Anonymous wrote:My question goes a bit further: What if someone gave away all their money to charity, is essentially penniless, and then needs the benefits of Medicaid.
For example, they are elderly with medical conditions that need 24/7 care in a full-time nursing facility.
What does the "system" do with them? Throw them on the street because they gave away all their assets to charity and are not eligible for care?
Anonymous wrote:The look back is 5 years. When did your parent give away the money? Did they have a history of regular giving for a long period of time? What state are they in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question goes a bit further: What if someone gave away all their money to charity, is essentially penniless, and then needs the benefits of Medicaid.
For example, they are elderly with medical conditions that need 24/7 care in a full-time nursing facility.
What does the "system" do with them? Throw them on the street because they gave away all their assets to charity and are not eligible for care?
The system Is your kids. They take care of you if you were nice to them.
And if you were never able to have kids or your child predeceased you, say in childhood?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medicaid does not always look back the full five years. When we were qualifying my MIL for Medicaid, I believe they only wanted statements going back a few months and didn't ask for financial info going farther back than that. So if the money giveway wasn't very recent, then it might not give Medicaid reason to want to look farther back.
What state are you in. My loved one is in Maryland and they absolutely wanted 5 years of statements and they flagged all checks that were more than $1000. We had to provide a reason for those checks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question goes a bit further: What if someone gave away all their money to charity, is essentially penniless, and then needs the benefits of Medicaid.
For example, they are elderly with medical conditions that need 24/7 care in a full-time nursing facility.
What does the "system" do with them? Throw them on the street because they gave away all their assets to charity and are not eligible for care?
The system Is your kids. They take care of you if you were nice to them.
Anonymous wrote:Medicaid does not always look back the full five years. When we were qualifying my MIL for Medicaid, I believe they only wanted statements going back a few months and didn't ask for financial info going farther back than that. So if the money giveway wasn't very recent, then it might not give Medicaid reason to want to look farther back.
Anonymous wrote:My question goes a bit further: What if someone gave away all their money to charity, is essentially penniless, and then needs the benefits of Medicaid.
For example, they are elderly with medical conditions that need 24/7 care in a full-time nursing facility.
What does the "system" do with them? Throw them on the street because they gave away all their assets to charity and are not eligible for care?
Anonymous wrote:I know the government will "look back" for several years (5? 7?) to make sure an elderly person didn't just give all their money to their children to qualify for medicaid.
But what if the elderly person didn't give money to their children, but otherwise made foolish financial decisions? Like giving 100's of thousands to charity or political causes?
Or just otherwise throwing away large amounts of money (putting down a several thousand dollar deposit on a living situation, then deciding not to live there and forfeiting the deposit--doing this several times a year so it REALLY adds up!)
Could this disqualify an elderly person from medicaid? And if so--what then? Adult children NEVER received money from the elderly person as adults (as in, not even a birthday card!) and cannot/will not pay elderly person's expenses.