’50 Nurses from 50 States’ Visit Capitol Hill to Preserve Home Health Medicare Benefit for their Patients and All Americans
Nurses Urge Lawmakers to ‘Help Us Choose Home’ as Home Care Faces
“These nurses prove yet again that home care professionals are some of the most dedicated people in this nation. Each of these nurses traveled to
The nurses are rallying to preserve a health-care option preferred by most Americans: Nine out of 10 seniors say they would prefer to receive health care at home rather than in an institution. Home care allows people to get the medical attention and supportive services they need in comfortable and familiar surroundings, often with family nearby. But the proposed deep cuts to the home health Medicare benefit are jeopardizing the ability for Americans – including 78 million Baby Boomers who are entering retirement age – to choose home care.
The cuts are being proposed despite research that home care is more cost effective than institutional care. The average home-care visit costs Medicare
Each nurse brought photos and stories of patients who were not able to represent themselves in
“I’ve traveled to
Wormington, who plans to travel in an R.V. with her husband of 40 years this summer, credits her recovery to the home health care she received from nurses, including Schlotter.
“It is because of home health that I am able to do the ‘little’ things in life, like walking, sleeping in my own bed and many of the other freedoms we enjoy in our homes on an everyday basis,” Wormington said. “If it were not for home care nurses, aides and therapists, I would not be here today.”
For more information, please visit www.helpuschoosehome.com or www.nahc.org.
About NAHC
The National Association for Home Care & Hospice represents the lion’s share of the nation’s 25,000 home care and hospice organizations that provide care to some 12 million people in the U.S. each year. Much of this care is non-medical and involves helping people with personal and supportive care needs, and is paid for privately.
Several NAHC staff members previously worked for key committees and Members of Congress. They helped write Medicare and Medicaid, especially the home health and hospice benefits, as well as legislation making Medicare/Medicaid fraud a felony, and creating the Office of Inspector General in the Department of Health and Human Services and State Medicaid Fraud Units to combat fraud and abuse in public programs.
For additional information contact:
Steve Riley or Jamie Lettis at
(717) 232-5554
SOURCE The National Association for Home Care & Hospice
