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Perfect Storm Brewing in Texas Assisted Living Facilities

February 6, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

In “Budget cuts elicit fears for elderly” (Houston Chronicle, January 30, 2012, B1, B5), Renee C. Lee documented some frightening trends in Assisted living (AL) facilities throughout Texas.

As in virtually every state, the eldest Baby Boomers are turning 66 this year and the number of Texans needing long-term care will continue rising for the next two decades.  On a positive note, the number of AL facilities has increased from 1,355 in 2000, to 1,440 in 2007, to 1,621 in 2011.  Unfortunately, this growth is a mixed blessing because there are nearly 20% more facilities that must be periodically inspected to ensure that state regulations for the industry are being met.  And Texas has been slow to revise current regulations to adjust to the growing demand for long-term care. 

Second, the TX Department of Aging and Disability Services recently eliminated 60 inspectors who enforce state regulations!  Consequently, the typical AL facility will be visited every 18 to 24 months.  Even before the cuts in staff, horror stories of bedbugs, physical and sexual abuse by staff, and failure to report missing residents abound.  The only rational conclusion is that less inspection will result in failure to detect more mistreatment of the elderly.

Third, “Texas requires as little as 16 hours of on-the-job training for attendants, allows medication to be administered without a license and doesn’t require specific staff-resident ratios,” Lee reports.  Carmen Castro, an advocate for the elderly, referred to this situation as “the Wild West.”

So there you have it – a sobering combination of increasing need, less frequent inspection, and inadequate training and requirements for attendants is brewing in Texas (and very likely in many other states).  These conditions can only lead to more misery for our parents and grandparents – and ourselves – in their final years.

One solution, so course, is for seniors to be very careful to choose only the most reputable, well staffed AL facilities with the best endorsements from current residents.  Sadly, however, the high cost of quality AL can severely drain the life savings of many Americans needing long-term care.  So many must settle for the cheapest facilities they can find.

On the other hand, Americans who own long-term care insurance (LTCi) are armed with financial resources that enable them to be much more selective about the type of facility they choose.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: assisted living, Baby Boomers, Carmen Castro, Honey Leveen, Houston Chronicle, long-term care, LTC, LTC Insurance, Own Your Future Texas, Renee C Lee, TX Department of Aging, www.honeyleveen.com

Word of the Long-Term Care Crisis is Spreading

February 3, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

“The long term care system in Hawaii is broken, “according to the December 13, 2011 Draft Final Report of the Hawaii Long term Care Commission (http://www.publicpolicycenter.hawaii.edu/documents/LTCC_FINALREPORT_draft14dec.pdf. 2424 Maile Way, Saunders 723,Honolulu,HI96822).  And as noted in several previous blogs, the crisis will get worse because of the aging of the Baby Boomers.  Furthermore, the population from which care givers are drawn is beginning to decline.

Members of this Commission clearly “get it.”  They note that 75% of people over 65 will eventually need some form of long-term care (LTC) and that people need to begin planning for this prospect well before they reach their 60s.  The report also cites an average cost of $80,000 per year in a nursing home and the lack of public funds to cover these enormous costs.

A recent survey (2011 Long-term Care Consumer Survey and Quiz Results John Hancock Life Insurance Company U.S.A., Boston, MA02117 includes encouraging evidence that public also “gets it.”  In a sample of 1,000 Americans aged 21 – 75, 82% agreed that it is irresponsible not to plan for the cost of long-term care.  On the negative side, however, only 11% actually own long-term care insurance (LTCi).  And while 62% agreed that LTCi was the best way to do such planning, only one-third were inclined to purchase a policy in today’s economy.

So news about the growing need for LTC and the lack of resources to fund care is getting to the public.  But Americans are still reluctant to invest their own money to purchase insurance for their own LTC.

The solution to this perplexing & frustrating problem is nicely summed up in the Hawaiian Commission’s first two recommendations:

“Conduct a long-term care education and awareness campaign

Treat the risk of needing long-term care as a normal life risk” (p. 10)

This has been my mission for over 20 years.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Baby Boomers, Hawaii Long-Term Care Commission, Honey Leveen, John Hancock, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Nursing Homes, www.honeyleveen.com

Did lack of $$ to pay for care have a role in these murders?

January 31, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

A tragic story in the January 16, 2012, issue of USA Today http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2012-01-15/ohio-woman-dies-murder-suicide/52584916/1) illustrates the extreme level of stress that family members can experience while caring for a loved one at home. 

“LOGAN, Ohio (AP) – A terminally ill woman has died days after her husband fatally shot their adult son and her two sisters in front of her at a southeastern Ohio home and then killed himself.

Authorities said the shootings last Monday in ruralLoganapparently stemmed from family tensions over the care of the cancer-stricken woman, 59-year-old Darlene Gilkey. She was not hurt in the shootings and was taken to a medical facility afterward. 

Her daughter-in-law, Heather Sowers, said Gilkey died Saturday, hours before the funeral for her 38-year-old son, Leroy Gilkey ofColumbus.”

The stress on unpaid family care givers has been documented in many studies. Stories like this cause me to wonder how much this family’s lack of finances and lack of access to respite care contributed to these murders. Don’t you think that if Ms. Gilkey owned long-term care insurance (LTCi), the care her policy would have paid for might have made a big qualitative difference for this family, and possibly averted this tragedy?

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure Tagged With: Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, USA Today, www.honeyleveen.com

Bargaining with your child for long-term care

January 26, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

In a January 15 Sunday Review article in the New York Times, “Bargaining for a Child’s Love,” Hendrik Hartog stated that the image from the early 20th Century of adult children lovingly taking care of their parents during their decline has been somewhat romanticized.  Yes, the custom was for family members to provide long-term care for their parents, but since over half the US population died before age 65, the burden was often relatively brief.  But there were also either implicit or explicit bargains discussed – parents would pass on their homes and other assets to their family caregivers after their death.  These often informal promises could lead to family strife, however, after the parent’s death.  Hartog adds that “…of course what was at stake was never just an economic bargain between rational actors. Older people negotiated with the young to receive love, to be cared for with affection, not just self-interest.” 

He goes on, “Dependency and disability still confront us as facts of life. There is little happiness in the inevitable but unpredictable decline that awaits all of us. And many younger people still experience themselves as trapped by a sense of duty to care for older relatives.” 

Hartog argues that policy and bureaucratic supports such as social security, Medicare and Medicaid have softened the burden on today’s family members, but in a letter to the Editor on p. A20 in the January 19, 2012 New York Times (Caring for Elderly Parents) http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/19/opinion/caring-for-elderly-parents.html?ref=todayspaper, Carole Levine cites dramatic statistics that many children provide long-term care for their parents with little or no assistance from government entities.  Citing Hartog’s claim “…that today middle-class family members don’t do the work of cleaning bedsheets, helping a parent into a bathtub, changing a diaper,” Levine counters that “in fact, according to the 2009 National Alliance for Caregiving national survey, this is exactly what at least 21 percent of the country’s 48 million caregivers do, as well as managing complex medications, arranging transportation, financial and legal affairs, and countless other tasks.” 

Levine correctly notes that “Most insurance, including Medicare, does not pay for this ‘custodial’ care,” and as I have pointed out many times in this blog, Medicaid provides funds only after families have depleted their own financial resources. 

Sadly, neither contributor mentioned LTCi as a wise and reasonable option that will provide funds to pay for long-term care and alleviate the family conflict and stress so accurately described.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Carole Levine, Hendrik Hartog, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, LTCi, Medicare, National Alliance for Caregiving, New York Times, www.honeyleveen.com

“I don’t want to be a burden on my children.”

January 8, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

A recent article (“Aging and Broke, More Lean on Family,” Wall Street Journal, Dec. 31, 2011) by E.S. Browning documents a disturbing trend among boomers and their parents.  And if Americans continue to avoid responsible planning for their long-term care, boomers and their CHILDREN will be confronted with an even more pervasive problem. Increasing numbers of aging boomers will live with their children or receive financial aid from them.

Browning reported that “Thirty-nine percent of adults with parents 65 and older reported giving parents financial aid in the past year, according to a September Pew Research Center survey. Some parents may have trouble acknowledging it: 10% of parents 65 and older reported receiving aid. …In 1900, 57% of adults 65 and older lived with relatives, according to Pew Research. Because of Social Security, Medicare and improving health and wealth, that rate declined to 17% by 1990, Pew says. Now it is up to 20%.”

As the boomers continue to age, this percentage is extremely likely to increase, and the result will be growing levels of emotional, physical and financial stress among family members.  Long-term Care Insurance provides dignity and choice and helps families avoid this kind of crisis.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Baby Boomers, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, Medicare, Pew Research Center, Social Security, Wall Street Journal

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Honey Leveen, LUTCF, CLTC, LTCP
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Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

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