6/11/2013

Seniors and Poverty


An alternative census estimate shows that more of America’s seniors than originally thought are living in poverty — and that means the poverty rate could spike under certain Medicare reforms, a new analysis finds.
 
The estimate, which takes into account health spending and regional cost of living, finds 1 in 7 seniors lives in poverty. It was previously thought that just 1 in 10 did.

And a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis released Monday breaks this poverty data down for seniors state by state — and notes that under some proposals to reform Medicare, these poverty levels would keep climbing.

“Under the supplemental poverty measure, which deducts health spending from income, poverty rates could increase if beneficiaries were required to pay higher cost sharing or premiums for Medicare,” the analysis states.

The supplemental poverty measure is the alternative estimate released by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2011.

The supplemental measure differs from the bureau’s official estimate in a number of key ways: It factors in out-of-pocket health spending, along with taxes and government benefits, and looks at poverty standards within the regional cost of living.

“The supplemental measure suggests that a greater share of seniors may already be struggling financially than is conveyed by the official measure,” Kaiser’s analysis states.

Kaiser finds the supplemental measure’s poverty rates for those 65 and older are higher in every state than the rates in the official estimate.     Read more:

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