Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hiding assets is never a good idea. Aging in place often turns into a nightmare for person who lives closest and if they live long enough and decline it is totally unsustainable no matter how house is set up. You cannot force a sibling to take someone in. I would get council on aging and other experts involved to find a long term residential setting that fits their budget. Person who refuses needs to be willing to take them in.
Yes, and honestly Medicaid/the state will find it and take it anyway. There’s a reason there’s an asset test for Medicaid. It is for indigent elderly, not for people who have assets they want to pass on to their children.
First, 9k is not much money. It’s at least 4k/month for independent living and AL goes up from there. That is just housing. If they need food, supplies, transportation, OOP medication, medical copay/coinsurance, clothing, non-covered medical services (e.g., PT where there’s no improvement expected) that’s all on top.
It does make sense if he can possibly qualify for IL/AL to get them both into a CCRC with a Medicaid-certified nursing home, and the sooner the better. They could stay together for a while and not need to reapply/get denied in the future when they need more care. What will happen then is that as they need higher levels of care, they can move up in intensity, draw down their assets, and qualify for Medicaid once they meet the income/asset tests. But you need a 1) CCRC that will move people along to higher levels of care without a waiting list; 2) an affiliated NH that takes Medicaid. AL/IL facilities with Medicaid NHs are also generally better equipped to handle behavioral problems (or at the very least are less likely to discharge someone for them).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that you haven’t addressed yet are the step down issues. Really it doesn’t matter what the needs are today. It’s whether you can fund it into the future when they become MA eligible. At some point your uncle is going to go into a higher level of care and your aunt won’t. I don’t see how you prevent your aunt from losing her housing.
And you really don’t see to grasp that expenses don’t go away. There will always be things they need to pay for.
The well spouse is allowed to keep their house - it doesn’t impact the Medicaid application, I don’t think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much of the pension dies with the husband? Not every pension provides for a survivor benefit and those that do can be small.
On the federal she’d get about $2500. I have to call the state when I’m up there next and find out that one. I don’t know about SS. They get two payments. One for around $1500 and a second for around $500. I assume the higher amount is from his working years and hers is the smaller. I don’t know how SS works in that scenario. Do spouses get anything when the higher-earning spouse passes away?
Anonymous wrote:I think the thing that you haven’t addressed yet are the step down issues. Really it doesn’t matter what the needs are today. It’s whether you can fund it into the future when they become MA eligible. At some point your uncle is going to go into a higher level of care and your aunt won’t. I don’t see how you prevent your aunt from losing her housing.
And you really don’t see to grasp that expenses don’t go away. There will always be things they need to pay for.
Anonymous wrote:Assisted care level facilities generally do not accept people with progressive dementia. Idea is they accept people who can get around and may need some help with meals - they are not staffed or equipped to handle people who need total care. Have you all checked to see if assisted care place would accept the husband? Skilled level care is different from the extended care you are looking at - you are looking for a nursing home/extended care facility. Is the $9000 a month net of taxes and insurance withholding? Memory care units run about $16,000 a month many places, and that is not all inclusive. Hiding income is a very bad idea - usually is attempt to illegally qualify people for Medicaid (Medicare does not pay for long term care) by lying about assets. They usually find out and then you have a criminal case on your hands. Isn’t decent to lie and expect other taxpayers to pay for care instead of using assets to pay for that care.
Anonymous wrote:How much of the pension dies with the husband? Not every pension provides for a survivor benefit and those that do can be small.
Anonymous wrote:If you have a set pension then you can't spend down. We just went through this with my MIL. Her pension is 11k a month. The facility is 6.5k a month-- least amount of care needed. She literally only pays for her Medicare, car insurance, toiletries and phone. Lunch out with the ladies sometimes. But her costs aren't more than 1k a month. The rest goes into her savings. She also has 150k in savings from the sale of her house. If she needs more stepped up care it will have to come from that.
10k may be cutting it close for the monthly. Do you have a better handle on all their finances? Like car insurance, Medicare supplemental, etc? My MIL was really hesitant to move but now loves the ease of not having to maintain her house.
Anonymous wrote:If you have a set pension then you can't spend down. We just went through this with my MIL. Her pension is 11k a month. The facility is 6.5k a month-- least amount of care needed. She literally only pays for her Medicare, car insurance, toiletries and phone. Lunch out with the ladies sometimes. But her costs aren't more than 1k a month. The rest goes into her savings. She also has 150k in savings from the sale of her house. If she needs more stepped up care it will have to come from that.
10k may be cutting it close for the monthly. Do you have a better handle on all their finances? Like car insurance, Medicare supplemental, etc? My MIL was really hesitant to move but now loves the ease of not having to maintain her house.