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Search Results for: nursing homes

The Question Every Millenial/Gen X-er, etc. Should Be Asking Their Parents

December 24, 2020 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

 

The blog below was written by my good friend and long-time colleague, Phyllis Shelton. I’ve re-published it because I can’t possibly think of a way to say it better. Thank you, Phyllis!

Okay. You need a grownup question to ask your parents besides,

  • Can I borrow the car keys? Or Have you seen my car keys?
  • When am I going to get a car?
  • Can I get a raise on my allowance?
  • Can I have a toy, ice cream, ANYTHING?

You are WAY PAST those whiny ones. Your parents (or someone) generally raised you out of them. They took care of you, good, bad or indifferent childhood as you may have had. They sheltered you, fed you, sent you to school, and kept you from dying before today from all the crazy things you did as a kid.

Now it’s your turn. We don’t ever, ever, EVER want to think of our parents as getting old and needing our help.

I get it. But think you must.

With the pandemic and news shouting at you on every device that saving for retirement is going to be even harder now, is it even possible to consider that you might have to step up and help your parents

…at the peak of your career

…when you are sending your own kids to college?

…when you are trying to make (or repair) your marriage to be the best ever?

Fortunately, you don’t have to…if you ask The Question.

Mom/Dad, do you have long-term care insurance?

Then before they can react, add “I really appreciate everything you have done for me. I want to know you will be taken care of someday just as well as you have taken care of me.”

If the answer is “yes,” ask them to show you where the policy is in case you need to access it suddenly.

If the answer is “mind your own business,” you have to be firm with “This is my business. You are my parents and I owe you everything. I want to be there for you, but I will need the resources so I can quarterback your care. I’m concerned that I won’t be able to do it myself plus take care of [name your spouse, children].

Oh honey we would never expect you to do that.

Then give me two minutes to tell you what I have learned from TIME, Inc.

  • Most long-term care which is care lasting longer than 90 days is not in a nursing home.
  • Most people are never in a nursing home.
  • A spouse (partner) can’t do it all. Mom will want to, but we want her to have time with [name your kids]. She will need time to rest and when is the last time she picked you up?
  • Hiring caregivers in 20 years could easily cost $40/hr. That gets to be a couple of hundred thousand a year pretty fast.
  • Those country club assisted living facilities are projected to be a quarter of a million a year in 20 years…couples can stay together when they no longer want to keep up their house and they look nothing like nursing homes…
  • Health insurance and Medicare don’t pay for long-term care. After about three months, you are on your own…pay with your own money, pay with some type of long-term care insurance, or go on Medicaid, which means spending down most of your retirement savings.
  • Over half of people age 65 are expected to need some type of LTC in their lives…probably won’t be nursing home care, but home care can actually cost more than a nursing home, depending on how much you have. [Reference another family if you know one that has spent an inordinate amount of money today…like “you know Jamie had to hire round the clock caregivers for his dad for four years at over $200,000 a year and he just passed away a couple of years ago. I can’t imagine what they would pay 20 years from now.]
  • Today there are policies that have guaranteed premiums so you never have to worry about rate increases and can be paid off early so you don’t have to pay premium in retirement.
  • Policies like these return the money to a beneficiary if you never need care so it’s not the “use it or lose it” kind.
  • There are policies that pay a cash benefit so you can save money by hiring anyone you want to take care of you.
  • All those benefits are tax-free.
  • There are policies that you can buy with your IRA or 401(k) if that’s the best way and even those can be tax-free after a few years.
  • There are even policies that protect your assets from Medicaid if you ever had to go in that direction.  What worries me about this is with this pandemic, state budgets are really slashed and it might be tough to get much help from Medicaid when you need it.

I love you Mom and Dad and I’m bringing this up because I want to be sure you are taken care of as well as you took care of me [and name your siblings]. You have to check on this stuff when your health is good so that’s why I’m bringing it up now. If I gave you a couple of websites to look at, would you do that for me?

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure Tagged With: asset based LTC, long-term care, LTC Insurance, LTCi facts

All the Single Ladies, All the Single Ladies… LTCi and Single Women

September 30, 2019 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

The need for long term care doesn’t think about your gender, your financial success or even your age. A life-changing medical crisis can barrel into your life when you least expect it, like an unexpected car accident. Or, it can sneak up on you, introducing subtle symptoms over time, barely noticeable. We see this, for example, with Alzheimer’s disease in people even in their 40s. What we do know is that single women are more in need for long term care insurance (LTCi) than others.

The Special Case for LTCi and Single Women

The two major factors driving the need of LTCi by women are longevity and caregiving.

It probably won’t surprise you to read that women live longer than men. More than two-thirds of Americans over the age of 85 are women. And 80% of centenarians are women. It’s no wonder most residents in nursing homes are women.

At the age of 75, almost 70% of women are single (widowed, divorced or never married). This means they typically live alone, without help with their daily tasks. And because of their historically lower earnings, single women at this age have significantly lower income from Social Security and other retirement plans.

Women are also more likely to be providing care for family members. 75% of people providing home care are women and typically a daughter caring for her mother. On average, she will devote 20 hours each week taking care of her mother. However, 1 in 6 caregivers will provide 40+ hours each week.

Older Women and Poverty

A report compiled by Justice in Aging last year found that out of the 7.1 million older adults that live in poverty, nearly two-thirds of them are women.

The report points to a number of issues that impact the incidence of poverty among women (You can click here to read the full report).

  • Wage Gap and Low Paying Jobs — 70% of workers earning $10/hour or less are women.
  • Caregiving — Caring for children and/or parents takes time away from paid employment.
  • Higher Health Care Costs — A 65-year old woman will spend $47,000 more in health care than a 65-year old man.
  • Domestic Violence — Affects physical and mental health, so it keeps women in poverty.
  • Wealth Gap — The Wage Gap reduces many women’s ability to accumulate wealth over their lifetimes.

 

If you are a woman, you are more likely to need medical care in your later years. Even if that care doesn’t begin until your 70s or 80s. If you have spent years taking care of parents and/or children, this is the time to start thinking about taking care of yourself.

Click here to receive a free, no-obligation quote for your own LTCi policy.

 

 

Filed Under: 3 in 4 Need More, Age related brain loss, Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: caregivers, health costs, Long Term Care insurance, long-term are costs, long-term care, LTCi, poverty, wealth gap, women, Women long term care

Using Your Long Term Care Insurance In Your 60s (or Younger!)

August 26, 2019 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

TLCI Woman on crutchesWhen you think of Long Term Care Insurance (LTCi), you’re probably thinking about planning for medical expenses and care for your later years. However, there are plenty of adults under 65 who are already using their LTCi policy for ongoing care.

Imagine thinking you’ve got decades before you need to start drawing on your LTCi when suddenly, the unexpected event happens. The catastrophic accident you didn’t see coming. The diagnosis that your physical injury is permanent and you will require full-time care for the rest of your life.

Few adults under 65 are prepared for this possibility.

We have a friend who had a fall at his home which resulted in severe spinal injury. He is now quadriplegic. He was in his mid-50s at the time of the accident.

While his health insurance paid for the immediate expenses including the surgeries and rehabilitation, it did not cover the ongoing care necessary for his continued recover. His original physical therapy required intensive sessions 5 days each week and he was making remarkable progress under this program. Unfortunately, his insurance company declined continuing coverage and he was discharged.

Needing Long Term Care Under 65

In 2018, the global financial services company Morningstar reported that 45% of adults requiring long term care are under 65 years old. In fact, 8% of people between the ages of 40 – 50 will have a disability that requires long term care.

Reasons for early long term care include:

  • Psychiatric or neurologic illness
  • Developmental disabilities
  • Traumatic physical injury, like brain or spinal cord damage

The AMDA (American Medical Directors Association) has even published a guidebook, “The Younger Adult in the Long Term Care Setting” to help navigate the options available. They recognize that the needs of this particular group are quite different from those over 65.

For starters, how does one prepare for living the next 30 – 60 years of their life in a nursing home facility?

That manual is available to members of the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care (PALTC).

Relying on Tea Leaves?

None of us knows how our future plays out. That’s why we purchase health insurance and auto insurance. The younger residents now living in nursing homes didn’t plan for this scenario. Those who have long term care insurance have better options and access to a higher quality of life and medical care.

Make plans to protect your future self. Click here to receive your free, no-obligation quote for your own LTCi policy.

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure Tagged With: Long Term Care insurance, long-term care, LTC, LTCi, Morningstar, spinal injuries

Are Assisted Living Facilities Keeping Up With Needs?

March 26, 2019 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Caregiver with Elderly WomanAssisted living facilities and their residents don’t tire of blaming each other for sub-standard care.

An article in the New York Times reported the tragic and avoidable death of a 90-year-old resident, suffering from dementia. A resident of Brookdale Charleston Senior Living, she wandered outside — and not for the first time.

Nobody noticed her absence for seven hours. She was found in the pond behind the facility, dead from puncture marks to her ear, temple, jaw and cheeks.  Her pacemaker was discovered inside one of the alligators that lived in the pond.

The assisted living facility has already settled the family’s claim for wrongful death and is now facing an additional suit for emotional distress.

Sharing the Blame

I believe that the residents, their families and the facilities can share in the blame.

Undertrained Staff

Assisted living is not federally regulated. Nursing homes are. State enforcement and sanctions are often lax and not very stringent.

Many experts agree that much of the problem stems from inadequate staffing which I’ve blogged about in the past. Adequate funding will easily resolve these shortcomings. An simple recommendation, but more difficult to implement.

Assisted living started as a service for people who were more independent. Residents who need help with activities of daily living (ADLs). Some residents were experiencing early cognitive challenges. Just a generation later, assisted living often accepts people with far greater needs. Needs they may not be prepared to fully accommodate. I often see this, and it disturbs me.

The Facility’s Profit Motive

Many assisted living facilities are for-profit entities, earning handsome returns to their investors. I have some friends who manage the marketing at some of these organizations. They often tell me that they are pressured by management to fill as many apartments as they can.

Facilities cannot offer this needed care at an affordable price point that fills apartments and attain financial returns that please their investors. As the saying goes, “No one can serve two masters.”

The Resident’s Budget

The residents (or their families) pay for assisted living out of their own pockets, unlike nursing homes. Medicare or Medicaid do not contribute. They have a high appeal, as they emphasize independent living instead of intensive medical care.

Many residents are unable to afford the higher cost of fully trained and properly staffed facilities, so they let their budget determine the quality of care they receive.

People want to deny the almost certain fact that they might ever need long term care (LTC). When they inevitably do need LTC, it is common for them and their family to downplay the true extent of their needs.

So they choose the posh, upscale environment so many assisted living facilities have, instead of one that may be better-equipped to actually care for the resident.

What happens when the residents and their family realize that they’re not getting the care they need? They might experience the tragic consequences like the resident in the NYT article. They might move to another facility more appropriate for their escalating needs.

Decide to Plan

When planning for your future needs, wouldn’t it be nice to make your decisions based on quality of life and not settle for a sub-standard solution just because of your financial limitations?

Choose quality! Click here to receive your free, no-obligation quote for your own Long Term Care insurance policy.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: assisted living, long-term care, long-term care insurannce, Long-Term Care Planning, LTCi, nursing facilities, nursing home care, Nursing Homes

Why & How Reputable Media Continues to “get” LTCi Wrong

January 18, 2018 by Honey Leveen 2 Comments

News cloud with how and whyThis blog has become my repository for correcting an error riddled, inflammatory Wall Street Journal article published last week.

Here’s a very accurate Forbes article refuting the WSJ article. It’s inately

My colleagues Steve Moses and Claude Thau wrote the following comments in response to this Wall Street Journal article titled “Millions Bought Insurance to Cover Retirement Health Costs. Now They Face an Awful Choice”.

Even a publication as credible and august as the Wall Street Journal can report things wrong.

I will add that in the nearly 30 years I’ve been a long-term care insurance (LTCi) specialist, faulty coverage like this still “gets to me”! LTCi has always been disparaged by the press, probably because it is a complex product that journalists don’t have time to properly research before deadlines. I also understand that inflammatory coverage attracts more readership.

This has led to widespread misinformation. My many long-term care insurance claimants will tell you LTCi is an extremely valuable, transformative, product. Articles like this one do the public a disservice by dissuading people and giving them one more excuse to avoid responsible and reasonable long-term care planning in advance.

By the way, it is almost never necessary to drop a LTCi policy due to a rate hike. We normally downgrade the policy instead, which lowers premiums yet conserves high LTCi policy function.

Here is a press release about this by my colleague Matt McCann.

Here are Steve Moses’s comments:

1/17/2018, “Millions Bought Insurance to Cover Retirement Health Costs. Now They Face an Awful Choice,” by Leslie Scism, Wall Street Journal

Quote: “Long-term-care insurance was supposed to help pay for nursing homes, assisted living and personal aides for tens of millions of Americans when they became unable to take care of themselves. Now, though, the industry is in financial turmoil, causing misery for many of the 7.3 million people who own a long-term-care policy, equal to about a fifth of the U.S. population at least 65 years old. Steep rate increases that many policyholders never saw coming are confronting them with an awful choice: Come up with the money to pay more—or walk away from their coverage.”

LTC Comment: Following is the letter I sent to the author of this front-page Wall Street Journal article:

Dear Ms. Scism,

There is a critical aspect of the LTC insurance issue that your otherwise fair and well-researched article missed entirely.

When LTC insurance carriers recognized their reserves were inadequate to pay future claims, they did the honorable thing. They raised premiums to ensure future claimants would receive full benefits.

Compare that with the federal government’s failure to fund Social Security and Medicare adequately, leaving those programs with upwards of $100 trillion dollars in unfunded liability. What’s more, government policy actually impaired private LTC insurance.

Beyond the reasons you cited for LTC insurance problems (actuaries’ errors regarding lapse rates and utilization, plus the Federal Reserve’s forcing interest rates to near zero, for which actuaries should not be blamed) there is another cause. Medicaid is the dominant payor of long-term care. Easy access to Medicaid for middle class and affluent people after they already needed care crowded out up to 90% of the potential market for LTC insurance, according to authors of peer-reviewed research published in the American Economic Review.

In other words, government policy impaired demand for and profitability of private long-term care insurance, while itself, leaving most aging Americans vulnerable to social insurance and public assistance programs that are hopelessly unprepared financially for the coming age wave.

It is a tragedy to blame private insurers and the dedicated people who’ve tried to make the LTC insurance product work for problems caused by poor public policy. Blame the culprits, not the victims.

For a full explanation, evidence and documentation of these facts and this analysis, please see my monograph “How to Fix Long-Term Care Financing,” published by the Foundation for Government Accountability (also the source of yesterday’s WSJ op-ed about millionaires on food stamps, a very similar problem.)

If you would like to follow up on these aspects of this complicated problem, please contact me.

Steve Moses

Stephen A. Moses, President
Center for Long-Term Care Reform
2212 Queen Anne Avenue North, #110
Seattle, WA  98109
Office: 206-283-7036
Fax: 206-283-6536
Email: smoses@centerltc.com
Web site: www.centerltc.com

Here are Claude Thau’s comments:

For the most part, Leslie Scism’s Wall Street Journal article  is accurate, however it leads readers to reach false conclusions.  From my perspective, it is clear that:

  1. Insurers are losing a lot of money on their old LTCi policies.  Although it was clear from the start that LTCi was a risky business, the “perfect storm” problems that the insurers are experiencing was unforeseeable.
  2. Both claimants and healthy policyholders cherish their policies (for good reason), hence will either stretch to pay the increased premiums or will reduce coverage to keep their policy in effect.
  3. Price increases are a big problem for people who bought LTCi policies long ago and don’t have the cash flow to pay the premium increases.
  4. People who can afford the price increases are getting a good deal, although they expected a much better deal.  I think it is appropriate that the burden of the adverse experience is being split between the insurers and the policyholders, but choosing the right balance is subjective.  I empathize with both sides, but more so with the policyholders.
  5. The industry is not meeting its potential in helping to solve the country’s LTC financing problems.  There are many reasons why the industry is not developing adequate market share.  Some people blame the industry; some people blame various levels of government.  However, human nature and other factors also contribute.
  6. Despite the problems, a good number of insurers have stayed in the market or entered the market, offering good ways that many people can insure their LTC risk.
  7. The price increases are taking a heavy toll on the industry, partly because media attention is focused on these older blocks, which causes people to be unduly wary of good opportunities to protect against LTC risk.
  8. The problems of existing policyholders, while severe, are significantly less common than Ms. Scism suggests.
  9. A key issue:  How do we encourage insurers to develop coverage for new risks, particularly distant future risks (long-term care is much more risky for insurers than annual property and casualty risks such as cyber risks).

The industry is losing money because the insurers ARE paying claims1.  Insurers sometimes erroneously fail to pay a claim, but failure to pay a claim appropriately is not necessarily bad faith.  I have generally succeeded in getting errors fixed or in explaining to the policyholder or family why the claim decision was right.  The Independent Review process, which protects against some wrongly-denied claims, is rarely used, which suggests that claims are resolved fairly.  To the degree that the July 2017 Milliman LTCi Survey was able to identify such appeals, independent reviewers supported insurers’ declines in nearly 90% of the cases2, which also suggests claims are resolved fairly.  A 2016 study3 found that 98% of LTCi claimants were satisfied with their claim payments and an earlier federally-funded study4 found large satisfaction as well.  (Footnotes are below my signature block.)

Our society spawns a significant number of fraudulent insurance claims in every line of insurance, including LTCi.  Insurers have a responsibility not to raise premiums in order to pay fraudulent claims.  Their efforts to avoid fraudulent claims can contribute to (but not fully explain) frustrating claims processes (16% of claimants do not consider the claims process to be easy.5)

Ms. Scism wrote “some policyholders complain that it [the industry] has nothing to lose by denying legitimate long-term-care claims”.  She failed to address that complaint appropriately.  One of the key risks of denying a LTCi claim is the huge risk of a (possibly class action) law suit.  In my view, insurers too often pay claims because the cost of defending a lawsuit would be expensive, even if successful.  Perhaps that contributed to a federally-funded study concluding that insurers overpaid LTCi claims by 3.4%6.

Ms. Scism’s title refers to “Millions… Face An Awful Choice” and her second paragraph starts “Now, though, the industry is in financial turmoil, causing misery for many of the 7.3 million people who own a long-term-care policy, equal to about a fifth of the U.S. population at least 65 years old.”  This sentence is inaccurate and misleading in several respects:

  1. There were 47.8 million above age 65 as of July 20157, obviously even more today.  Dividing the “7.3 million” by 47.8 million produces less than 15% (still overstated), not “about a fifth” as she wrote.
  2. She is including people below age 65 in the numerator but not in the denominator.  If she did an apples-to-apples comparison, the ratio would be significantly lower than even 15%.
  3. She is also including policyholders who no longer pay premiums (generally because they are on claim) and those who have purchased more recently-priced policies.
  4. She wrote “Credit Suisse analysts tallied more than 4,500 rate-increase requests nationwide from 2009 to early 2017 by 16 once-big sellers of long-term-care insurance. The proposed increases affected hundreds of thousands of policyholders.”  Even if all those “hundreds of thousands” are over age 65, the Credit Suisse data suggests probably less than 10% of people age 65+.  Did she make any effort to reconcile the conflict between her statements and her Credit Suisse source?

Policyholders getting huge price increases is worthy of attention and discussion, but focusing solely on the plight of policyholders who bought LTCi long ago leads readers to infer that LTCi is not a good alternative for them today.  The past problems have caused today’s products to be much more stably priced.  Furthermore, Ms. Scism dismisses the popular combo products (“But such products are often costlier”), without mentioning that many of those combo products are entirely guaranteed, which protects against the “misery” she cites.  By the way, of course it costs more if you add a potential death benefit to LTCi coverage.  I believe articles about price increases on old policies should make strong efforts to explain that the situation is tremendously better today.

Best wishes,

Claude Thau
Director of Long Term Care Insurance Funding Solutions, Target Insurance Services

Phone direct: 913-403-5824; WATS line: 800-999-3026, x2241
claudet@targetins.com

Click here to connect with Claude on LinkedIn

Claude’s Footnotes:

1  NAIC Experience Exhibit Reports through 2014 show LTCi claims compounded 12% per annum from 2001-2014.  The author did not seek more recent information; growth clearly has continued albeit at a rate that the author can’t quote. See also the subsequent proof that claimants are satisfied, etc..

2  Thau, Claude; Schmitz, Allan; and Giese, Christopher, Milliman LTCi Survey, Broker World Magazine, July 2017, p. 3 of the reprint.

3  LifePlans, “Experience and Satisfaction Levels of Long-Term Care Insurance Customers: A Study of Long-Term Care Insurance Claimants”, September 2016, p. 14.  “…only six percent of claimants had a disagreement with their insurance company about policy coverage, and the majority of these disagreements (65 percent) were resolved to the satisfaction of the claimant. Put another way, for every 100 people making claims under their insurance policy, only two are likely to have had a disagreement about coverage that was not solved to their satisfaction.”  A table on page 22 shows that 70% of claimants were “very satisfied” with their policy, 27% were somewhat satisfied, 2% were somewhat dissatisfied and 1% were very dissatisfied.  The lower satisfaction rate in this table appears to reflect the claims process as well as the amount paid, whereas the 98% statistic is related solely to the amount paid.

4  U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Disability, Aging, and Long-Term Care Policy (2006 and 2008). “Service Use and Transitions: Decisions, Choices, and Care Management Among an Admissions Cohort of Privately Insured Disabled Elders” (2006); “Following an Admission Cohort over 28 Months to Track Claim Experience, Service Use, and Transitions” (2008); “Care Management, Claim Experience, and Transitions Among an Admissions Cohort of Privately Insured Disabled Elders over a 28-Month Period” (2008).  This study found that 14% of home care claimants, 5% of assisted living facility (ALF) claimants and 11% of nursing home claimants were dissatisfied.  It differed from the 2016 study in that this older study dealt with people earlier in the claims process.  Satisfaction apparently increases with time on claim, perhaps because the paperwork hassle is concentrated at claim initiation and because the monthly payment tends to increase and cumulative payments definitely increase.

5  LifePlans, “Experience and Satisfaction Levels of Long-Term Care Insurance Customers: A Study of Long-Term Care Insurance Claimants”, September 2016, chart p. 15 shows that 78% said it was easy; 15% said it was difficult and 7% did not know.  Of those who expressed an opinion, 15/93=16.2% thought it was difficult)

6  National Long-Term Care Insurance Claims Decision Study: An Empirical Analysis of the Appropriateness of Claims Adjudication Decisions and Payments, April 2010; Figure 5; p. 11 Total Paid/Total that should have been paid = Total Paid/((Total paid – (Amount that auditors would have denied – amount that auditors would have approved)) = $155,925,300/(155,925,300 – ($5,905,708 -$719,999)) = 3.4%

7  See https://www.census.gov/newsroom/facts-for-features/2017/cb17-ff08.html

Filed Under: Correcting Ignorant Public Figures, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, LTCi rate hikes, rate hikes

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