November 10, 2023

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
trusted source
proofread

Racial, ethnic disparities in long-term care remain among older adults despite passage of Affordable Care Act: Study

Credit: Craig Adderley from Pexels
× close
Credit: Craig Adderley from Pexels

Despite the raft of health care changes that occurred after the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law in 2010, racial and ethnic disparities in aging needs among older adults persist today, a new study shows.

Researchers from the University of Michigan and Syracuse University found that wide disparities in difficulties with daily tasks—and who can afford to pay for care to help meet those needs—remain. However, those disparities were not present among the poorest Americans, they say.

The study, which uses data from U-M's Health and Retirement Study, was published in the journal Health Affairs Scholar.

"Hoping America's long-term care problems away won't work," said Geoffrey Hoffman, assistant professor in the School of Nursing. "Policies not directly targeting the millions of Americans with unmet needs won't do the job. We need direct solutions to ease burdens that disproportionately impact , older Americans and their family members."

The study examined how white, Black and Hispanic differed in the need for and receipt of help with , mobility and household activities from 2008 to 2018, a period marked by major health care changes spurred by the ACA. While the ACA brought forth large-scale policy changes and is believed to have reshaped U.S. health care, little is known about how it has altered long-term care, including the prevalence of older adults with functional difficulties and their use of family and paid care.

Key findings include:

"I was surprised by the prevalence of people with unmet needs who were not getting care support. Given all the hopes that we had with trying to equalize disparities (by expanding) many home and community-based services, we're still seeing these high rates," said study first author Jun Li, who received a doctorate from the U-M School of Public Health and is now an assistant professor at Syracuse University.

Hoffman said the lack of disparities for lower-income people offers hope that Medicaid is an equalizer.

"But the very of need and unmet need for this group means much more is needed, as expanded Medicaid wasn't able to bring these rates down," he said.

More information: Jun Li et al, Unaddressed functional difficulty and care support among White, Black, and Hispanic older adults in the last decade, Health Affairs Scholar (2023). DOI: 10.1093/haschl/qxad041

Load comments (1)