Yearly Long Term Care Costs Increase 15% Since 2004 to Nearly $75,000 in 2007 According to Annual Study by Genworth Financial
Additional Polling Shows 75% of Americans Have No Long Term Care Plans
RICHMOND, Va., April 3 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Genworth Financial's (NYSE: GNW) 2007 Cost of Care Survey found the average national cost of care for nursing homes, assisted living facilities and in the home has steadily increased over the past four years and has reached new highs that exceed most household incomes in the U.S.(1) The rising costs of long term care may, therefore, present difficulties for many Americans should they need to pay for long term care out of their own pockets.
A separate national poll conducted by Public Opinion Strategies for Genworth Financial with input from the Alzheimer's Association found that 75 percent of Americans have made no long term care plans and 59 percent expressed concern about being able to pay for long term care. Almost half of the respondents (44 percent) incorrectly believe that Medicare or their private health insurance will pay for their long-term care needs. In actuality, health insurance and the federal Medicare program do not generally cover long-term care.
Genworth's annual benchmark study surveyed more than 11,000 nursing homes, assisted living facilities and home care providers in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. It was conducted by CareScout between January and February 2007 to gain a comprehensive view of long-term care expenses. The 2007 Cost of Care Survey, which offers national, state, and local cost information is available at http://www.genworth.com.
According to the 2007 Cost of Care Survey, the average national cost in 2007 of a single year in a private nursing home room is $74,806. To put this into context, one year in a private nursing home room costs nearly double the average full 4-year college degree in the U.S., including tuition, room and board (College Board's national average for public colleges is $51,184 for four years, making a single year in a nursing home 46 percent more expensive).
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