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Elder Orphanism

March 17, 2016 by Honey Leave a Comment

Elder OrphanismWe will be reading more about elder orphans. Even if we have a slew of kids, we are likely to wind up as elder orphans. We must plan for this right now.

Here is a link to a beautiful column describing what the future is likely to look like.

Thanks to the author, Dave Nesbit, for allowing me to re-publish this.

“New Year’s Day is a time to turn the page on our bad habits and start new and positive behaviors.

Here’s a challenge of what self-interested baby boomers should resolve to do now—reach out with personal compassion and respect to younger people. This might seem to be inverted thinking from “respect your elders.”

Over the last century, progress in transportation and technology enabled the settling of our vast country and made the intergenerational family farm all but obsolete. Maybe your children, as mine, are now adults who have relocated outside of our geographic area to fill the labor needs of America’s expanding economy. As 20th century labor mobility has undercut traditional family life, affordable cellphone plans appeared in response.

In 1915, a 3-minute coast-to-coast phone call cost $20.70, which was 3 percent of the $687 average annual income. By 1940, that same call cost $3, when the average house rented for only $30 per month. By 1970, the 70-cent cost was the same as a McDonald’s quarter-pounder. Now the insignificant cost of a lengthy call, along with Skype, might deceive us into believing that our family needs are fulfilled by inexpensive communication. They aren’t.

Today’s communication is not much more meaningful than when I as a child chimed in “Hello Grandma, I love you” during a 3-minute call. Fifty years ago, Bell Telephone advertised that “long distance is the next best thing to being there.” Maybe it is, but it’s a “poor second” and an inadequate balm for the loneliness and vulnerability of older persons who are distant from their family’s younger generations.

When I was growing up, my mother “adopted” three widows who shared special times with our family. Those surrogates helped to fill the void of absent biological grandparents, who I rarely saw. Until she was in college, our daughter did not realize how lucky she was to grow up in the same town with two sets of grandparents who she saw often and knew well.

Especially since our children live out of state, I’m glad that my wife and I own long-term care insurance and have colleagues at Keystone Elder Law. Both will be great assets when aging causes us to become frail, and we need to develop and implement a caregiving plan. It certainly would be a healthy supplement if a surrogate, family-like relationship would develop outside of our organizational environment.

I have witnessed such an intergenerational relationship develop among members of a service club, when one is missing a parent/grandparent(s) and another is missing a child/grandchild(ren). Similarly, such relationships can originate naturally among neighbors. Churches that seek a means to translate scripture into practice could encourage and nurture intergenerational surrogate families.

Pennsylvania rewards live-in caregivers. The state initiates an action during probate to recover Medicaid funds paid to provide care in a nursing home. However, live-in caregivers who do not own their own home and who lived with an unrelated frail person for at least two years prior to that person relocating to a nursing home, may inherit the home free of any estate recovery.

In his futuristic novel titled “2030,” Albert Brooks suggests that, by that date, the national debt will have outpaced the gross national product, medical breakthroughs with cancer and other diseases will enable longer life expectancy, and older persons will be confined in worn-out and all-but-forgotten cruise ships that are anchored off the West Coast. Young people, who work harder and receive less, will be incited to form gangs and become violent against older people, who seem selfish to them.

Could surrogate families be a possible antidote for both the intergenerational separation caused by mobility, and the pessimistic clash between the young and old as told in Brooks’ novel?

Over the past half century, the American melting pot has blended Catholics and Protestants, and Christians and Jews, into neighborhoods and families. Is it too hopeful to imagine that Judeo-Christian families and neighborhoods will assimilate peaceful Muslims? Would acts of kindness from Judeo-Christians to vulnerable younger Americans not only lead to surrogate families, but also make our younger generation less vulnerable for recruitment by radicals who promote terrorism?

As my wife and I visited our children and grandchildren in south Florida over Thanksgiving, I observed a significant number of interracial families. This contrasted with my recent, sad experiences with a couple of families in which a parent had alienated their child decades ago because of an interracial relationship. Could it be that racial intolerance within families is waning as rapidly as the relevance of the cost of a long-distance call?

The legislature and courts have forced a legal settlement of most of the controversial sexual preference issues. Is Brooks correct that the emerging issue for the 21st century will be the young versus the old? According to a Pew Foundation study, the declining percentage of Americans who are younger than age 15 will cross over the growing percentage of Americans who are over age 65, at the number of 20 percent, just before the year 2030.

How will the legislature and courts manage public resources and entitlements, when fewer younger people are available to support the larger number of older people who live longer? Will life-prolonging drugs be provided to the poor? Will Medicare have maximum lifetime benefit? Will the cost of long-term care for seniors deplete Medicaid funding for young families and children? Will the ethics of assisted suicide and euthanasia be considered seriously?

Politicians have kicked the can of painfully real solutions into the future. Our children will be taxed excessively, not only to repay escalating public debt created by our generation, but also to pay for entitlement programs to take care of aging baby boomers. Be proactive about this dilemma.

If not out of shear kindness, then in recognition of your probable future long-term care needs, create a surrogate family. Find younger people in your neighborhood, service club or church to befriend graciously now. Maybe they will respond in kind to manage and advocate for your care in the future.”

Filed Under: Denial, Elephant in the Room, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC, The Magic of owning long-term care insurance Tagged With: Baby Boomers, Better Homes and Gardens, Boomers, Elder Orphanism, elder orphans, home care, Information About LTC, long-term care, Medicaid

Proof that Millionaires Need Long-Term Care Insurance

June 12, 2015 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

MillionaireA recent New York Times article titled “Millionaires Who Are Frugal When They Don’t Have to Be” resonated with me. It describes the spending habits of many multi-millionaires and sheds light on why people of high net worth should definitely own long-term care insurance (LTCi).

The article confirms what I have seen over and over again during my 25-year career when very affluent people need long-term care.

From the article: “There were common threads in this group. These were people who had all made the money in their own lifetimes and done that as much by saving, investing and making careful choices about spending as by making large salaries.”

Such people create their own wealth and happiness step by step, painstakingly, responsibly, day-by-day. It’s hard! Money is happiness and security. They do not like spending it. Each dollar still has great meaning, even when you have more than enough money to buy just about anything you want, with no concern.

For many years in my practice, most of the time, people who can well afford to self-insure (pay all of their expenses themselves) for long-term care, choose not to!

I see this over and over again and have testimonials from very affluent clients admitting they would not be availing themselves of home care or assisted living were it not for their LTCi.

I have testimonials from children of affluent clients admitting their lives are much different, they are not bound and shackled into caregiving roles, because their parent owned and collected from their LTCi (check this site’s Testimonials page).

I see personal friends who had the opportunity to buy LTCi but did not when they were able to. I know they have the resources to pay for long-term care, but instead, the healthier spouse and/or kids are their caregivers. This outcome is stressful, regrettable, avoidable and undignified!

Filed Under: Denial, Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, New York Times, The Magic of owning long-term care insurance Tagged With: Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, www.honeyleveen.com

How Long-Term Care Insurance Can Transform Lives

January 28, 2015 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Edna MartinEdna Martin, Long-Term Care Insurance Specialist

What follows is the true story my colleague, Edna Martin, of Seattle, was kind enough to share. In so doing, we hope we will help others understand the transformative difference long-term care insurance ownership can make in peoples lives.

“My parents were beginning to have trouble living independently, primarily because my mother was in the beginning stages of dementia.   She had a second aneurism when she was 70. From that point forward, although she recovered she was never quite the same.  Slowly over time, she became more and more dependent on my father.  She had trouble remembering things and her ability to walk was becoming affected.

As time went on, my father was becoming overwhelmed with caring for my mom, and my husband and I often had to run over to their house to help them.   At that time, my parents were in their early 80’s.  We decided it would be easier for everyone if we combined households and had them live with us so we could be instantly available to help.  My husband remodeled our house into two separate living units – each had its own kitchen, living room and bedroom.  Plus, we installed a chairlift so that my mother, if she became completely wheelchair bound, would have a way to get out of their unit.  A couple of years later, we were grateful for the lift since she completely lost her ability to walk.

Having them move in with us meant I was going to have to change how I earned a living. I knew I would have to take time off to assist my folks. I chose an insurance career because it provided me with the flexibility to control my schedule. At first I sold life, disability and long-term care insurance (LTCi). I didn’t know anything about LTCi; it was just something that was part of my portfolio. However, it didn’t take me long to realize that LTCi could be a life changer for families like ours. The more I read about it, and the more emergencies that befell our household, the more I realized the importance of owning it.

Early one beautiful Sunday morning, my dad was lifting my mom out of the car into her wheelchair.  He got her right up to the front door of their church only to drop dead from a heart attack. Suddenly, I became my mom’s primary caregiver. I couldn’t work at all because I had to assume all of my mother’s care. It was the toughest job I’ve ever had. We were scrambling every week to make ends meet while caring for someone who couldn’t perform 5 out of 6 Activities of Daily Living (ADL’s) and had dementia. We were forced to make decisions during a time of crisis.

To replace my father we hired help 8 hours a day, 7 days a week and were spending close to $5,000 a month this way. That left us 16 hours a day with no help! My mother didn’t have enough funds to cover that cost herself so we supplemented it with our own funds which completely halted (and reversed) our retirement savings. Plus, I had to stay home to help with her care, further compounding the cost in lost income. I never knew if a caregiver was going to show up or not—and if they didn’t, it was up to me. If I’d known about LTCi when my parents were younger I would have insisted they purchase it.

Having a policy would have provided the funds to get care in much sooner, thus alleviating the strain off my dad.  As a caregiver, I realized how much my dad had taken on.  I experienced a tremendous amount of physical strain lifting my mom, dressing her, cleaning and feeding her.  We couldn’t go anywhere and were virtually housebound, which meant we could never get a break.   I was lucky that my husband was so supportive and that I adored my mother who was sweet and loving throughout that time.  The year that followed caring for my mother was one of the most profoundly moving years of my life.  However, physically I was hurting and eventually was forced to relinquish her care to a nearby facility where they had the manpower to care for her 24 hours a day.  We visited her nearly every day of the 3 ½ years she was there until her eventual death at 91.

My husband and I consider LTCi ownership to be an essential part of our well-being.  It is also a gift to our daughter so she never has to be faced with what we went through.”

Filed Under: Denial, Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC, The Magic of owning long-term care insurance Tagged With: home care, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, www.honeyleveen.com

Undeniable Proof That LTCi Is Good for America!

November 24, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

LTCi is Good for AmericaA report proving how and why long-term care insurance (LTCi) helps all of us and our country was just published. LifePlans conducted the study over a period of twelve years. It was commissioned by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP).

Here’s background on  the report.

The report shows that that for LTCi policyholders:

  • A typical 60-year old LTCi policyholder would pay $188/month in premium for the same amount of care they would otherwise have to save $1,666/month, for 22 years, for.
  • Roughly 22 years of premium payments would be returned after only five months of collecting from the average LTCi policy.
  • The majority (97.6%) of all LTCi claims get paid. My experience has been that the only reasons LTCi claims are not paid are due to incomplete claim paperwork or no true need.
  • Most LTCi claimants agree that LTCi enhances access and flexibility as they seek to obtain to the services of their choice.
  • LTCi owners receive on average 35% more hours of care than those without, and their care is also more likely to address their needs.
  • The LTCi industry currently serves 7.4 million policyholders and is expected to pay out roughly $700 billion in claims over the life of those policies.

For Family Caregivers, the report shows:

  • Individuals caring for family members with LTCi are nearly twice as likely to be able to continue working as when there is no LTCi.
  • Caregivers of LTCi claimants experience less stress finding appropriate services for their loved ones.
  • LTCi enables family members to spend less time on hands-on care and more on social interaction and companionship, which leads to better experiences and less stress.

Why the report proves that LTCi is good for America:

  • Because LTCi covers a majority of LTC costs, insureds are not forced to depend on Medicaid.
  • Between 21 and 31% of insured nursing home residents would spend down to qualify for Medicaid if they did not own LTCi. Fewer than 5 percent of LTCi policyholders spend down to Medicaid.
  • Today’s 7.4 million current LTCi policyholders are expected to save the Medicaid program about $50 billion over their lifetimes. Annualized Medicaid savings per in-force policy are about $334.

The graphics in the report are great. They are straightforward and easy to understand, as is the report itself.  If you would like to receive a copy of the entire report, email me at honey@honeyleveen.com.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC, The Magic of owning long-term care insurance Tagged With: AHIP, Honey Leveen, LifePlans, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Medicaid, Medicare, www.honeyleveen.com

Moving Story About How Long-Term Care Insurance Works

March 14, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

What follows is a true story about a friend and colleague. An extraordinary health event occurred. My friend’s long-term care insurance (LTCi) kicked in, exactly as planned. LTCi has provided dignity for my friend and her family, plus choices and options that would otherwise not be possible.

My Story: Talking the Talk and Walking the Walk

by Allan Shoff 

LTCi DignityThis is the story of my wife, Karen Shoff, and the role long-term care insurance has played in our lives.

Karen is the love of my life. We’ve been married for 33 years. She was active, passionate and accomplished in her varied life endeavors. Our rich family life was a huge source of satisfaction to Karen. We have two grown children, 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild. Our daughter, son-in-law, and five of our grandchildren have now moved back from Israel to help with Karen’s care. 

In 2009, Karen had some tingling in her left arm. We went to Cedars Sinai Hospital’s emergency room where they did several examinations, including a brain scan. There were problems with the machine’s calibration—and with the technician giving the brain scan. Karen got eight times the recommended radiation dosage. Within a short time, she began to experience memory loss. We were part of a class-action lawsuit and received a fairly paltry settlement, which only paid for about eight months of Karen’s care.

Over the past four years, Karen has continued to lose function. She no longer speaks to people or interacts with anyone at a personal level. She has some pain, but more discomfort and fear of falling. Music therapy has been helpful to her, but over the past few weeks, she has become more and more withdrawn, spending virtually the whole day with her eyes closed, and communicating very little with anyone. 

Many readers of this newsletter know of Karen. Karen was one of the most passionate, knowledgeable, reputable, accomplished long-term care insurance specialists in the country. She was a visionary and a true leader. She was a featured speaker at NAHU’s 2001 National Convention and a long-time member of the Million Dollar Round Table. She was always seeking ways to give back to the insurance profession and the world. She did whatever she could to foster interest in long-term care insurance education and responsible financial planning. 

Karen has her undergraduate degree from Cornell, a master’s from Smith College School for social work, and a master’s from the Leonard Davis School of Gerontology at USC. The early part of her career was spent as a social worker at a nursing home. 

Karen’s experience as a nursing home social worker made a huge impression on her. In addition, her own experience with her father compelled her to write her widely acclaimed book, “There’s No Place Like [A Nursing] Home”. You can learn about this book and buy a copy at www.longtermcarela.com or email me at shoffandshoff@earthlink.net. Many advisors have found the book to be a powerful tool in their practice. 

The book intimately tells the story of our experience caring for my father-in-law at home. At age 97, my father-in-law suffered a massive stroke. His doctors told us they did not expect him to survive more than a week. Against all odds and advice, but with the wholehearted support of our family, we flew Karen’s father from New York to our home in Santa Monica, CA, and provided him with 24-hour care for the last 11 months of his life. Due to the excellent care Karen arranged for her father at home, he exceeded all expectations and regained his speech. Although he would not re-gain other skills, he found pleasure reminiscing and participating in other facets of family life. Karen publicly expressed, as often as she could, how precious to us all his last few months were.

Thank goodness Karen talked the talk and walked the walk by placing ample long-term care insurance on herself.

 Karen has been using caregivers since August 2011. At present, she has 24-hour care with three regular caregivers. One is a nurse who spends about 15 hours a day here, plus two additional part-time caregivers. In addition, our daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren all help in various ways. I do what I can, but the whole situation is very trying for me.

 Karen owns two CNA LTCI policies, each with lifetime benefit periods and 5% annual compound growth increases. These policies cover about 85-90% of Karen’s care expenses. Without her LTCI, the necessary, dignified, loving level of care Karen receives would be entirely impossible.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC, Testimonials, The Magic of owning long-term care insurance Tagged With: Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Million Dollar Round Table, NAHU, www.honeyleveen.com

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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
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Honey Leveen, LUTCF, CLTC, LTCP
“The Queen, by Self-Proclamation, of Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCi)”
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Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

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