Someone posted that they now know after caregiving how to plan for their future. So true!
Mom suddenly couldn't walk one day and went to short term rehab. She's been there for 7 months without much improvement, she still uses a wheelchair. Their home is not conducive to wheelchair use so she will most likely go into permanent long term care.
Dad has Lewy Body Dementia and had several falls at home. He went to the ER on Christmas day after a fall. He checked out ok but husband insisted he go to long term care. Dad had a hospital stay for 11 days, to find a care facility bed, and has been in a NH where my mom is for about a month. They do not have memory care there so we are trying to find a new NH for him. The hospital made arrangements first for a place we visited and it was awful! They just lost their certification recently. Go figure. We were able to get him in to NH where mom is.
Because mom and dad never planned for long term care, they are on Medicaid. Let alone, it's hard to just find an available Medicaid bed, the places we have seen are less than ideal. My dad is currently in a shared room that is only 10' by 10' ( the minimum state requirement size for a shared room), shares a bathroom with 3 other people (door between two shared rooms for two women and two men), and has a hanging bar for his clothes just 3 feet wide. I can tell this room was originally intended for just one person, but they make more money this way.
He knows we are looking for another place, so it keeps his hopes up. There will be no income from the sale of their home, they had a reverse mortgage, and any profit from the sale will be taken by Medicaid. We still have the home. My husband and I moved from out of state last year to take care of them. We still reside in the home.
I've entertained thoughts of moving dad back home but my husband would divorce me. He did not handle taking care of dad for 6 months very well, and he's even a Paramedic / Firefighter. We cared for dad full time for 6 months. I think my husband was quick to get dad into a NH more so for us and not for dad. I've gone back to work full time and husband will go start again in May. Husband is quick to get rid of my parents' household things and get rid of the house. I'm not so sure I couldn't move dad back in to the house and go back to being his full time caregiver. I really didn't have a hard time with it. But it could destroy my marriage.
Mom is still on the rehab side of the NH and probanly will be for a awhile. Not even sure what to do about options for her in the near future.
And currently don't know what to do between awful options for dad, and my marriage!
LTC policies are very costly. And the premiums do increase quite a bit. Their daily rate pay may not equal the cost of the daily rate at facility. Many don't pay a dime for 90 days.
I think what many of see today are parents who have outlived their resources, or the value of their resources has not kept up with the escalating cost of care.
Is there a senior resource Center near you which can help you plan? Your state's council on aging is a good resource too.
Your parents needs will only increase. You can continue to be their advocate and daughter with them in a facility. They will not ever be happy about it but they will adjust. As long as their needs are met, they are safe and cared for you have to let some things go. Does the facility have activities that dad will participate in? His room should be looked at as sleeping quarters and the rest of the facility is now his home. It is hard for everyone but you have to consider what you would do as his and her sole caregiver, no husband, no job, no assets, no resources trying to get Medicaid to pay for everything they need, etc. Please think about the reality of their situation now and future.
Sorry that your family is going through this right now!
Truth about getting old: "Not pleasant." Even if you have long-term care insurance, you are still likely to need Medicaid in the end. However, being able to pay a year or two would give you better choices, generally speaking. Hate to say it but: we are living too long, with chronic medical issues. Different from the not-so-old days. And nowadays, family members have to work if they possibly can, to provide not just for their old age, but for the here and now. Europeans may have it better, but they do pay for it in higher taxes. No easy answers.
Do you see it coming? She then developed dementia, Alzheimer's type, and forgot or decided she would not need it in her Alzheimer's brain. So the policy lapsed, tried to get it reinstated with payment of past premiums. Of course the company would not do it.
If anyone purchases a policy, have a child or someone responsible for making sure the payments are made. Wonder how much the companies make off policies that lapse after years of payment, then forgotten....
I don’t know their personal situation but you think Mom and Dad seem to have planned poorly for their old age? Assisted living in my area are about $4k a month even without the additional personal needs they may eventually need. Moms NH is $12k a month. That’s $144k a year. She’s been there going on 3 years so that’s $432k. There’s not a lot of people who can’t afford that and for “normal” people it takes a good income and lots of planning to put that kind of money away. Sometimes those costs are a shock.
After a rather long and tedious search a good friend of mine found a religious group that ran a little nursing home. There were only two dozen residents or so. They accepted Medicaid. The place was simple, clean, and the staff was friendly. She placed her older sister, who had Alzheimer's, with them after the money from the sale of the sister's home was spent and she could no longer afford the "nice nursing home". My friend visited her sister once a week for the five years she lived there.
Good luck with your search. Stay positive and be open to looking at nursing homes that are a little further away but still within driving distance.
/www.investmentnews.com/article/20180809/FREE/180809918/genworth-raises-long-term-care-insurance-costs-an-average-58
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