Medicine: Day Care Centers for the Old
Doctoring and dignity for the partly disabled
A year ago Charles Crandall, 73, was spending most of his days staring at the walls of his San Francisco apartment, subsisting on solitary meals eaten out of cans. Crippled by a childhood bout with polio and suffering from heart disease, he seemed destined for a nursing home. Had that been his fate, he says, "I don't think I would be living now." Instead, California social services agencies enrolled him in a new kind of program for the elderly that allowed him to continue living in his own home. Three days a week, from 10 a.m. to 3 in the afternoon, Crandall goes to a day care center for adults. There, nurses monitor his health, a physical therapist provides him with exercises, a nutritionist plans his lunch and friends keep him interested in the world. Together, says Crandall, "they give me the incentive to live."
Adult day care centers are, for a growing number of Americans, a happy solution to the problems posed by infirmity and old age. For people like Crandall, who are disabled but not in need of full-time nursing care, they fill the vital gap between neighborhood senior citizen centers, which are generally not equipped for the handicapped, and dreaded institutionalization. For families of the infirm elderly they offer welcome relief from the strain of providing full-time care for an ailing relative at home and from the guilt that often comes from banishing that person to a nursing home, perhaps prematurely. (An estimated 25% of nursing home residents do not need to be there.) "Our goal," says Jacqueline Falk, a day care administrator in Chicago, "is to keep people living in the community for as long as possible, with independence and dignity."
Though England has had "day hospitals" since the 1950s, they are a relatively recent innovation in the U.S. Adult day care centers grew out of disillusionment with nursing homes, many of which are known for rising costs, all but endless waiting lists and neglect of patients. In 1974 the Department of Health, Education and Welfare added an incentive by agreeing to channel Medicaid funds toward programs designed to take the place of nursing homes. Massachusetts, California and Georgia led the way. Within four years some 275 adult day care facilities had been established. Today there are about 800 such centers in 44 states and Puerto Rico.
The centers are diverse. Basically, there are two types: adult day "health" centers, where the focus is on providing medical services such as physical and speech therapy; and "social" day care centers, which stress social and recreational activities, though they too may have nurses and therapists on staff. Costs range from $11.82 a day, at one notably inexpensive center in Lincoln, Neb., to $50, with additional charges where transportation is provided. Patients typically spend two or three days a week in day care. Nursing homes, by contrast, charge an average $30 to $40 a day, some as much as $70seven days a week.
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