Abstract

BackgroundAmerican Indian elders, aged 55 years and older, represent a neglected segment of the United States (U.S.) health care system. This group is more likely to be uninsured and to suffer from greater morbidities, poorer health outcomes and quality of life, and lower life expectancies compared to all other aging populations in the country. Despite the U.S. government’s federal trust responsibility to meet American Indians’ health-related needs through the Indian Health Service (IHS), elders are negatively affected by provider shortages, limited availability of health care services, and gaps in insurance. This qualitative study examines the perspectives of professional stakeholders involved in planning, delivery of, and advocating for services for this population to identify and analyze macro- and meso-level factors affecting access to and use of health care and insurance among American Indian elders at the micro level.MethodsBetween June 2016 and March 2017, we undertook in-depth qualitative interviews with 47 professional stakeholders in two states in the Southwest U.S., including health care providers, outreach workers, public-sector administrators, and tribal leaders. The interviews focused on perceptions of both policy- and practice-related factors that bear upon health care inequities impacting elders. We analyzed iteratively the interview transcripts, using both open and focused coding techniques, followed by a critical review of the findings by a Community Action Board comprising American Indian elders.ResultsFindings illuminated complex and multilevel contextual influences on health care inequities for elders, centering on (1) gaps in elder-oriented services; (2) benefits and limits of the Affordable Care Act (ACA); (2) invisibility of elders in national, state, and tribal policymaking; and (4) perceived threats to the IHS system and the federal trust responsibility.ConclusionsFindings point to recommendations to improve the prevention and treatment of illness among American Indian elders by meeting their unique health care and insurance needs. Policies and practices must target meso and macro levels of contextual influence. Although Medicaid expansion under the ACA enables providers of essential services to elders, including the IHS, to enhance care through increased reimbursements, future policy efforts must improve upon this funding situation and fulfill the federal trust responsibility.

Highlights

  • American Indian elders, aged 55 years and older, represent a neglected segment of the United States (U.S.) health care system

  • Gaps in elder-oriented services Participants concurred that inadequate federal funding for American Indian health care undermined the provision of high-quality health care services for elders

  • Specialty services for elders remained underfinanced in the Indian Health Service (IHS) budget, with one physician observing that “there is no actual dedicated line-item funding for elder services or elder care of any sort in the IHS budget” (Male; White; Indian Health Service (I/T/U) system; 030506)

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Summary

Introduction

American Indian elders, aged 55 years and older, represent a neglected segment of the United States (U.S.) health care system. Established by treaty in exchange for land and natural resources that tribes ceded to the U.S government, this right is recognized in the Constitution and affirmed by the Supreme Court [1] It is enshrined in the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA) of 1976, which permitted reimbursement by Medicare and Medicaid for services for American Indian and Alaska Native patients in Indian Health Service (IHS) and tribal health care facilities. The IHCIA provides authorization for the provision of hospice, assisted living, long-term, and home- and community-based services that should be of particular benefit to elder American Indians (aged 55 and older) Members of this segment of the American Indian and Alaska Native population are more likely to experience poorer health and barriers to care when compared to all other aging populations in the U.S [3, 4]. The number of elders aged 65 and older, which was 464,000 in 2012, is expected to increase to 996,000 in 2050, while the population of elders aged 85 and older is likely to grow from 22,000 to 173,000 [6, 7]

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