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Starving Seniors: How America Fails To Feed Its Aging

When Army veteran Eugene Milligan fell off a charity鈥檚 rolls for home-delivered Meals on Wheels because of a long stay in the hospital last winter, he had to rely on others such as his son, a local church and a generous off-duty nurse to bring him food. (Andrea Morales for KHN)

MEMPHIS, Tenn. 鈥 Army veteran Eugene Milligan is 75 years old and blind. He uses a wheelchair since losing half his right leg to diabetes and gets dialysis for kidney failure.

And he has struggled to get enough to eat.

Earlier this year, he ended up in the hospital after burning himself while boiling water for oatmeal. The long stay caused the Memphis vet to fall off a charity鈥檚 rolls for home-delivered , so he had to rely on others, such as his son, a generous off-duty nurse and a local church to bring him food.

鈥淢any times, I鈥檝e felt like I was starving,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 neighbors that need food too. There鈥檚 people at dialysis that need food. There鈥檚 hunger everywhere.鈥

Indeed, millions of seniors across the country quietly go hungry as the safety net designed to catch them frays. Nearly 8% of Americans 60 and older were 鈥渇ood insecure鈥 in 2017, according to a Feeding America. That鈥檚 5.5 million seniors who don鈥檛 have consistent access to enough food for a healthy life, a number that has more than doubled since 2001 and is only expected to grow as America grays.

While the plight of hungry children elicits support and can be tackled in schools, the plight of hungry older Americans is shrouded by isolation and a generation鈥檚 pride. The problem is most acute in parts of the South and Southwest. Louisiana has the highest rate among states, with 12% of seniors facing food insecurity. Memphis fares worst among major metropolitan areas, with 17% of seniors like Milligan unsure of their next meal.

And government relief falls short. One of the main federal programs helping seniors is starved for money. The Older Americans Act 鈥 passed more than half a century ago as part of President Lyndon Johnson鈥檚 Great Society reforms 鈥 was amended in 1972 to provide for home-delivered and group meals, along with other services, for anyone 60 and older. But its funding has lagged far behind senior population growth, as well as economic inflation.

The biggest chunk of the act鈥檚 budget, nutrition services, dropped by 8% over the past 18 years when adjusted for inflation, an found in February. Home-delivered and group meals have decreased by nearly 21 million since 2005. Only a fraction of those facing food insecurity get any meal services under the act; a found 83% got none.

With the act set to expire Sept. 30, Congress is now considering its reauthorization and how much to spend going forward.

Meanwhile, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, only 45% of eligible adults 60 and older have signed up for another source of federal aid: SNAP, the food stamp program for America鈥檚 poorest. Those who don鈥檛 are typically either unaware they could qualify, believe their benefits would be tiny or can no longer get to a grocery store to use them.

Even fewer seniors may have SNAP in the future. More than 13% of SNAP households with elderly members would lose benefits under a recent Trump administration proposal.

For now, millions of seniors 鈥 especially low-income ones 鈥 go without. Across the nation, waits are common to receive home-delivered meals from a crucial provider, Meals on Wheels, a network of 5,000 community-based programs. In Memphis, for example, the wait to get on the Meals on Wheels schedule is more than a year long.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really sad because a meal is not an expensive thing,鈥 said Sally Jones Heinz, president and CEO of the , which provides home-delivered meals in Memphis. 鈥漈his shouldn鈥檛 be the way things are in 2019.鈥

Since malnutrition exacerbates diseases and prevents healing, seniors without steady, nutritious food can wind up in hospitals, which drives up costs, . Sometimes seniors relapse quickly after discharge 鈥 or worse.

Widower Robert Mukes, 71, starved to death on a cold December day in 2016, alone in his Cincinnati apartment.

The Hamilton County Coroner listed the primary cause of death as 鈥渟tarvation of unknown etiology鈥 and noted 鈥減ossible hypothermia,鈥 pointing out that his apartment had no electricity or running water. show the 5-foot-7-inch man weighed just 100.5 pounds.

A Clear Need

On a hot May morning in Memphis, seniors trickled into a food bank at the Riverside Missionary Baptist Church, 3 miles from the opulent tourist mecca of Graceland. They picked up boxes packed with canned goods, rice, vegetables and meat.

Marion Thomas, 63, placed her box in the trunk of a friend鈥檚 car. She lives with chronic back pain and high blood pressure and started coming to the pantry three years ago. She鈥檚 disabled, relies on Social Security and gets $42 a month from SNAP based on her income, household size and other factors. That鈥檚 much less than the average $125-a-month benefit for households with seniors, but more than the $16 minimum that one in five such households get. Still, Thomas said, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 buy very much.鈥

A day later, the Mid-South Food Bank brought a 鈥渕obile pantry鈥 to Latham Terrace, a senior housing complex, where a long line of people waited. Some inched forward in wheelchairs; others leaned on canes. One by one, they collected their allotments.

The need is just as real elsewhere. In Dallas, Texas, 69-year-old China Anderson squirrels away milk, cookies and other parts of her home-delivered lunches for dinner because she can no longer stand and cook due to scoliosis and eight deteriorating vertebral discs.

As seniors ration food, programs ration services.

Although more than a third of the Meals on Wheels money comes from the Older Americans Act, even with additional public and private dollars, funds are still so limited that some programs have no choice but to triage people using score sheets that assign points based on who needs food the most. Seniors coming from the hospital and those without family usually top waiting lists.

More than 1,000 were waiting on the Memphis area鈥檚 list recently. And in Dallas, $4.1 million in donations wiped out a 1,000-person waiting list in December, but within months it had crept back up to 100.

Nationally, 鈥渢here are tens of thousands of seniors who are waiting,鈥 said , chief membership and advocacy officer for Meals on Wheels America. 鈥淲hile they鈥檙e waiting, their health deteriorates and, in some cases, we know seniors have died.鈥

Edwin Walker, a deputy assistant secretary for the federal Administration on Aging, acknowledged waits are a long-standing problem, but said 2.4 million people a year benefit from the Older Americans Act鈥檚 group or home-delivered meals, allowing them to stay independent and healthy.

Seniors get human connection, as well as food, from these services. Aner Lee Murphy, a 102-year-old Meals on Wheels client in Memphis, counts on the visits with volunteers Libby and Bob Anderson almost as much as the food. She calls them 鈥渕y children,鈥 hugging them close and offering a prayer each time they leave.

But others miss out on such physical and psychological nourishment. A devastating phone call brought that home for Kim Daugherty, executive director of the , which connects seniors to service providers in the region. The woman on the line told Daugherty she鈥檇 been on the waiting list for more than a year.

鈥淢a鈥檃m, there are several hundred people ahead of you,鈥 Daugherty reluctantly explained.

鈥淚 just need you all to remember,鈥 came the caller鈥檚 haunting reply, 鈥淚鈥檓 hungry and I need food.鈥

A Slow Killer

, a poverty researcher at the University of Kentucky who worked on the Feeding America study, said food insecurity shot up with the Great Recession, starting in the late 2000s, and peaked in 2014. He said it shows no signs of dropping to pre-recession levels.

While older adults of all income levels can face difficulty accessing and preparing healthy food, rates are highest among seniors in poverty. They are also high among minorities. More than 17% of black seniors and 16% of Hispanic seniors are food insecure, compared with fewer than 7% of white seniors.

A host of issues combine to set those seniors on a downward spiral, said registered dietitian , who chairs the Department of Nutrition and Dietetics at the University of North Florida. Going to the grocery store gets a lot harder if they can鈥檛 drive. Expensive medications leave less money for food. Chronic physical and mental health problems sap stamina and make it tough to cook. Inch by inch, hungry seniors decline.

And, even if it rarely kills directly, hunger can complicate illness and kill slowly.

Malnutrition blunts immunity, which already tends to weaken as people age. Once they start losing weight, they鈥檙e more likely to grow frail and are more likely to die within a year, said Dr. John Morley, director of the division of geriatric medicine at Saint Louis University.

Seniors just out of the hospital are particularly vulnerable. Many wind up getting readmitted, pushing up taxpayers鈥 costs for Medicare and Medicaid. Afound that Medicare could save $1.57 for every dollar spent on home-delivered meals for chronically ill seniors after a hospitalization.

Most hospitals don鈥檛 refer senior outpatients to Meals on Wheels, and advocates say too few insurance companies get involved in making sure seniors have enough to eat to keep them healthy.

鈥淢any times, I鈥檝e felt like I was starving,鈥 says Milligan who is blind, lost half his right leg to diabetes, gets dialysis for kidney failure and has struggled to get enough to eat at his Memphis home.(Andrea Morales for KHN)

When Milligan, the Memphis veteran, burned himself with boiling water last winter and had to be hospitalized for 65 days, he fell off the Metropolitan Inter-Faith Association鈥檚 radar. The meals he鈥檇 been getting for about a decade stopped.

Heinz, Metropolitan鈥檚 CEO, said the association is usually able to start and stop meals for short hospital stays. But, Heinz said, the association didn鈥檛 hear from Milligan and kept trying to deliver meals for a time while he was in the hospital, then notified the Aging Commission of the Mid-South he wasn鈥檛 home. As is standard procedure, Metropolitan officials said, a staff member from the commission made three attempts to contact him and left a card at the blind man鈥檚 home.

But nothing happened when he got out of the hospital this spring. In mid-May, a nurse referred him for meal delivery. Still, he didn鈥檛 get meals because he faced a waitlist already more than 1,000 names long.

After questions from Kaiser Health News, Heinz looked into Milligan鈥檚 case and realized that, as a former client, Milligan could get back on the delivery schedule faster.

But even then the process still has hurdles: The aging commission would need to conduct a new home assessment for meals to resume. That has yet to happen because, amid the wait, Milligan鈥檚 health deteriorated.

A Murky Future

As the Older Americans Act awaits reauthorization this fall, many senior advocates worry about its funding.

In June, the U.S. House passed a $93 million increase to the Older Americans Act鈥榮 nutrition programs, raising total funding by about 10% to $1 billion in the next fiscal year. In inflation-adjusted dollars, that鈥檚 still less than in 2009. And it still has to pass in the Republican-controlled Senate, where the proposed increase faces long odds.

U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, an Oregon Democrat who chairs the Civil Rights and Human Services Subcommittee, expects the panel to tackle legislation for reauthorization of the act soon after members return from the August recess. She鈥檚 now working with colleagues 鈥渢o craft a strong, bipartisan update,鈥 she said, that increases investments in nutrition programs as well as other services.

鈥淚鈥檓 confident the House will soon pass a robust bill,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd I am hopeful that the Senate will also move quickly so we can better meet the needs of our seniors.鈥

In the meantime, 鈥渢he need for home-delivered meals keeps increasing every year,鈥 said Lorena Fernandez, who runs a in Yakima, Wash. Activists are pressing state and local governments to ensure seniors don鈥檛 starve, with mixed results. In Louisiana, for example, anti-hunger advocates stood on the state Capitol steps in May and unsuccessfully called on the state to invest $1 million to buy food from Louisiana farmers to distribute to hungry residents. Elsewhere, senior activists across the nation have participated each March in 鈥淢arch for Meals鈥 events such as walks, fundraisers and rallies designed to focus attention on the problem.

Private fundraising hasn鈥檛 been easy everywhere, especially rural communities without much wealth. Philanthropy has instead tended to flow to hungry kids, who outnumber hungry seniors more than 2-to-1, according to Feeding America.

鈥淭en years ago, organizations had a goal of ending child hunger and a lot of innovation and resources went into what could be done,鈥 said Jeremy Everett, executive director of Baylor University鈥檚 Texas Hunger Initiative. 鈥淭he same thing has not happened in the senior adult population.鈥 And that has left people struggling for enough food to eat.

As for Milligan, he didn鈥檛 get back on Meals on Wheels before suffering complications related to his dialysis in June. He ended up back in the hospital. Ironically, it was there that he finally had a steady, if temporary, source of food.

It鈥檚 impossible to know if his time without steady, nutritious food made a difference. What is almost certain is that feeding him at home would have been far cheaper.

Related Topics

Aging Cost and Quality Medicaid Medicare Public Health States