Dad needs a NH, His SS and Pension come to approx. $1,650.00 p month. survival expenses eat most of that up. How do we get him on medicaid. Been told he makes too much money to qualify. He is 83, has dementia with lewy bodies and total body atrophy, is functionally imoblie and incontinent. needs 24/7 care and 81 year old mom w early dementia can not take care of him at home any more. he was just hospitalized for severe dehydration b/c he had bladder cancer and refuses to drink sufficient amount of water b/c he doesn't want wet diapers. All resources that I have applied to for help say he does not qualify for services. Humana won't provide in home assistance of any type except MAYBE a nurse to ck blood pressure. They live in FLA. and senior services are a joke. Mom can't even drive to store to get their meds or food or dads diapers. I live in MA and beyond frustrated. Can't even get him free legal service to get a DPOA for him and mom. She only gets $610.00 SS per month. Can't they file separately for Medicaid, I am drowning in paperwork and hitting dead ends. Need help.
The medical usually comes from them being hospitalized and then discharged to a NH for 2 -3 weeks of rehab (all of this MediCARE pays for) - so they get into NH via that route and then end up staying in NH and apply for MedicAID to pay for. If they have been living at home, they often won't have the fat medical file to show the need for skilled nursing care, so you will have to move them to MD's - like a gerontologist - who understand what is needed within their medical history to make the approval for Medicaid work. Understand?
His bladder cancer may allow him to be hospice (MediCARE pays for hospice) eligible whether for at-home services a couple of days a week or in a NH.
Medicaid financials are 2 fronts: "income" (what they get each month, like SS) and then "assets" (like savings, annuities, home, car, property). Home, 1 auto are exempt assets by & large. Most states have the "income" limit at about 2K per individual for Medicaid.Your mom as the not going into the NH spouse, is called the "community spouse". A community spouse is allowed to have assets ABOVE the 2K asset ceiling. The exact amount depends on the state - most have it at 110K. Now on the face of it Dad seems OK for his income limit. So there must be an "asset" problem. The Medicaid applicant non-exempt assets have to be under 2K - so anything that takes them over that will disqualify them. It could be a life insurance policy with a cash value, ditto for preneed funeral or burial policies. If they have an annuity with a redeemable value, that will disqualify them. Anything that has a cash value and doesn't qualify as a non-exempt asset, must be cashed in and all the proceeds used towards their care. My mom's application had a delay until her life insurance policy status could be established.....it was from the 1960's and like 20+ pages. Now the caseworker does not have the time or the ability to decipher the policy as to whether there is a cash value. But they can sent you a letter of inquiry on the status of the policy. I had 48 hours to get this done otherwise her application would go into the documentation not provided file and she would be rejected for Medicaid. I got a broker who hold a TX insurance license to do a note on letterhead that the policy was NCV (No Cash Value) so all OK there
and faxed it over the next day. But for most folks, they don't have a stockbroker who will just do this and like right now for you babe. My experience is that the system really requires someone who is pretty OCD to shepherd the application as there will be something amiss. My experience is that you have to find the time to go to their home and go through their stuff and make copies of all needed and then carefully do the application that the NH gives you. You kinda need to have a big binder with your copies of their financials at the ready to be able to answer whatever question right then. The NH should give you a list of documents they require. Both my mom & my late MIL are/were in TX NH and the list was similar but different from their NH's. Go figure.....
How have you gone about applying for Medicaid? It seems that if you do this on-line they often get rejected as there is no coverage for at home room & board so there is nothing for Medicaid to pay for. They make too much for food stamps or the other traditional Medicaid programs. For us with my mom, the application was done in tandem with the NH application to the state for Medicaid payment (for her room & board costs @ $ 145.00 a day). I found the NH who's medical director was in her gerontology group and they had room at 1 facility, so that is where she went. It was not my first choice of NH and I moved her to another much better 1 within the year, but the important part is that she got into a NH and through the initial NH Medicaid process. I did her application (over 100 pages mainly due to her old-school insurance policies); and then the NH reviewed it (to see if they would even accept her as a Medicaid Pending resident); then the NH sent the application & documentation I did ALONG with their bill to the state Medicaid program for their (NH) room & board bill. It went to a specific state caseworker who did the NH in that area. On my own, I could not apply for Medicaid for my mom, it had to go within the NH application system.
For probono law, the best situation I've found is from law schools. Most law schools will have a set probono clinic. It usually will be set in low income areas and tends to be about tenant & domestic situations but they can do the DPOA, MPOA that work for your state. Remember it is free so what they do may not be tailored to what would really work best for your parents, it will be just in general documents. Good luck and keep a sense of humor.
Until the paperwork is done to show that they have applied for the policy to be cancelled and cashed out, he will continue to be declined.
Did you ask about changing the ownership of the policy? Not the beneficiary of the policy but who owns the policy. (If they are like most couples, they are each others beneficiary, which will be an issue for mom if she gets 25K and needs a NH soon, it will have to be spent-down). Sometime ownership change can be done with a rather small fee to process and it would then go into moms ownership so it would not be Dad's asset. It should be OK since they are married but that is a elder care legal ?. If that can't be done, then you have to cash it in at a loss and then do a spend down. But with the 20K, Dad can spend whatever is FL limit on preneed funeral or burial or cremation and he might be able to buy a small NCV life insurance policy, at his age and health issues it will likely cost the face value of the policy and probably would have to be limited to $ 1,500 or whatever FL has as it's limit. BUT it would be $ provided to the family after death to do stuff (rather than pay to the NH). He can also do the spend down on any of his property - so if the car needs 3K in repairs or they want to trade in the car for one that is newer and more dependable and pay in full, that should be OK to do Medicaid-wise. He can get a newer and more comfortable wheelchair above the basic one that Medicaid does. New glasses or hearing aids can be bought for the spend-down too.
The life insurance policy is now a known entity for Dad, so until it gets cashed in, he will be over the resource limit for any at-need program like Medicaid. If family can deal with him at home, I'd suggest getting him qualified for at home hospice.
I've had to deal with TX & LA for Medicaid, and I don't think states are being difficult per se, it's more like the obvious asset issues (house, car, life insurance, bank deposits, interest earned) can't just go away or be ignored as it's tied into their SS # and the info is just keystrokes away to find out. If you live long enough, unless you are multigenerationally wealthy, you will run out of $ eventually in the US. Not pretty, so start planning & investigating where to move to outside US.
The only options we were given for dads life insurance was to A. Stop paying and lose the money, or B. transfer ownership, C. Continue to pay premiums and be disqualified for Medicaid. We are trying to get hospice services in home through his Island Doctors and Humana. Waiting for eval to be done. Needles to say, both mom and dad will need some kind of placement. Dad, as I said is already 24/7 needy, mom eventually. So, all this information is helpful and I th ak you for your input...all info greatly appreciated. Xoxo
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