Senior citizens attending adult day health-care facilities are going to be able to go back to their regular routines for the time being, according to a recent announcement from the California Department of Health Care Services.

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Earlier this year, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, in an attempt to cut state spending, proposed limiting Medi-Cal adult daycare benefits from four or five days a week to a maximum of three days.

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According to information from the California Association for Adult Day Services, the reduction was set to go into effect the week of Sept. 7, but was halted on Sept. 9 when a federal judge granted a temporary injunction.

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In granting the injunction, Judge Soundra Brown Armstrong, a U.S. District Judge in Oakland, further ordered the department to provide ā€œprompt noticeā€ of the injunction to all adult day health-care program providers and recipients. The ruling will enable seniors to get the number of attendance days previously approved by the department.

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Alice Reyes, director of operations for the Santa Maria Wisdom Center, said the decision means ā€œbusiness will be back to usualā€ at her facility. Located on North Broadway, the center provides adult day health-care services, including meals, medical attention, and enrichment activities.

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Reyes said this is the third time this year the state has tried to reduce spending and services to seniors.

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ā€œThey tried to cut spending by 10 percent, but that was given an injunction and overturned. And then they came back and tried 5 percent, but that was ultimately overturned as well,ā€ she said. ā€œSo I think, given the history, there’s a pretty good chance this will be overturned, too.ā€

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Reyes said the ever-changing status of available care has been a rollercoaster ride for the recipients and their families.

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ā€œThe families have been really worried. These people are part of the Medi-Cal population and can’t afford to choose from a lot of different places,ā€ she said. ā€œSome of them were thinking, ā€˜Am I going to have to quit my job if they won’t give me time off to take care of my loved one?ā€™ā€

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The Wisdom Center currently provides care to 82 people, half of whom were affected by the three-day-maximum cap. Those individuals will now receive their regular four to five days of care.

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ā€œThey’re ecstatic,ā€ Reyes said. ā€œIt takes a heavy burden off of them.ā€

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For more information about adult day health care, contact the California Department of Aging at (916) 419-7545 or visit aging.ca.gov.

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