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by Jane Sneddon Little
July/August 1992
This article presents estimates of the degree to which
individuals paying privately for nursing home services
are being asked to subsidize their state’s Medicaid
program. Recently published data permit making some
first rough estimates of the extent of this activity.
Although these crude measures must be interpreted with
great care, the data suggest that cost-shifting activity
is widespread and sizable.
Because, as the article shows, cost-shifting activity
undermines policy makers’ efforts to regulate
nursing home costs, the article suggests that private
patients should not be asked to subsidize Medicaid’s
long-term care program; all comparably disabled individuals
in a given institution should be charged the same rate.
The author concludes by explaining why her findings
bolster the case for including long-term care coverage
in Medicare.
Full-text article 
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