Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Aging News: A Plan When You Don't Have Kids; Health Costs Rising; The Need To Keep Moving
鈥淭he trouble is: You think you have time.鈥 That Buddhist-sounding quote from a fortune cookie rattled around the back of my head for decades, seemingly for no reason. Now that I find myself living with my 94-year-old mother in a Florida city where preacher Billy Graham got his start and being a never-wed 60-something has made me a tourist attraction of sorts, I finally understand why I thought the repercussions of growing old without a child or two would not apply to me: I was just plain delusional. (Zubrod, 8/15)
Today's 65-year-olds can expect to spend an average of聽$130,000 on health care during their聽retirement,聽from premiums to co-payments to eyeglasses, according to new estimates. The聽average single聽65-year-old woman can expect to need聽$135,000 to spend on health care in retirement, while a man will聽spend $125,000, according to estimates from Fidelity Investments.聽(Steverman, 8/16)
Despite a growing body of research that shows staying in bed can be harmful to seniors, many hospitals still don鈥檛 put a high priority on making them walk. At [the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Hospital-Highlands] 26-bed geriatric unit, known as the Acute Care for Elders unit, or ACE, patients are encouraged to start moving as soon as they arrive. The unit is one of a few hundred around the U.S. that is attempting to provide better and more tailored care to geriatric patients. The hospital opened the unit in 2008 with the recognition that the elderly population was growing and that many older patients didn鈥檛 fare well in the hospital. (Gorman, 8/16)