Long Term Care
What is long term care? Long term care
provides benefits when you are unable to do a certain number of activities of
daily living, such as dressing, walking and eating, or when you are cognitively
impaired. Long term care provides a mix of supportive and medical services, and
can be delivered in a variety of places, including a skilled nursing facility,
assisted living facility, adult day care center, and/or home. Generally,
services should be delivered in the "least restrictive" environmentone
that corresponds to your needs.

| What about Medicare? |
Many individuals
incorrectly assume that Medicare will cover most of their long-term care costs.
In fact, Medicare pays very little of all long-term care costs. Its not
recommended that you rely on Medicare to pay for your long-term care needs.
Medicare covers only the following long-term care services:
Skilled
Nursing Facility Benefit: After you have been in a hospital for at least
three days, Medicare may pay for your care while you recover in a certified
skilled nursing facility. It will only pay up to 100 days, and you are
responsible for a daily co-payment for every day in the nursing home between
the 21st and the 100th day.
Home Health Benefit: if you are
confined to your home, require skilled care for an injury or an illness and
meet other specific criteria, Medicare can pay in full for services provided by
a Medicare certified home health care agency. Your doctor must determine that
you need home health care and set up a plan of care for you.
Medicare
does not cover personal care services, such as assistance with dressing and
bathing, unless you are homebound and are also getting skilled care such as
nursing or therapy. Any covered personal care must also relate to the treatment
of an illness or injury and you can only get a limited amount of personal care
in any week.
Additionally, if you purchase a private Medicare
supplement plan (also called Medigap plan) or enroll in a Medicare HMO plan,
these plans will usually not pay for long-term care services that are not
covered by Medicare. In Massachusetts, Medicare supplement policies do not
cover long-term care costs, but Medicare Supplement 1 and Medicare Supplement 2
policies do pay for the co-payments for 21 through 100 for Medicare-approved
stay in nursing homes. |
What is long term care
insurance?
Essentially, long term care covers expenses not
paid for by traditional insurance, Health Maintenance Organizations, or
Medicare. It enables people to protect their assets without having to transfer
or deplete them to qualify for Medicaid. Long term care insurance is available
in the private market, and usually provides a fixed benefit for a specific time
period. Policies vary by daily benefit maximum, inflation protection, choice of
service site (home or skilled nursing facility), requirements for prior
hospitalization, and cancellation features. Some policies will refund the
premiums paid if the policy is cancelled and some will not.
What determines what long term insurance will
cost? The main determining factors are:
- Age - The risk generally increases as you get older.
- Marital Status - Single people are more likely to need care
from a paid provider.
- Gender - Women are at a higher risk than men, primarily because
they tend to live longer.
- Lifestyle - Poor diet and/or exercise habits can increase your
risk.
- Health and family history also impact your risk. What aspects
of the policy will affect the monthly premium? The daily benefit (which may
range from $50 to $500 per day), variable benefits depending upon the site of
care, maximum benefits, site of long term care services, and inflation
protection.
- Specifically, the higher the daily benefit, the more expensive
the long term care insurance.
- Receiving services in your home will cost 60 to 75 percent of
the cost of skilled nursing facility care.
- Benefits that are for the remainder of your lifetime are
generally more expensive than a fixed dollar amount or specific number of
years.
- Flexibility in the place where benefits are received, called
comprehensive policies, is usually more expensive than just one site, such as a
skilled nursing facility.
- Insurance with inflation protection is important given that
health costs have been increasing faster than the general rate of inflation for
the past several years.
What are the risks and
benefits of long term care insurance?
The risk of purchasing long term care insurance is
that a premium will be paid for a number of years or decades and no benefits
will be received because you don't require long term care services. In this
situation, you are paying for peace of mind. The benefit is coverage of long
term care services if they are needed. At age 40, I assessed my situation as an
active, healthy female with family longevity and decided to purchase group long
term care insurance when it was offered by my employer. If I live to 95 years,
the investment will be $45,000 over 55 years-much less expensive than one year
in a nursing home!
Contact Denise
J. Boisvert for more details on long term care insurance.
Click here to learn more about other financial
services provided by Denise J. Boisvert & Associates, Inc.
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