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Gene Hackman's death offers a vivid example of the choices older adults and their family caregivers need to consider such as where to live and how to develop a network of support, Andrea Cohen, board chair of the Caregiver Action Network and founder of HouseWorks, said. Home care can play a role in these conversations, Anne Tumlinson, founder and CEO of ATI Advisory and founder of the family caregiver group Daughterhood, said. Home care must treat family caregivers as one of their key stakeholders, along with the client and employee, Cohen said. When she started HouseWorks, a personal care company, family caregivers were invisible. No longer. Family caregiver training is much better than it used to be. Public policy also has shifted so that, through the new GUIDE Model, Medicare now recognizes the important role that family caregivers of loved ones with dementia face, Tumlinson said. Going forward, home care companies need to be strategic and provide a range of services, such as home modifications, for their clients. Tumlinson agreed. The most successful home-based care models are interdisciplinary and scalable, she said. And they must be data-driven, Cohen added. Providing for family caregivers is essential. Taking care of them helps to solve problems for the hospital and healthcare plan and other parts of the healthcare system.Follow us on social media:X: @McKHomeCareFacebook: McKnight's Home CareLinkedIn: McKnight's Home CareInstagram: mcknights_homecareFollow Caregiver Action Network on social media:Facebook: Caregiver Action NetworkLinkedIn: Caregiver Action NetworkInstagram:@caregiveractionFollow ATI Advisory on social media:LinkedIn: ATI AdvisoryFollow Daughterhood on social media:Facebook: DaughterhoodInstagram: Daughterhood
In today's Bonus policy episode, Howard Gleckman joins Anne in discussing policy changes in 2023. Howard is a published author and writer whose professional expertise is founded on long-term care, health care, elder care, tax policy, budget policy and economics. Howard was also a senior correspondent in the Washington bureau of Business Week. In our episode today, we discuss some of the major policy happenings in 2023 - the GUIDE program, CMS staffing standards, the decision to cover Leqembi and more. SHOW NOTES Howard Gleckman.com
The challenge of caring through a broken healthcare system is something every caregiver lives through. My guests today, Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson and Daughterhood Interim CEO Andrea Cohen know those challenges personally and professionally. Today we discuss their personal experiences as caregivers, what drives them to create change, the importance of being able to find practical resources and support - and how Daughterhood can help. SHOW NOTES
The challenge of caring through a broken healthcare system is something every caregiver lives through. My guests today, Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson and Daughterhood Interim CEO Andrea Cohen know those challenges personally and professionally. Today we discuss their personal experiences as caregivers, what drives them to create change, the importance of being able to find practical resources and support - and how Daughterhood can help. SHOW NOTES
David C. Grabowski, PhD, is a professor of health care policy in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School. His research examines the economics of aging with a particular interest in the areas of long-term care and post-acute care. From 2017-2023 Dr. Grabowski was a member of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), which is an independent agency established to advise the U.S. Congress on issues affecting the Medicare program. He joins Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson and I in discussing how policy affects nursing home quality, the fragmentation of payments in the LTC system, staffing requirements, accountability and how to advocate for change. SHOW NOTES
For this special 100th episode of the Career Relaunch® podcast, Anne Tumlinson, ATI Advisory CEO and Daughterhood founder joins us again to share her reflections, perspectives, and lessons learned since being the very first guest I interviewed for this show seven years ago. Then, in the Mental Fuel® segment, I'll share my top takeaways about managing the dynamics of career change that I've learned from the guests on this show.
David C. Grabowski, PhD, is a professor of health care policy in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School. His research examines the economics of aging with a particular interest in the areas of long-term care and post-acute care. From 2017-2023 Dr. Grabowski was a member of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), which is an independent agency established to advise the U.S. Congress on issues affecting the Medicare program. He joins Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson and I in discussing how policy affects nursing home quality, the fragmentation of payments in the LTC system, staffing requirements, accountability and how to advocate for change. SHOW NOTES
Today Anne and Rosanne are joined by Karen Kavanaugh senior director, Strategic Initiatives at the Rosalynn Carter Institute for Caregivers. She leads the development and launch of the institute's initiatives designed to expand supports to strengthen caregiver health, resilience, and wellbeing. Her portfolio includes Working While Caring, and initiatives designed to deepen the research on effective workplace supports for caregivers and to expand access to those supports. She is also leading RCI's caregiving typology and bereavement initiatives. We discuss the challenges that affect caregiving employees, employer viewpoints and ideas and policy changes that can help. SHOW NOTES
This is a bonus episode of Daughterhood The Podcast. At Daughterhood, we hear your challenges in navigating the healthcare system and how it can be both frustrating and disheartening. In each of these bonus episodes, I have the pleasure of speaking with Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson where we will bring the caregiving conversation to a different level with change leaders and policy experts. Today with speak with Dr. Joanne Lynn. A geriatrician, hospice physician, health services researcher, quality improvement advisor, and policy advocate who has Published over 300 peer-reviewed medical research and policy articles. Our conversation covers the looming crisis, the unpredictability of care, the necessity of change in policy regarding long-term care, how older Americans are viewed, and strategies all of us can use to change policy. SHOW NOTES Dr Joanne Lynn Daughterhood
This is a bonus episode of Daughterhood The Podcast. At Daughterhood, we hear your challenges in navigating the healthcare system and how it can be both frustrating and disheartening. In each of these bonus episodes, I have the pleasure of speaking with Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson where we will bring the caregiving conversation to a different level with change leaders and policy experts. Today with speak with Dr. Joanne Lynn. A geriatrician, hospice physician, health services researcher, quality improvement advisor, and policy advocate who has Published over 300 peer-reviewed medical research and policy articles. Our conversation covers the looming crisis, the unpredictability of care, the necessity of change in policy regarding long-term care, how older Americans are viewed, and strategies all of us can use to change policy. SHOW NOTES Dr Joanne Lynn Daughterhood
Here at Daughterhood, we receive numerous questions regarding governmental policy, and the myriad of ways it affects the healthcare system and each of us both as patient and as caregiver. It was my pleasure to speak with two experts in the field and friends of the podcast - Howard Gleckman Senior Fellow at The Urban Institute as well as a columnist at Forbes, editor of TaxVox Blog for the Tax Policy Center and author of Caring for our parents. And creator of Daughterhood Anne Tumlinson who is also the Founder and CEO of ATI Advisory a national research and consulting firm that shapes public policy and business strategy to reform care delivery for individuals with complex care needs and their families. We discuss many issues like the challenges of trying to change policy, the importance of lawmakers hearing and understanding the challenges caregivers face, how policy shapes the care we receive and the importance of making our voices heard. Daughterhood.org HowardGleckman.com
Here at Daughterhood, we receive numerous questions regarding governmental policy, and the myriad of ways it affects the healthcare system and each of us both as patient and as caregiver. It was my pleasure to speak with two experts in the field and friends of the podcast - Howard Gleckman Senior Fellow at The Urban Institute as well as a columnist at Forbes, editor of TaxVox Blog for the Tax Policy Center and author of Caring for our parents. And creator of Daughterhood Anne Tumlinson who is also the Founder and CEO of ATI Advisory a national research and consulting firm that shapes public policy and business strategy to reform care delivery for individuals with complex care needs and their families. We discuss many issues like the challenges of trying to change policy, the importance of lawmakers hearing and understanding the challenges caregivers face, how policy shapes the care we receive and the importance of making our voices heard. Daughterhood.org HowardGleckman.com
Our guest today is a real political maverick as well as an incredible business leader. Anne Tumlinson started her career in government working as a healthcare advisor to the one and only Congressman John Lewis. Today, she is the Founder and CEO of ATI Advisory, and the founder of Daughterhood. Both organizations aim to address aging and disability issues in our country. Unfortunately, there are a lot of issues. In this episode, Anne walks us through the scope of the problem, but she also talks about a lot of solutions. And some of these solutions, she's already built. Do you have any thoughts? Please email us at hello@rosenmaninstitute.org. We post new episodes every Monday. “The Health Technology Podcast” is produced by Herminio Neto, hosted by Christine Winoto, and engineered by Andrew John Rojek
Anne Tumlinson, founder of Daughterhood.orgCovid-19 had taken the lives of 181,000 people in nursing homes, assisted living and other long-term care facilities ….. one-third of the national total. The troubles have intensified a spotlight on long-running questions about how communities can do a better job supporting people who need care but want to live outside an institutional setting.I explore these questions in a new New York Times Retiring column posted this weekend. I interviewed a couple dozen experts for the story in areas ranging from health care to housing, urban planning and health care. I’m planning a series of podcast follow-ups to dive deeper into different aspects of the story. My podcast guest this week is one of those experts. Anne Tumlinson is one of the nation’s top authorities in public policy on caregiving, having worked for years on Capitol Hill and in the private sector as an analyst, researcher and consultant. She is the founder of ATI Advisory, a Washington, D.C.-based research and advisory services firm that works to reform health and long-term care delivery and financing for the nation’s frail and vulnerable older adults. Daughterhood.orgBut she also is the founder of Daughterhood.org, a fascinating national network of support circles for caregivers. Earlier in her career, Anne worked as a healthcare advisor to the late Congressman John Lewis (D-GA), and then as the lead for Medicaid program oversight at the Office of Management and Budget. I asked Anne for her thoughts on the challenges people face when they need to make caregiving decisions for loved ones, most often on short timelines and without adequate preparation or knowledge — and, how that affects the choices that need to be made between institutional and home-based care.Listen to the podcast by clicking the player icon at the top of the newsletter. The podcast also can be found on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Stitcher.Biden’s big bet on expansion of home-based careMy New York Times column notes that the recently-approved American Rescue Act contains a very large ($12.7 billion) increase in federal spending on home and community-based services through the Medicaid program. Moreover, the $2 trillion infrastructure plan proposed by the Administration this week includes an addition $400 billion over eight years to bolster long-term care outside of institutional settings.Howard Gleckman notes in a Forbes.com post that this latest proposal is an important step forward - but that it does nott address the nation’s broader long-term care problems:It focuses on only one piece the puzzle—Medicaid HCBS. And it still won’t provide sufficient services for many older adults and younger people with disabilities who rely on Medicaid for their care. It doesn’t boost funding for a long list of non-Medicaid federal programs that are critical to those living at home. And it does nothing at all for middle-income Americans who are unable to pay for long-term care insurance but are not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid. The rest of the Washington agenda on retirementCongress recently rescued the retirements of more than 1 million workers who faced the prospect that the pensions they earned and had been promised might evaporate. The American Rescue Act allocated $86 billion for grants to struggling multiemployer pension funds that would allow them to continue paying full benefits. The law authorizes the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) to make the grants, which do not need to be repaid.The generosity of the move came as a surprise. Previously, Democrats had been pushing a package of low-interest loans to aid the multiemployer funds, while Republicans wanted to boost insurance premiums paid by employers, add new premiums paid by plan participants, and force more conservative accounting assumptions. But the Democratic majority is looking at things a bit differently this year. And so long as Congress is casting a benign eye on the well-being of these pensioners, I have a short list of other “must-do” retirement items for the consideration of lawmakers. And these are reforms that will impact a much larger - and more demographically diverse - group of retirees now and in the years ahead than the multiemployer plan fix.My list includes:Expansion of Social SecurityReduction of the Medicare eligibility ageFixing long-term care insuranceBuilding affordable senior housingLearn more in my Reuters column this week.Subscribe to the newsletterYou’re subscribed to occasional, short posts sent to my free list. Sign up for the paid edition to receive my weekly in-depth report, plus online access to my series of retirement guides. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at retirementrevised.substack.com/subscribe
Meet family caregiver and healthy aging advocate Anne Tumlinson. Anne’s experiences caring for her grandma led her to work in the aging industry and start a national support group for caregivers called Daughterhood. In this episode, we talk about how we are coping with life’s disruptions, what employers can do to support working caregivers, setting family priorities, and we confess our self-care secrets.
Meet family caregiver and healthy aging advocate Anne Tumlinson. Anne's experiences caring for her grandma led her to work in the aging industry and start a national support group for caregivers called Daughterhood. In this episode, we talk about how we are coping with life's disruptions, what employers can do to support working caregivers, setting family priorities, and we confess our self-care secrets.
Meet family caregiver and healthy aging advocate Anne Tumlinson. Anne’s experiences caring for her grandma led her to work in the aging industry and start a national support group for caregivers called Daughterhood. In this episode, we talk about how we are coping with life’s disruptions, what employers can do to support working caregivers, setting family priorities, and we confess our self-care secrets.
Anne Tumlinson, founder of ATI Advisory and Daughterhood, explains why the coronavirus was so deadly in nursing homes, the strategies that were involved in trying to contain the spread, and the changes that are needed going forward. Anne is a nationally recognized expert in the economics of an aging society. She advises government officials, business leaders and investors on innovations in financing and delivery of health and long-term care to older adults.
Anne Tumlinson, founder of ATI Advisory and Daughterhood, explains why the coronavirus was so deadly in nursing homes, the strategies that were involved in trying to contain the spread, and the changes that are needed going forward. Anne is a nationally recognized expert in the economics of an aging society. She advises government officials, business leaders and investors on innovations in financing and delivery of health and long-term care to older adults.
Join me for my conversation with Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson as we talk about the many facets of caregiving. We talk about the issues caregivers face, guilt, isolation, dealing with being "the one in charge" and even how Daughterhood got its name.
Join me for my conversation with Daughterhood Founder Anne Tumlinson as we talk about the many facets of caregiving. We talk about the issues caregivers face, guilt, isolation, dealing with being "the one in charge" and even how Daughterhood got its name.
Home care agencies nationwide are eager to partner with Medicare Advantage plans, but doing so is easier said than done. However, mid-year flexibilities recently announced by CMS instantly opened up new opportunities for providers. In this episode of Disrupt, you’ll hear from Anne Tumlinson, CEO of ATI innovations, who broke it all down. Tumlinson explained what the flexibilities mean for home care providers and how they can capitalize on those opportunities now and into the future. Listen to this episode of Disrupt to learn: -- How COVID-19 has shaken up the MA landscape to the benefit of home care providers -- What MA decision makers take into account when creating plans and finding partners -- Why the future of Medicare Advantage is looking brighter that ever -- And much more Subscribe to Disrupt to be notified when new episodes are released. Listen today!
Anne Tumlinson – CEO of ATI Advisory and founder of Daughterhood.org - talks with Bobbi and Mike about her experiences coaching women and men to insist on excellent care and a meaningful experience for their parents. “Taking care of frail, old people is really complicated. You feel like you need a social work, business, law and medical degree to even understand what you need to know.” Anne Tumlinson has spent the last two decades working on improving how America cares for its frailest, most vulnerable older adults. Don't forget to subscribe, download, and review to share your thoughts about the show! To find out more about Bobbi and Mike or the inspiration behind this podcast, Rodger That, head over to rodgerthat.show.
Anne Tumlinson, founder of Daughterhood.org, discusses caring for caregivers by providing tools and training for success.
Anne Tumlinson, founder of Daughterhood.org, discusses caring for caregivers by providing tools and training for success.
To help our brain span match our lifespan, we need a focus on brain health. Increasingly, research shows ways to prevent or reverse mild cognitive impairment and improve brain health. If we each do more to keep our brain healthy, with our doctor’s help, we will be better prepared as individuals and as a healthcare system to fight cognitive decline.Our host Meryl Comer will sit down with healthcare/aging expert Anne Tumlinson. She has authored recommendations for building a system of brain health care, including a yearly brain health check-up.Support the show (https://www.usagainstalzheimers.org/ways-donate)
From the federal government to Avalere Health to the advisory firm that bears her name, Anne Tumlinson has been a leading voice on the business of long-term health care in the United States. As CEO of Anne Tumlinson Innovations, she hears from providers around the country, who tell her about their struggles and successes with new payment models — including managed Medicare and accountable care organizations. In our conversation, Tumlinson said she’s no longer comfortable telling providers that all they need to survive in the new landscape is a solid set of data proving good outcomes. The reality is much more complicated than that, and success could require operators to band together to negotiate the best rates moving forward. Download this episode of Rethink to hear: - Why providers partnering with their competitors might be the path to success in some markets - Why consumers choose Medicare Advantage plans, and why seniors may not always understand what that decision might mean for nursing home coverage - How operators can navigate the dual — and dueling — worlds of fee-for-service Medicare and new payment models
Denise and her guests, Susan Rowe and Anne Tumlinson of Daughterhood.org, discuss what's new in our business of caregiving. During today's podcast, the three ponder this question: How will the home care and hospice space change? Anne Tumlinson founded Daughterhood and is also a long-time researcher and aging expert in Washington, DC. She has worked for many years on improving how we pay for and provide care to the nation's most frail older adults and their caregivers. Susan Rowe joined Daughterhood at its inception in January 2015. She brings her natural gift for empathy to bare in her current role as Daughterhood Programs Coordinator, where she works forming and supporting daughterhood circles and their group of awesome volunteer leaders from Florida to Los Angeles To learn more about our discussion, you can read the following articles: Let's talk about Honor's pivot: https://homehealthcarenews.com/2018/05/honor-raises-50-million-to-target-hundreds-of-new-partners/ and Humana's entree into hospice: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/health/hospice-humana-private-equity.html?smid=tw-nythealth&smtyp=cur --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/caring-conversations/message
Denise and her guests, Susan Rowe and Anne Tumlinson of Daughterhood.org, discuss what's new in our business of caregiving. During today's podcast, the three ponder this question: How will the home care and hospice space change? Anne Tumlinson founded Daughterhood and is also a long-time researcher and aging expert in Washington, DC. She has worked for many years on improving how we pay for and provide care to the nation’s most frail older adults and their caregivers. Susan Rowe joined Daughterhood at its inception in January 2015. She brings her natural gift for empathy to bare in her current role as Daughterhood Programs Coordinator, where she works forming and supporting daughterhood circles and their group of awesome volunteer leaders from Florida to Los Angeles To learn more about our discussion, you can read the following articles: Let's talk about Honor's pivot: https://homehealthcarenews.com/2018/05/honor-raises-50-million-to-target-hundreds-of-new-partners/ and Humana's entree into hospice: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/health/hospice-humana-private-equity.html?smid=tw-nythealth&smtyp=cur --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/caring-conversations/message
Denise and her guests, Susan Rowe and Anne Tumlinson of Daughterhood.org, discuss what's new in our business of caregiving. During today's podcast, the three ponder this question: Will innovations in health care and help for family caregivers come from outside our space? Anne Tumlinson founded Daughterhood and is also a long-time researcher and aging expert in Washington, DC. She has worked for many years on improving how we pay for and provide care to the nation's most frail older adults and their caregivers. Susan Rowe joined Daughterhood at its inception in January 2015. She brings her natural gift for empathy to bare in her current role as Daughterhood Programs Coordinator, where she works forming and supporting daughterhood circles and their group of awesome volunteer leaders from Florida to Los Angeles To learn more about our discussion, you can read the following articles: http://time.com/5128377/amazon-and-friends-takes-on-a-new-industry-health-care/ https://www.investors.com/news/walmart-pillpack-merger-talks-humana-hints-healthcare-disruption/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/caring-conversations/message
Denise and her guests, Susan Rowe and Anne Tumlinson of Daughterhood.org, discuss what's new in our business of caregiving. During today's podcast, the three ponder this question: Will innovations in health care and help for family caregivers come from outside our space? Anne Tumlinson founded Daughterhood and is also a long-time researcher and aging expert in Washington, DC. She has worked for many years on improving how we pay for and provide care to the nation’s most frail older adults and their caregivers. Susan Rowe joined Daughterhood at its inception in January 2015. She brings her natural gift for empathy to bare in her current role as Daughterhood Programs Coordinator, where she works forming and supporting daughterhood circles and their group of awesome volunteer leaders from Florida to Los Angeles To learn more about our discussion, you can read the following articles: http://time.com/5128377/amazon-and-friends-takes-on-a-new-industry-health-care/ https://www.investors.com/news/walmart-pillpack-merger-talks-humana-hints-healthcare-disruption/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/caring-conversations/message
As the approaches, Anne Tumlinson of joins us to discuss the importance of bringing family caregivers together. With over two decades working on improving how America cares for its frailest, most vulnerable older adults, Anne shares some of the challenges and universal truths that many caregivers experience. Ms. Tumlinson will be a guest speaker at the Family Caregivers Conference on February 17, 2018.
Dr. K talks with Anne Tumlinson, founder of Daughterhood.org. They discuss what families struggle with the most, the upcoming Aging 2.0 Optimize Conference, promising innovations to help family caregivers and older adults, and more. The post 051 Interview: Innovations to Help Older Adults & Family Caregivers appeared first on Better Health While Aging.
Learn about daily discipline and embracing the ups AND downs in your career journey with Anne Tumlinson, former Consulting Vice President turned Independent Consultant & Community Founder. Joseph will also share thoughts on how you can start making progress against your own career goals.
Dr. K talks with Anne Tumlinson about how families can pay for long-term care, and other challenges in caregiving. They discuss when Medicaid and other public services might pay for care, the role of long-term care insurance, why Anne started a site for family caregivers, and why so many women feel shame and guilt related to helping aging parents. The post 017 Interview: Paying for Long-Term Care & Other Family Caregiving Challenges appeared first on Better Health While Aging.
Pat shares another healthcare encounter filled with typical dangers. Guest, Anne Tumlinson founder of daughterhood.org gives practical tips to save your older parent from a hospital stay plus gives additional advice on how to survive a hospital visit. Fear the Wheelchair - everyone's favorite game makes a comeback plus Pat shares a special - A Brush With Danger. Is MRSA on your hairbrush?This show is broadcast live on W4CY Radio (www.w4cy.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (http://www.talk4radio.com/) on the Talk 4 Media Network (http://www.talk4media.com/).