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Uriah Logan (800x600)

Long Term Care Workers

Across America, nursing home workers are standing together with residents and advocates to improve standards, protect funding, and enhance the quality of care.

When the quality of nursing home jobs improves, studies show that the quality of nursing home care improves too. We also stand for Medicare and Medicaid to provide nursing homes with the funding necessary for safe staffing and adequate supplies. 

Medicaid is the nation’s only comprehensive health care safety net. For millions of older and disabled Americans, Medicaid is the only link to the most basic primary care. Medicaid does need to be modernized and made more efficient. For many states, annual increases in Medicaid spending have created a financial burden that has grown into a crisis.

Tight budgets and competing priorities are leading policymakers at both the state and federal levels to focus on options for reducing Medicaid outlays. Down the road, the real driver of Medicaid costs will be meeting the long term care needs of a rapidly aging nation. The current financing and delivery system impoverishes workers and consumers, places undue financial stress on state and local governments, and can even compromise the quality of the care provided. Far too many long term care workers lack adequate wages or access to health benefits.

This is no way to build a stable workforce that can provide the hands-on care our seniors will need. Failure to address these issues will leave us with a health care system that is unstable, poor quality, and which ultimately will hurt those it is supposed to protect. As a nation, we can do better.