LawWiki
HomeCodesSearchGlossaryAPIAbout
LawWiki

Plain English summaries of California law with zero-hallucination AI. Every summary is verified against official source text.

Product

  • Search
  • Codes
  • About

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer

© 2026 LawWiki. All rights reserved.

HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 101Pt. 1Ch. 1.5§ 100145 Long-Term Care Consumer Rights

§ 100145 Long-Term Care Consumer Rights

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 100145 Long-Term Care Consumer Rights

This law says the state must redesign long‑term care so older people and people with disabilities can help plan services and get a smoother, more coordinated system.

Key Takeaways

  • •Older adults and people with disabilities should help shape the long‑term care system.
  • •The current system is fragmented and often gives expensive, inappropriate care.
  • •The law pushes for a coordinated, community‑based approach that reduces paperwork and improves independence.

Example

Mrs. Lopez, a senior who needs help with daily tasks, finds the current system forces her to fill out many different forms and wait for separate agencies. Under this law, her community can create a single program that lets her and other seniors decide what services they need and how they should be delivered.

The law lets people like Mrs. Lopez be part of designing the care system, so she gets help that fits her life instead of being bounced between confusing programs.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 100145 Long-Term Care Consumer Rights

The Legislature finds and declares that for older persons and persons with disabilities all of the following apply: (a)  Long-term care consumers experience great differences in service levels, eligibility criteria and service availability that often results in inappropriate and expensive care that is not responsive to individual needs. (b)  Individuals requiring long-term care services are most often the best judges of their own needs. Consequently, they should share the responsibility for designing the overall long-term care delivery system. (c)  The laws governing long-term care facilities have established an uncoordinated array of long-term care services that are funded and administered by a state structure that lacks necessary integration and focus. (d)  Article 4.05 (commencing with Section 14139.05) of Chapter 7 of Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code sets forth the state’s public policy strategy to address this problem through an approach that provides the opportunity for a community to design and implement a coordinated services delivery system with the involvement of long-term care consumers in the decisionmaking process. (e)  The Long-Term Care Integration Pilot Projects were developed to test models for service integration, with the goal of providing a continuum of social and health services that foster independence and self-reliance, maintain individual dignity, and allow consumers of long-term care services to remain an integral part of their family and community life. (f)  The adoption of the Mello-Granlund Older Californians Act (Division 8.5 (commencing with Section 9000) of the Welfare and Institutions Code) sought to improve the integration of available services at the local level and enhance the development of systems of home and community-based services. (g)  Obstacles currently preventing the integration of long-term care programs and oversight at the state level include all of the following: inflexible and inconsistent funding sources, economic incentives that encourage the placement of consumers in the highest levels of care, lack of coordination between aging, health, and social service departments at the state level, and inflexible state and federal regulations. (h)  It is both necessary and urgent to restructure long-term care programs and oversight at the state level so that duplicative and confusing eligibility criteria, assessments, intake forms, and service limitations will not continue to inhibit consumer satisfaction, impede improvements in consumer health status, and perpetuate the ineffective use of state resources. (Added by Stats. 1997, Ch. 269, Sec. 1. Effective January 1, 1998.)

Last verified: January 11, 2026

Key Terms

integrationadoptioncommunityhealthportlegislatureinstitutions codeeligibility

Related Statutes

  • § 152 Health Equity Office Duties
  • § 101320 Local Health Jurisdiction Funding
  • § 124880 Clinic Operations Stabilization Grants
  • § 1562.03 Crisis Residential Program Standards
  • § 1567 County Care For Juvenile Wards

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 100145.
View Official Source