{"id":1030385,"date":"2023-03-19T11:16:26","date_gmt":"2023-03-19T11:16:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.commondreams.org\/opinion\/medicare-caregivers-for-seniors"},"modified":"2023-03-19T11:16:26","modified_gmt":"2023-03-19T11:16:26","slug":"cutting-medicare-benefits-will-further-strain-overworked-caregivers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2023\/03\/19\/cutting-medicare-benefits-will-further-strain-overworked-caregivers\/","title":{"rendered":"Cutting Medicare Benefits Will Further Strain Overworked Caregivers"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
There\u2019s an ongoing debate in Washington about the need to trim government spending. As our representatives in Congress wrangle over words like \u201ccuts\u201d and \u201creforms,\u201d the salient issue remains that long-standing entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare are on the chopping block. It\u2019s time that we acknowledge just how essential these programs are to supporting home and medical care for older Americans and the caregivers who provide that care.<\/p>\n
Care benefits are mistakenly deemed unnecessary but any cuts to this lifeline would be devastating to both older adults and their caregivers. Cuts to Medicare, in particular, would do grave harm to caregivers \u2013 direct care providers and unpaid family members alike \u2013 who spend countless hours making sure those in their charge live dignified and rewarding lives despite their challenges.<\/p>\n
These cuts will only make a hard job infinitely harder by limiting resources and expanding the health burden caregivers bear in their work. We know this because we work with caregivers on a daily basis at Culpepper Garden to serve low-income older adults in our independent- and assisted-living residences. That\u2019s why we urge our Congress to immediately take Medicare off the chopping block during these debt ceiling deliberations. Instead, they must preserve, and even strengthen, it.<\/p>\n
There are about 65 million Americans on Medicare, and, according to the AARP<\/a>, one in five Americans in 2020 had been a caregiver \u2014 that\u2019s about 53 million adults. Of those, most are female Baby Boomers<\/a> and the vast majority are women of color taking care of a family member. Given how many people are affected, questions about Medicare\u2019s future are far from insignificant. <\/p>\n Among the proposals to cut Medicare<\/a> benefits include reducing reimbursements<\/a> that providers receive for treating Medicare patients. In fact, this has already occurred and some doctors argue that decreasing their payments from the federal health insurance program will mean fewer of them will agree to take on new Medicare patients because they just can\u2019t earn enough<\/a> money doing so. This, in turn, will make it harder for patients to access the care they need and that<\/em>, of course, means they will get sicker and rely on their caregivers for care that should<\/em> be provided by a doctor.<\/p>\n Access to high quality care is critical \u2013 not just to treat disease, but also to prevent it. According to the CDC, chronic diseases are not only responsible for $4.1 trillion in healthcare costs<\/a> every year, they are also the nation\u2019s leading cause of illness, disability, and death. Properly funding Medicare, and supporting caregivers and assisted-living programs, will improve health outcomes for older adults and will ultimately help the economy by reducing healthcare costs.<\/p>\n