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      Connecticut's 'Money Follows The Person' Yields Positive Results For Transitioning People Out Of Institutions.

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          Abstract

          A centerpiece of federal and state efforts to rebalance long-term services and supports to enhance consumer choice and contain costs, the federal Money Follows the Person Rebalancing Demonstration helps qualified individuals living in institutions make the transition to life in the community. The Connecticut Money Follows the Person program is an unusually rich source of data, with information on the 2,262 people who transitioned to the community under that state's program during 2008-14. Responses to participant surveys completed before and six, twelve, and twenty-four months after transition indicate that, for the majority of respondents who remained in the community, quality of life and life satisfaction improved significantly after transition, and they stayed high. About half of the participants visited hospitals or emergency departments after transition; however, only 14 percent had returned to an institution one year after transition. Predictors of reinstitutionalization included some not previously observed: mental health disability, difficulties with family members before transition, and not exercising choice and control in daily life. These and other findings suggest multiple ways in which policy makers can target efforts to strengthen transition programs that can meaningfully improve people's lives while containing costs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Health Aff (Millwood)
          Health affairs (Project Hope)
          Health Affairs (Project Hope)
          1544-5208
          0278-2715
          Oct 2015
          : 34
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Julie Robison (jrobison@uhch.edu) is an associate professor in the Center on Aging at UConn Health, in Farmington, Connecticut.
          [2 ] Martha Porter is a research associate in the Center on Aging at UConn Health.
          [3 ] Noreen Shugrue is a research associate in the Center on Aging at UConn Health.
          [4 ] Alison Kleppinger is a research associate in the Center on Aging at UConn Health.
          [5 ] Dawn Lambert is project director of Medicaid Rebalancing Initiatives in the Division of Health Services, Connecticut Department of Social Services, in Hartford.
          Article
          34/10/1628
          10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0244
          26438737
          0ff1031f-e5c3-4a22-9312-326876f9d678
          History

          Health Reform,Elderly,Quality Of Care,Medicaid,Long-Term Care

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