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Old Actors Care Homes to Close
Jeffrey Katzenberg, the chairman of the MPTF’s board, announced on 14th January 2009 that the closure of the care units had been forced upon them because keeping the facilities open could bankrupt the Motion Picture & Television Fund within a few years. The two facilities, which housed approximately 100 actors, had reportedly been losing in the region of $10 million (£7.15 million) per year.
MPTF Press Release:
MOTION PICTURE & TELEVISION FUND
TO PUT NEW EMPHASIS
ON COMMUNITY-BASED CARE FOR SENIORS
Declining Demand and Challenging Economic Outlook Force Decision
To Phase Out Acute-Care Hospital and
Long-Term Care Unit
WOODLAND HILLS, CA – January 14, 2009
– The Motion Picture & Television Fund (MPTF), the entertainment industry’s
premier health and social services charity, announced today a major realignment
of resources under which the Fund’s acute-care hospital and long-term care (LTC)
facility will be phased out in favor of community-based programs aimed at
assisting the growing number of seniors who prefer to “age in place”—that is,
live safely and independently in their own homes for as long as possible.
As part of this realignment, MPTF will be expanding its existing community-based
efforts by establishing a network of Community Care Teams that will bring a
variety of medical and social services to entertainment industry
retirees—whether they live in their own homes, in retirement communities, or in
long-term care facilities. At the same time, MPTF will be making plans to
modernize and improve its independent- and assisted-living residential
facilities.
Driven by the changing needs of the population MPTF serves—as well as an
increasingly dire economic outlook—the decision to concentrate on
community-based care is the result of more than three years of study and
analysis by MPTF staff and outside experts.
“The world is changing and MPTF has been changing with it,” said Frank G.
Mancuso, chairman of the MPTF Corporate Board. “For nearly 90 years, we have
embodied Hollywood’s unique commitment to taking care of its own. Focusing on a
community-based approach will allow us to continue honoring this commitment for
another 90 years.”
“Our new emphasis on community-based care reflects the growing desire of today’s
active seniors to live as independently as possible for as long as possible,”
said David Tillman, M.D., president and CEO of MPTF. “It also reflects some
sobering economic realities that are affecting healthcare institutions
nationwide. With costs skyrocketing and government reimbursement declining,
operating our own acute-care hospital and long-term care facility is draining
our resources at an alarming rate. The good news is that by emphasizing a
community-based approach to senior care, MPTF will not only be able to stay on a
solid financial footing, it will also be able to assist many more retirees than
we do now—thousands rather than hundreds.”
“MPTF is initiating these changes because it’s the right thing to do, but the
fact is that we have no choice,” added Jeffrey Katzenberg, chairman of the MPTF
Foundation Board. “Although we are in good shape today, the acute-care hospital
and long-term care facility are generating operating deficits that could
bankrupt MPTF in a very few years. The entertainment community depends on MPTF
for a wide range of social and medical services—everything from healthcare to
emergency financial assistance to childcare and family counseling—and if MPTF
doesn’t do something now, pretty soon it won’t be able to do anything.”
“These changes will safeguard MPTF’s ability to continue meeting our community’s
medical and social service needs for decades to come,” said Casey Wasserman,
chairman of the Wasserman Foundation, one of MPTF’s biggest benefactors. “MPTF’s
willingness to confront these challenging issues head on—and its ability to come
up with creative solutions—makes it more deserving than ever of our support.”
Wasserman emphasized that this view is shared by his grandmother, current MPTF
Board Trustee Edie Wasserman, who along with her late husband Lew Wasserman has
long been one of the organization’s most passionate and dedicated supporters.
MPTF’s new emphasis on community-based care will build on existing efforts such
as its Elder Connection program and Center for Aging, which provide social,
financial, and healthcare services for industry seniors who want to remain in
their own homes. The centerpiece will be a new network of Community Care Teams,
consisting of MPTF doctors, nurses, and social workers who will reach out to
Fund-eligible seniors in Southern California, whether they are in their own
homes, in retirement communities, or in outside nursing homes, to ensure they
are getting the support they need.
As a result of the planned phase-outs, approximately 100 patients currently
residing in the long-term care facility on MPTF’s Wasserman campus in Woodland
Hills will be relocated over the course of 2009 to selected nursing homes in and
around Los Angeles. Every patient will be evaluated individually and matched to
the most appropriate facility in the area for their particular needs and family
situation. The first transfers will not begin for at least 60 days, unless a
patient specifically requests to be moved sooner.
“Closing our long-term care facility does not alter MPTF’s historical commitment
to industry veterans and their families,” Dr. Tillman said. “We’ll still be
there for our people to make sure they get the care they need and deserve. We
will work closely with all our current patients and their families to ensure a
safe and successful transition for everyone. Once they are relocated, our
Community Care Teams will visit them regularly. We will offer the same service
to all Fund-eligible patients who might need long-term care in the future.”
MPTF’s acute-care hospital, which for the past few years has rarely been called
upon to care for more than ten patients at any one time, will continue to
operate until late 2009. Thereafter, acute-care patients will receive their care
at hospitals near MPTF’s Woodland Hills campus.
The phase-out of the hospital and LTC unit will not affect the approximately 185
residents of MPTF’s independent- and assisted-living facilities (including the
Country House, the Fran & Ray Stark Villas, and the Frances Goldwyn Lodge).
MPTF’s six area health centers, which serve some 60,000 industry workers and
their families, will be similarly unaffected. The Fund also intends to continue
operating its Harry’s Haven memory care facility.
As a result of the hospital and LTC facility phase-outs, some 290 jobs will be
eliminated over the course of the year. This represents roughly a third of all
MPTF’s hourly workers and a third of its managerial staff. MPTF will provide
out-placement counseling and host job fairs in an effort to help all the
displaced workers find new employment.
The hospital and long-term care facility currently generate an operating deficit
of $10 million a year. This shortfall is expected to widen significantly in
coming years. The problem is that the vast majority of hospital and LTC patients
are covered by government insurance programs whose reimbursement rates have not
kept pace with fast-rising operating costs.
MPTF has been making up the shortfall by dipping into its investment reserves.
Based on current projections, continuing to subsidize the hospital and LTC
facility would likely exhaust available reserves within five years.
The non-profit Motion Picture & Television Fund, headquartered in Woodland
Hills, was founded in 1921 to provide relief for those in the film industry who
had fallen on hard times. Today, 88 years later, MPTF is a major service
provider supporting the health and well being of the entertainment community.
Healthcare, childcare, retirement living and social/charitable services are
offered with compassion and respect for the dignity of the whole person. Care
is offered through six outpatient health centers, charitable financial
assistance and community outreach programs, a full-scale retirement community.
and a children’s day care center.
The MPTF was established in 1921 by such Hollywood luminaries as Charles Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, D.W Griffith and Joseph M. Schenck. Former residents have included Stanley Kramer and DeForest Kelley. [ADD]
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