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

How to Save Medicaid LTC $30 Billion Per Year and Pay for the “Doc Fix”

March 11, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

Thanks to my friend Steve Moses of the Center for LTC Reform for his permission to reprint this very enlightening blog. It’s long, but the reader will be rewarded with keen insights.

A Foundation in Facts

Medicaid expenditures today are huge ($366.5 billion for 2009) and growing rapidly (up 7.9% for 2010 and up 11.2% for 2011, estimated). Medicaid is the biggest item in state budgets (22% on average), exceeding elementary and secondary education combined. Long-term care (LTC) accounts for 22.0% to 63.7% of total Medicaid expenditures in the states, 33.3% on average. Medicaid-financed nursing home care totaled $45.0 billion and home care, $24.3 billion in 2009.

LTC and Dual Eligibles

Medicaid LTC recipients consume a disproportionate share of total program expenditures. For example, people eligible for Medicaid and Medicare or “dual eligibles” account for 39% of Medicaid spending ($142.9 billion for 2009), although they comprise only 15% of Medicaid recipients. Dual eligibles are heavy users of long-term care (LTC is 70% of their Medicaid expenditures) and acute care services not covered by Medicare (5%). Medicaid pays for their Medicare premiums (9%) and cost-sharing (15%) too.

The aged, blind and disabled–also heavy users of LTC–are 1/4 of Medicaid recipients (25.3%) but account for 2/3 of program costs (67.1%), whereas poor women and children are 3/4 of the recipients (74.7%) but account for only 1/3 of the cost (32.4%).

Potential Medicaid Savings

Researchers and policy makers are trying to find ways to manage dual eligibles more cost-effectively, but no one has focused on how to prevent people from becoming dual eligibles in the first place. This briefing paper will suggest how Medicaid could save $30 billion per year by preparing people to pay privately for long-term care so they do not end up as dual eligibles dependent on Medicaid.

The heaviest users of Medicaid’s most expensive benefit (LTC)–dual eligibles and the aged, blind and disabled (ABD)–consume a disproportionate share of Medicaid’s total resources. Therefore, every actual or potential dual eligible, ABD or LTC recipient diverted from Medicaid dependency will result in a disproportionate savings to the Medicaid program. Conclusion: prevent Medicaid dependency for even a small number of these heavy LTC users, and the savings will be extraordinarily high.

Queries

Aren’t dual eligibles, the aged, blind and disabled, and heavy LTC users the poorest of the poor? Isn’t Medicaid their safety net which protects them only after catastrophic spend down has devastated their life’s savings and driven them into financial destitution? How can you possibly hope to divert such people from Medicaid dependency without destroying their lives and the lives of their spouses and dependents?

Are people on Medicaid necessarily poor?

Only if they need acute or preventive medical care. Not if they’re aged, blind or disabled and eligible because they need long-term care. Income is rarely an obstacle to Medicaid eligibility for people who require LTC. If they have too little income to pay all their medical expenses, including nursing home care, they’re eligible. In other words, you don’t need to have low income to qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits. All you need is a cash flow problem after you pay all your medical and LTC bills.

Medicaid limits non-exempt assets for LTC recipients to $2,000. But, exempt assets are practically unlimited. For example, a home and all contiguous property up to $525,000 plus a business including the capital and cash flow, one automobile, prepaid burial plans, term life insurance, personal belongings and other resources are excluded without limit from eligibility asset caps. Married couples are assured of even higher income and asset protections, including up to $2,841 of monthly income and up to $113,640 of assets for the community spouse as of 2012.

For more details, see Briefing Paper #2 in this series: “Medicaid Long-Term Care Eligibility.”

Medicaid Planning

On top of these already generous income and asset limits, Medicaid planners use both simple and sophisticated techniques to protect additional hundreds of thousands of dollars for affluent clients and their heirs. Such techniques include gifting strategies, annuities, trusts, life care contracts and dozens of others delineated in hundreds of law journal and popular media articles and books. Google “Medicaid estate planning” to find thousands of methods and purveyors of self-impoverishment to qualify for Medicaid. Similar techniques allow people with substantial income and assets to avoid Medicaid’s estate recovery requirements, which in any case, are rarely enforced effectively by the states.

For more details, see Briefing Paper #3 in this series: “Medicaid Planning”

Bottom Line

Medicaid is not primarily a long-term care safety net for people who have spent down into impoverishment. Rather, Medicaid is the principal payor of long-term care for nearly everyone.

Medicaid pays less than one-third of the dollars for nursing home care (32.8%), but covers nearly 2/3 of nursing home residents (64%) and touches over 80% of all nursing home patient days with its extremely low, quality-destroying reimbursement rates.

Out-of-pocket expenditures for nursing home care are down from 49.5% in 1970 to 29.1% in 2009. Nearly half of these already low out-of-pocket costs actually come from the Social Security income of people already on Medicaid, not from asset spend down.

When you back out all nursing home costs paid by Medicaid, Medicare, private health insurance, Social Security and other personal income spend-through by Medicaid recipients, individuals’ and families’ assets are at risk for less than one dollar in six of nursing home costs.

Home care is even less a private burden. Only 8.8% of $68.3 billion home health care costs in 2009 were paid out of pocket. Medicare (43.6%) and Medicaid (35.6%) paid 79.2% of the total and private insurance paid 7.3%.

Building on These Facts

How can we take advantage of the fact that Medicaid LTC does not require impoverishment to improve the program, reduce its cost and generate substantial savings?

First ask: what is the single biggest asset Medicaid protects from long-term care costs? Answer: the home. Medicaid exempts the home and all contiguous property up to an equity value of at least $525,000 and up to $786,000 in some states, e.g. NY, CA, ID.

What do we know about senior’s home equity? Roughly 81% of seniors own their homes; 65% of these senior homeowners own their homes free and clear. Altogether, seniors own nearly two trillion dollars worth of home equity. This home equity wealth is currently illiquid, largely untapped for long-term care costs, mostly exempted from Medicaid eligibility limits, and usually avoids Medicaid estate recovery.

There are ways to liquefy this wealth and put it to use financing quality long-term care for frail and chronically ill seniors. For example, reverse mortgages are private financial products that allow people to convert illiquid home equity into usable income or assets which they can use in any way they see fit and still remain in their homes as long as they are able.

According to the National Council on the Aging (NCOA), 48% of America’s 13.2 million households age 62 and older could get $72,128 on average from reverse mortgages. “In total, an estimated $953 billion could be available from reverse mortgages for immediate long-term care needs and to promote aging in place.”

Yet, reverse mortgages are rarely used to finance long-term care today. Why?

Because Medicaid LTC financing co-opts the market for reverse mortgages by paying for most formal long-term care for most Americans, exempting most home equity, and thus obviating the need to tap home equity for long-term care.

How to Save Medicaid LTC $30 Billion Per Year

To save Medicaid billions of dollars every year and improve the program, replace the home equity exemption with a requirement that people consume their home equity before they become eligible for Medicaid LTC benefits.

How much could this save? Medicaid spent $142.9 billion on 8.9 million dual eligibles in 2009 or $16,056 per dually eligible recipient. To save $30 billion per year, Medicaid would only need to reduce the number of dual eligibles by 1,868,460 or 21%.

Is that feasible? Yes, because as NCOA reports, half of households headed by people over 62 could get over $70,000 each from a reverse mortgage. That much money added to other income and assets and used for long-term care, especially private home and community-based services, could delay or prevent Medicaid eligibility for millions of Americans. The savings to Medicaid would easily exceed $30,000,000,000 per year in combined state and federal expenditures, probably much more.

Over time, Medicaid savings will increase rapidly beyond these initial estimates as more and more people plan ahead to pay their own LTC expenses by means of home equity conversion and private long-term care insurance, a product whose market will expand if and when it becomes needed to protect home equity from LTC expenses.

Objections and Answers

If this is such a great idea, why don’t people already use reverse mortgages for long-term care expenses? Why would they when Medicaid exempts the home and all contiguous property regardless of value and estate recovery is easy to avoid? Put home equity at risk and consumers will take long-term care seriously, plan for it, and save, invest or insure against the risk. Consequently, many fewer will end up as dual eligibles.

How does requiring people to use their home equity improve Medicaid? With fewer people to serve, Medicaid will have more resources to help those who are genuinely in need. Medicaid will require fewer eligibility workers and estate recovery staff, thus reducing administrative costs. Part of the Medicaid savings can be applied to increasing reimbursement rates and expanding the continuum of services provided, thus improving access to and quality of care. Finally, the jobs created in the financial services industry (reverse mortgage lenders) and the insurance industry (LTC insurance agents) will generate new tax revenues to help states and the federal government support Medicaid.

Wouldn’t reverse mortgages impoverish spouses of Medicaid recipients and leave them dependent on public assistance? No, just the opposite. Reverse mortgages provide extra income indefinitely. They are fully insured by the federal government so that families retain the income and the use of the home until they move, sell or die even if the home equity is entirely consumed.

Doesn’t this take away a sacred right people have to pass their homes to heirs? No, Congress made it clear over 20 years ago “that all of the resources available to an institutionalized individual, including equity in a home, which are not needed for the support of a spouse or dependent children will be used to defray the cost of supporting the individual in the institution.” That was the justification for estate recovery, which has not worked well because it is punitive, after the fact, and politically sensitive. Reverse mortgages as a pre-condition of eligibility would achieve the same objective far more efficiently.

Long-term care providers, including nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and home care agencies, would lose Medicaid patients, wouldn’t they? Yes, and they’ll be thrilled to replace Medicaid recipients, whose reimbursement is often less than the cost of providing their care, with private patients who pay a sustainable market rate for access to the top quality care they demand and receive as paying customers. Furthermore, the influx of new revenue will improve care access and quality for all long-term care patients, private pay and Medicaid.

Won’t baby boomer heirs, who are counting on inheritances protected by Medicaid, object strenuously? Probably, but why should Medicaid, which was intended as a safety net for the poor, be inheritance insurance for middle-class boomers anyway? Boomers are exactly the generation we need to awaken to long-term care risk and to their need to insure against it. For nearly 50 years, Medicaid has done exactly the opposite. It has anesthetized boomers to the risk by paying for their parents’ long-term care. We worry about the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare, but at least those programs have putative “trust funds.” Medicaid is a dead-weight drag on state and federal general funds. Medicaid has nowhere to turn as the demographic tsunami hits.

How would you prevent people from gaming this rule the same way they use Medicaid planning to circumvent the current system? Most people who transfer assets to qualify for Medicaid do it after they have a long-term care crisis or when they (or usually their heirs) anticipate such a crisis coming soon. By that time, they don’t qualify medically or cannot afford private LTC insurance, so they turn to Medicaid by hook or by crook. Confront them with a real Medicaid spend down liability while they are still young, healthy and affluent enough to insure privately and most people will do so. Unlike transfers of liquid assets or negotiable securities, real property transfers are publicly recorded and easily discovered. It would be simple to hold people accountable who give away large amounts of home equity any time before applying for Medicaid, even a decade or more. The asset transfer look back period for real property should be at least ten years, instead of five as now.

This is a political non-starter because Medicaid is a “third rail” like Social Security and Medicare. Nonsense. We are quickly approaching the time when failure to confront exploding Medicaid costs will exceed the political risk of confronting them honestly. How will politicians justify cutting dental benefits for poor children or slashing higher education or letting roads go unrepaired just so prosperous seniors can pass their wealth to affluent heirs at the expense of ever-skyrocketing Medicaid long-term care costs?

Do enough people currently receiving Medicaid LTC benefits own their homes to achieve such big savings immediately? No, probably no more than 15% to 20% of people already receiving Medicaid still own their homes. Besides, policy makers would probably want to grandfather in current recipients under the status quo. The major savings will come over a period of three years as the Medicaid long-term care population turns over and fewer new recipients qualify until after they spend down their home equity with a reverse mortgage. The big question here is: what happens now to the homes owned by 81% of seniors by the time they qualify for Medicaid and most of them no longer own their homes? Are the homes being transferred to heirs? Are they being sold and the money used somehow? How? Evidently not for long-term care as the data explained above shows. Research is needed to answer these questions.

Summary

Medicaid is supposed to be America’s long-term care safety net for the poor. Instead, it is the principal LTC payor for nearly everyone. Medicaid’s LTC benefit has become “inheritance insurance” for baby boomers, lulling them into a false sense of security regarding their own future long-term care needs. Medicaid’s generous LTC eligibility and elastic income and asset limits create perverse incentives that invite abuse and discourage responsible long-term care planning.

The conventional wisdom that most people must spend down their life savings before they qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits is a myth, demonstrably false. If people’s biggest asset, their home equity, were at risk to pay for long-term care, most people would plan early to save, invest and insure against that risk. Reverse mortgages permit people to withdraw supplemental income or assets from their otherwise illiquid home equity without giving up use of the home. This extra cash can purchase services to help them remain at home and delay or avoid Medicaid dependency altogether.

The single most effective step Congress and the President can take to fix Medicaid, reduce its cost, and improve America’s long-term care service delivery and financing system is to reduce or eliminate Medicaid’s home equity. That simple measure will pump desperately needed financial oxygen into the LTC service delivery system, relieve the burden of Medicaid on taxpayers, enable Medicaid to provide better access to higher quality care for the genuinely needy, and expand the market for LTC insurance and home equity conversion products, thus generating additional tax revenue for state and federal coffers.

Afterword on the “Doc Fix” Problem

The sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula the government uses to pay physicians is set to slice nearly 30% off the doctors’ Medicare reimbursement rates on January 1, 2012. Almost everyone agrees that can’t be allowed to happen. But no one knows how to pay for avoiding it. The “Doc Fix” is estimated to cost $30 billion per year, $300 billion over ten years, and $500 billion soon if nothing is done.

In the meantime, Medicaid long-term care is fraught with virtually boundless waste, fraud and abuse, as Cato’s Michael Cannon has documented. Recent exposés by video-muckraker James O’Keefe dramatize the problem. All it would take to save most of the cost of the “Doc Fix” is to think clearly about Medicaid LTC and reform it. In other words, “Pay for the Doc Fix by Fixing Medicaid LTC.” This Briefing Paper explained how.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Doc Fix, long-term care, Medicaid, Medicare, Medicare Medicaid Dual Eligibles, Stephen Moses, Steve Moses

The Cost of Entitlements Just Goes Up and Up

February 15, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

“Even Critics of Safety Net Increasingly Depend on It” (NY Times, Feb. 12, 2012, pp. A1, 24) presents frightening trends that threaten the well being of every American.  A myriad of benefits programs provided over $6,500 for every man, woman and child in the US in 2009, a 69% increase from 2000.  And although the primary objective of these programs was to keep Americans out of poverty, the poorest Americans no longer receive the majority of government benefits. 

Trends in the need and cost of these programs are sobering.  Nearly 50% of Americans lived in households receiving government benefits in 2010, up from 38% in 1998 and 44% just before the recession in 2007.  And spending on medical benefits is projected to rise 60% over the next 10 years.  As the baby boomers age, the number of Americans covered by Medicare will increase by one-third.  These increases will make spending on medical benefits higher than every other expenditure in the federal budget expect interest on the national debt – higher even than the money invested in education or defense!

And where will the money come from to cover all these national expenses?  Not from the taxes we pay.  For example, “a 45-year old woman who earns $43,500 in 2010 will pay taxes worth $87,000 to the federal government by the time she retires, BUT the government will spend $275,000 for her medical care before she dies.  As the economists say, “There is no free lunch.”

As the boomers age, increasing numbers of them will also need long-term care, which is covered by Medicaid or personal funds, NOT Medicare.  And, of course, the demand for long-term care will continue to increase – even as Medicaid funds shrink.  How sad…

One way to maintain your dignity in your final years AND to minimize physical, emotional and financial stress on your family is to own long-term care insurance to cover these expenses that can average over $70,000 per year.  You owe it to yourself and your family to give this option careful thought.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC Tagged With: Baby Boomers, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Long Term Care insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, New York Times

So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC?

January 14, 2012 by Honey 1 Comment

Thanks to my good friend and colleague Steve Moses, of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform for the following guest column. I am re-publishing his blog because it gives unusual insight and makes complicated information easy to understand.

“So What If the Government Pays for Most LTC?, 2010 Data Update”
by
Stephen A. Moses

Ever wonder why LTC insurance sales and market penetration are so discouraging?  Or why reverse mortgages are rarely used to pay for long-term care?  Or why LTC service providers are always struggling to survive financially and still provide quality care?  Read on.

America spent $143.1 billion on nursing facilities and Continuing Care Retirement Communities in 2010.  The percentage of these costs paid by Medicaid and Medicare has gone up over the past 40 years (from 26.8% in 1970 to 53.8% in 2010, up 27.0 % of the total) while out-of-pocket costs have declined (from 49.5% in 1970 to 28.3% in 2010, down 21.2% of the total).  Source:  http://www.cms.hhs.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/tables.pdf, Table 12.

SO WHAT?  Consumers’ liability for nursing home and CCRC costs has declined by 43% in the past four decades, while the share paid by Medicaid and Medicare has more than doubled. 

No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as insurers would like them to be!  No wonder they don’t use home equity for LTC when Medicaid exempts most home equity.  No wonder nursing homes are struggling financially–their dependency on parsimonious government reimbursements is increasing while their more profitable private payers are disappearing. 

Unfortunately, these problems are even worse than the preceding data suggest.  Over half of the so-called “out-of-pocket” costs reported by CMS are really just contributions toward their cost of care by people already covered by Medicaid!  These are not out-of-pocket costs in terms of ASSET spend down, but rather only INCOME, most of which comes from Social Security benefits, another government program.  Thus, although Medicaid pays less than one-third the cost of nursing home care (31.5% of the dollars in 2010), it covers two-thirds of all nursing home residents.  Because people in nursing homes on Medicaid tend to be long-stayers, Medicaid pays something toward nearly 80 percent of all patient days. 

SO WHAT?  Medicaid pays in full or subsidizes almost four-fifths of all nursing home patient days.  If it pays even one dollar per month (with the rest contributed from the recipient’s income), the nursing home receives Medicaid’s dismally low reimbursement rate. 

No wonder the public is not as worried about nursing home costs as LTC insurers think they should be.  No wonder nursing homes are facing insolvency all around the United States when so much of their revenue comes from Medicaid, often at reimbursement rates less than the cost of providing the care.

Don’t be fooled by the 8.9% of nursing home costs that CMS reports as having been paid by “private health insurance” in 2010.  That category does not include private long-term care insurance.  (See category definitions here.)  No one knows how much LTC insurance pays toward nursing home care, because most LTCI policies pay beneficiaries, not nursing homes.  Thus, a large proportion of insurance payments for nursing home care gets reported as if it were “out-of-pocket” payments because private payers write the checks to the nursing home but are reimbursed by their LTC insurance policies.  This fact further inflates the out-of-pocket figure artificially.

How does all this affect assisted living facilities?  ALFs are 90% private pay and they cost an average of $41,724 per year (Source:  2011 MetLife survey at http://www.metlife.com/assets/cao/mmi/publications/studies/2011/mmi-market-survey-nursing-home-assisted-living-adult-day-services-costs.pdf).  Many people who could afford assisted living by spending down their illiquid wealth, especially home equity, choose instead to take advantage of Medicaid nursing home benefits.  Medicaid exempts one home and all contiguous property (up to $525,000 or $786,000 depending on the state), plus one business, and one automobile of unlimited value, plus many other non-countable assets, not to mention sophisticated asset sheltering and divestment techniques marketed by Medicaid planning attorneys.  Income rarely interferes with Medicaid nursing home eligibility unless such income exceeds the cost of private nursing home care. 

SO WHAT?  For most people, Medicaid nursing home benefits are easy to obtain without spending down assets significantly and Medicaid’s income contribution requirement is usually much less expensive than paying the full cost of assisted living. 

No wonder ALFs are struggling to attract enough private payers to be profitable.  No wonder people are not as eager to buy LTC insurance as insurers would like them to be.

The situation with home health care financing is very similar to nursing home financing.  According to CMS, America spent $70.2 billion on home health care in 2010.  Medicare (44.9%) and Medicaid (37.3%) paid 82.2% of this total and private insurance paid 6.4%.  Only 7.1% of home health care costs were paid out of pocket.  The remainder came from several small public and private financing sources.  Data source:  http://www.cms.hhs.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/tables.pdf, Table 4.

SO WHAT?  Only one out of every 14 dollars spent on home health care comes out of the pockets of patients and a large portion of that comes from the income (not assets) of people already on Medicaid.

No wonder the public does not feel the sense of urgency about this risk that long-term care insurers think they should. 

Bottom line, people only buy insurance against real financial risk.  As long as they can ignore the risk, avoid the premiums, and get government to pay for their long-term care when and if such care is needed, they will remain in “denial” about the need for LTC insurance.  As long as Medicaid and Medicare are paying for a huge proportion of all nursing home and home health care costs while out-of-pocket expenditures remain only nominal, nursing homes and home health agencies will remain starved for financial oxygen. 

The solution is simple.  Target Medicaid financing of long-term care to the needy and use the savings to fund education and tax incentives to encourage the public to plan early to be able to pay privately for long-term care.  For ideas and recommendations on how to implement this solution, see www.centerltc.com.

Note especially:

“Medi-Cal Long-Term Care:  Safety Net or Hammock?” at https://www.pacificresearch.org/medi-cal-long-term-care-safety-net-or-hammock/;

“Doing LTC RIght” at http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/Doing_LTC_RIght.pdf;

“The LTC Graduate Seminar Transcript” at http://www.centerltc.com/members/LTCGradSemTranscription.pdf (requires password, contact smoses@centerltc.com);

“Aging America’s Achilles’ Heel:  Medicaid Long-Term Care” at http://www.centerltc.com/AgingAmericasAchillesHeel.pdf; and

“The Realist’s Guide to Medicaid and Long-Term Care” at http://www.centerltc.org/realistsguide.pdf.

In the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Congress took some small steps toward addressing these problems.  A cap was placed on Medicaid’s home equity exemption and several of the more egregious Medicaid planning abuses were ended.  But much more remains to be done.  With the Age Wave starting to crest and threatening to crash over the next two decades, we can only hope it isn’t too late already.

Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform in Seattle, Washington.  The Center’s mission is to ensure quality long-term care for all Americans.  Steve Moses writes, speaks and consults throughout the United States on long-term care policy.  He is the author of the study “Aging America’s Achilles’ Heel: Medicaid Long-Term Care,” published by the Cato Institute (www.cato.org).  Learn more at www.centerltc.com or email smoses@centerltc.com.

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: Center for Long-Term Care Reform, CMS, Honey Leveen, long-term care, LTC Insurance, ltc planning, Medicaid, Medicare, Nursing Homes, Social Security, Steve Moses, www.honeyleveen.com

Medicaid outlook bleak for providers in 2012

January 2, 2012 by Honey Leave a Comment

A new report by Eljay LLC (A Report on Shortfalls in Medicaid Funding for Nursing Home Care, © 2011 Eljay, LLC. All rights reserved), on behalf of the American Health Care Association, states that the unprecedented state of budget deficits will result in historically low Medicaid nursing home reimbursements. Because of this, the report projects nursing homes will average a $19.55 shortfall, per patient, per day in 2011, up from $16.54/day in 2009.

Many nursing facilities have counted on profitability from Medicare patients to offset the profit they lose on Medicaid patients. In 2012, Medicare payments to nursing homes will be scaled back, effectively eliminating this “profitability patch.”

Recent LTCQueen blogs have predicted that the quality of government financed long-term care would diminish; here’s evidence that it will, sooner than many are willing to admit. These tragic circumstances make long-term care insurance ownership more compelling than ever.

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: American Health Care Association, Eljay LLC, Long Term Care insurance, long-term care, LTC Insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, Nursing Homes

Medicaid Funding — Going, going… Gone?

December 26, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

Although our hearts are filled with the spirit of giving during this Holiday Season, our federal government and many states will increasingly resemble the Grinch in the very near future.

 Facing the same dilemma of many other states whose Medicaid funds are drying up, Maine’s new Republican governor recently called the state’s entitlement system “a runaway train” (“Medicaid Cuts Are Part of a Larger Battle in Maine,” New York Times, Dec. 24, 2011, p. A11).  His proposal to reduce Maine’s Medicaid rolls by 65,000 (18%) has generated outcries from citizens throughout the state.  One specific cut is room and board at assisted living centers. 

So Baby Boomers who are gambling on the availability of state Medicaid funds to defray the cost of their long-term care are seeing their odds of “winning” go down and down.  In view of this Scrooge-like future, the need for US citizens to engage in sensible planning for their long-term care with reasonably priced Long-term Care Insurance is becoming more and more urgent!

Now that I have your attention, I’m sorry to add another statistic that we are all familiar with – 10,000 boomers are joining the Medicare rolls every day.  In a Dec. 23, 2011 story in the Washington Post titled,“Medicare Spending Growth Rising Slower but Enrollment Will Rise,” we learn that projected growth in Medicare recipients will rise from 47 million in 2010 to 88 million in 2040.  And medical costs for seniors also continue to rise.  

So seniors who need long-term care will be competing for increasingly scarce funds with seniors who need medical care – a very sad predicament, indeed. 

The clock is ticking, America!

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC Tagged With: Baby Boomers, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, Long-Term Care Planning, LTC Insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, New York Times, Washington Post

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 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