Medicare Out-of-Pocket Burden – Food
Insecurity – Older Worker Digital Skills
Medicare
Out-of-Pocket Burden – Food Insecurity – Older Worker Digital Skills
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VIEW ONLINE
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Policy Plus Action |
The AARP Public Policy
Institute Newsletter
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Contrary to common
belief, Medicare doesn’t cover all health care-related costs,
and that reality burdens millions of older adults
financially. In 2018, people with traditional Medicare spent
an average of $6,168 on insurance premiums and medical
services, and 10 percent of people enrolled in the program
reported delaying care due to cost. Half of those with
traditional Medicare spend at least 16 percent of their
income on health care.
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During the
pandemic millions of people have enrolled in the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation’s largest
anti-hunger mechanism and one that likely has helped keep the
share of food-insecure adults ages 50 and older unchanged
(8.5 percent; 9.5 million people). Almost half of SNAP households
include an older adult, while most older SNAP enrollees live
alone and below the poverty line. A recent AARP Public Policy
Institute Fact Sheet provides further details on this key
program, and whom it’s helping.
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When older workers
lose jobs due to a lack of digital skills, the economy loses
the many other skills they bring to the workforce. Meanwhile,
the pandemic has meant an expansion in online and remote
work, a trend that is expected to continue, while simultaneously
older workers have been both disproportionately at risk of
health consequences from COVID-19 and more severely affected
by long-term unemployment. Looking further out, digitally
skilled older workers generally make more money and are
better positioned to compete for the jobs of the future.
Closing the digital skills gap is an imperative for not only
the older worker, but the economy itself—and it even has
equity implications.
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Here’s a look at
some of 2021’s top blogs from The Future of Nursing: Campaign
for Action. Some highlights: how nursing education can
help achieve health equity, the trend of vaccine hesitancy
among nurses, how states are making health care more
accessible by allowing nurse practitioners and all advanced
practice registered nurses to practice to the full extent of
their education and training, and what the future of this key
health care profession looks like. The Campaign for Action
is an initiative of AARP Foundation, AARP, and the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation.
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As the overall
unemployment rate declined from 4.2 percent to 3.9 percent,
the unemployment rate for people ages 55+ declined from 3.2
percent to 3 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
(BLS) December numbers showed. Meanwhile, the share of jobseekers
ages 55+ who were long-term unemployed increased to 42.8
percent despite declining (to 29.7 percent) among those ages
16 to 54. Labor force participation for the 55+ increased
slightly, to 38.5 percent. The AARP Public Policy Institute
Employment Data Digest reports on the monthly BLS numbers,
offering an older-worker focus.
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The COVID-19
pandemic exposed both new and longstanding cracks in the
long-term services and supports (LTSS) system, and so now is
the time to reimagine, redesign, and rebuild. The
Long-Term Services and Supports State Scorecard‚ already
the premier tool to measure performance within and across
states, can guide the way. At this critical juncture, the
tool has the potential to draw further attention to critical
LTSS issues exposed by the COVID-19 crisis and help states
build and maintain momentum in their efforts to modernize
their LTSS systems. The Scorecard team, therefore, is seeking
input on finding ways to better measure state progress toward
a truly high-performing LTSS system.
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Editor-in-Chief: Susan C. Reinhard,
RN, PhD, FAAN
Senior Writer/Editor: Carl Levesque
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