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Sanford
announces elderly health care initiative September 3, 2003 SPARTANBURG, S.C.
- South
Carolina senior citizens and disabled residents soon will have more choice
in deciding how their Medicaid money can be spent. Gov.
Mark Sanford announced the pilot program "S.C. Choice" on a visit
to a Spartanburg nursing home Wednesday. Under
the program, people getting benefits from the Department of Health and Human
Services' Community Long-term Care Program now can use their Medicaid money
in alternate ways. Before,
if seniors needed at-home health care, they had to go through a
state-approved agency. Now they can use their Medicaid money to have a
friend, relative or neighbor assist when they're most needed, said Health
and Human Services Department spokeswoman Kathy Mayfield-Smith. South
Carolina is the first state to receive federal approval for the program. It
will begin in Spartanburg, Cherokee and Union counties and expand statewide
by next year. The
new program will be beneficial for 86-year-old Roberta Rentz, according to
her daughter Beth Grant of Woodruff. Rentz
comes to the Mountainview Medical Day Care Program in Spartanburg three days
a week, and gets in-home care twice a week. "Mom's
needs fluctuate," Grant said. "There are times when she may need
more in-home care - at nights and weekends." Grant
said her family has been locked in by the number of hours an in-home health
care worker can visit. The new program will give the family flexibility, and
give Grant a break on evenings or weekends when a health care worker
normally is not available. The
program gives seniors the freedom to live comfortably at home, delaying the
need to move into a nursing home, said state Health and Human Services
Department Director Robbie Kerr. For
example, seniors enrolled in the new program could use their Medicaid money
to buy lumber and have friends build a wheelchair ramp. Currently, seniors
would have to go through an approved contractor and a good deal of
bureaucratic red tape, Kerr said. "Anything
we can do that empowers seniors and disabled people with choices that let
them stay in their homes for longer periods of time is only going to enhance
quality of life in South Carolina," Sanford said. It
also is expected to save the state money. Community-based care costs the
state about 42 percent less than institutional care, Kerr said. The
Health and Human Services Department would assure the Medicaid funds are
spent properly by assigning agents to assist patients and monitor the
process, Kerr said. Those duties will be assigned to current agency
employees, he said. About
11,000 seniors and disabled residents are eligible for the program. Senior
advocates support the program. "It's
a tremendous opportunity for seniors in South Carolina to make their own
choices about how to live their lives comfortably," said Tom Lloyd,
speaker of the Silver-Haired Legislature, which sets priorities for
legislation affecting senior citizens. Copyright ©
2002 Global Action on Aging
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