MedCity News November 15, 2024
Piyush Gupta and Laurie Schultz

Providing proactive and preventive health-focused living among younger, less affluent senior populations — and extending this into value-based care — just makes sense.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the entire baby boom generation will be age 65 or older by 2030. Many boomers will move into senior living environments. The National Investment Center for Seniors Housing and Care (NIC) estimates the value of investment-grade U.S. seniors housing and care property at $477.8 billion.

In recent decades, many seniors have opted to “age in place” in continuing care retirement communities spanning independent and assisted living, skilled nursing care, and memory care and offering various amenities including meals. Monthly pricing, according to NIC, averages $3,353, with entry fees averaging $410,000...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Patient / Consumer, Payment Models, Primary care, Provider, Value Based
SOFHA and Lumeris Partner to Enhance Value-Based Care in Tennessee and Virginia
Podcast: How the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Will Impact Family Caregivers w/ Jason Resendez
Finalized 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule advances CCM and value-based care with new advanced primary care management codes
Primary Care That’s Incentivized To Keep People Healthy
No link between telehealth and low-value services in primary care: study

Share This Article