This report provides pertinent details about the variables, data, and equations on which the Brookings/ICF Long Term Care Financing Model is based. It is designed for those interested in learning precisely how the model generates its results.
Long-Term Care Financing
Reports
Displaying 141 - 150 of 172. 10 per page. Page 15.
Advanced SearchA Synthesis and Critique of Studies on Medicaid Asset Spenddown
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
An Analysis of the Impact of Spend-down on Medicaid Expenditures
This study analyzes Connecticut nursing home data on a current resident cohort, with particular attention to how many residents began their stays as private pay, but eventually spent down to Medicaid eligibility. It also estimates how many residents were Medicaid eligible prior to admission or became eligible at admission.
Catastrophic Acute and Long-Term Care Costs: Risks Faced by Disabled Elderly Persons
The repeal of many provisions of the 1988 Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act was due to subjective impressions about the usefulness to many elderly persons of the services covered by the law and to the omission of long-term care services.
National Long-Term Care Channeling Demonstration: Summary of Demonstration and Reports
This paper presents an overview of the results of the National Long-Term Care Channeling Demonstration, conducted in ten states to test the impact of a community-based system of long-term care upon the functionally disabled elderly.
Programmatic Definitions of Disability: Policy Implications
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and EvaluationU.S. Department of Health and Human Services
1991
PDF Version: http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/prodefes.pdf (26 PDF pages)
Variations in the Medicaid Safety Net for Children and Youth with High Medical Costs: A Comparison of Four States
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Longitudinal Analysis of High Cost Medicaid Children in California
This report analyzed the Medicaid experience of children in California who had at least $25,000 in claims in 1983. The study analyzed their enrollment in claims experience over the period 1980-1986 in order to determine whether these children remain high cost over a number of years, and whether their eligibility changes over time. [35 PDF pages]
The Disabled: Their Health Care and Health Insurance
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
The Disabled: Their Health Care and Health Insurance
Michele Adler
August 1990
PDF Version