NURSING
HOME SITE
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Active
Baby Boomers
Strategies
on Paying for Nursing Home Care and Medicaid
By P.L. Fields
The
decision to place your loved one into a nursing home is an extremely
difficult decision, often causing much guilt for the caregiver. It is
a very emotional decision for most clients we see and most are under
a certain amount of stress, often great, when facing what they consider
to be a drastic course of action.
I
counsel our caregiver clients to get beyond the guilt as quickly as
they can, because the situation their loved one is in is not the caregiver’s
fault. And besides, the longer you remain under this stress, the less
healthy you eat, or you eat way too much, the less you sleep, and some
start drinking (my own mother started this late at night after she got
my dad settled in bed for the evening – not healthy to say the least).
The
stress of caring for a loved one is constant and unrelenting. It is
a physical, mental and emotional grind. On numerous occasions, we have
actually had caregiver clients die before the spouse in the nursing
home. Sometimes, the caregivers die shortly after the nursing home spouse
dies. The stress of being a caregiver can be deadly serious, especially
for older clients who are caregivers for their spouse.
You
have to recognize it and develop a plan to deal with it.
Get
your children involved in developing a plan to deal with your loved
one’s incapacity. And remember, plan for the absolute worst case scenario.
Get to an attorney who can help you develop a plan to help you with
your particular situation. And this is especially important as soon
as you detect any signs of dementia in your parent or spouse, or as
soon as you begin to detect physical problems with your loved one. The
sooner you begin the plan, the better off the family will be.
NOW,
HOW DO WE PAY FOR MAMA’S NURSING HOME CARE? There are really only three
ways to pay for a stay in a nursing home.
LONG
TERM CARE INSURANCE (LTCI). If Mama was far-sighted enough, she may
have purchased LTCI in the past before she needed it. This would be
an excellent source of funds to help defray some or all of Mama’s long
term care costs. Unfortunately, very few seniors, those over age 60,
have LTCI coverage.
SELF
PAY. This essentially means that Mama has enough income or financial
assets to pay her own way in the nursing home. However, many families
don’t have the income or the financial asset base to be able to pay
$4,000 to $7,500 or more a month for a bed for very long in a nursing
home.
MEDICAID.
This is a state-administered medical benefit program which will pay
for the cost of a nursing home stay if three tests are met, i.e., medical
need, asset, and income. Medicaid is obviously a needs-based program,
funded partially by state funds, but mostly by federal funds. Many people
are under the mistaken impression that MEDICARE, which most seniors
in this country over age sixty-five participate in to one degree or
another, will cover the cost of their stay in a nursing home.
(c)
Copyright 2005 P.L.Fields LLC
P.L.
Fields is a Medicaid Expert and President of Senior Strategies, a service
that helps seniors save time and money. To learn more about the secret
strategies and solutions that Medicaid lawyers charge to get clients
qualified for Medicaid, while protecting their assets, visit: http://www.medicaidsecrets.info