Have you ever thought what our country would be like without LTC facilities? Nursing homes, skilled nursing units, rest homes or whatever you want to call them provide a tremendous service to our aging population. If you think about what it would be like without them, you realize how valuable they really are.
According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention there are over 16,000 nursing homes in the United States, housing 1.5 million residence. Those numbers are climbing, and will continue to climb everyday. The early baby boomers are in their mid to late 60′s, and many will soon join the already large population of LTC facility residents.
LTC facilities provide a cost-effective way to enable aging patients with injuries, acute illnesses or postoperative care needs to recover in an environment outside a hospital. When these patients are admitted from a hospital, Medicare will cover the cost. Nursing home facilities started as a way for patients to recover for an extended time away from the hospital. As time went on, the elderly population grew. People lived longer as time went on. The average life expectancy in 1921 was only 56.4 years. Thirty years later it increased to 68.1, and thirty years after that it increased to 73.9. Currently, it is about 78 years.
The demand for long-term care services will increase in coming decades when the baby boomers reach their 80s. Declining family sizes, increasing childlessness, and rising divorce rates will limit the number of family members that are able to help. The simulations show that even under the most optimistic scenario long-term care burdens on families and institutions will increase substantially.









