Abstract
AbstractThe Medicaid Aging Waiver program (MAW) subsidizes the cost of long-term care (LTC) at home or in communities to satisfy older people’s increasing desire to age in place. The MAW program might be health improving for older people by allowing them to age at home. However, less quality and quantity of home-based care comparing to nursing home care could offset some of the potential benefits. I use policy expenditure across states over time linked with detailed health information from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to identify the associated effects of MAWs on health outcomes of older adults who are at risk of needing LTC and who are resources constrained to be potentially eligible for Medicaid. Overall, the findings suggest that the MAW program is beneficial to health: a $1,000 increase in MAW spending for each older person results is associated with a 1.4 percent improvement in self-reported health status, a 1.5 percent reduction in functional mobility limitations, a 1.6 percent decrease in Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) limitations, and a 1.7 percent improvement in negative psychological feelings. For older people who are most likely not eligible for MAWs, such as those who are wealthy or in good health and do not require LTC, these health-improving effects have not been observed.
Funder
Max Planck Society
Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Helsinki
Cities of Helsinki, Vantaa and Espoo
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. Aguila E, Park JH, Vega A. Living arrangements and supplemental income programs for older adults in Mexico. Demography. 2020;57(4):1345–68.
2. Alecxih LMB, Radke S, Wiener JM, Anderson WL, Khatutsky G, Shinogle J. Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services for older people and persons with physical disabilities: Beneficiary satisfaction, service use and expenditures. 2006.
3. Bailey MJ, Goodman-Bacon A. The war on poverty’s experiment in public medicine: Community Health Centers and the mortality of older Americans. American Economic Review. 2015;105(3):1067–104.
4. Bitler MP, Gelbach JB, Hoynes HW. Welfare reform and health. Journal of Human Resources. 2005;40(2):309–34.
5. Brown JR, Finkelstein A. The interaction of public and private insurance: Medicaid and the long-term care insurance market. American Economic Review. 2008;98(3):1083–102.