Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be clear, I am strictly answering the equation in the headline. Not saying you should be helping your father in any way.
I moved my father to a state with generous Medicaid laws. There is a share of cost version of Medicaid here and then you jump thru some hoops to eliminate it. Then there is in home support that pays me for taking care of my parent (state program).
So you are actually your parents caregiver which of course comes with elder abuse liability. Being a child who has a limited relationship with a parent out of state who from what I am reading-was never a main parent is not remotely equivalent. I imagine if any of these cases are taken to court they would be thrown out pretty quickly. I wonder if they base things on like “your father paid 200k for your college education and you owe that back to him” kind of thing? I imagine if there isn’t any provable financial support it really doesn’t have a chance of being substantiated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You contact a social worker or your county department of aging and ask them how they can help
Thanks. Is this free? Or is this something you pay an hourly rate for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be clear, I am strictly answering the equation in the headline. Not saying you should be helping your father in any way.
I moved my father to a state with generous Medicaid laws. There is a share of cost version of Medicaid here and then you jump thru some hoops to eliminate it. Then there is in home support that pays me for taking care of my parent (state program).
Medicaid is a federal program.
Anonymous wrote:What state?
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, I am strictly answering the equation in the headline. Not saying you should be helping your father in any way.
I moved my father to a state with generous Medicaid laws. There is a share of cost version of Medicaid here and then you jump thru some hoops to eliminate it. Then there is in home support that pays me for taking care of my parent (state program).
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, I am strictly answering the equation in the headline. Not saying you should be helping your father in any way.
I moved my father to a state with generous Medicaid laws. There is a share of cost version of Medicaid here and then you jump thru some hoops to eliminate it. Then there is in home support that pays me for taking care of my parent (state program).
Anonymous wrote:20 states have filial responsibility laws. It’s the state where the parent lives that counts, not the state the adult relatives live in.
It is rarely used BUT more facilities are turning to this law now because of the deep cuts to eldercare programs.
Anonymous wrote:20 states have filial responsibility laws. It’s the state where the parent lives that counts, not the state the adult relatives live in.
It is rarely used BUT more facilities are turning to this law now because of the deep cuts to eldercare programs.
Anonymous wrote:Some states come after next of kin for elder neglect.