I find that a lot of posters are caught off-guard when their parents go to rehab from a hospital and then turn out to need long term care. Often, the patient has no funds, is going to have to apply for Medicaid and the facility where they've been placed will not accept "Medicaid Pending" residents. It's SO very important while your parent is in the hospital to meet with the discharge planning folks, discuss what the long term plan might be and to be upfront about what resources your parent has. I can recall doing this with the RN who did planning at the hospital my mom was in, post hip fracture, which was 2 months after a stroke. She was a sweet but very businesslike woman who said "okay, what does mom have, asset-wise?" My brother and I were put off, but CPA/MBA sister in law had all the figures in her head, and having been through this with both of her parents knew what the nurse was looking for. If your parent can private pay for some number of months or years, many facilities will accept a patient for rehab and transition them to long term care, knowing that the funds are there to private pay for a certain term until the spend down and Medicaid application. I think it's absolutely essential to understand this. It's also good to know, if parent has NO funds, that it might be better to place them in a facility that accepts Medicaid from the outset of rehab so that you're not left scrambling to find them a "Medicaid pending placement" down the road.
Windyridge, you sure said the truth! I think about this stuff for myself all the time. My barrier is a big fat retired spouse who pooh-poohs all that planning ("it's bad luck") and whose ultimate plan is to drop dead from a heart attack sometime in the future - until then, it's spend spend spend as we've never been able to spend!.....idiot...... (I am lucky in my own life with my family that we had jumped through all the hoops (will, living will, POA, quit claim deed on the house) years before mom got dementia - all our ducks were in a row and even though I was the only one to handle things, and it was an absolute nightmare, we were in as good a position as we would ever be.) .....People reading this, listen up because when the time comes, you don't want to floundering around with no idea what to do!
Ren
The hospital to rehab to care facility procedure is a crap shoot in this country. It can vary wildly from one place to the next. You might get the ANGEL social worker or discharge planner but usually not.
Look around the next time you go to the old folks rehab facility. It’s necessary for many folks after strokes, falls or surgeries and can get people up and at em again. But it almost seems like a reflex on most docs parts to send everyone to rehab. Looking around the facility my mom was in I’d guess it was a totally pointless exercise for about half the elders there. Many of these places are simply mills chewing up Medicare bucks.
Few people are prepared for caregiving at all much less the nightmare of making these transitions. After my sis died, then bro, and it was obvious mom and dad were going down hill so I started laying track 6 years ago. When the deciding crisis occurred recently it was still a nightmare getting two people in care at the same time. The hospital was trying to discharge mom, the AL room wasn’t set up, Dad was wandering the neighborhood...........Nightmare. Capital N. But I was able to get it done....On a wing and a prayer. Had I not had a handle on the legal and financial stuff....I can’t even imagine.
I don’t mean to sound boastful. There are endless situations and hardships out there. But I’m always struck by the amount of posts on this forum where it’s clear no one has given one thought to caring for 98 yr old granny who’s still driving, lives in the four story filthy house full of cats which is 40 miles out in the boonies,and has a reverse mortgage. To be fair, the people posting are usually the unfortunate last man standing who inherits this mess. But many times you have to ask, What the hell were you guys doing the last 10 years?
I’ve been bugging the crap out of my young nephews about getting their parents wills, end of life matters and POAs done. Have that talk now! Get your waterfowl aligned!
And BTW, I’ve spent lots of time reading this forum in the last 5 years. For a Lone Ranger/long distance caregiver like me it has been a godsend.
Ren
My wife is 57 had been disabled since 2005, I'm 63 and have been disabled since 1996 due to a back injury, then 2 failed surgeries. My wife is bipolar and had multiple health issues. She weighs about 60 lbs more then I do so it is impossible for me to move her around. I think if we were able to get her more therapy, she could regain partial use of het right limbs. This may be wishful thinking but I strongly think this is possible. No way for private pay so she's stuck in limbo. It looks likeLTC for life.
Anyway, yesterday the OT, PT, and ST met with my mom and me and said based on their evaluations, my dad needs 24 hour care, thus long term care. My own naïve hope had been that he could go home for a while as he still is aware he is not home and yearns to be. The staff says they always see families wanting to take their loved one home for at least a while finding out that it is just too hard. My mom had hoped to move in with my dad to assisted living, but the staff thinks even that would not provide the care my dad needs. Although they conceded that different AL facilities offer different assistance, the variable paying what you pay.
My parents are not bloody rich, but have the funds for probably a few years of care, depending on what the costs would be. Kind of like Ren1935 above. I guess the options are going home and hiring in home care, though I know that would be VERY expensive. Going to an assisted living with mom with extra care available, if that is possible. Or long term care, and then the question would be regular long term care of memory care.
The other option is I have the personal means to stop what I am doing and be there to take care of my dad at home as a full time caregiver. The staff at rehab thought that was noble, but said they hear people say that all the time and it rarely turns out well. In my case, I feel my dad would be the easy part. My mom who is physically healthy but neurotic would be the hard one to tolerate.
Trying to deal with like Medicaid LTC eligibility and going about it directionally is going to mean there’s going to be delays in getting them approved or even in getting them eligible; forget about spending time and energy on the nuances of how & where mom could have spent a cashed in CD. Either it’s accounted for or its a penalty, it’s a binary approach. Either they get the whole life policy cashed in or their not eligible, it’s binary. Either they show need for skilled nursing care or they don’t, it’s yes or no, binary. That’s what Medicaid, insurance etc are going do. Whether it’s fair, kind, rude, whatever is besides the point, you need to view the situation from the yes/no, in/out binary decision making of the M&Ms, insurance co, etc.
To me what’s the simplest way to start thinking binary for a dpoa is assume they are going to outlive their $, need skilled nursing care and will apply to Medicaid and plan for it. Gabriel Heiser’s book “Medicaid Secrets” is really priceless in giving an overview of the whole process as to how the system works. ISBN-13: 978-1941123o41
I had looked ahead before the fall for senior living services and had placed us on a waiting list for the facility in which now she is being cared for. The first day after being placed in rehab, after surgery, a room became available. Who would have imagined! I do believe a Greater Power was at work here folks and I am very thankful. I was in a total burnout phase after caring for her for five years and the last year being a very difficult one.
She isn't doing great but is learning to walk again. Only time will tell our future as right now it appears very dim.
Just thought I would share with you folks as that seems to help.
As a side note, both of us are eighty two years old and have been married sixty two years.
Ren.
Once the medical decision to discharge happens they want the patient out and they don't care where they're sent
Even now that she's immobile the hospital planner thought I should be able to transport her in my car instead I had to pay $150 for gurney transfer
Even the hospital's senior network didn't have any suggestions for placement but referred me to an 800 number in another part of the county
Another recent poster is lamenting the lack of medi-cal facilities in the OC
Neither mom's memory care or the NH she was recently in while she was being treated for sepsis take medi-cal
If she outlasts her savings which is becoming a real possibility then I don't know what I'll do
One of my cousins faced the issue, again and again, of her father being discharged home from the hospital. He was "fine". (No, he was mentally ill, PTSD from the Burma Road in WWII, dementia, etc". But he knew who the president was and what day it was. And his PCP said "nice people don't get dementia". Oy.
My cousin's husband finally tracked down a SW at the hospital who sent in a psychiatrist. Once "Dementia" was a dx in his chart, everything changed. They were able to get home care, etc.