disabled Medicaid Patients

Some patient advocates, as well as the nursing home industry, object to using managed care for such vulnerable patients, but health plans say they can provide quality services while holding down costs.

Long-Term Care: Another Tough Subject For The Next Round Of Reform

Democrats and Republicans may spend the next two years fighting about what to jettison or retain in the new health law. If these battles are resolved, we’ll be back to address another looming challenge: long-term care. It’s best that this happen sooner rather than later.

Text: Fiscal Commission’s Recommendations On Health Care Spending

The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform released its long-awaited report on recommendations to cope with the national debt, now and into the future, “The Moment of Truth.” Seven of the 66 pages concerned health care spending, especially focusing on Medicare.