Abstract
In conjunction with the 1995 White House Conference on Aging (WHCoA), the authors conducted a study of 917 homebound elders in one state in order to determine whether medications and medical care were always affordable and accessible, and how nursing home care would be paid for if needed. For more than two-fifths of the sample, paying for physicians' services and medications, as welt as locating reliable medical transportation was problematic at times. A similar proportion did not know where they would turn for assistance if family and friends were unavailable. Although Medicare only pays for up to 100 days under certain circumstances, more than half of the sample projected that Medicare would pay for nursing home care if it was needed. The authors conclude by discussing the WHCoA resolutions and resulting social policy implications.
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