How to Pay for Nursing Home Costs
Medicare, Medicaid and other resources can help minimize the high cost of long-term care.
Odds are high that someone in your family will need a nursing home
sooner or later. Someone turning age 65 today has almost a 70% chance
of needing some type of long-term care, and 20% of people will need it
for longer than five years, according to LongTermCare.gov. The average
cost of nursing home care is so high that the cost of that care can
financially cripple a family. But there are steps you can take – whether
a nursing home is needed now, next month or next decade – to minimize
the financial strain of nursing home costs.
There are many
ways to cover the costs of long-term care, including savings,
investments, assets, long-term care insurance, state LTC Partnership
programs, the Federal LTC Insurance Program and tax advantages. Care Conversations,
an initiative led by the American Health Care Association, the National
Center for Assisted Living and America's Skilled Nursing Caregivers,
offer a helpful list of these private and public payment sources in
greater detail.
Planning for Long-Term Care
Medicare
does not provide an all-inclusive long-term care component. If certain
conditions are met, Medicare offers limited coverage (up to 100 days per
benefit period) for some beneficiaries. Since Medicare does not cover
long-term care, the program does not pay for assisted living costs,
though it may cover certain services, such as home health or outpatient
therapy benefits for assisted living residents. Additional information
can be found on Care Conversations.
Ideally,
financial planning for long-term care should occur long before the need
arises, says Wendy Boglioli, a spokesperson for insurer Genworth
Financial. Long-term care insurance, Medigap and employer-provided or group health insurance plans
can offset the cost of long-term care. But if these policies aren't in
place before a major health event occurs, they are usually no longer
available to consumers.
If your family's facing imminent need for nursing care and doesn't have an insurance plan
for it in place, there are still options to help defray the costs. Make
no mistake: Those costs can be staggering.
In 2018, a private room cost an average of $8,365 a month, or more than $100,000 annually, according to the Cost of Care Survey 2018 by Genworth Financial. A semi-private room ran $7,441 a month, or $89,292 per year. And the average nursing home stay is 835 days, or more than two years, according to the government's latest National Nursing Home Survey.
In 2018, a private room cost an average of $8,365 a month, or more than $100,000 annually, according to the Cost of Care Survey 2018 by Genworth Financial. A semi-private room ran $7,441 a month, or $89,292 per year. And the average nursing home stay is 835 days, or more than two years, according to the government's latest National Nursing Home Survey.
Costs widely
vary from person to person, both because of geographical difference in
rates and because each resident's length of stay differs. While nearly 1
in 10 residents age 75 to 84 stays in a nursing home for five or more
years, nearly 3 in 10 residents in that age group stay less than 100
days, the maximum duration covered by Medicare, according to the
American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance. Convalescent nursing
home care, which follows a major surgery or other hospitalization, is
typically short-term and can be covered by Medicare.
"Even
if you or your loved one doesn't need care right now, but you think it
may be coming, at least look at the costs now and in five years to gauge
what the hit will be," Boglioli says.Medicare
Seniors and their families facing a near-term need for a nursing home should first determine whether Medicare
will cover at least a portion of the stay. The Medicare program
provides coverage for rehabilitation – but not long-term care. Medicare
will pick up the tab for up to 100 days of care in a skilled nursing
facility each benefit period. A benefit period is how Medicare measures
the length of stay in a hospital or skilled nursing facility.
Medicare
can also help if a long-term nursing home situation looks inevitable
but isn't immediately necessary. For as long as the individual is able
to stay at home, Medicare can be tapped for up to 35 hours per week of
home health services. Medicare covers home health services like
intermittent skilled nursing care, physical therapy, speech-language
pathology and occupational therapy for up to 60 days at a time, called
an "episode of care."
To secure
these funds, individuals must be living at home – not in a nursing home
or other long-term care facility – must have their physician approve a
plan of care and must use a Medicare-certified agency. If you require
help only with personal care, such as meal preparation, bathing, using
the bathroom and dressing, you do not qualify for the Medicare home
health benefit. A government-published guide offers details on which home health services Medicare covers
.
The U.S. News Best Nursing Homes rankings indicate which nursing homes in each state accept Medicare..
Medicaid
If
an individual lacks enough savings to cover the cost of a nursing home –
or if the cost of a protracted stay exhausts their assets – they can
become eligible for assistance from Medicaid. State Medicaid programs
are required to cover nursing home care, says Caroline Haarmann,
associate vice president, Medicaid Reimbursement and Research, American
Health Care Association. “To qualify for these services, a person would
have to meet their state’s level of care criteria and financial
eligibility requirements,” she says. “Eligibility for Medicaid LTC is
complex, as there is often more than one ‘eligibility pathway’ that
allow a person to qualify for these services. Some of these are options
the state can choose, while others are mandatory.” In addition,
depending on how a person qualifies for nursing home care in Medicaid,
the state may determine that the beneficiary must contribute towards the
cost of their care.
To qualify for Medicaid,
applicants must have minimal assets – no more than $2,000 in cash and
cash equivalents such as bonds and IRAs. For married couples, the spouse
staying at home may have assets worth an additional $132,900, the
annually adjusted Social Security cap for 2019. While some seniors might
be tempted to make large financial gifts to their children or
grandchildren in order to hasten qualification for Medicaid, doing so
within the five years prior to applying for the program could disqualify
them from receiving its benefits.
Before
applying for Medicaid, seniors who own their home also need to consider
the fate of the property. Under federal law, a home is exempt from the
asset limits described above, but if the owner dies while receiving
Medicaid nursing home benefits, the government can take the house.
Families that want to avoid losing a treasured home, therefore, might
choose to forgo Medicaid, especially if the applicant's life expectancy
is short and relatives have the means to pay anticipated costs out of
pocket.
By contrast, assisted living facilities, which don't take Medicare or
Medicaid, and home health agencies often face steep competition, so
consumers shouldn't be shy about talking prices with these
organizations. An assisted living facility with a high vacancy rate or
no waiting list may be more willing to negotiate a monthly rate,
according to Genworth. If you're considering a home health agency, you
may be able to secure a lower hourly or daily rate if you indicate that
you're shopping around for the best price.
Informational Source
A senior may
be able to keep his or her home in the family either by adding a child's
name to the deed at least five years before applying for Medicaid or by
setting up an asset-protection trust before applying. This type of
trust enables a person or couple to transfer some type of property, such
as a home or cash-like assets, to another person to hold and manage for
their benefit, says Gabriel Heiser, a Nashville-based lawyer
specializing in nursing home law and author of "How to Protect Your
Family's Assets from Devastating Nursing Home Costs: Medicaid Secrets."
He recommends hiring a lawyer to help with the process. "This is not a
do-it-yourself project," he says.
One way to find a qualified lawyer is to call your local bar association and find out which attorneys are teaching seminars on Medicaid planning to other attorneys. The attorney also must be licensed in the same state as the person needing Medicaid assistance because Medicaid laws vary from state to state.
One way to find a qualified lawyer is to call your local bar association and find out which attorneys are teaching seminars on Medicaid planning to other attorneys. The attorney also must be licensed in the same state as the person needing Medicaid assistance because Medicaid laws vary from state to state.
Veterans Administration Aid and Attendance
According
to VeteranAId.org, the A&A Pension can provide up to $1,794 per
month to a veteran, $1,153 per month to a surviving spouse, or $2,127
per month to a couple. A veteran filing with a sick spouse is eligible
for up to $1,410 per month. Like Social Security, this pension is
dependable and is paid directly to you by the Department of the
Treasury. This benefit can be used for in-home care, board and care,
assisted living communities and private-pay nursing homes.
“Industry
professionals consult the Community Care Program, the Department of
Veterans Affairs’ new network of licensed health care providers, as well
as Veterans Care Agreements,” says Dana Halvorson, senior director, Not
for Profit and Constituent Services at AHCA. “VCAs are a new type of
agreement included in the VA MISSION Act (of 2018).” Learn more about
VCAs at the VA website.
Cost of Nursing Home vs. Assisted Living
Rachel
Reeves, director of communications, National Center for Assisted
Living, says that assisted living is primarily paid for by individuals’
private or personal funds, such as LTC insurance or personal assets.
Medicare does not cover long-term supports and services. Medicaid varies
by state, and how the program is set up in each state determines how
residents can use Medicaid to help pay for LTC in home and
community-based settings, such as assisted living communities.
“About 1 in 6 assisted living residents relies on Medicaid for their
daily care, many of whom spend down their personal assets and rely on
Medicaid in order to remain in their assisted living home,” she says.
While assisted living care
has a lower price tag than skilled nursing/nursing home care, it’s
important to understand the difference between the settings.
Traditionally, assisted living does not offer 24/7 skilled nursing care
like nursing homes. “Residents typically need less assistance with daily
activities and are more independent than nursing home residents,”
Reeves says. The NCAL website offers some helpful resources on paying for care.Negotiating Long-Term Care Costs
Most
nursing homes won't lower their rates, which are keyed to the payment
levels offered by Medicare and Medicaid. Still, there's sometimes room
to negotiate when it comes to long-term nursing care costs. "Sometimes,
rather than accept a lower Medicaid rate, a facility will agree to take a
lower private pay rate, which is still higher than the Medicaid rate
but lower than published private pay rates," says Howard Krooks, past
president of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys.
Relocating the Patient
If
a senior who needs long-term care has children, grandchildren or other
relatives residing in a city or state where nursing homes are less
expensive, moving the patient could be a good option, Krooks says. A
move might not only reduce the cost of care, but also make it easier for
relatives to check in on the resident. Those deciding whether to move
an elderly relative should consider the individual's health and whether
moving away from doctors who have an established relationship with the
senior could harm his or her care.
Moving
an elderly relative to a new location solely to find cheaper care might
backfire if it leaves the patient far from family. Relatives could face
higher travel expenses when visiting their loved one, offsetting any
family savings.Informational Source

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