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5 Top Reasons to Retain Our RHCs
No savings in closing an RHC --
Because RHCs care for people with severe disabilities, the cost of their care is
about the same no matter where they are cared for, DDD administrators have said.
There is also considerable expense in closing an RHC, expenses both anticipated
and not anticipated. Don’t add costs at a time when we need to cut costs
Part of a needed continuum of care, and choice
-- The Supreme Court Olmstead decision (1999) guarantees the right of individuals
to choose an appropriate setting. For some, that is an RHC. We shouldn’t let special
interest groups and for profit providers tell us “everyone belongs in a community
setting.” We know this isn’t true because of failed community placements and a
recent increase in crisis and permanent admissions to our RHCs. People with severe
or profound developmental disabilities, and their families, should continue to
have the RHC
option as part of a continuum of care.
Efficiently provides a full array of services
-- RHCs care for the 3% of developmentally disabled people who are among
the most afflicted. This population requires a wide range of services including
mental health, psychological services medical, nursing, dental, physical therapy,
speech therapy, occupational therapy, social services, recreation and more -- most of
them for a lifetime. These services require the professional staff that is always
available at an RHC. Because of concentrated individualized services, some RHC
residents become able to live in a community setting.
Provides respite care and other services to community based clients
-- Respite care in our RHCs serves the community with short term respite for families and caretakers.
Respite provides services to the client, including physical and psychological evaluations and dentistry.
Respite care can also prevent the need for full-time RHC residency. Respite is a highly sought after and needed service.
Only safety net when other services fail--
Case managers and community residential services depend on the RHCs when they cannot provide the intense
level of care some people require. There is often no backup available when an aging family caregiver is
suddenly unavailable due to illness or death. Private businesses (AFHs, group homes) have the right to
refuse to serve those who, for example, demonstrate behavioral challenges that endanger others.
RHCs are the only safety net available.
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