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February 06, 2012
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Wills & Trusts News

 

Dramatic Decline in Disability Continues for Older Americans

Disability among older Americans is declining dramatically -- and at an accelerating pace, according to the National Long Term Care Survey (NLTCS). Moreover, the percentage of people age 65 and older with disabilities fell 1.6 percent per year from 1989-1994 and 2.6 percent annually from 1994-1999.

The improvements also are noteworthy for a newly observed decline in disability among black Americans and a decrease of at least 200,000 in the number of people estimated to live in nursing homes.

Researchers also are studying the broader implications of the decline in disability. For example, can continued reductions in disability help control costs for Medicare, Medicaid, or other health care expenditures? Kenneth G. Manton and XiLiang Gu examine one aspect of this question in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences report, looking at the reduction in nursing home residence as one possible area of cost savings. If a nursing home stay costs about $47,200 per year, they note, the reduction in nursing home stays may have avoided several billion dollars in costs from 1994-1999.

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  News Room  
 
Governor Ehrlich Launches $90M in Disability Initiatives
Governor Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., today announced his FY 2007 disability budget initiatives of nearly $90 million across State agencies, designed to...
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More Than 50 Million Americans Report Some Level of Disability
About 18 percent of Americans in 2002 said they had a disability, and 12 percent had a severe disability, according to a report released today by t...
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Americans With Disabilities Act Transforms Lives
Washington -- While court decisions since Brown v. Board of Education and laws like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 assured that African-American Rosa...
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Common Terms

 


Today's Terms

Optional Supplementation

Definition:
The payments made by States to help persons meet needs not fully covered by Federal SSI benefits. The State determines whether it will make a payment, to whom, and in what amount.

Social Security and Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)

Definition:
Monthly cash benefit administered by the federal Social Security Administration (SSA) to retired or disabled workers and their qualified dependents. Beneficiaries must be 62 years of age or older, or disabled, and have enough work "credits" to be qualified.

SSI State Supplement

Definition:
A cash benefit authorized by Ch. 49.77 and 49.775, Wis. Stats. This benefit is intended to supplement the federal SSI benefit payment. Eligibility is based on current receipt of federal SSI benefits or special "grandfathered" status as a recipient of the state supplement only.

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Resource Center

 

 

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Hot Topics

 

  • Creating A Trust
  • Types Of Trusts
  • Modifying A Willl
  • Types Of Wills
  • Disinheriting Family
  • Selecting An Executor
  • Protecting Assests

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Wisconsin Wills & Trusts Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need a Wills & Trusts Attorney you should contact our Wills & Trusts Attorneys as soon as possible:

  • Appleton
  • Beloit
  • Burlington
  • Chippewa Falls
  • De Pere
  • Eau Claire
  • Fond Du Lac
  • Franklin
  • Green Bay
  • Janesville
  • Kenosha
  • La Crosse
  • Madison
  • Manitowoc
  • Marshfield
  • Menomonee Falls
  • Milwaukee
  • Neenah
  • New Berlin
  • Oak Creek
  • Oconomowoc
  • Oshkosh
  • Racine
  • Sheboygan
  • Stevens Point
  • Sun Prairie
  • Superior
  • Waukesha
  • Wausau
  • West Bend
  • Wisconsin Rapids
 


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