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  • Title: Home care in New York City: providers, payers, and clients.
    Author: Bell D, McCormack JJ.
    Journal: Pap Ser United Hosp Fund N Y; 1987 Feb; (6):1-46. PubMed ID: 10313816.
    Abstract:
    Estimates based on 1980 data indicate that almost two-thirds of the disabled elderly in New York City receive care only from informal sources. Another one-fifth use a combination of informal and formal sources of care. Thus, only about 15 percent are exclusively dependent on various agencies and programs that constitute the formal home care system. Over 200 organizations in 1986 offered some form of home care service in New York City. Among these were at least 100 proprietary businesses, 61 nonprofit personal care agencies, and 36 nonprofit certified home health agencies. In 1984, 166,739 different New York City residents received home care services provided by the four largest types of formal providers of care: certified home health agencies; Long Term Home Health Care Programs; Human Resources Administration home attendant agencies and homemaker/housekeeper agencies; and Department for Aging homemaker/housekeeper programs. While women age 65 and older living alone are the largest client group for home care services, persons below age 65 account for approximately one-fourth of program caseloads of the four major home care providers in New York City. An estimate of one-day home care use in 1984 shows that the four major types of providers served 59,554 persons with total annual expenditures of $499.3 million, while nursing homes cared for 36,072 persons with annual expenditures of almost $1.4 billion. It is thus evident that more people are receiving organized, extended care at home on a given day in New York City than in nursing homes. Medicaid, the major payer for home care in New York City, spent $412.4 million on home care services in 1984, accounting for 82.6 percent of total publicly funded expenditures for home care services. Of this amount, 89 percent was for personal care services provided through the Human Resources Administration's personal care program. More details on home care in New York City follow, along with a discussion of policy perspectives surrounding the provision of and payment for home care services in the future.
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