4600 - Legislative findings and purpose.

§ 4600. Legislative findings and purpose. The dramatic increase in the  numbers  of  elderly  people, especially those seventy-five years of age  and older, coupled with the special housing and  health  care  needs  of  this  growing segment of the population, requires the development of new  and creative approaches to help ensure  the  care  of  older  people  in  residential  settings  of  their  own  choice.  If carefully planned and  monitored, life  care  communities  have  the  potential  to  provide  a  continuum  of  care  for  older  people  that will provide an attractive  residential option for such persons, while meeting their long term  care  needs  for life. To ensure that the financial, consumer, and health care  interest  of  individuals  who  enroll  in  such  communities  will   be  protected,  such  communities  must be effectively managed and carefully  overseen.    The intent of the legislature, therefore, is to allow for the  prudent  development  of  life care communities.  The legislature further intends  to require that the relevant state agencies coordinate the regulation of  such communities in order to ensure that there are  adequate  safeguards  for  those  elderly  who  become  residents and to assist in the orderly  development, of such communities. Although lead responsibility  for  the  interagency  coordination  of  the  regulation and establishment of such  communities is vested in the department of health, the legislature  does  not  intend  that  such  communities become or be perceived as primarily  medically-oriented facilities. The legislature  intends,  instead,  that  such  communities  be viewed as an attractive and innovative residential  alternative for older New Yorkers who are seeking to  maintain,  to  the  extent  possible, an independent and active life in a community in which  their long-term care needs will be met.