My mother in law was in a memory care center and on elder waivers.
Her brother died and left her about $10,000 for an inheritance. It was enough money to take her off of elder waivers and then got kicked out of the memory care because it only paid for 1 month. We are not able to apply for elder waivers for a whole year. She is living with my sister in law but it is getting to be too much for her to do, What are our options
Take care,
Carol
There should also be a State Ombudsman for Long Term Care. Contact that office ASAP
Good Luck
Was MIL memory care actually AL or was it skilled nursing facility aka a NH? I'm gonna bet it was AL, is that the case??? Huge butt difference in AL and NH run for waivers & medicaid.
Why is there a 1 year waiting period? Is it the state that's saying this and is it that there's a waiting list for waivers (like in my state the list is now about 7K for a new AL waiver and they are SOL on ever getting a new one as state is moving to PACE); or is it that the old memory care facility only takes a very small # of waiver placements and those beds are occupied so maybe a year till a bed opens up - which is the story?
So AL or NH?
Was MIL assessed a penalty?
Does she owe any $ to old memory care facility?
Why did SIL take her home & what would have happened if she would not have?
The answers will make a difference in how to approach this......
If the waiver program she was on was at a AL then that is very very different than NH /ltc medicaid for your state for discharging a resident. A NH has to find them placement and has to coordinate with other social services to do this under medicare & Medicaid rules and state regulations as the resident needs skilled care. But an IL or AL dont have to as no " skilled care" required so they are not at risk by leaving. What was MILs situation?
If it was she was in AL Memory care then why doesn't she step up her needs and enter a new skilled nursing NH facility as "Medicaid pending"? Can she get MD orders done stating that she is "at need" for skilled nursing care needed? OR is she more in that grey area of being ok on her ADL's and seems pretty competent and cognitive so not really needing skilled? If its that she is not showing in her medical chart a true documented need for skilled, then you all are going to have to do whatever to see a & other docs to build her chart up to clearly show skilled nursing needed so she can qualify medically for a NH and apply for NH Medicaid to pay for it. Often memory care is custodial care and she isn't going to ever qualify for needing skilled nursing based on what the memory care facility has in her records. I moved my mom from IL to NH and totally bypassed the whole AL phase, took about 6 mos to have her medical records show need and the visit she has a more than 10% weight loss and a bad H&H lab report, her doc wrote orders for skilled so she could enter a NH as medicaid pending. Most NH admits are from a hospital discharge to a NH for rehab (a Medicare benefit) so they come in with a medical file showing need for skilled nursing care and then they end up staying at the NH and applying for Medicaid for LTC. For Medicaid to pay they have to qualify & show need both medically and financially.
Contacting elected is a waste of time IMHO as they voted these programs in place or are under huge budget constraints as it is for their share of NH costs. Also if your state even has waiver programs, it's a big deal as most states don't do individual waivers for AL at all (so mil was lucky to have gotten one) or are phasing them out for community based service programs like PACE.
psychological neurological testing. before they will pay for skilled nursing.
We are putting her in independent care today
until she can have that done, the social worker who came to our house for an interview found her still able to do most things, yet she can't function in daily living so we have to go this route so we can have someone else make notes if she gets lost/confused/angry/
I hope this helps, lots of paper work but well worth it
I did write to my state senators, respresentatives and governor
himself and heard nothing back. Their new law is to take all the proceeds from your home that the remaining spouse lives in if he or she decides to sell it to try to get enough money to live on, during the time they are on Medicaid ( Title 19), or welfare or if they sell it within 5 years after the death of the spouse. They want their money back that they spent on you and your spouse.I am livid about all of this. If you ever heard a commercial about a number to call if you have unpaid credit card debt or did not pay your taxes, you can get your debt 'forgiven' or greatly reduced. Those people were breaking the law and they are getting rewarded for it,. yet those of us who are elderly and who must care for some with Alzheimers are not given any help at all. They just don't care. It is not right, but I must watch 55 years of savings that we both worked for go down the drain in 3 years. I have given up and resigned myself to ultimate poverty. I could suggest if you have a ADRC- Aging and Disability Resource Center in your area, they have qualified people to help you. So sorry. EK
The medicaid requirement of a 5 year lookback into all financials; the surrender requirement of any insurance policies with cash value; and MERP aka estate recovery were all placed into law by the 2006 Deficit Reduction Act which Republican President Bush administration heavily promoted and Bush signed into law 3/02/2006. The states then took anywhere from a few months to 5 years to sign it into law.
MERP as it is an after death recovery is very much interdependent on existing state probate laws as to how it can be done & how family can position themselves. What seems to be the situation - anecdotally as all this is too young for hard data- is that family are probate & attorney adverse so do not open probate so house defaults to recovery; family do not respond to the MERP intent letters so the house defaults to recovery; family cannot provide the documents required for exemptions or exclusions so house defaults to recovery. Once that happens and a claim or a lien placed on the property, it cannot be sold to anyone who needs title insurance as per their mortgage lender without the claim or lien lifted by settlement with MERP. Often family is unaware of MERPs claim or lien till they get to closing and title co search shows the MERP claim or lien.
Right now 1/3 of states have outside contractors who do MERP. Two main ones - PCG & HMS - both get a % of the recovery (from 12% -18%), plus fees. Interest varies (most 9%).
There are folks on this site who have dealt with MERP - 1 had a low value home (mid 30's value) & about 1/2 that in documented expenses who settled the claim for 4k; another is in NYS and going long view to ignore the lien for another decade so outside any statute of limitations but they are continuing to pay property taxes and other minimal on the property for the decade.
One of the issues with MERP is that at the time DRA was policy developed (2000-2005), real estate was totally a go-go....houses selling for way way over value. Folks with low income could get a house way way beyond what realitically they could afford. Homes often had deficiencies titally overlooked as there would easily be an underwriter who would take the paper. Grannies house could sell with plenty $ to go to family AND pay MERP. Everybody gets $$$$$$!
Not at all what the housing market is now.
DRA 2006 Bush.
MERP is somewhat similar in what PL 93-641 did for Certificate of Need reviews, in that before 93-641 CON was supposed to be done for cost-containment in health care but not required in order for a project to get approval or funding flow; there was no specific structure for CON only guideline of what review could be done. It was scattershot in approach for application as MERP was. Once 93-641 signed, there was a specific structure established for CON review. Similar to what DRA did to change what MERP has to do. CON ran for about a decade plus during the more go-go years of hospital build outs. CON laws got revised and most phased out as hospitals have consolidated & less competition, although a few states (MS) still have CON on the books.
For early preDRA MERP done, about 1/3 of states did zero recovery; others did it only for those who had estates with property assets over 500K tax assessor value. No uniformity or compliance standards.
What - imho - is likely to happen to MERP is that it too will change as recovery (& the windfall of $ from the elders homes) as a concept was based on what housing and real estate was in the first part of 2000 - 2005. Very different situation now in 2015. The states aren't really set up to have to deal with old houses with decades of delayed maintenance. (Like what LA & MS find themselves a decade post Katrina in dealing with property still with storm debris or left to go wild). If the state is going to place a claim or lien your parents home or ultimately take you & your spouses home once the community spouse dies - and make it very complex to qualify for exclusions and exemptions or have it so probate & its costs has to be done - then why would you spend a penny on the house that you absolutely don't have to?
If I'm not mistaken your mom passed away without ever needing to apply for Medicaid and died leaving a home and some degree of an estate with assets so MERP is not going to ever be a real time issue for you or your family. Your in the much more fortunate situation of having a parent with assets who died and dealing with problems of the more affluent like trying to find a company to do an estate sale for the contents of your mothers home. But for 60-65% of NH residents, they are on Medicaid to pay for their care, & as such they are already impoverished and MERP will be a real issue for them and their families. Most on NH Medicaid probably don't have a 400K newer home in a better neighborhood or 350K condo at the beach that can be easily sold. Based on those in the NH with my mom, their homes were bought 1950's - 1970's & now needing lots of work to even come close to realize assessor value in a sale. The elder did nothing to contest increased property value as their taxes were frozen. I'd bet that this is going to be a real issue for those states that have outside contractors for MERP to actually meet their goal of $$ recovered and paid ultimately to the states as houses aren't going to have assessor value in reality and many homes will not meet underwriters requirements to be sold with a mortgage. MERP will have an impasse on these homes with families as it's not cost effective to do recovery.
I never said "Bush's fault".
Further, my situation is that my husband never saved any money.We never lived " high on the hog" He just didn't make much. He was dead broke 3 years ago.No pensions or IRA. Even though I should have divorced him, I did the Christian thing and stuck it out, so now, while my husband is in a nursing home and I am paying $ 14,000. a month out of my savings, which is $ 168,000. per year. I also worked for 40 years at customer service in my own business ( and we have no pensions to rely on and my husband has no IRA) working on my feet about12-14 hours a day and worked to age 72 until my back gave out. and yes, I did save my money ( thank God) or we would be on welfare already! So unless you are a multi millionaire, tell me how long you could shell out $ 168,000 a year plus my own living expenses. Very few people could do that- if they could, how come 90% of the people are on welfare in nursing homes? I think it is unfair that I should end up in poverty just because my husband got sick and I had to use all my money and in the end, if I need care, I will be on Title 19 - and yes, there is a difference. In my husband's home, all Title 19 people are put in double or triple occupancy rooms , There are way too many people out there who illegitimately milk the system and so those of us who saved and saved and played by the rules get to end up in poverty. I just thought you should know more specifics since you think I am getting a " free lunch" Look at all the people who never worked, never saved and are bums and living off the government. I am very very angry about that.
I think a fairer way to do it would be to divide a couple's assets in half when one enters a nursing home. the community spouse would then have money to live on and stay in his or her home and the other one would pay till his share of the money runs out, That way the government pays for only 1 person on welfare, not 2. Are you aware a lot of states do it just that way. Not WI. As I stated, our seniors are on the second lowest rung of the economic ladder do to the state government. The federal government has no jurisdiction over the state of WI.
Perhaps now you will understand how upsetting this is and why I am angry. EK
You are right- I am angry that some idiot like him gets on Title 19 and I, who have worked all my life, saved all my life, never asked a thing from anybody will be forced to lose all I had and go on Title 19. The system is all wrong. Those who lived life correctly, saved their money, but could not ever have enough to pay for Title 19 are losing out and all those bums out there and kids who owe tons of money for all their " gadgets"- which by the way, I still have just a flip phone, and until last year still had " dial up" on my 20 year old computer. Trust me, I am not the person you assumed I was in your first post.
So let's agree that we agree and that unfortunately, since my husband never saved any money and I was nice enough to stick it out with him through physical and emotional abuse, I am in a unique situation that because of him, I will end up in poverty, through no fault of my own and have every right to be angry that I am the victim in this situation. EK