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I'm going to let you in on something you may not know. Unless the person entering a Long Term Care facility is extremely wealthy or has a spectacular LTC insurance policy, they start doing the Medicaid application the day that person walks in the door. So don't worry about that.
Also, don't ever let the administative staff or social workers of these places ever get pushy with you. NEVER sign any documents from these people unless you read it thoroughly and fully understand it. If you don't understand a document, tell them you will be having your attorney look over it and explain it to you. Under no circumstances should you ever just sign your name to something an admission person hands you. I say this because many people have signed documents for a loved one at a care facility because they were told they were something else. Turns out, they put themselves on the hook financially for payment.
The people who do admissions at nursing homes, AL's, and memory care facilities are for the most part despicable low-lifes who would rip off their own mothers. Skilled, greedy liars who have no problem tricking and screwing over a person's whole family to squeeze every dime. These people are real snakes in the grass. That's their job.
Tour some facilities that have availability and pick one for your mother. Then have a lawyer look over the paperwork they want you to sign.
Although there are probably many explanations for why eldercare is not a priority, I think we have vulture capitalism to thank for the current situation. Make no mistake: the hedge fund/private equity corporations that are buying up hospices and eldercare facilities are NOT about care. They are ALL about MONEY/ROI (return on investment) also known as shareholder value. How much money the wealthy can expect as profit--THAT is what governs the quality of "care" available to many older adults.
As to pushy, if you are being hounded you can easily have them off the phone by saying that your parent is applying for Medicaid and soon broke.
It's an unpleasant process, but we are the Corporate States of America, and they are just a small part of that.
$ stuff the elder / their POA have control over….. do a spend down; get their home/car sold if that’s what they want to do; create Trusts if feasible, etc. But the “medically at need for skilled nursing care” which LTC Medicaid absolutely requires depends on others (eg MDs, PTs, OT, hospitalization & rehab notes, etc) for your parent to have a nice fat health chart that beyond clearly shows an assessment as to “need” for skilled nursing care. NHs can and will admit an elder who is not at this level if they are private pay. Usually elder is in their 90’s with $$$ to private pay so moving them into a NH is better than doing an IL 2 AL 2 NH multiple moves. A 1 & done approach. This elder could in theory be totally OK in an AL or even maybe in a very proactive IL but due to their age and the medications they are on, it just makes sense to ensconced into a nice private room in a NH. But this type elder will not be able to pass medical “at need” assessment for LTC Medicaid. Medicaid does review health charts and can send out actual assessment team to do in person evaluation.
FWIW vast majority of SNF/NH admits are this scenario:
Dad living at home/apt has a bad fall; Dad goes to ER/ED; Dad is hospitalized (MediCARE as his health insurance is paying); Dad gets hip replacement surgery (MediCARE pays); Dad then discharged to rehab done in a SNF that has a IRF (in patient rehab unit) and again MediCARE pays for a period of time based on discharge paperwork and how they progress. Majority of time, Dad stops progressing in his rehab around week 3 or 4, so Medicare stops. Dad cannot feasibly return to his old life so this Dad stays put BUT goes from a rehab patient to a custodial care resident. Custodial care is private pay, LTC insurance or this Dad & his POA file for LTC Medicaid. Medically this Dad has a nice super fat file to show that he is oh so definitely “at need” medically that’s recent and with all the codes in his chart to support this determination. The financial part that’s your/ the POA & Dads problem to show he’s “at need” financially for LTC Medicaid which for most States is a max of $2829 income, under 2K in nonexempt assets and no 3-5 year lookback issues.
Just being old, frail, needing help taking meds, cannot shop / cook for themselves is not enough to be medically “at need”. Is your parent documented medically at need??? If not, you will have to work with their physicians to build up their charts to show that is the case. Or ya wait till they have a fall or super ill, either way hospitalized then go to rehab in a NH and stay there.
Also when looking at places that participate in LTC Medicaid, clearly ask if they do “Medicaid Pending” or if not, how they do the contract btw POA or responsible family member for billing in the interim btw filing and approval. Also ask if # of LTC Medicaid beds are fixed (so limited). Ask if the Share of Cost is done from day 1 once application filed or all the SOC gets paid upon approval even if it’s 3-5 months (this kinda is State dependent). SOC is the monthly income your parent gets ea mo., like their SSA $. SOC paid to NH less sm personal needs allowance (tends to be $50-$75, & all the $ they will ever have once on LTC Medicaid and is restricted spending).
For a widowed parent, to me, if you have been involved in their life & are POA & signature on bank accounts, imho you can DIY all this. If they are still at home or in IL, you do whatever visits, labs, etc to get their chart done. But if not, or if they are a strong personality and you are not, it’s best off being done by Medicaid experienced attorney.
Dad has become a commodity. Like Hospice, he is now traded on the exchange.
That's a part of our lives lived daily in every way.
How do schools spend their money?
On consultants. On textbooks changed every month (how often did my Mom tape mine together; she swore I was given the rattiest books because she did the best repairs).
Follow the money. That's how it works. It's OK. It's a choice. It's apparently OUR choice because we cannot stop shopping for a single second.
When my mother went to rehab, they tried to get me to sign a paper that said if there was any legal dispute over payments that we agreed to let their attorneys handle it and represent us. I declined saying that we had our own attorney and would not sign over those rights to anyone else. They later approached my 93 y/o mother and had her sign without my knowledge. She told me about it later and she recalled they were very happy with her saying “she signed it!” She did not know what she was signing and I did not find out about it until after she was out. In the end it didn’t matter because it was just a short rehab stay - but this is an example of how they operate. There are no ethics - just pure greed and desperate sales people trying to keep their jobs. Calling them snakes is an insult to snakes.
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