Stuff You Should Know - A History of Nursing Homes
Episode Date: October 27, 2020In America, we've treated our senior citizens in very different ways over the years. Tune in to hear about how we've tackled compassionate care. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheart...podcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
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We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
and Jerry's out there wandering around in the ether.
And that makes this stuff that you should know.
She's been wandering around the ether for weeks.
At least, I daresay months by now, Chuck.
Yeah, she's actually just chatted with Jerry
from 10 feet away.
Oh, that's nice, man.
That must have felt really special.
It did, her hair's long.
Oh, man, my hair is really long too.
Yeah, I feel like I saw Jerry a couple of months ago
and her hair was long, so she must have a full-on do now.
Yeah, you know, she looks like a proper lady.
I'm not touching that one.
All right.
So, Chuck, this one was one of yours.
It was a nursing homes is the idea, right?
Yeah.
So, I have a question for you.
What made you decide that you want to do on nursing homes?
You know, I mean, I'm almost 50.
My parents are in their mid-70s.
Emily's grandmother is edging toward 100.
Wow.
So, you know, this is the kind of stuff
that just you got to start thinking about at some point.
And Emily and I are old parents and have an only child
that we don't want her to have to take care of us or anything.
So, like, we're just starting to have all these thoughts.
And I was like, yeah, you know what?
I'm not so sure America does it right here.
Yeah.
And after studying this stuff, it's, we do it okay.
But it's also like, hey, work your whole life
and then go broke at the end.
Yeah, that's a real bummer about the whole thing,
is you're just kind of like expected to spend whatever
money you have on care at the end of your life.
And it just seems a little wrong to me, too.
Yeah.
And we need to shout out, first of all, our buddy Dave Ruse,
helped us put this together.
And he actually did a real deal interview with Dr. Muriel Gillick,
who is an author of Old and Sick in America,
Colin, The Journey Through the Health Care System, and was
quite a resource in the history of this stuff in this country,
I think was pretty fascinating.
Yeah, it is.
It's super fascinating.
And the whole thing kind of started out, you know,
and we're talking about nursing homes in particular,
but there's just no way we can't talk about other kinds of homes
in particular, because nursing homes grew out of this kind
of system that developed that seemed to really kind of take
shape and take hold around the second industrial revolution,
the one that happened here in the States.
And because of that, because people were like, you know,
I don't feel like swinging the scythe any longer.
I'm going to go into town and see what they have in the way
of jobs.
Yeah.
So long mom and dad.
All of a sudden, mom and dad were like gulp,
because they were on their own.
Not just, you know, one set of parents in particular,
but it was like a general intergenerational trend
where kids were moving away from the farm,
and all of a sudden there weren't multi-generational homes
like there were before.
Because when you have a multi-generational home,
you don't have to worry about what's going to happen to you
when you get older, where you're going to live.
You're going to live in the same house you raised your
bratty little kid in to take care of you until you die.
And that's just the way it was for years and years
and years in America.
Yeah.
There's a stat here.
In 1900, 57% of adults over 65 lived in a multi-generational
household, and by 1980, 80 years later, that went down to 17%.
Wow.
And big reasons for that, like you were talking about,
you know, moving away from the farm, but just nowadays,
people just move away.
I mean, 63% of American adults have moved to a completely
new community at least once.
Right.
And as Dr. Gillick points out, she says,
not only are people not living with their adult children,
they're not even living near them many times now.
Yeah, because they finally wised up and we're like,
gosh, I can get away from my kids once and for all now
that they're adults.
Well, I think it's more like the kids are like,
hey, gee, I want to go live in wherever the heck I want to.
And we'll just think of the plan for my parents at home.
Yeah.
My generation doesn't have any hangups about guilt or morality,
you know?
But the thing is, it's not just the kids moving away.
Like my grandmother moved far away.
She moved to Florida.
She moved to Arizona.
Yeah, that happened too.
Like she moved.
Sure.
She was like so long, everybody, I got this.
But she was very fortunate that she had it.
The one of the things that nursing homes exist for
is to take care of people who don't got it,
who either don't have family,
who don't have the money to hire people to take care of them,
who don't have the money to go live in,
and say like assisted living or something.
That's what nursing homes have kind of evolved to take care of.
And in that sense, they're actually directly related to
what came, what were originally called alms houses
or county houses or poor houses,
which if you were old and you didn't have anyone to take care of you
in like the late 18th, early 19th century in America,
you could go to like a farm that the county maintained,
and there would be a bed there for you.
And you would be housed with a bunch of different people
with a bunch of different conditions.
And the one thing that you all had in common
was that society didn't quite know what to do with you.
Yeah. So, I mean, it could range from people who
had no living family and just needed care,
that had nothing else wrong with them,
except just being old and needing care and having no one around,
to people that were mentally ill,
maybe people who were suffering from dementia
or people who were alcoholics or drug addicts.
And like you said, you could get a bed,
but there were no doctors.
There were no nurses. You couldn't get medical care.
And that was sort of the beginnings of the shame almost,
if you want to look at it that way.
Yeah, kind of.
But it does say something that society did say,
we have a responsibility of people.
We can't just be like, well, there's a cornfield
for you to go laying until you die of exposure.
Good luck.
There was a bed that was provided
as meager and horrific as that whole thing was.
It was at least an experiment or an attempt to do something.
Yeah. And the next big change happened
sort of midway through the 19th century when
sort of around the time of the Civil War,
we started getting our first big hospitals,
like medical hospitals, public medical hospitals
in the big cities around the country.
And they were sort of the beginnings of modern,
large-scale public health care.
And here's the thing, though, is they were, back then,
they focused on acute care.
So if you, again, were a senior and you,
they called them old chronics,
like you had maybe a chronic condition
and no one to take care of you, then you,
basically, you were too dependent to go to one of these places
because it was a hospital.
And they're like, you can't stay here.
Right. Because even though, you know,
you're called an old chronic,
you might not have anything wrong with you,
aside from being really old
and maybe you can't make it to the bathroom very easily,
something like that.
Right.
But not necessarily anything that a hospital could treat you for.
It was just, they had a bed.
Hospitals very quickly were like, we can't,
like this isn't working.
You're going to stay here indefinitely
and there's really nothing wrong with you.
We've got to find a place for you.
And so about that time, some charities,
especially either ethnic or religious-based charities,
like the Baptists or the German Aid Society was a big one in Boston,
I think, the German Ladies' Aid Society of Boston.
I'm sorry.
They kind of said, you know what,
we have members who are, they're members of our church
or, you know, they're German,
they're part of our community
and they don't have anybody.
So we need to make sure that they're taken care of.
And they actually started founding
what were called old age homes,
which is basically, they would get like a,
a large home and kind of outfit it with different,
each room was like a different room for a different tenant.
And they would take care of like old widows basically
who didn't have the money
or the children to take care of them.
Yeah, but specifically what they deemed as worthy poor.
And here's what differentiated them from the almshouses was,
if you were worthy poor, and you know, that's in air quotes,
that meant that you were the wife of a man who worked hard
all his life, but never made a lot of money,
maybe worked at a shipyard
or just had sort of a very low paying blue collar,
but respectable job,
but certainly not the kind of dough
to pay for like private nursing homes or anything like that.
Right.
But not alcoholic or drug addict or, you know,
there was no, they didn't like force a shame attachment to it.
But so these widows who were, you know, in their 60s or 70s,
depending on, you know, how their husband lived their lives.
They're like, I've been morphine-free since 73, so let me in.
They didn't have these big pensions or anything
because of the jobs their husbands had.
So they were taken into one of these homes,
like a Baptist home or something,
and they were given a bed and they were given,
again, not medical care,
but they were at least given meals in a bed.
Right.
A lot of times they were expected to kind of pay
for their room and board.
It was kind of like a needs-based sliding scale,
I got the impression.
Some of them just straight up said,
hey, give us $500 at the time,
or I think around 1900 or the late 19th century.
I don't remember exactly when it was.
The Winchester Home for Aged Women in Massachusetts.
The Winchester Mystery House.
I looked it up.
I was like, is that the same one?
But it was bequeathed by a Lucy Winchester,
who I couldn't find anything about,
but it's not the same person.
You lose a lot of people in that house.
Yeah, you would.
Although you gain a lot more ghosts.
That's true.
But they said you pay us $500.
So this is in 1904.
You pay us $500 and you can stay here for the rest of your life.
And $500 back then was worth about $15,000 today.
And they're like, how old are you again?
Exactly.
I was thinking about that.
It's a bit of a gamble on both sides,
but it's a bit like insurance.
It's like some sort of long-term care insurance
where you're like, okay, let's stretch my $500
as far as I can go.
Or you could die two days after.
They still kept your $500,
but then hopefully it was used to make life better
for the other people who had used up their $500 long ago.
Right.
So there was this kind of idea that if you could pay for it,
you should pay for it.
And then as time went on, it was like,
oh, you sold your house.
We need that money if you're going to stay here.
And people would take in more and more money
from that person's estate as they were alive
to take care of them.
And this is starting in like the beginning
of the 20th century into the 19th century.
So that's a very long tradition of extracting everything
from old people as they're dying to pay for their care.
And I'm with you.
I'm bothered by that.
Yeah.
I mean, the question became not how much is it
for your care facility?
And it's more like, how much you got?
How much you got?
Here, grab them by the ankles and turn them upside down.
Or if they weren't charging, there was the expectation
that they didn't need so much care
that they couldn't also contribute.
Like, we got a room for you.
We'll feed you.
But you got to make your bed.
You got to clean your room and maybe help keep the property up.
So I got the idea that these were people who, like I said,
a senior widow who just didn't have anywhere else to go
and otherwise was doing OK.
Yeah.
But forced to knock off Gucci wallets during craft,
arts and crafts time.
Should we take a break?
Sure.
All right.
I got a Gucci wallet to work on myself.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
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OK, so we've got, Alm's houses are still around.
They have, they stayed around until like the 1940s
from what I could see.
These county houses, poor houses.
And then alongside of those, you've got old age homes.
But then, um, the government was kind of like,
we can do, we can do better than this.
New York itself, I think, became the first state
in the United States to say, um, it's 1890.
It's modern era.
We need to do more to take care of, like, our, our elderly.
And in particular, our mentally infirm.
They, and they, that state made a commitment
to take care for the state, to take responsibility
for its, um, mentally ill.
And that included, uh, people with dementia of all sorts,
um, which they would have called senility back then.
Yeah.
Um, and so that was kind of like the first entrée
of the state into caring for elderly people.
And that actually kind of opened a bit of a floodgate.
I think, um, other states started to kind of follow suit.
But it was like a, it was a step in a really dark direction
because by World War I, if you were elderly,
especially if you had some sort of, um, decline,
some sort of cognitive decline from age,
there was a really good chance
that you were in a mental asylum, um, with everybody else.
And in, in a lot of cases,
I think even if you were just elderly,
you would find yourself in a mental asylum.
Isn't that right?
Yeah.
I mean, absolutely.
So you've got a situation where the states start to say,
hey, we need to take care of our mentally ill,
but seniors just started getting kind of lumped in
if they didn't have anywhere else to go.
So you might have, you know, someone's,
someone's grandmother who just didn't have family
and who was really doing okay upstairs
and, and was in pretty good health,
might find themselves in, uh, like you said,
a mental hospital with people with severe mental illness.
Right.
Uh, and I think there's, uh, a couple of stats here
that Dave dug up.
By 1930, there were more elderly Americans
in mental hospitals than in those home houses
and the private old age homes combined.
And, uh, he mentioned one in particular,
Chicago State Hospital, which was a mental hospital.
In the 1930s, 70% of the patients there were,
quote, aged or infirm,
that had no other underlying psychosis
or mental health condition.
Right.
So that's a really dangerous place for old people to be
because if you act up, they can put you on medications.
They can give you, um, the, the hydrotherapy treatment.
They can do all sorts of stuff to you
because you're in a mental hospital.
And I think it's kind of like one of those things where,
if you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
Well, if you're a 1930s old-timey psychiatrist,
everything looks like a, um,
a mental condition.
A mental condition.
Right.
You know?
And you're going to treat all of the people the same way.
And so, luckily, Francis Perkins arrived on the scene
around this time.
So World War I is when old people really started to get
shuffled off to mental hospitals.
By 1935, the government swooped in and was like,
whoa, whoa, this is way wrong.
Like we need, just because these people are old,
doesn't mean that they're, um, they're mentally ill.
So let's extract them from that environment
and figure out if we can do something else.
And thanks to social security,
that really began to change fairly quickly.
Yeah.
So this is 1935.
Again, you mentioned the great Francis Perkins.
If you didn't listen to that episode, go listen to it.
It's fantastic.
Yeah.
You're missing out.
The Social Security Act, um,
basically, like when we think of social security now,
we think of the program where you pay in your whole life
from your paycheck.
And then when you retire, you get a monthly income.
And if you work longer,
then your checks are going to be bigger.
Um, I started working when I was 13.
So I imagine I'm going to be rolling in dough.
You're always boasting about that.
At the time.
I'm sick of hearing about that.
About my 13-year-old busboy job.
Yes.
It's a title max now, by the way.
Is it really?
Yeah, drive by.
Title max got your money, your money, your real money.
Oh man, that's some good free advertising.
Yeah.
Uh, I drove by, I drive by there on the way to my mom's
and Emily's parents' house sometimes.
And I always pointed out to my daughter and say,
hey, that's the barbecue restaurant I worked at.
It's now a title max.
Is that the one where the guy put his foot in the Brunswick stew?
Yeah.
Hey man.
It's so wrong, man.
It's so wrong.
I wonder where that guy is now, Randy.
He's in, he's in, I don't know.
I'm not even going to guess.
I have a feeling Randy's in prison.
Do you think so?
I mean, uh, he, he, I saw him do a lot worse
than put his foot in the Brunswick stew.
You know what I mean?
Oh geez.
I don't, but my mind is racing right now.
He was at his heart of life behind bars.
I see.
And I'm not laughing at that.
It's, it's very sad.
But Randy, you know, he made his own decisions.
That reminds me, remember Randy, the hippie from MTV
in like the late 80s, early 90s?
No.
He ran for president.
He was like just this total weirdo burnout.
Who was he a character?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
Who looked today like he could have been in LMFAO.
Okay.
Like really, he dressed like that,
but this is like decades before it.
But anyway, I remember like he, he like ran for president.
And I think he lost and he's like, I've made my bed.
Now I must lie in it.
I'll never forget that after some reason.
I just thought it was hilarious.
But yeah, that was Randy.
Well, I mean, maybe it was the Randy Brunswick stew.
It was the Rand's what I'm saying.
So yeah, that, that was old age insurance is what they
called it originally.
But then there was also old age assistance, OAA,
which was you're going to get payments when you're older,
even if you didn't work, which was a big deal
because so many women were not allowed to work and have jobs.
So like, what were they going to do?
They're going to say, hey, you didn't pay anything in.
Sorry, you just raised your kids and grandkids.
That's a great, that's a great point.
I think we still do that today though, unfortunately,
but at least women can actually work in the workforce
if they want to.
But yeah, if they stay home and raise kids,
then they're still treated the same way,
which is pretty shameful.
But I get your point.
And the point is, is that we needed to be able to take care
of people who hadn't necessarily worked in the workforce
and paid into social security.
And then also we had to offset that first basically generation
that we're like, okay, we're the first ones.
Nobody's been paying in, but why do we,
why are we the ones who have to pay in,
but we get nothing from it?
So that old age assistance, the OAA really helped
with that.
And I guess it's kind of gone the way of disco
because the only thing I know about
is the old age insurance that's still around.
And I know they don't call it that any longer,
but that old age assistance where it's like,
I guess that would be Medicaid, right?
Yeah, I think so.
Okay, so we'll talk a lot more about Medicaid and Medicare.
Just put a button in that, all of you bureaucrat wonks.
You're gonna love it.
Yeah, but FDR, this is when things really changed.
And the reason we're talking about social security
and stuff like this is because it really,
it sort of laid out the roadmap for what was gonna happen
and how we cared for our grandparents
and what kind of places they were gonna be.
So because he went in there with a new deal
and he was like, these all houses are terrible.
He's like, we need to get rid of these.
And he said, in these state mental hospitals,
they're overburdened and that's not right either.
So here's what I'll do.
Part of the OAA, the old age assistance, a big provision here
is that you can't get any of that money
if you're living in a public institution
like an alms house or like a state mental hospital.
No money coming your way.
No, so suddenly the people who were stuck
in state mental hospitals or alms houses,
not only were like, well, I could get out of here,
now I have the funds to get out of here
and go somewhere better.
And this led to a huge boom
in the growth of private living facilities for the elderly.
Yeah, I think that was the big change.
I mean, surely people were like,
great, I can get out of here.
But I think people saw dollar signs said, wait a minute,
I can get paid by the government
to take in these people and take care of them.
Like sometimes directly get paid by the government.
Yeah, that was kind of like an amendment
that they made later on where it was like,
yeah, that incentivized it even more.
It's like, we'll pay you directly.
There's not even, this person doesn't have to be involved.
Just take care of them, follow these guidelines
and we'll send you this check every month.
And the people like, is there any money left over for me?
Just don't ask any questions.
As a matter of fact, now that you bring it up,
do you have any money?
You're gonna give it to them first
before we give you the money.
Yeah, there's a balance on your account, sir.
So this is kind of how it went for like the first 15, 20 years
after Social Security Act was introduced in 1935
where it fueled this boom of retirement homes,
basically the retirement home industry found its birth there.
And then about 15 years after the government was like,
you know what, we've been sinking a lot of money into this.
Maybe we should look around and see
if any of these places are any good.
And they found that no,
in a lot of cases they weren't really good.
There was, if you converted an old Victorian mansion
into an old age home with a dozen rooms,
you probably didn't add a fire exit onto every room
and fire stairs on the second and third floor.
There's probably not a sprinkler system
because they weren't very prevalent by that time.
And so if there was a fire,
all of these, the dozen aged and infirm people
who lived there were going to die in a fire.
That was the one big one that they turned up
that came out of these early investigations
into what came to be called nursing homes.
Yeah, so this is when Congress steps in again,
like you said, about 15 to 20 years later in the 1950s
and said, all right, here's the deal.
If you're getting this dough from us,
we need to regulate what's going on there
and they need to be safe.
And a lot of these mom and pops that, like you said,
converted an old house, they couldn't make those upgrades.
You can't just slap on a fire escape to an old Victorian,
I guess you could, but it wouldn't look that great
or probably work that well.
And so a lot of these smaller ones floundered
and all of a sudden, and this is where things really start to change,
there's a big market for just basically,
I don't know if I would call it the corporatization yet,
but maybe to a certain degree, these bigger facilities
for residents that had this money that could go straight to them.
And so these sort of larger places
that weren't individual houses started popping up.
Yeah, well, that's like an ongoing and recurring theme
and a big criticism among conservatives
of big government or government regulation
is that it homogenizes things
because usually the mom and pop operations,
even if they are well-meaning and not nefarious,
like they don't have the money to add those fire exits on.
But say like a corporation that's gonna own several of these things,
they can build new ones with all the modern fire exits
and fire sprinklers.
And so those bigger corporations start owning more and more and more
and by building more and more and more,
they're not gonna make each one like really unique
and embedded in the community.
They're going to plunk down the same one
and every place they build one.
And so there's this homogenization that occurs as a result of that
and that's exactly what happened
with what came to be called nursing homes,
which really started to find their advent in the 1950s
from these reforms where the government was like,
you guys need to be able to do this, this and this.
We're gonna assign the public health service
to lay out guidelines.
The public health service knows about regulating hospitals.
So they really added onto that homogenization
this underlying medicalization of caring for older people,
which makes sense.
You think of older people, elderly people, senior adults,
you think, gosh, the body's starting to wear down,
they have all these conditions or whatever.
So it makes sense that you would couple hospitalization
or medicalization with that, but that's not always the case.
And the problem is, is it became the case,
whether you needed it or not,
that was the kind of place you lived,
was basically a bland institutional extension of a hospital.
Yeah, I mean, it's not like in...
I kept thinking of the movie, Say Anything,
when I was researching this
because that was a prominent storyline in that movie.
Oh, I never saw it.
You never saw Say Anything?
I didn't.
Do you wonder what happens every time a guy in a trench coat
holds up a boombox over his head?
I mean, I know enough about that.
You get the cultural reference?
Yeah, of course.
I just wondered if all this time you're like,
what is the deal with this boombox?
Yeah, it's like a reference to Kevin Smith and Clark.
Okay, sure, exactly.
Now, Ioni Skye's father, the late great John Mahoney,
was he ran a mom and pop nursing home.
Oh, really?
Yes, and was in spoiler coming,
if you haven't seen a 30-something-year-old movie,
he was found to be ripping them off,
and that was a big sort of subplot in that movie.
All I heard was that was a big subplot in that movie.
Very good.
Good.
But Say Anything Aside, they, like you said,
became more hospitalized, for lack of a better word.
And if you went to one of them back then,
there was very little to differentiate it from a hospital,
from the central nurse's station to the cafeteria food.
Yeah.
I remember going to visit my grandmother,
on my paternal grandmother, who lived to be 101,
before my dad and his wife took her in.
She was in one of these places,
and actually, maybe it was the other way around,
she went afterward.
But it was terrible, you know?
It was awful and very, very sad.
And if I was not a young man with nothing going on in my life,
I might have done something about it,
but I didn't know what to do back then.
You would have opened all the doors and been like,
go free, go free.
I would have ripped her out of there, at least,
and said, come home with me.
Yeah, I mean, they were pretty bad,
especially by the time I'm guessing you were there
in the 80s or 90s, maybe?
This would have been the 90s, yeah.
So in the mid-50s, even,
these things made a little more sense.
At the very least, they were newer.
By the 70s and 80s, they were so bad
that we had a reform act that kicked in in 1987,
which is basically like, this place is wrong.
And maybe we don't know what to do or replace them with,
but here are some things that you have
to treat these people with dignity.
They have to be able to have a say in what they wear
or what they eat or what they do during the day.
And it really kind of got off the rails
within a couple of decades after their advent.
The thing is, is like I was saying,
nobody knows what to do about nursing homes,
and we'll talk a little more about that later,
but just kind of put a pin in that.
Nursing homes were not great, and they're still not great.
Yeah, should we take a break and then come back
and talk about Medicaid and Medicare
and how that figure's in?
Yeah.
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All right.
So we promised talk of Medicare and Medicaid.
And I think Dave kind of put it really on the nose here.
He said, no two government programs have shaped
the nursing home care model over the last 50 years
more than those two programs.
Created in 1965, Lyndon Johnson amended the Social Security
Act.
And if you still get confused, if you're
like a young hip and happening millennial,
and you don't know what those two words mean,
and you get them mixed up, Medicare is health insurance
universal, one might dare say socialized medicine.
That's a red herring.
For Americans over 65, Medicaid is long-term care
for Americans lower income status.
That's right.
That's the difference.
Yeah.
And you don't necessarily have to be elderly for Medicaid.
I believe Medicare, you do.
Medicaid, you could be lower income and have a lifelong
disability.
And you'd be eligible for Medicaid, too.
Yeah.
So Medicare, again, this is if you're over 65,
it's going to pay for acute medical care
when you're in a hospital.
But if you need something long-term, kind of like what
we were talking about at the beginning,
then it won't pay for that.
Like you can't just say, all right,
I'm going to go to a nursing home now,
and it's going to just pay for that in full.
But Medicaid would.
And for a while, everybody's like, OK, well,
we'll just take Medicaid.
This is after Lyndon Johnson's Great Society in 1965.
So they were like, this is fine.
And then somebody realized that Medicare pays way more
than Medicaid does.
And so all of the bottom line people said,
how can we do this?
What are we going to do?
So they read the act.
And they found that there was language in there
that says Medicare will pay for a stay up to 100 days
in a skilled nursing facility after three days
or more of treatment in the hospital.
And so all of those nursing homes are like, well, we have.
We have nurses.
We have doctors.
Let's just rebrand ourselves as skilled nursing facilities.
And so there was a huge, massive transition
from nursing homes where you would go live potentially
the rest of your life.
And there were nurses and doctors and all of that.
And this was your new home until you died to you guys
got to go because we're now a skilled nursing facility, which
means the most you could stay as 100 days.
But we're going to make way more off of flipping people
every 100 days than we would because Medicare is going to pay.
Then we would letting you stay here as a nursing home
because Medicaid's paying for that.
That, like I said, just caused a huge change in the industry.
Yeah.
And Americans in the 80s and 90s generally were like, you know what?
We need better facilities and more comfortable facilities
that feel less like a hospital and more like an apartment,
let's say.
And that was sort of the birth of what's
known now as assisted living facilities
where there are different levels of care that you can pay for.
And the idea is that if you go to one of those,
you have a little bit more independence.
You have a little bit more say in how your day goes.
And that's just at a daily schedule level.
And it's like a little more social.
Like it's sort of like you would, I mean,
the best ones are like what you would hope they would be,
which is a place for your grandparents to go hang out
and hang out with other seniors and have a social life
and tell stories and be with one another
and not just sort of be in a hospital room.
Right.
So like if you can't just stay in your house or something
as you're getting older, this is a real alternative for you.
And because there's different levels of care,
you can age in place there.
Like you can just keep getting older and older
and then they'll start adding greater and greater layers of care.
The thing is, assisted living is expensive
and it's outside of the federal purview.
Like the feds went all in on nursing homes.
They regulate nursing homes.
They don't regulate assisted care.
They will pay for nursing homes.
They won't pay for assisted care.
There's a lot of differences.
And they're almost, they're very much intertwined
nursing homes in assisted living.
But they're very separate as far as the U.S. government is concerned.
They're two different things
and the government recognizes nursing homes.
The thing is, it's like you were saying in the 80s and 90s,
people were like, we don't want to live in nursing homes anymore.
We want to move over here.
And all the nursing homes were like, fine,
we're skilled nursing facilities now.
And we can get some of that sweet, sweet Medicare money.
So now if you...
Did you see that stat?
Yeah.
1963, there were 570,000 skilled nursing beds.
And in 1982, there were 1.2 million.
So they definitely were like, oh, that money needs to be coming our way.
Exactly.
So, and that's exactly what they did.
They said, we're skilled nursing facilities now.
And they probably are owned by the hospitals
where you do three days in there
and then get moved to the skilled nursing facility.
And then maybe if it's a large enough group,
they might own an assisted living facility too
that you can say move into after that 100 days or something.
The thing is, assisted living is great.
It can be really, really good.
And nursing homes can be good too.
There's not...
Like all nursing homes aren't bad
and all of them have their upsides.
Like you were saying, assisted living is very social.
There's probably a lot more going on, a lot more activity
just because a lot of the people who live there these days
are going to be more active still.
Whereas in nursing homes, it's now the people
who live in nursing homes tend to be much sicker, more infirm.
But there's still socialization where there's not necessarily
if you just live alone at your house
and somebody comes by a couple of times a week.
So there are definitely good things to nursing homes.
The problem is 70% of them are for-profit.
Some of them are owned by private equity firms.
We shouldn't let private equity firms
anywhere near the aged population ever in any country.
That's just a terrible combination.
And apparently, in fact, there's studies that show
when private equity firms take over nursing homes,
there is a measurable decline in health outcomes
for the residents because their whole thing is they're dedicated
to making corporate profits.
So you cut costs and you cut services.
You just approach things differently than you should.
And that's kind of like this evolution
that's going on now is we've been providing services
to elderly people as they age, as if they're customers,
where instead we should be providing care.
And those are two different things
even though from a few paces back, they might look similar,
they're not, they're different.
And that's kind of the push that we're going toward now.
Yeah, so where we find ourselves today statistically is...
And I was kind of surprised about this.
I had a feeling that more Americans
were in these facilities than I thought.
I guess it's a little bit heartening to hear the numbers.
There are about 1.4 million Americans
in residential nursing homes and then another 1.7 million
cycling through those skilled nursing facilities
if they have like a surgery or an illness
or something they're recovering from or rehabbing from,
which is only about 4.5% of all Americans over 65
and 10% of all Americans over 85.
I thought it would be higher than that.
If you want to look at the downside though
is one big reason why maybe the cost.
It depends on where you are of course,
but if you are in a private room at a nursing home
and I guess was this in Georgia?
Yeah.
At $235 a night in New York,
that's about $400 a night and change on average a night.
Like at that point, just move them into the W hotel, right?
Pretty much, yeah.
The only thing is they don't have nurses at the W hotel.
I know, of course I'm kidding, but that's a lot of money, man.
And you can just get bled dry at the end of your life.
Well, you do.
And as a matter of fact, to pay for a nursing home,
Medicaid says you have to have paid in,
which basically says you need to have,
if you don't own your house anymore,
you have to give the proceeds from your house.
Yeah, you gotta liquidate.
Yeah, you have to liquidate your inheritance.
You have to pay down to usually something like,
I saw like maybe $700 a month income is the cutoff.
Anything over that and you have to be contributing.
Anything under that,
the Medicaid will kick in and pay the place directly
for letting you stay there.
But the thing is, it's like, of course,
the better alternative is assisted living.
Some state Medicaid programs will pay or help pay
for assisted living, but for the most part,
if you're living in an assisted living facility,
you might have a reverse mortgage on your house.
You are probably, you've liquidated all of your investments.
You're paying for it out of pocket in the United States
for the good kind of retirement home.
Yeah, and there are people out there
that are trying to further reform
what these places look like.
There's a gentleman named Dr. Bill Thomas,
who is a geriatrician who has something
called the Eden alternative.
That is, he's trying to basically reframe
these nursing home residents and caregivers as care partners.
And it sounds kind of hippie-dippy,
but he wants people to be able to still grow in life
and to still flourish and to still learn.
Just because you're a senior doesn't mean
you just have to sit in a room and watch Judge Judy
or push checkers around a checkerboard.
And they're, depending on where you are,
they might be adopting these methodologies
of the Eden alternative or the greenhouse movement,
another thing he helps spawn,
which is you're in an individualized home.
It's not a big facility.
You got a private room, you got a bathroom,
and there's outdoor space for you to go and garden
and to walk around and to, again,
try and flourish in your last years on this planet.
Right, and there's also a push for aging in place at home,
which can be really beneficial.
But again, it can also be isolating,
depending on what kind of friends or family.
Maybe if you live in a condo, it would be a little more.
But if you're living in the house that you spent
your entire life in and all the neighbors have moved away
and you don't know anybody anymore, that can be isolating.
So in that sense, assisted living or even a nursing home
could be a better alternative.
But a lot of people say,
no, this is my house.
I want to stay here at home.
The problem is I've seen it put that Medicaid
has an institutional bias,
which means that they'll pay for you to go to an institution,
like the definition of the word institution.
They don't really pay for you to be able to stay at home.
Some programs do, but a lot of them don't,
even if you do want to stay at home,
which is kind of heartbreaking to me.
Yeah, I mean, Emily's grandmother, Mary,
who is very popular with this stuff,
you should know Army as the eldest general,
she, you know, we had to move her out of her house
that she was in, you know, not her whole life,
but for a large portion of her life.
But it was one of those deals where
it's out in the middle of the country in Ohio.
There was no family close by.
There was no hospital close by.
And it's just, it's hard to say,
it's okay to stay there, you know?
And it was sad when she left,
but she was also like, no, this is great.
I'll move in with you guys.
Like she didn't kick and scream, you know?
She was willing and understood it was the best thing.
And, you know, that's probably one reason
why she's pushing 100 right now, I think.
For sure.
Where does she live?
She lives with Emily's parents.
And here in Georgia now.
That's great.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, I'm very glad that that worked out for,
but I was also looking at like the antithesis of that,
like what happens in the United States
to people who don't have any family,
who don't have any children,
and who don't have any money?
Like what happens to them?
And they seem to be,
they seem to be kind of left on their own.
Like if they have a house,
they're probably just going to be left in their house
and maybe meals on wheels will come by.
The county social services might be able to help them,
but this is if they reach out for help.
If they need assistance, they might not get it at home.
Because again, there's a lot of services that aren't paid for.
And if you don't have any money, your SOL,
you could go to a nursing home,
but if you don't have any ability to pay,
they can kick you out.
They can kick you out for a bunch of different reasons.
The most depressing thing that I've looked up in a while
was nursing home evictions.
Oh, God.
And there was a loophole that was recently closed in 2016
that said, if the nursing home is not able to offer care
for the person, then they can be discharged.
And they use that as like a huge loophole.
They'd be like, we're sorry, we can't offer you the care
you need any longer.
You have to leave.
And if you don't have anybody to advocate for you,
where are you going to go?
And I couldn't get a really good answer,
but I get the impression that it's not huge and rampant,
but there are a lot of people who are still falling
through the crack society as they age
because we don't have a robust nationalized plan
to care for the elderly no matter what.
And I thought, well, of course,
the United States is super behind in that respect,
but apparently we're in line with other countries like Canada.
You'd think Canada would have like a place for every senior
and they're all happy and taken care of
and everybody gets a pet beaver or something like that.
No, you're on your own kind of,
like your state might help you out a little bit,
the local city might, but that's about it.
Same with the UK too, which I was really surprised
because both of them have nationalized medicine.
Yeah, I will say that this is where social media
has been beneficial as far as neighborhood and neighbors go.
I mean, all the time on our neighborhood pages,
we see people stepping up, and especially in a place like Atlanta
where gentrification has happened,
you do see a lot of neighbors stepping up
to help take care of the senior African-American community
that is still living in their houses
and they haven't been bought out for a shamefully low price
by a greedy contractor to flip it into a little McMansion.
But you see it all the time,
that we work with a group called Neighbor in Need
that really does great things.
Oh, that's great.
And aside from just the official organizations,
all the time you'll see someone that lives next door
to someone like that, they'll be like,
hey, she's having a hard time paying her power bill this winter
and an hour it is funded for the rest of the year,
the neighbors step up and pay for her power bill.
And it's just little things like that,
but these are in communities where the houses are close together
and people know each other's business,
like Emily's grandmother out there in the middle of the country
and a lot of rural America, that might not be the case.
You might not have someone checking up on you.
And people, you know, bleeding hearts like you and I
feel that they should be taken care of no matter what, you know?
Yeah, but I mean, isn't that something everybody can get behind?
You would think so, but that's just not true.
I'll remind you of our episode on homelessness many years ago.
Yeah, that one's tough for me to swallow.
Those are the people who believed in the unworthy poor, huh?
Yeah.
And were to send them to Alms houses back in the day.
Yeah, the good news is if you're looking for a home
for a family member these days, Medicare.gov has a lot of resources.
Oh, I'll tell you another place too.
U.S. News and World Report is really hot and heavy
on an assisted living and nursing home ratings.
Yeah, nursing home compares, another website.
And, you know, there are places where you can go to really dig in,
see which ones you feel are a good fit.
They're rated on, you know, how the people are really doing there,
not just like how pretty it is.
And if you go and visit one, they said to beware of the chandelier effect.
Like, in fact, if you walk in and you see a grand piano in the lobby,
just turn around and leave.
Well, yeah, that's, I mean, that's one of the ways that they get you.
You want to do a little more digging than just that.
And you want to talk to residents.
You want to read like actual like inspections and reports on those places.
You want to look at stats, like how many patients had to be,
were taken to the ER or were readmitted in the hospital.
How many have bed sores?
Any allegations of abuse?
Apparently abuse has doubled between 2013 and 2017.
It's still low.
I think it was like 845, which is 845 too many,
but it's still doubled since 2013.
So you want to like really look for that kind of thing.
Are they over prescribing medications?
Like for psychosis to people who are problematic
when you don't really think they're problematic.
There's a lot of stuff you want to look for that you can look for that's out there.
Just do some digging because this is somebody you care about.
Don't forget.
Yeah.
And we really want to point out that it's easy to zero in on things like abuse cases
and unnecessary medication, but we really salute you.
If you are the lion share of these people and nurses that are taking care of our seniors
and doing a great, great job and a very, very tough job.
Yeah.
And one of the things actually I saw, I'm glad you said that was that it's a really
a thankless kind of job because traditionally people who work in elder care,
like the actual workers are treated like garbage by management.
It's just like an industry wide problem.
It's not surprising.
And that was actually one of those things from the Eden alternative was that workers
are treated with the respect that you want the workers to treat the patients with.
Right.
Like everyone is treated with respect and dignity, not just ideally the patients,
the workers too because they deserve it for the work they're doing.
That's amazing.
You got anything else about nursing homes?
I got nothing else.
We can do better.
Start thinking about stuff.
You know, I mean, you're never too young to get a plan in places.
That's all I'm saying.
Great point.
And since I said great point, it's time for listener mail.
I mean, maybe if you're like 25, you don't need to be thinking about your
nursing home options.
Okay.
But you know what I mean?
Well, not necessarily.
I'm glad you said that.
Your parents and grandparents.
I saw that 17% of nursing home residents were under 65.
So there are some younger residents in there that I think get overlooked a lot, like by us.
You know what you call those people?
What?
The party crowd.
That's right.
Oh, man.
That's going to be me, man.
What, the party crowd at the nursing home?
I'm going to be mixing it up like Scatman Crothers in the Twilight Zone movie.
I could see that.
Let's go play kick the can, everyone.
It's midnight.
It's time to take off that gown and live.
Good things happen.
You ready?
I'm ready.
Well, read it away.
I'm going to call this one Goots follow up.
Okay.
This is a good one about the great, great Steve Gutenberg.
I'm hoping someone throws this stuff his way, by the way.
He needs to know.
I can feel him right now listening to him.
All right.
This is from Dave.
Hey, guys, on a recent episode, you discussed the episode of party down,
in which the wonderful Steve Gutenberg allows the caters to throw a party at his house.
You knew this had come up before and wondered in what episode and what context.
By chance, the next day, I was scrolling randomly through older episodes and selected
barefoot running.
Boy, remember that one?
That was a rough one.
When in this episode, you started talking about Steve Gutenberg,
I had an intensely existential experience.
I was listening in the present to you talk about Steve Gutenberg in the past,
having listened in the more recent past to you also from a more recent past.
Talk about Steve Gutenberg, unable to remember the more distant past
in which you were talking about Steve Gutenberg,
which I was now listening to in the present,
which knowledge of the future in which you would again discuss Steve Gutenberg.
Is Steve Gutenberg the center of our cosmos, the nexus around
which space and time and God swirl until they become one?
The answer to this question, for which our souls cry out,
I can only speculate yes.
Yes. Anyway, I wanted to let you guys know in which previous episode
you featured Steve Gutenberg.
That's great.
As to the context, there was none.
You started talking about Steve Gutenberg for no discernible reason.
That sounds like me.
Which is as it should be.
And that is from Dave.
And Dave was very excited that this was getting read and he said,
to be honest, I had a little bit to drink when I wrote that and I didn't fully
remember the whole experience.
So, good job.
Oh, there you go.
Goods would be proud.
Yeah. I think Dave's going to be part of the mixing it up crowd at the nursing home too.
Kicking that can.
Yeah. Well, thanks a lot, Dave.
That was pretty great.
And if you have something great to tell us,
especially if it's in reference to something we said about something we said in the past,
we'd love to hear from you.
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