It’s Not Your Parents Long-Term Services : A 30 Year Longitudinal Study of Ohio’s System
Robert Applebaum, Matt Nelson, John Bowblis

TL;DR
This study tracks 30 years of changes in Ohio's long-term care system, showing a shift from nursing homes to home and community-based services.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed longitudinal analysis of Ohio's long-term services system changes over three decades.
Findings
In 1993, 90% of older Ohioans needing long-term care used nursing homes, but by 2023, only 40% did.
Nursing home beds in Ohio decreased by 12% despite a 100,000 increase in the population over age 85.
Assisted living facilities in Ohio grew from under 200 in 1992 to over 800 in 2023.
Abstract
Using data from a longitudinal study of Ohio’s long-term services and supports system this paper documents the monumental system changes occurring over the last three decades. The study is based on a biennial survey of nursing homes and residential care facilities in the state (92% survey response rate) and records data on participants in Ohio’s home and community-based waiver program. Findings from the study document an almost un-imaginal change in how long-term services are provided. As an example, Ohio with a politically powerful nursing home industry, was widely dependent on nursing home care for older people age 60 and older needing long-term services in the early 1990’s. In 1993, nine in ten older people on Medicaid needing long-term services received such support in the nursing home setting. In 2023, with the expansion of home and community-based services, that proportion had…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
