So I'm wondering how common is it in the current time that most people will have an extended period of years before death where they require caregiving? I know this site is devoted to caregiving so it looks like 100% of the time but this is a self-selected group. A few years ago my insurance agent was trying to talk me into insurance for this, but even their best very expensive policy only covered three years in a nursing home before it gave out - it hardly seemed worth it. Have things changed from how they used to be, say 20-30 years ago? Did the end of life always become this extended lingering situation?
Is the question "should I buy Long term care insurance?"
1. Can you afford it? I'm 66, and I pay $2000 a year for a medium-quality policy. It's a lot of money. If you are younger and very healthy it costs less, but it's never cheap. It would be a shame to spend that much for a few years and then discover you can't keep it up, and have to let it lapse. To die at 97 and never have gotten a penny's benefit from it because you're too healthy - that is a "loss" i'd be glad to bear.
2. Do you have assets to protect? If you have less than $200,000 including your house, and you spend years in a NH, it will all go for your care anyway, and you probably can't afford it.
If you are worth $10,000,000, then you have a great money person who can set things up to protect your assets and fund your care for years. I am in between.
3. Do you have young or disabled children you need to provide for? Maybe a life insurance policy or trust would do that better than LTC insurance. Or maybe LTC will make it easier for them to know what to do with you when/if you need care.
4. Do you have a family history of chronic disabling conditions? If so, and if you can afford it, sign up early! The odds are that you will need LTC. Neither of my parents needed a long NH stay, but we are all just one very bad fall from needing a lot of care for years. I tried to get insurance for me and my husband because he has a family history of diabetes, but even at age 60, he wasn't accepted.
5. Do you live in a state that will reward you for having LTCI when they come after your assets for Medicaid? This applies to those of us in the middle, who can self-pay for some time but not forever. I don't remember the details, but it helps.
It is a gamble. I read some statistics. There are more single women over age 85 in NHs than any other group. But. Only 25% of single women over age 85 are in the NH! Hope this was helpful
And yes, to some degree, it depends upon what one is dying of, declining from, and over what period of time...and who is around to pitch in, to really help out. Most run for the hills...just "too much" and/or are "too busy" for the elderly, mostly these are parents that brought us into this world and cared for us when we were fraile, sick, crying and needed to be fed...to be cared for.
Is there really a big difference between an elderly child and a young child, except for age? The young child is learning, being taught, surviving, being guided and comforted. The elderly child is trying to remember, trying to in many cases..be a part of a family, fit in, control what they know is becoming uncontrollable, and to maintain their dignity. They have now become dependent, to a greater degree or not...but becoming dependent. Most elderly are sharper than you think, and ultimately is our responsibility to give them every opportunity to feel safe and comfortable...just like when someone provided for you when you were a baby, and perhaps far less cognitive, and much more dependent. We were all in the wilderness when we were born, and dependent upon our parents and/or other providers that looked out for our safety and well being. We were then, a "shell" of what would/could be. Yet today, all this debate about "quality of life" for the elderly...and all the sacrifice that impedes on "our quality of life".
Guess what folks, life is a circle of life events, from the mircle of birth, and the caretaking process... to the elderly state of human life, and the caretaking process. What's the difference between a dependent one year old and a 85 year old dependent parent? It is the cycle of life and love to provide..to be there through the good times, and the rough times. Ultimately, it is your decision and only you can answer the question of "quality of life".
In my opinion, "quality of life" is more on the shoulders of the caregivers for the elderly, and what they are willing to sacrifice to provide a better "quality of life" to the person they are caring for. In my experience, and with my elimination and/or reduction of so many antipsychotic drugs that were perscribed for my Mother, Mom bloomed back like a knew flower. And so, she realized a much better "quality of life" during the last three to four months of her life. She was alive, and not a "shell". It all falls upon the caregiver, and what they believe to be and see to believe, sacrifice for, and trust to enable and provide the best quality of life for whom they are caring for. It is ultimately, the primary caregiver's decision, absent other family assistance..often from remote family members that are not involved...and in most cases, don't want to be involved...because of jepordizing "their quality of life".
It's your decision. Maybe a question should be asked to some of our so many heroes that fought in our many wars. Ask them about "quality of life" and the fortitude it took for them to carry a wounded soldier to safety...not knowing their "quality of life".
Good luck with your decision making process.