Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ill spouse qualifies for medicaid after 50% of the couple's assets are spent for their care. No need to divorce. If 505 left for you isn't enough for you, that's being kind of awful.
So, you want OP (presumably the wife, who will left alone to take care of the innocent child / children), to just needlessly piss-away 50 % of the “couples assets” (maybe including 50% of the 529 for the kids college) and only then apply for Medicaid ?
How does that make any sense for her?
If I had a cancer diagnosis right now, I’d immediately begin to think only about what’s financially best for my wife and kids after I’m gone. If that means divorce, then of course I’d do that for my family. It is their best interest that matters most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
My husband died from cancer after several treatments. He even spent weeks in a hospital. We didn’t pay much at all since he had insurance. Divorce is crazy.
It's usually not the cost of the health care that drives the expense. It is the cost of living long term with no way to take care of your daily activities of living.
If you can't get up from bed and to the bathroom to pee in the middle of the night by yourself;
If you can't shower or bathe or dress yourself;
If you can't get your own food, or even feed yourself;
If you can't make decisions for yourself and need memory care
these are the situations where the cost of care can wipe out a family's life savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
You aren’t missing anything. Of course some people can’t afford to pay their max each year or demand some kind of treatment that is not covered. When you dig in, there is always some reason beyond “cancer bankrupted me.” Even if we had to pay the OOP max for both in-network and our-of-network treatment each year, it still would not bankrupt us. I think the other issue is if the sick spouse can’t work and the other spouse isn’t employed or makes too little.
NP. I’m a sahm and before that I was a teacher making 40,000 a year. If my spouse wasn’t able to work due to illness, we’d lose our health insurance and even though I’d of course get a job as quickly as possible we may definitely be in serious financial trouble.
No, you would not lose your health insurance unless he is terminated, and then Cobra kicks in.
You know Cobra is really expensive, though, right? If he's not working or fired, and she's not employed, how are they going to pay the skyrocking premiums?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
My husband died from cancer after several treatments. He even spent weeks in a hospital. We didn’t pay much at all since he had insurance. Divorce is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
You aren’t missing anything. Of course some people can’t afford to pay their max each year or demand some kind of treatment that is not covered. When you dig in, there is always some reason beyond “cancer bankrupted me.” Even if we had to pay the OOP max for both in-network and our-of-network treatment each year, it still would not bankrupt us. I think the other issue is if the sick spouse can’t work and the other spouse isn’t employed or makes too little.
NP. I’m a sahm and before that I was a teacher making 40,000 a year. If my spouse wasn’t able to work due to illness, we’d lose our health insurance and even though I’d of course get a job as quickly as possible we may definitely be in serious financial trouble.
No, you would not lose your health insurance unless he is terminated, and then Cobra kicks in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:or the cost of a home health aide?
Disability insurance provides cash which you can spend on long term care. Many life insurance policies permit acceleration of the death benefit in the case of terminal or chronic illness, which you can spend on long term care. Some life insurance policies have long term care benefits. Plus there’s that million dollars. Why would you need Medicaid?
Anonymous wrote:or the cost of a home health aide?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
You aren’t missing anything. Of course some people can’t afford to pay their max each year or demand some kind of treatment that is not covered. When you dig in, there is always some reason beyond “cancer bankrupted me.” Even if we had to pay the OOP max for both in-network and our-of-network treatment each year, it still would not bankrupt us. I think the other issue is if the sick spouse can’t work and the other spouse isn’t employed or makes too little.
NP. I’m a sahm and before that I was a teacher making 40,000 a year. If my spouse wasn’t able to work due to illness, we’d lose our health insurance and even though I’d of course get a job as quickly as possible we may definitely be in serious financial trouble.
Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:This is sort of ridiculous. If you have a million dollars and a young family, wouldn’t you have both life and health insurance? Not to mention disability insurance. Why would you need Medicaid in this scenario?
Anonymous wrote:I always hear stories of people getting cancer and going bankrupt even with insurance. How is this possible with out of pocket maximums? Unless you need a full time caretaker or an experimental treatment, won’t 99% of insured patients just hit their max each year? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:Ill spouse qualifies for medicaid after 50% of the couple's assets are spent for their care. No need to divorce. If 505 left for you isn't enough for you, that's being kind of awful.