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THAT is just plain wrong. Most people aren't aware that, should their parents HAVE the money to pay them something for their 24/7 care, Medicaid will disallow that as well. Family care giving is considered a gift.
Seems to me our politicians should make sure that, at LEAST when you take someone into your own home to care for them, you can be paid, say, $1000 a month to help those people who 24/7 give up their lives . . .
But such is not the case unless one has a formal contract, keeps a daily log of duties, reports it as income and pays Federal/state taxes on it as well as SS.
If/when a person goes on Medicaid, they do a five-year look back to make sure one HASN'T gifted any money during that period of time. If they have, Medicaid uses a formula to deny Medicaid eligibility to make up for those gifts. They exclude X-number of months of coverage until that money is recouped. It's not pretty.
Their children are allowed to report it on there income tax filing as gifted by parent with no tax.
probably just a small pool of recipients that fit this situation.
Kashi's family just lucked out.
What I think is being looked for is a "pattern of. Spending " that makes sense for the income and savings that they had for the past years. So if mom had 50K savings 5 years ago & got 1K a month income & has a home, it can make sense she could be down to impoverishment. But if she has been living with family & no paid caregivers and is now impoverished then they are going to look for gifting as there still should be plenty of assets for a spend down.
The gifting is basically a transfer penalty that is day based with the base line figure of whatever your state pays for daily room & board reinbusrement rate paid by Medicaid. There should be the formula used on your state medicaid website. Like for TX it's $145.00 r&b paid to the NH daily. So a 50K transfer would mean roughly 345 days that they are ineligible for Medicaid to pay for NH ALTHOUGH they are now qualified for Medicaid. 345 days is a long long time to have to private pay......
From this point on, you need to stop any gifting etc with moms $$. Go over the figures and if it's substantial, then I'd suggest you get the details and all legal and get mom& you to an elder law attorney. It will be $$ well spent.
As I understand it, every area has a nursing home monthly cost number. Like, let's say the Chicago area is $8,000 a month. If they find $80,000 that they consider to be gifts, they will exclude ten months of her care.
I have no idea how they figure food and gas costs paid to you. I'd suspect that won't count though.
Don't feel bad that you didn't know. Most people don't.