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Archive for March 8th, 2010

Employees Caring For Older Relatives Cost Employers $13.4 Billion Annually

Trying to minimize the costs of care for parents or loved ones?  You might be saving costs but your employer is not.  Employees in the U.S. who are caring for an older relative are more likely to report health problems like depression, diabetes, hypertension or heart disease, costing employers an estimated average additional health care cost of 8% per year, or $13.4 billion annually, according to the MetLife Study of Working Caregivers and Employer Health Care Costs. The report, produced by the MetLife Mature Market Institute® with the National Alliance for Caregiving in conjunction with the University of Pittsburgh Institute of Aging, also found that younger caregivers (ages 18 to 39) cost their employers 11% more for health care than non-caregivers, while male caregivers cost an additional 18%. The survey found that:

  • Younger caregivers (18 to 39 years old) demonstrated significantly higher rates of cholesterol, hypertension, COPD, depression, kidney disease, and heart disease in comparison to non-caregivers of the same age.
  • Employed caregivers find it more difficult than non-caregivers to take care of their own health or participate in preventive health screenings. For example, women caregivers were less likely to report annual mammograms than non-caregivers.
  • Employees with eldercare responsibilities were more likely to report missed days of work. Overall, 10% of caregivers missed at least one day of work over the past two weeks because of health issues compared to 9% of non-caregivers. Differences were mostly driven by the much higher absenteeism among younger caregiving employees, age 18 to 39.
  • It also found that eldercare may be closely associated with high-risk behaviors like smoking and alcohol consumption.

“While this news may be distressing, our research points out that coordination of eldercare services and wellness initiatives may open new avenues of innovation to benefit both employees and employers,” said Sandra Timmermann, Ed.D., director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute. “Employers can provide support to their employees and, at the same time, reduce their health care costs by anticipating and responding to the challenges of eldercare.”

According to Gail Hunt, president and CEO of the National Alliance for Caregiving, “Caregivers have more unplanned absences. Their performance on the job is also compromised by a lack of focus on their work due to distractions, like phone calls and care coordination, that occupy their time. They need solutions so they can be healthier and perform better.”

Announcing Senior Housing News Weekly

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Nuns on the Run? Article on Clare Discusses Current Status and Challenges of CCRC Project

Crain’s Chicago Business recently ran an article entitled, “Upscale senior home The Clare averts default after cancellations soar”, that discusses some of the challenges and strategies that the high-profile continuing care retirement community is currently facing. The high-profile, 52 story high rise has attracted national attention for its lawsuit arguing it should be exempt from property taxes and it tapping reserves to make bond payments in 2009.  Look for more on The Clare in the future profiled here at Senior Housing News.

http://www.chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/article.pl?articleId=33074

National HealthCare Corporation Reports 5% Increase in Revenues For 2009

National HealthCare Corporation (NYSE Amex:  NCA, NHC.PRA), a national long-term care operator, announced fourth quarter 2009 income of $4.9 million dollars or .37 per share compared to $2.7 million or .21 cents per share.  Revenues for Q4 increased 4.2% and operating revenues for the full year increased by 5.5%.

NHC operates 76 long-term health care centers with over 9,000 beds and 33 home care programs, seven independent living centers and 15 assisted living communities.

For the full earnings release for NHC, click http://www.nhccare.com/presspdf/20100302.pdf

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