Both myself and my husband are signers on my mother in laws ckg acct, savings, stocks, etc. She is 91 and currently living with us. IF something happens and we are forced to put her in a nursing home can the state attach any of these assets being as she has other signers on her accts? How about any home care that we've had. Will they expect reimbursements for that als0??
There are two great articles written by AgingCare.com editor’s that were already posted in our community. We thought this might answer your caregiving question.
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/10-Government-Programs-Caregivers-Can-Access-for-Their-Elderly-Parents-120513.htm
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/how-to-get-paid-for-being-a-caregiver-135476.htm
We hope this helps.
Thank you,
Ashley T.
The AgingCare.com Team
Medicaid for NH is for those who are impoverished & need skilled nursing care. You have to qualify both financially and medically for Medicaid. Most states have it so that you are limited to 2K in assets and about 2K in monthly income. Each state runs Medicaid so the exact # varies by state. For my mom it is $ 2,094.00 in income max each month and 2K in overall non exempt assets. She has a NCV funeral policy & small term life policy which are ok assets as they have NO CASH VALUE. For your MIL, all funds she has like her stocks, whole life insurance policy, savings, other investments have to be spent down BEFORE Medicaid will pay for the NH. Anything she gets a tax form for will be an asset that is totally reportable which Medicaid can find out about.
You mention she has stocks, I'd really suggest you speak with her broker on starting to liquidate all this now so that it minimizes any penalties for her cashing out. Please keep all the documents as if there is something that is odd, like she has margin calls or other vehicles that seize a big chunk, Medicaid will require extra documentation on these.
Medicaid requires documentation with the application. For my mom it was 3 years & 6 months of her financials. No way around it. I had to go to mom's bank and sit a morning with bank officer for them to do a letter with the details on each of her CD's and all accounts that were closed and what happened to the proceeds of each on the date they were closed. Now luckily they all went into her main drawing account so she was good there and she was in IL prior to NH & has a home so it was clear where her $ was going. What I think the caseworker is looking for is "patterns of spending" that make sense and then since the caseworker is local, I do think they also look at the zip code to see if the applicant's poverty makes sense.
If MIL sold or transferred any real property (home land cars) within 5 years prior to application, Medicaid will look to see where the proceeds went. If she didn't put the $$ into her bank account, then where did it go? Real property records are recorded by the local assessor and dovetailed into the state system and will surface eventually and to the penny. That seems to trigger a transfer penalty inquiry by Medicaid and they are declined from Medicaid till the penalty period is privately paid to NH OR the property transferred back to mom's name if it was that she gifted the property to family OR they move back in with family to get to the 5 year point. Transfer penalties are super sticky to deal with, really if you all have done something that could become a penalty, you should go with MIL to see an elder law attorney to work out the best option before she applies to Medicaid.
Medicaid is & has to be for those who are impoverished. If not, you are expected to private pay till you have spend down your assets and can document it.
What I have learned is that the application is never closed per se, like I as DPOA for my mom has to do an annual recertification about 8 pages and provide the current month and 3 months prior of financials along with the details on her assets (insurance, etc). This is Texas and other states do this too.
About the "snitch cash", I just wouldn't do it as if & when they find out, your elder will be ineligible for Medicaid until the penalty is worked out. The NH will come after you & any other family to private pay for their care. As this usually happens after they are in the NH a couple or a few of months, the amount will be significant enough (at 5K - 15K a month) that it is worth the NH going to sue you or turn you to debt collection.
If you apply for Medicaid, you have to provide whatever length of time of financials that Medicaid requests whether 3 months, 3 years or 5 years. You do not have the option not to comply either. Medicaid knows what income they are getting in and what their living situation is. If they are getting $ 1,500 a month from SS and retirement and live with family and had 50K in their bank account 5 years ago and now have only 1K, then someone will have to do an accounting of just where 50K in savings and 90K in income for the last 5 years went. This is what I meant by providing a "pattern of spending" that made sense. Many states are contracting out compliance for Medicaid (just like outsourcing MERP) and they have the ability to quickly do an evaluation on your pattern of spending to discern fraud.