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Why nursing homes and hospice are so expensive in the USA

Why nursing homes and hospice are so expensive in the USA

Baby Boomer will be the largest generation in American history that reaches the long -term care room. The oldest baby boomers will be defined next year between 1946 and 1964 as by Pew Research. The group will flood a managerial care room, which is already understaffed, underfunded and faced with political uncertainty.

“This room is completely under prepared for the number of older adults who need long -term care and the end of life supply,” said David Grabowski, professor of health policy at the Harvard Medical School. “We have historically rely on families. There will not be the number of family members we have had in the past.”

Now private equity wants to come onto the market. A recently carried out study between 2015 and 2022, 47 private equity companies bought 124 US hospice agencies. According to a study by the University of Pennsylvania, an estimated 75% of US hospice agencies are profit-oriented today.

“The hospice was founded as a non -profit movement of the base in which the majority of care provided a few decades ago of strictly non -profit organizations,” said Robert Tyler Braun, assistant professor at the Department of Health Policy and Economy at Weill Cornell Medicine. “In this current landscape, the majority of the hospice providers are profit.”

Nursing homes and long-term care facilities have long been a business target for private equity and publicly traded companies. Data made available to CNBC by coherent market views show that the same trends in the hospice care area have increased significantly since the 2010s.

Take a look at the video above to find out how these investments affect the room, who invests in it and what it means for seniors and their families.

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