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1) are 65+,
2) medical condition requires that level of skilled Nursing care,
3) monthly income is less than their states max (about $2,020.00),
This is the “income test” – how much $ do you make.
4) countable assets are less than $2K
This is the “asset test” – how much $ do you own.
5) not gifted away anything of value during the look-back period.
The eligibility $$$ are different if there is a community spouse.The max look-back is 5 yrs. Most states require 3 – 6 mo. of financials with Medicaid application. Can require more financials if something pique’s interest.A “transfer penalty” can happen when items are gifted below value. Penalty different for each state.
All assets are counted for the asset test, unless the assets fall within the short list of "noncountable" assets, which in general are:
- personal possessions,
- a vehicle,
- their principal residence, provided it is in the same state in which the individual is applying for coverage & the house with no equity limit if the "community spouse" lives there; otherwise the equity limit is 500K (750K in some states)
- prepaid funeral plans (irrevocable, no cash value/NCV)
- small amount of life insurance (usually $1,500 & NCV)
All other assets (savings, stocks, whole life) are counted.These must “spend down” to get to their states asset max to qualify for Medicaid.
Is the system fair? Probably not as it rewards those that do advance planning to make themselves poor, or exempts those that have the financial acumen to do a Living Trust. But thank goodness it is there because if you live long enough you will eventually run out of $ to pay for care unless you are truly wealthy.Medicaid is designed as a safety-net for low income who can show both financial and medical necessity for long term care.Because Medicaid is needs-based, doing a 5 yr look-back on the applicants assets is critical for the states to operate the program. If everyone was able to transfer all of our parents assets, empty out their accounts today, spend monthly retirement and SS on nonNH stuff and put them into a NH tomorrow paid 100% by the state, the system couldn't afford it and they wouldn't have any NH to go to.
Medicaid is all about either doing planning OR spending your $ until or unless you are impoverished. Medicaid gets to the heart of the issue of who should pay for long-term care -- the public through the tax-supported Medicaid program, or users of long-term care through their personal resources, including those remaining after death via MERP (Medicaid Estate Recovery Program).
In almost all states, the elder's homesteaded property is an exempt asset. They do not have to sell it to qualify for Medicaid. There are a few exceptions, like for example the property is assessed at over 500K (or 750K in some states) so has to be sold, or the property is income producing (like it's a duplex and 1 side is rented out) or if the elder has/is end of life stage disease where they really truly have no "expectation" or ability to ever return to the home.
The whole issue of keeping mom's empty house and why, imho, most sell it is because the family cannot afford to maintain the house for mom. Once they are in NH on Medicaid, all mom's income less the personal needs allowance must be paid in toto to the NH. So there is no $ to spend on the house by mom. If there is a mortgage or property tax & maintenance is high, often the family can't afford mom's house. So the house gets sold. But you can have her keep it and you pay for all (taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance) and then in probate you dispose of the home as per her will and you file your own detailed claim against the estate for the $ you paid. The state might do a claim for the $ the state spent on her care paid by Medicaid (MERP) but MERP rates are low in most states for homes that have valid claims for expenses paid for the homestead, empty property.
As far as the Occupy Wall Street 1 percenters thing, I guess you have your own ideas. Mine differ than yours.
You confuse me because you seem to think a socialistic society is a good thing, then in the next post you confirm that government does run our lives, it's messed up with Medicare, yet MORE government would be a good thing???
I send you lots of good vibes and wishes in your situation with your parent. It's one of the hardest things we will have to do in our lives and we all come at it from different perspectives. I'm turning off my political switch now....
Piffle? Really, piffle? The 1% is piffle?
And you really don't think that people have died in the US? Be for real. The government DOES tell you how to live your life. Wake up and smell your surroundings.
You say that the mother of your daughter's boyfriend is the one that allowed his insurance to lapse. How is that anyone else's fault? Should not his mother be responsible?
A lot of us don't think you have to be Oprah or Beyonce' to be living the American dream. That 1% stuff is piffle.
100 million people throughout history have died from living under the various "isms" you mention. Our system may be far from perfect but I'd rather live free than have the government tell me how to live my life.
Sorry this is off-topic, but I can't help but respond to a post like yours.
I mean it is all so ridiculous. And the post is that they are looking to me to help them figure it out and I can't. I can't help them when they need me to the most. For all they have done for me all I can do is keep searching for answers and worry right along with them.
Hang tough...
I live in Roanoke, VA. I was told that if she were to share a room with someone at AL it would be $3,500 per month. If she had a room of her own, it would be $4,700 a month. Although I appreciate all of the responses about how "inexpensive" this is, it's not. It's ridiculously expensive. To only provide a room and 3 meals a day for that price is crazy. It does not include anything like medication monitoring etc. It's extra for that.
Neither her nor my wonderful father are veterans.
When I say she doesn't qualify for Medicaid I say that because my dad working his little tiny butt off and squirreled away every penny he got. He worked very hard to accumulate a small nest egg for my mom. She owns her own house and I'm pretty sure that that may qualifies as an asset that would need to be sold.
she probably gets about $1400 in SS and a few hundred more from a couple of pensions from my dad working.
She also has some stocks. And I am guessing that stocks count as assets also?
And now....be prepared for my rant. Hey, you were warned!
I find it DISGUSTING that hard working folks like my dad who worked for decades and gave THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS of dollars to the US government through taxes, get screwed at the end. What the hell is the point of working so damn hard and saving and saving and buying a house and paying your taxes like a dutiful American if at the end of it all the woman who you did all this for (in this case, my mother) has to sell the home and become poverty stricken in order to get any assistance? So either way the greedy ass government gets theirs, right?!!
I have another family member who does nothing with her life. Accumulated nothing. Owns nothing. A big giant lazy ass. And when the time comes for her to go to AL, she won't have to pay a dime. Great incentive to work!
Oh, I feel SO much better now. Thanks!!
Why doesn't she qualify for Medicaid?
If it is that every month she is over her states's Medicaid income limit BUT not enough to pay in full for the NH and she qualifies for NH in every other way?? Then she can see an elder care attorney to do a "Miller Trust" or a "Special Needs Trust". Say mom gets 1K from SS and 1,500K from retirement every month. Her monthly income is $2,500. So basically she is $ 500 over the state's ceiling for monthly income. No matter what she does is always is $500 over. So this excess $ 500 is what funds the trust. The beneficiary of the trust is the state or the state's Medicaid program and upon death reverts to the state. Miller really has to be done by an attorney who does elder law as it needs to be flexible/adaptable and meet the criteria of each state's law on probate (death laws) & Medicaid rules.
Medicaid is a federal/state needs based entitlement program (and very different than how Medicare & SS are done as they are federally structured entitlement programs).Because it is needs based what was done with assets in the 5 yr window prior to Medicaid application is central to qualifying. Medicaid is designed as a safety-net for low income who can show both financial and medical necessity for long term care. The monthly income & asset ceilings and how assets are dealt with after death is set by each state.
Because Medicaid is needs-based, doing a 5 yr look-back on the applicants assets is critical for the states to operate the program. If everyone was able to transfer all of our parents assets, empty out their accounts today, spend monthly retirement and SS on nonNH stuff and put them into a NH tomorrow paid 100% by the state the system couldn't afford it and they wouldn't have any NH to go to.
Medicaid compliance is all about either doing planning OR spending your share until &/OR unless you are impoverished. Medicaid gets to the heart of the issue of who should pay for long-term care -- the public through the tax-supported Medicaid program, or users of long-term care through their personal resources, including
those after death. Good luck!
My father has utilized in home aid, moved on to assisted living and now a skilled nursing care. I have found when we got him placed in a particular facility the staff were more open to discuss options.
If you or another family member is the primary care giver you can "charge" for those duties. Helps to spend down the funds but keep it in the family.
The sooner you get her assets out of her name the better. Speak with an elder care attorney.
Be prepared if you attempting VA and Medicaid. Although they will back pay the process is long and grueling. Try to go face to face with either of those facilities. It helps.
I wish you the best. You are doing the right thing.
Hang in there.
I have a neighbor whose wife had a stroke. They are in their 80's and were very active. She went into a nursing home and required rehab. It was 10K a month. She is now home with no improvement. Someone comes into her home. All of this expensive. Just unfortunate. Good Luck to You
When we moved her in with us, local and good respite care was $15.00 an hour. My parents were 'grasshoppers' socking away every cent, something we've never been able to do with the cost of everything, but mom's got a good nest egg....for awhile.
Her AL place is a little under six thousand a month. She's in relatively good health and only 75 so I expect at some time, we'll run out. We're also very middle class, often living paycheck to paycheck so I understand. We certainly couldn't even approach affording mom's bill.
When you say she doesn't qualify for medicaid, does that mean she takes in too much a month? My mom has SS and a small pension. I look forward to reading other people's answers. This stuff is not easy!
The least expensive solution I am aware of is to hire live in help. It provides one on one care and she gets to stay in her own home. That may work for a while and puts off the move to an AL.
If she or her husband was a veteran, there may be benefits available there. As you spend down her assets, she may become eligible for medicaid at some point.
As part of my search, I did find a group home for memory care. 15 residents in the home. I wasn't impressed with the one I saw and it was the only one in the area.
These are the best ideas I can come up with, perhaps others will have more ideas. Good luck.