Medicaid is the primary payer for nursing home care, covering over 60% of all residents on a typical day. Setting nursing home reimbursement rates too high can lead to excess profits at taxpayers’ expense. Yet, nursing homes need appropriate reimbursement to invest in nursing staff and other quality improvement initiatives.

This session, presented during the LeadingAge Leadership Summit by two researchers at the LeadingAge LTSS Center @UMass Boston, will provide new information on the relationship between Medicaid nursing home reimbursement rates and reported care costs.

Marc Cohen, LTSS Center co-director, and Edward Miller, professor and chair of the Department of Gerontology at UMass Boston, will share findings from their independent assessment of Medicaid reimbursement and the costs associated with Medicaid-reimbursed nursing home care. Their setting-by-setting analysis, funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, revealed that the average nursing home receives only 82 cents in reimbursement for each dollar it spends providing care to a Medicaid recipient.

Visit the Leadership Summit website.