Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006. Originally Published: Assisted Living, July 2005; pp. 28-33.
"Since they started to dot the U.S. landscape in the early 1980s, assisted-living facilities have become the best hope of America's seniors for avoiding confinement in a nursing home. Instead of a hospital environment, assisted living promised private apartments and communal dining in hotel-like settings, and some help with daily needs such as dressing and bathing. In CR's three-month investigation, we found that assisted living now presents quite a different picture....Seniors and their families, anxious to avoid nursing homes, have come to look upon assisted living as the preferred place to go when health starts failing. Assisted-living operators, out of compassion or a need to fill beds, accept and keep residents even if their condition has worsened. As a result, many of the nearly 1 million people now in assisted-living facilities are more likely to be frail and sick than independent. And that has created a troubling mismatch between the care a resident needs and the care a facility and its staff can give." (CONSUMER REPORTS) This article presents the findings of the Consumer Reports investigation of assisted-living facilities.
1522-3213;
Consumer Reports (Periodical)
Congregate housing Investigations Life care communities Medical care--Cost of Older people--Long-term care