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Saturday, December 2, 2023

'What to know about home care services'

 Most older Americans want to live at home as long as they can, but finding and affording the help they need often isn’t easy. There are severe shortages of home health aides in many parts of the country. Hiring them is costly. And most middle-class people will have to pay for home care themselves if they will need it for the long haul. Here’s a guide to locating home care for an older person.

After a fall or surgery, some older people will need short-term care at home from a nurse or therapist to help them recover. Medicare, the federal insurance program for those 65 and over, typically pays for this kind of home health care. A nurse can make sure a wound is healing properly, for example, while a physical therapist can help a person get back on their feet after a knee replacement.

But millions of older Americans need assistance over months or years to stay in their homes safely instead of moving to an assisted-living facility or nursing home. They may require help getting out of bed, taking a shower or going to the bathroom; getting to the doctor; shopping for groceries or making meals. They need a home health aide or personal care assistant, who may not have much, if any, medical training.

A wide range of services are available, whether it’s light housekeeping or hiring a private-duty nurse. Monica Moreno, senior director of care and support at the Alzheimer’s Association, suggests that you start by making a simple list of the kind of help you or your loved one needs and the number of hours each day or week required.

To identify agencies and services available in your area, Ms. Moreno recommends looking through a database of community resources provided jointly by the association and AARP, the nonprofit group representing older Americans, that is searchable by location. A list of agencies and a brief description of what they provide can be found under the category of home care. AARP also has a guide to finding a home health aide.

Image
A home health nurse in a red shirt with a lanyard smiles as she stands next to an elderly patient in his wheelchair in his living room.
Laurie Gregory, a patient care aide at Interim HealthCare, with a client, Dan Missroon, at his home in Summerville, S.C.Credit...Desiree Rios/The New York Times
A home health nurse in a red shirt with a lanyard smiles as she stands next to an elderly patient in his wheelchair in his living room.

While Medicare certifies and gives star ratings to home health agencies, the businesses that provide home care services are not subject to federal oversight or required to be licensed in every state. But a good agency will run background checks on its workers and give them training and support. If an aide calls in sick or quits, the agency can find a replacement. Some businesses also bond and insure their caregivers.

To choose an agency, Jennifer Battista, the chief operating officer for the Home Care Association of America, suggests inviting several of them to your home to conduct an assessment. Ask them how they vet their employees, whether they run criminal background checks, and whether their employees are required to know how to perform CPR or provide first aid. Be sure to ask for references for individual aides and talk to families who have employed them before.





















Once you pick an agency, you may want to try a few caregivers before finding the right one. The more information you share about your loved ones’ needs, the better the agency will be able to find an aide who’s a good fit. “It’s a lot like matchmaking,” Ms. Battista said.

Many families have success finding a caregiver by asking people they trust for recommendations, said Nicole Jorwic, a lawyer who is the chief of advocacy and campaigns for Caring Across Generations, an advocacy organization. “Cast a wide net, post on private social media and ask family and friends,” she said, noting that she found caregivers for her grandparents by asking people in her community.

Churches and other religious institutions, local charities and community organizations may also have suggestions. A primary care doctor or local medical practice may have experience with specific home care agencies or know of individual caregivers. If you decide to hire someone privately, you should be sure to do a thorough background check and talk to families who have employed that person before. Family Caregiver Alliance, a California nonprofit group, provides a guide.

Many home agencies erroneously say they can’t send a home aide and will tell a doctor’s office or patient that Medicare won’t pay for one. “This is a longstanding problem,” said Judith A. Stein, the executive director for the Center for Medicare Advocacy, a nonprofit legal group.

While it’s true that Medicare doesn’t pay for long-term care, it may pay for an aide as part of a patient’s care plan if that person also qualifies for a home nurse or therapist for a time. Agencies often refuse to provide someone because Medicare pays a lump sum per patient, meaning the agency isn’t paid more for sending an aide in addition to the nurse or therapist. Talk to the doctor about whether an aide is necessary so one can be specified in the care plan presented to the agency.


Medicare patients are getting fewer visits from an aide now than they did some 25 years ago, and the center is now appealing a judge’s dismissal of a lawsuit claiming that Medicare, under the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, discouraged the use of aides for thousands of people. The judge did acknowledge that many people were not getting care.

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A close-up view of a hand on the back of an elderly woman, who is wearing a light blue windbreaker and being helped around the yard. Her care giver at right is out of focus, but an arm can be seen also helping her.
Robin Lee, center, who has had dementia for about a decade, took a walk through her yard with the help of her son, left, and a dementia care specialist, Ronnie Smalls, right.Credit...Desiree Rios/The New York Times
A close-up view of a hand on the back of an elderly woman, who is wearing a light blue windbreaker and being helped around the yard. Her care giver at right is out of focus, but an arm can be seen also helping her.

Under Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor that provides long-term care, the cost of an aide is often covered as an alternative to a nursing home. But the shortage of workers can make it difficult to find one even if you qualify. Families complain of frequent no-shows, and the low wages paid under the program mean that agencies often have high turnover among workers.

Some private Medicare Advantage plans offer home care as a supplemental benefit, and it’s possible that some help will be covered under a long-term care insurance policy. If you or your loved one is a veteran, it’s worth checking with Veterans Affairs to see if it will pay for home care.

If you decide to pay privately, the hourly rates charged by agencies vary widely, and some agencies may not be able to fill a position for just a few hours a week. In San Jose, Calif., half of the agencies charged more than $37 an hour for a home health aide in 2021, according to Genworth, the long-term care insurer. Across the country, agencies are charging roughly $27 an hour with a little more than half of that going to pay their workers.




There are no good estimates for how much people working for themselves may charge. You could save some money because there is no middleman taking a cut, but some independent caregivers charge roughly the same as an agency.

If the agency you’re using is licensed by your state, you can check with the government office overseeing it if you run into a problem. You can also file a complaint with various state agencies, including the state health department.

State or local government agencies that focus on aging or nonprofit groups can provide information. You can also try the eldercare locator. The Alzheimer’s Association also has some advice for finding caregivers, and it offers a 24-hour help line, 1-800-272-3900.

Family caregivers should also think about taking advantage of respite care to give themselves a break from time to time. Depending on the circumstances, insurance may cover the cost, and there are local government and community groups that will also pay for an aide for a brief period. Churches and other organizations may also provide respite care.

Reed Abelson covers the business of health care, focusing on health insurance and how financial incentives affect the delivery of medical care. She has been a reporter for The Times since 1995

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/02/health/home-care-explainer.html

'China's respiratory illness rise due to known pathogens, official says'

 China's surge in respiratory illness is caused by known pathogens and there is no sign of new infectious diseases, a health official said on Saturday as the country faces its first full winter since lifting strict COVID-19 restrictions.

The spike in illness in the country where COVID emerged in late 2019 attracted the spotlight when the World Health Organization sought information last week, citing a report on clusters of undiagnosed pneumonia in children.

Chinese authorities will open more paediatric outpatient clinics, seek to ensure more elderly people and children receive flu vaccines and encourage people to wear masks and wash their hands, Mi Feng, an official with China's National Health Commission, told a press conference.

Doctors in China and experts abroad have not expressed alarm about China's outbreaks, given that many other countries saw similar increases in respiratory diseases after easing pandemic measures, which China did at the end of last year.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/1-chinas-respiratory-illness-rise-083956088.html

Jewish tech executives met with TikTok CEO over pro-Palestinian bias concerns

 A group of 40 mostly Jewish tech leaders and business executives confronted TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew over their concerns about antisemitism and the allegedly disproportionate popularity of pro-Palestine videos on the app, according to multiple reports.

During the Zoom meeting, held last month, the executives reportedly presented an analysis of TikTok data during the Israel-Hamas war and pushed for answers on what they felt was an “unexplainable discrepancy” in content that favored Palestinians, Fortune reported.

The analysis was backed by 90 co-signers, including Tinder co-founder Sean Rad, ex-Meta chief revenue officer David Fischer and Bonobos co-founder Andy Dunn, according to Bloomberg.

“For every view of pro-Israel posts, there are about 54 views of pro-Palestine posts,” one of the executives, AIX Ventures partner Anthony Goldbloom, told Fortune. “If TikTok was just a mirror reflecting back what people believe, it shouldn’t be a 54:1 ratio.”

The executives also raised concerns about the rise of antisemitic violence and nudged TikTok to reconsider its thinking on which videos violate its guidelines.

The meeting, which was said to be “cordial,” occurred during a period of renewed criticism over the China-owned app. Chew was reportedly one of multiple TikTok executives in attendance.

“This is an extremely difficult time for millions of people around the world and in our TikTok community,” a TikTok spokesperson said in a statement to Bloomberg. “We feel it’s important to meet with and listen to creators, human rights experts, civil society and other stakeholders to help guide our ongoing work to keep our global community safe.”

TikTok did not immediately return a request for comment on the meeting.

TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew is pictured.AP

The spread of inflammatory content related to the Israel-Hamas war has provided fodder for critics who allege that the Chinese Communist Party uses the app as a propaganda tool to sway Americans and capture their data – charges that TikTok has denied.

As The Post reported, a number of Republican lawmakers renewed their calls for TikTok to be banned in the US due to their concerns about the spread of anti-Israel posts on the platform. TikTok said there was “no basis to these false claims” that pro-Palestine videos was spreading more rapidly.

The uproar intensified in mid-November after TikTok influencers posted a number of viral videos in which they praised 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden’s 2002 “letter to America” – in which the terrorist leader described the creation of Israel as a “crime which must be erased” and referred to the AIDS epidemic was “a Satanic American Invention.”

Executives decried a rise of antisemitic incidents on the US.TikTok

TikTok had pushed back on criticism in a Nov. 13 blog post that slammed what the company described as “misinformation and mischaracterization about how the TikTok platform actually operates.”

The company said it has worked quickly to take down any videos that violate its policy against hateful content.

“Blunt comparisons of hashtags is severely flawed and misrepresentative of the activity on TikTok,” TikTok said.

“For example, the hashtag #standwithIsrael may be associated with fewer videos than #freePalestine, but it has 68% more views per video in the US, which means more people are seeing the content,” the post added.

The company has also described claims that pro-Palestinian videos have spread more than pro-Israel videos as “simply false.”

Lawmakers blasted TikTok as Osama Bin Laden’s ‘Letter to America’ got viral praise.TikTok/@lynetteadkins

TikTok isn’t the only social media platform to face scrutiny over its response to the Israel-Hamas conflict. A growing number of blue-chip firms, including Disney and Apple, have paused advertising on X due to concerns about antisemitic content – including problematic posts by the company’s owner, Elon Musk.

Musk fired back in an already-infamous interview at the New York Times’ DealBook summit this week, telling companies that yanked ad dollars to “go f—k yourself” and specifically calling out Disney CEO Bob Iger.

Musk has denied that the problem is worse on X than it is on other social media platforms.

https://nypost.com/2023/12/01/business/jewish-tech-executives-met-with-tiktok-ceo-over-pro-palestinian-bias-concerns-reports/

What we know about China’s new pneumonia outbreak so far

 News of an outbreak of a strange “white lung” pneumonia hospitalizing kids in northern China is more than enough to start the rest of us worrying.

That fear is well-warranted, given China’s long and continuing history of hiding public-health realities from the rest of the world.

Especially now that similar illnesses — with as yet unknown causes — have broken out on US soil in Ohio.

So far (thankfully) there’s no direct evidence of a new pathogen or a lab leak here; if anything, in fact, just the opposite.

Yet the fear alone — recalling the time in early 2020 when China was denying the scope of a new outbreak and the World Health Organization was backing this false reality — is certainly justified and terrifying.

We simply can’t trust any public-health info coming out of China.

We couldn’t trust their public health pronouncements back then, and we can’t trust them now.

The vision of an international consortium of scientists (including China) informing the world in real time that Tony Fauci and others envisioned two decades ago has never succeeded.

So what is happening now? If not another new killer virus, then what?

For one thing, it’s respiratory infection season in northern China and in the northern hemisphere around the world, and there are multiple pathogens circulating including, RSV, influenza, adenoviruses, strep and COVID.

The lockdowns that were reinstituted in China in 2022, and lasted until late in the year, have led to millions of people encountering these bugs for the first time in a few years, or in the case of infants, for the first time ever.

This may well have caused a delayed immune response (immune pause), as it takes the immune system longer to recognize something it hasn’t seen in a while, or never seen, and more severe illness results.

But the main problem causing the increase in childhood hospitalizations in China, Denmark and the Netherlands (where lockdowns also lasted into 2022) appears to be a tiny bacteria known as mycoplasma.

The mycoplasma problem is worsened because of a growing antibiotic resistance due to overuse of the antibiotic azithromycin (Zpack).

Whereas this common infection in the late fall is usually mild and treatable with antibiotics, the resistant form is more likely to cause severe illness, including “walking pneumonia.”

In Denmark, 541 cases were reported last week alone, and many more were missed. 

Here in the United States, we are just starting to see the problem emerge.

Warren County, Ohio, reported 142 cases of childhood pneumonia last week, and the state has yet to determine if the cause is mycoplasma or a combination of pathogens — though I wouldn’t be surprised if it is mycoplasma.

Indeed, mycoplasma may well be coming to a state near you, and though there are other antibiotics regularly used to treat it, including tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones, they are not used widely in children for fear of side effects.

Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have continued to up their game in terms of tracking respiratory infections.

Thanks to CDC, we know that our flu season is still early with only 12,000 hospitalizations nationwide, and while the agency estimates that RSV (which is peaking now) leads to 58,000 to 80,000 hospitalizations a year, it too is not likely the main cause of the pneumonia hospitalizations in China or Europe, which are occurring in older children.

Unfortunately, I am not as confident in worldwide surveillance and transparency, nor should anyone be.

And even if the current surge of childhood pneumonias is due to the well-known bacteria mycoplasma and the longtime overuse of old antibiotics, it by no means indicates the next mysterious pneumonia won’t be from a leaky lab in China where risky research continues.

Fear and distrust remain warranted.

Marc Siegel, MD, is a clinical professor of medicine and medical director of Doctor Radio at NYU Langone Health and a Fox News medical analyst.

https://nypost.com/2023/12/01/opinion/what-we-know-about-chinas-new-pneumonia-outbreak-so-far/

Jan. 6 Committee Tapes Have Disappeared, Says House Republican

 by Savannah Hulsey Pointer via The Epoch Times,

The disappearance of videotapes of witness interviews conducted by the Democratic-led House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack has alarmed the chairman of the House panel that replaced it.

Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), who chairs the House Administration Oversight Subcommittee that is currently investigating security lapses connected to the Capitol riot and potential ramifications for upcoming criminal trials, is questioning the disappearance of the video evidence.

“All of the videotapes of all depositions are gone,” Mr. Loudermilk told the "Just the News, No Noise" television show Thursday night.

“We found out about this early in the investigation when I received a call from someone who was looking for some information off one of the videotapes, and we started searching, and we had none,” Mr. Loudermilk explained.

“I wrote a letter to Bennie Thompson asking for them. And he confirmed that they did not preserve those types. He didn't feel that they had to."

According to Mr. Loudermilk, the videotapes met the requirements for congressional evidence under House rules because some of the segments were shown at hearings, and the now-defunct J6 committee, led by Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss), ought to have kept all of the recordings.

According to House rules, you have to preserve any data and information and documents that are used in an official proceeding, which they did. They (J6 Democrats) actually aired portions of these tapes on their televised hearings, which means they had to keep those," Mr. Loudermilk said.

"Yet he chose not to."

The lawmaker explained why he believes this is an important piece of evidence to maintain, citing that some witnesses, such as former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson, have changed their testimony over time, and even transcripts might not be sufficient to obtain a full understanding of the testimony.

"I want to see what her body language is when she gave her original testimony," Mr. Loudermilk said of the former White House staffer. "I want to see what her voice inflection is, was she very confident in what she was saying at that time, but then later decided to change it?

"This is why it's so important that we have those videotapes and I believe that's probably why we don't have them ... I believe they exist somewhere. We've just got to find where all these videos are.

Mr. Thompson's office did not immediately respond to The Epoch Times' request for comment.

The disclosure may also affect the criminal proceedings that are taking place in federal court in Washington, and state court in Georgia, where former President Donald Trump and his associates are accused of crimes connected to the events of Jan. 6, 2021.

A court recently denied President Trump's legal team's request for specific material from the Jan. 6 committee. District of Columbia Judge Tanya Chutkan turned down the former president, saying his requests were essentially a fishing expedition.

In her seven-page ruling, she reprimanded President Trump for his demands, claiming that they were too broad and too unclear. It further claimed that he was abusing his authority by trying to get information that was available through other channels in violation of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17.

"Defendant has not met his burdens with respect to his proposed Rule 17(c) subpoenas," Judge Chutkan said.

"He has not sufficiently justified his requests for either the 'Missing Materials' themselves or the other five categories of documents related to them."

The judge went on to quote United States v. Cuthbertson, adding that the "broad scope of the records that defendant seeks, and his vague description of their potential relevance, resemble less 'a good faith effort to obtain identified evidence' than they do 'a general fishing expedition that attempts to use the [Rule 17(c) subpoena] as a discovery device.'"

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/jan-6-committee-tapes-have-disappeared-says-house-republican