Market Trends | NIC MAP Vision | Senior Housing | memory care
By: Omar Zahraoui | June 15, 2023
According to estimates derived from an analysis released by NIC Analytics in 2022, approximately one in nine Americans aged 65 and older, totaling 6.5 million individuals, are affected by Alzheimer’s or other dementias. The analysis further indicated that the prevalence increased with age, with higher ratios observed in older age cohorts. By projecting the findings to 2030, NIC Analytics estimated that around 8.2 million Americans will be living with Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia just seven years from now. These estimates highlight the importance of providing tailored and innovative care and support to meet the growing demand for specialized memory care services.
Business Environment | Executive Survey Insights | Market Trends | Senior Housing
By: Ryan Brooks | June 13, 2023
“A new series of questions in the May 2023 survey, suggested by April 2023 ESI survey participants, asked about the utilization of third-party referral aggregators. Of respondents who are currently using third-party aggregators, almost two-thirds (64%) successfully convert less than 25% of the third-party generated leads.
Market Trends | NIC MAP Vision | Senior Housing | occupancy
By: Omar Zahraoui | June 08, 2023
The senior housing stabilized occupancy rate for the NIC MAP Primary Markets edged up to 84.7% in the May 2023 reporting period, up 0.1 percentage points (pps) from the April 2023 reporting period on a three-month rolling basis, according to intra-quarterly NIC MAP® data, released by NIC MAP Vision. From its pandemic record low of 80.3% in June 2021, senior housing stabilized occupancy increased by 4.4pps but remained 4.7pps below pre-pandemic March 2020 levels of 89.4%.
Market Trends | Senior Housing | occupancy
By: Caroline Clapp | June 06, 2023
The senior housing sector posted a total return of 0.11% in the first quarter of 2023, up from a decline of -0.88% total return in the prior quarter. Short-term total returns for senior housing outperformed the broader NPI, which posted a total return of -1.81% in the first quarter. Positive income returns for senior housing were partially offset by negative appreciation,