Long Term Care Insurance Expert | Honey Leveen | Houston, TX

Helping you make informed LTC decisions

 
Request a Free, No-Obligation LTCi Quote
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • WHY LTCi
  • LTCi FAQs
  • PROCESS
  • TESTIMONIALS
  • ARTICLES
  • MEDIA
  • RESOURCES
  • VLOG
  • BLOG

Entitlement Bandits Rob Medicaid/Medicare

August 1, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

A brief, new Cato Institue video explains the causes of high rates of Medicaid fraud.

The biggest reason is because Medicaid money is “other peoples’ money.” If Medicaid’s accounting were run more like private enterprise, like a credit card company, fraud would be cut down dramatically.

This video ties into long-term care (LTC) well because Medicaid pays for the majority of facility-based LTC in the US. As has been discussed in earlier LTCQueen blogs, if Americans want to “have their cake and eat it;” in other words, preserve wealth and have their loved one receive Medicaid-paid LTC, it is just not that difficult to “game the system.”

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: Cato Institute, Honey Leveen, long-term care, LTC, LTC Insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, www.honeyleveen.com

3in4needmore.com is on The Road

July 29, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

The 3in4NeedMore campaign is in high gear and it’s exciting!

Celebrity spokesperson the 71 year old Dr. Marion, a geriatric care manager is on a 9-week tour of the country in a 1967 converted Greyhound bus. At each stop, she alerts Americans to the need for each one of us to do responsible long-term term care planning. Her advice is, “it’s never too soon to start planning for long-term care needs and costs.” She is eloquent and passionate about the cause. She is infinitely credible.

Here’s a wonderful video describing Dr. Marion’s third week on the road. It’s about 10 mintues. It’s visually fun to watch. If you don’t have time for the visuals, scan to the talking parts, which have great content.

Click here for a link to Dr. Marion’s blog.

I have met Dr. Marion, who has a PhD in geriatric care management. She is eloquent and looks like everyone’s grandmother. She is infinitely credible.

I so hope Americans take her message to heart since not nearly enough of us own long-term care insurance (LTCi). When the Baby Boomers start approaching their 80’s and a great number of us need the care that LTCi pays for, those without LTCi will have few choices and options.

Filed Under: 3 in 4 Need More, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Dr. Marion, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, www.3in4needmore.com, www.honeyleveen.com

Valuing the Invaluable

July 26, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

“In 2009, about 42.1 million family caregivers in the U.S. provided care to an adult with limitations in daily activities at any given point in time, and about 61.6 million provided care at some time during the year,” according to the AARP Public Policy Institute’s July 2011 update.  (See Valuing the Invaluable: 2011 Update The Growing Contributions and Costs of Family Caregiving, p. 1, Lynn Feinberg, Susan C. Reinhard, Ari Houser, and Rita Choula.  AARP Public Policy Institute: 601 E Street, NW Washington DC 20049.)

The estimated economic value of their unpaid contributions was approximately $450 billion in 2009, up from an estimated $375 billion in 2007.  The report also explains the contributions of family caregivers, details the costs and consequences of providing family care, and provides policy recommendations to better support caregiving families.

Family support is critical to remaining in one’s home and in the community, but often comes at substantial costs to caregivers themselves, to their families, and to society.  If family caregivers were no longer available, the economic cost to the U.S. health care and long-term services and supports (LTSS) systems would increase astronomically.

When unpaid family caregivers become less available due to changing family demographics, imagine the battles in Washington over how to fund long-term care for the legions of elderly without LTCi!

 

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: AARP, AARP Public Policy Institute, Ari Houser, Rita Choula, Susan C Reinhard

UK on Collision Course with Long-term Care (LTC) Costs

July 7, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

A newly released report by the Alzheimer’s Society (The Dementia Tax Report 2011. Alzheimer’s Society, Devon House, 58 St Katharine’s Way, London E1W 1LB) minces no words describing the collision course between the UK economy and its growing long-term care needs.

Although the report studied the British, the many similarities between our two countries and cultures make the study relevant here.

The study found that only 3% of those with dementia own long-term care insurance (LTCi). The LTCi industry has existed in Britain for quite some time, but it is not as fully evolved as the LTCi industry in the US, where about 10% of us own LTCi, as my blog on the new Urban Institute study confirms.

The Alzheimer’s Society study (p. 3) states that “Despite the hard work of many care staff and care providers there are many thousands of people who cannot access the quality care and support that they need to have a good quality of life. Latest reports from the Equality and Human Rights Commission, Age UK and others show that the system is not simply in need of repair but is fundamentally broken.

There are currently 750,000 people living with dementia in the UK and this number will grow to over 1 million by 2021. Two thirds of people living in care homes and one quarter of people in hospitals are people with dementia.”

Yow!

Interestingly, but not really surprising, the survey asked British respondents why they did not own LTCi. They gave the same excuses we Americans do: they didn’t know about it, they didn’t expect to need care, and LTCi is too expensive. In my March 28, 2011 blog I reported similar results of Prudential’s recent study.

Of course, LTCi is not too expensive. “LTCi is too expensive” is simply an excuse people give to avoid having a conversation about responsible long-term care planning. Here’s the simple math. Say your premiums are $2,000/year. Say you need to collect from your LTCi in 20 years (pick any number and the math. is the same). From your $40,000 investment, you will collect over $60,000 (in today’s dollars) from your LTCi policy when you need care for ONLY ONE YEAR. According the US Department of Health and Human Services, the odds of needing some type of long-term care at age 65 are at least 70%.

If you don’t yet own LTCi, please take heed of these warnings and act responsibly – NOW!

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC Tagged With: Alzheimer's Society, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, Prudential Insurance Company, Urban Institute, US Department of Health and Human Services, www.honeyleveen.com

Steve Moses is a Sage

June 23, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

My friend and colleague, Steve Moses, of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform beautifully describes why sales of long-term care insurance (LTCi) continue to languish. It’s impossible to explain it better than Steve can, so I’ve re-published his blog, with permission, below. I want to encourage readers to visit The Center for Long-Term Care Reform site.

LTC BULLET:  LTC MIXED MESSAGES

LTC Comment:  Happy first day of summer!

Today we’ll examine four seemingly unrelated issues and show how they fit together like pieces in a puzzle.

Issue #1:  Medicaid planning lives.  Despite the welfare program’s diminishing financial prospects and dismal reputation for poor access and quality, Medicaid planners continue to hawk Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPT).  Example:

6/19/11, “Protecting Your Future: Address all the issues in estate planning,” by Bonnie Kraham Times Herald-Record:  “[Clients] might . . . wish to change from a revocable trust to a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) because they were unable or unwilling to obtain long-term care insurance and the time has come to protect their assets from nursing home costs.”

Issue #2:  Maintenance of effort (MOE) prevails.  Federal law does not allow state Medicaid programs to constrict loose LTC eligibility rules without penalty.  Background:

6/17/11, “Medicaid Mandate Targeted in Debt Talks, but Savings Are Questionable,” by John Reichard, CQ Today:  “As talks intensify over reducing the nation’s debt, there is a real chance that negotiators could end up eliminating a 2009 rule requiring states to maintain current levels of Medicaid eligibility.”

Issue #3:  Reverse mortgages retrench.  The two biggest banks issuing reverse mortgages have left the business.  News:

6/17/11, “2 Big Banks Exit Reverse Mortgage Business,” by Tara Siegel Bernard, New York Times:  “Wells Fargo, the largest provider, said on Thursday that it was leaving the business, following the departure in February of Bank of America, the second-largest lender. With the two biggest players gone – together, they accounted for 43 percent of the business, according to Reverse Market Insight – prospective borrowers may find it more difficult to access the mortgages. . . . ‘We are not allowed, as an originator, to decline anyone,’ added Mr. Codel of Wells Fargo. We ‘worked closely with HUD to find an alternative solution and we were unable to find one with them, which led to this outcome.’   . . .  MetLife, the third-largest provider of reverse mortgages, declined to comment on its business.”  (Emphasis added)

Issue #4:  LTC insurance lags.  Despite the obvious risk and cost of long-term care, most people don’t plan for it or purchase private LTC insurance.  I don’t think any readers of these LTC Bullets would need further evidence of that point.

So, what’s the connection between MAPT, MOE, RMs, and LTCI?

The problem of LTC financing isn’t complicated.  Medicaid and Medicare co-opted LTC financing in 1965 by making nursing home care basically free and easy to obtain.  That crowded out both a private home care industry and LTC insurance to pay for it resulting in the system’s “institutional bias” and Medicaid dependency.  Desensitized to the financial risk, consumers didn’t worry about LTC, ended up in welfare nursing homes by default, and in time, bankrupted the provider system and its primary payers, Medicaid and Medicare. 

The government tried to help us and this is what we got.  Easy access to Medicaid for LTC after the insurable event occurs (Medicaid planning).  Crazy federal rules that prevent states from closing Medicaid loopholes and stopping the abuse (maintenance of effort).  Up to $750,000 of home equity exempted from Medicaid spend down and regulations that undercut home equity conversion in other ways (reverse mortgage industry setbacks).  A public in denial about LTC risk right when the cost is about to explode off the charts (LTCI doldrums).

So, what’s to be done?  Two possibilities. 

The preferred approach:  Fix the problem through responsible public policy by removing the causes.  Get rid of the maintenance of effort restriction so states can target scarce Medicaid funds to those who need them most.  Eliminate or radically reduce Medicaid’s home equity exemption so people will see the real risk and cost of LTC.  Do these things and both the reverse mortgage and LTC insurance industries will take off, creating jobs and generating tax revenues, even as Medicaid LTC costs plummet and more people have better access to a wider continuum of higher quality, privately financed long-term care.

What’s the other possibility?  Continue to ignore these realities, let the current system fall apart, watch a lot of people (especially the poor) get hurt, and end up in the same place anyway:  with a radically reduced LTC safety net, with savings and home equity used to fund most routine long-term care, and with the public finally worried about LTC risk and buying private LTC insurance in droves.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, LTCi, Medicaid, Medicaid Planning, Steve Moses

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 48
  • 49
  • 50
  • 51
  • 52
  • …
  • 56
  • Next Page »

Contact Me

Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Videos go here.

From My Blog

Podcast Illuminates LTC Need

Thanks to my long-time friend, client, beloved former radio personality, actress, author, passionate … [Read More...]

LTCI is Magical at Time of Need!

This is an actual, unsolicted, very meaningful, touching cleint testimonial, just recieved. I pasted … [Read More...]

Testimonials

Open Quotation Mark"Honey - Whenever I need a clarification regarding our “LTC” you are “Johnny on the spot” responding in a very prompt manner, reassuring me, informing me in a concise way, patient with me as I massage the understanding in my own words. Your knowledge is current and expressed with confidence, offered in your conscientious and upbeat personality. Quotation Mark ClosedIt is a pleasure to work with you. Thank you for your expertise." ~ Nancy Damon, Houston, TX
Read more

Thanks for visiting my site! I like hearing from you!

Here’s how to reach me:

Honey Leveen, LUTCF, CLTC, LTCP
“The Queen, by Self-Proclamation, of Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCi)”
404 Royal Bonnet
Ft. Myers, FL 33908

Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

©Honey Leveen, Queen of Long-Term Care Insurance 2011-2015 ~ All Rights Reserved ~ Customization of Genesis Framework by Weborization