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LTCi Current Events

August 25, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

LTCi Current EventsI’ve just returned from my third long-term care insurance (LTCi) conference of the year, where I again was told that sales of new LTCi policies were down 26.5% in 2013 in terms of premiums and 22.9% in terms of number of policies. That’s the bad news.

The good news is that we have many excellent products to help people prepare for the high risk and cost of needing long-term care. Some are new and some are traditional LTCi products. The newer products are non-traditional life insurance and annuity policies specifically designed to protect for LTC. These products greatly leverage premiums paid in if long-term care is needed. These new products are good; the bugs are out. They work.

LTCi premiums can be made reasonable and affordable. What may not be reasonable is needing LTC for anything but a short period of time and not owning LTCi.

If you are middle class-to-affluent, it is irrational to put off responsible LTC planning.

Sadly, most people remain irrational about the need for responsible LTC planning. There is something about the human psyche that dislikes having conversations about unpleasant, yet probable events in the future. I meet many people who can afford to own LTCi, yet instead they spend the cost of LTCi premium on “toys.” Such people are often financially and emotionally unprepared when the need for LTC arises. Sadly, such circumstances will increase as time passes.

This past year, the media has been more helpful than ever when it comes to broadcasting why the government can’t and won’t pay for LTC, as well as how important it is for Americans to plan for LTC on their own, in advance.

Despite this, Americans still refuse to acknowledge this grim, true advice.

Medicaid, a government funded program, pays for the majority of LTC in the US. Click on this link to see my blogs on why Medicaid-funded LTC is not the type of care people who own LTCi would choose.

Please share this information with people you care about. Do not be discouraged when they make up excuses to avoid LTC planning; instead, I hope you’ll keep trying to influence them. The time to plan and be prepared for LTC is now.

Filed Under: Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, LTC, LTCi, Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, Stephen Moses, Steve Moses, www.honeyleveen.com

Jawboning De Rigeur, But of Little Use

November 26, 2013 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Recent coverage of long-term care by the parent company of the Public Broadcasting System’s NewsHour, and the SCAN Foundation, caught my eye.  (Watch below)

I want to thank Steve Moses, President of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform for bringing this story to my attention.

Steve has given me permission to re-publish portions of his blog, below. You will read how Steve pokes holes in the testimonies of some of the most reputable LTC experts in the country.

Before you read Steve’s comments, I wish to editorialize. All we ever seem to see covered in the news – whether it’s mainstream media reporting on long-term care or political posturing – is jawboning about the need for long-term care conversation, discussion, and planning. The words strewn by various LTC pundits appease and sound appealing, but they are without teeth. Nothing concrete is recommended for addressing the 5,000-pound elephant in the room, which is: how do we pay for long-term care presently and when we are deluged with a Silver Tsunami of Baby Boomers who are woefully unprepared to pay for their long-term care? The lack of solutions to this mounting dilemma is disheartening, frightening, and frustrating for my colleagues and me.

I am doubly disappointed when I see such insipid, superficial reporting from sources I normally have great respect for: PBS and NPR. Here’s a blog I did about comparably inept, superficial, inaccurate LTC reporting on the Diane Rehm Show on NPR: /2012/reaming-diane-rehm/

Here’s a blog I called Neither Party has a solution for the oncoming deluge of Medicare/Medicaid services. This blog describes why neither Republicans nor Democrats wish to broach the subject of long-term care planning. Another blog, entitled Dismal Outlook for Medicare, Social Security, also explains why it is a politically unsavory no-man’s land for either party to broach the subject of realistic long-term care financing. Here’s a blog I did titled National Commission on LTC Finds No Solutions for LTC Crisis. Here are the National Commission’s actual recommendations: http://www.ltccommission.senate.gov/recommendations.cfm. Read them, and you will see the same insipid jawboning and fluff as Steve describes in his comments below.

By the way, Steve, thanks for your acknowledgement and praise for my AMG (Altruistic, Masochistic, Genius) status! (Read Steve’s comments to learn about AMG’s.)

Here is Steve Moses’s critique of the recent LTC forum, titled “Global and Regional Models for Long-Term Care: Can They Work Nationally?“:

LTC BULLET: PBS’S 6 TIPS FOR LTC MISS THE MARK

LTC Comment: Millions watch the Public Broadcasting System’s NewsHour every night. So when that show addresses long-term care it’s worth paying attention.

You can read about and view videos from a forum, titled “Global and Regional Models for Long-Term Care: Can They Work Nationally?,” that MacNeil/Lehrer Productions (the NewsHour’s parent company) and the SCAN Foundation sponsored on Monday.

But if you have better things to do, such as advising consumers on how to protect themselves from LTC risks and costs without depending on tottering government programs, let me save you some time.

Following are quick summaries of PBS’s “6 tips for averting America’s looming long-term care crisis” followed by our critique of each.

PBS Tip #1: “Keep it Local” The Urban Institute’s Howard Gleckman says don’t seek a “single answer.” Rather work from the bottom up with friends, neighbors and families taking the lead. “To the degree that we can, government can at least try to stay out of the way of those solutions . . ..”

LTC Comment: Hear, hear! Finally something from this writer with which I can agree. But true to form, he reverts to form a few sentences later, advocating more and bigger government programs.

PBS Tip #2: “Change the Financing” Former CMS Administrator Dr. Mark McClellan, currently with the Brookings Institution, says “let people control how [Medicaid] money is spent on their behalf. That’s what’s behind our ‘Money Follows the Person’ [MFP] initiatives in states around the country . . ..”

LTC Comment: Terrific. MFP programs are a vast improvement over the current LTC financing system which makes providers–not patients–the program’s customers. But “Money Follows the Person” still depends on payments coming from an unsustainable welfare program. Making Medicaid more attractive to more people is not a solution.

PBS Tip #3: “Focus More on the Poor” Dr. E. Percil Stanford, president of Folding Voice and the KIND Corporation, says “Unfortunately, considerable [LTC policy] attention from the most well-intentioned institutions and organizations has focused primarily on the middle and upper classes.” Instead, he says, they should focus laser-like on the poor elderly.

LTC Comment: Right on, but how? No answer from this source. Research shows Medicaid’s LTC program benefits the middle-class and affluent as much or more than the poor. The solution is to target scarce public benefits to the needy and use some of the savings to incentivize early and responsible LTC planning by more prosperous people.

PBS Tip #4: “Build a Comprehensive National Strategy” AARP’s Debra Whitman wants us to spend more government money to help family caregivers, grow Medicaid, expand “affordable” housing and transportation, “integrate” health care services, and eliminate LTC impoverishment.

LTC Comment: Typical AARP eyewash. Not a word about where the money will come from to pay for such wishful public program expansions. The federal government already borrows a third or more of everything it spends. It forces interest rates to near zero to make such borrowing feasible temporarily. Watch out when this bubble bursts.

PBS Tip #5: “Begin the Conversation” Jennie Chin Hansen, CEO of the American Geriatrics Society [AGS], thinks we should “chat and chew” LTC issues with our friends and colleagues creating a “study group” opportunity to “discuss the universal journey.” She says “Let’s proactively help each other build greater confidence, clarity and capacity.”

LTC Comment: Doesn’t that advice sound vacuous coming from the head of the AGS? We’ve been jaw-boning long-term care for decades without addressing the real problem, i.e. government pays for most high-cost LTC which anesthetizes consumers to the risk and crowds out responsible LTC planning and private financing.

PBS Tip #6: “Make It a Human Right” Dr. Laura Gitlin of the Center for Innovative Care in Aging says “We need to grow a long-term care system based on . . . [the] principle . . . that long-term care is a basic right.”

LTC Comment: Of all the empty rhetoric in this program, the prize for thoughtless irresponsibility goes to this proposal. If people have a basic human right to long-term care whether or not they are able or willing to pay for it, their “right” means someone else must provide LTC whether or not they are compensated for their effort. That is the definition of slavery, which is what this ostensibly caring academic actually advocates.

Closing LTC Comment: When I see the subterranean quality of LTC policy analysis displayed in program’s like this one, I’m nearly ready to despair. The one thing that keeps me going is that a few of you AMGs (altruistic, masochistic geniuses) are still out there having truly valuable conversations with real consumers about how actually to protect themselves from escalating LTC risks and costs.

The whole wobbly Rube Goldberg apparatus of government-financed LTC puts enormous obstacles in your way. It gives away what you’re trying to sell. It makes your product unprofitable by manipulating interest rates so that its programs are artificially viable. It falsely assures citizens they’ll be taken care of by bankrupt social programs already under-funded by trillions of dollars. Yet you soldier on. Somehow.

Hail to the AMGs!

Filed Under: Correcting Ignorant Public Figures, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Honey Leveen, NPR, Public Broadcast System, SCAN Foudantion, Stephen Moses, Steve Moses

Ignore Film’s Message at Your Peril

January 30, 2013 by Honey Leave a Comment

Amour is an award winning film that has received rave critical reviews.

Unfortunately, many of you who watch the trailer will be so uncomfortable with the subject matter that you will probably not want to see the film. Even more unfortunate (and frustrating to me), after seeing the film most viewers will still be unwilling to connect the film’s message to their own need for immediate LTC planning.

George, the husband and primary caregiver to Anne in the film, was in denial about the extent of Anne’s need for care for way too long. He refused to acknowledge how bad off she was, and that there was an urgent need for additional care. It’s very likely that one reason he chose to deny the extent of Anne’s need was financial.

Finally, additional caregivers are hired. But they appear to be there for only a few hours a day. Anne’s profound need for care was meticulously portrayed, and it soon became clear that she actually needed full-time care. Any professional in the care giving industry would have quickly recognized this. Again, why was more care not brought in? I believe it was due to George’s psychological denial of the severity of Anne’s condition, as well as the exorbitant cost.

Inevitably, George’s mental and physical health also declines from the stress of being Anne’s primary caregiver and having too little respite.

Of course, if Anne and George owned long-term care insurance, their LTCi policies would’ve been pumping loads of money to defray Anne’s care giving expenses. And perhaps the ultimate, inevitable tragedy would have been averted.

Back to the beginning. How do I know that people still cannot connect the dots between the tragic outcome of Amour and the need for immediate long-term care planning? I had conversations with three ladies in the ladies room afterwards, and when I mentioned that George and Anne would have benefited greatly from owning long-term care insurance, these ladies could not connect the dots. They admitted they did not own long-term care insurance, but dismissed my overtures to discuss why long-term care insurance ownership would have altered the film’s tragic outcome. People dwell in denial.

If you read my prior blog, featuring Steve Moses, you will gain a better understanding of my grave concern about how unprepared Americans are for their possible need of long-term care.

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Amour, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Stephen Moses, Steve Moses

The State of the Long-Term Care Insurance Industry

January 28, 2013 by Honey Leave a Comment

Thanks to my friend and colleague, Stephen Moses, president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, for allowing me to republish this address on the future of long-term care financing and long-term care insurance in the United States. The following is an edited transcript of a speech he delivered on January 12, 2013.

Don’t miss the irony in Steve’s speech.  The good news for LTC insurance is actually very bad news for the U.S. economy.  The only way to reconcile this seeming conflict is to resolve the LTC financing crisis in the right way.

The Good News and Bad News About Long-Term Care

Stephen A. Moses - Center For LTC Reformby Stephen A. Moses

I have good news and bad news.

I’ll spend one minute on the bad news and the rest of my time on the good news.

The bad news is that all the reasons consumers have been in denial about the risk and cost of long-term care still apply and they are getting worse.

  • Government programs still pay for most expensive long-term care in the USA.
  • Government LTC benefits are much easier to get than most people realize.
  • And the Federal Reserve still forces interest rates to near zero which compels carriers to raise premiums to compensate, making LTCI harder to sell.

OK.  So much for the bad news.

Here’s why LTC insurance carriers, distributors and producers are in the catbird seat primed to do well doing good for your clients and for your country.

First of all, everything that makes LTC insurance necessary remains true and is becoming more so.  For example:

  • 8,000 Americans turn 65 every day and that will continue for the next 18 years.
  • 70 % of people 65+ will need some LTC and 20% will need 5 years or more
  • LTC is very expensive:  As of 2012, over $80,000 per year for a nursing home; over $42,000 for assisted living; and over $60,000 for a home health aide on a daily 8-hour shift

But we’ve known all that since the inception of LTC insurance in the 1970s.  Nothing new there.

So what is new?  Why will the LTC insurance market explode within your career horizons and probably during the current four-year presidential term?

In a nutshell, all the obstacles to a strong LTC insurance market are about to come crashing down.

Let me walk you through them one by one.

  • The demographic bombshell of aging boomers is only now beginning to explode with the first of the 77-million-strong generation becoming fully eligible for Social Security last year and for Medicare the year before.
  • Government programs funding LTC are like Wylie Coyote in the Road Runner cartoon.  They’ve gone over the fiscal cliff still wearing a silly grin, but they’re about to fall like an anvil.  Why?
  • Basic federal government debt is $16.5 trillion, over $52,000 for every man, woman and child in the country.  Our debt to Gross Domestic Product ratio is 100 percent.  We borrow 42 cents of every dollar the federal government spends.  Can you believe that?  We go $1 trillion deeper in debt every year.  That can’t continue for long.
  • Medicaid, which crowds out 2/3 to 90% of the LTC insurance market according to Brown and Finkelstein, has a terrible reputation for poor care and is bankrupting the states.  Easy access to Medicaid and its big loopholes will end.
  • Social Security pays for about 13% of LTC through Medicaid spend-through, but Social Security has a $21 trillion unfunded liability.  It can’t continue funding LTC.
  • Medicare pays generously for nursing home and home care which enables LTC providers to survive with most of their patients funded at less than cost by Medicaid.  But Medicare has a $39 trillion unfunded liability, so it can’t continue either.
  • All three – Medicaid, Social Security and Medicare – will be means-tested.  That means they’ll be welfare programs, not social insurance, and most middle class and affluent Americans will get less, if anything, from them.
  • Home equity will become a major source of funding for income security, health care and long-term care in retirement.  That’s good for the reverse mortgage business in the short run and for LTC insurance in the long run as more people realize they need coverage to protect their home equity.
  • 65 million Americans are unpaid caregivers, 7 of 10 of whom care for someone over 50 years of age.  Those numbers will skyrocket as boomers age.

So what does this mean for you?

We’re about to enter a brave new world of long-term care.  Keep doing what you’re doing and before long prospects will be knocking on your door instead of vice versa.

The public’s been asleep about LTC risk and cost because a government safety net has softened the financial consequences of going without LTC insurance since 1965.

As I’ve explained, that’s ending.

Already you see key changes indicating the public is finally getting the message.  The age of purchase for LTC insurance has fallen by a decade from late ‘60s to late ‘50s.

You see and hear many more media stories about the risk and cost of long-term care.

Businesses worry more and more about absenteeism and “presenteeism” due to employees caring for elderly parents or worrying about them instead of working.  That means you’ll sell many more group and multi-life policies.

Attorneys, financial planners and accountants are getting more questions from their clients about LTC.  Just last week an estate planner called me to find out who could help him protect his clients.  I referred him to a major distributor.

People are getting scared.  They hear the news about the federal debt and deficit and unfunded entitlements.  They’re caring for elderly loved ones in huge and rapidly growing numbers.  The public programs they’ve relied on no longer instill confidence.

These trends develop slowly over time.  They grow and grow like blowing up a balloon.  Then they pop and all of a sudden everything is different.  That’s what’s going to happen.

You are in the enviable position of being in the right place at the right time.  Some of you have been pioneers in long-term care insurance.  We know you by the arrows in your backs.

But your time has come now.

Watch for this scenario to play out.

  • Assuming current government policies stay the same, the American economy will continue to lag.
  • Domestic and international financial pressures will force interest rates up in spite of the Federal Reserve.
  • Federal debt service will skyrocket putting more financial pressure than ever on government programs that fund LTC such as Medicaid, Social Security and Medicare.
  • Policy makers will have no choice but to cut back on benefits, eligibility, and provider reimbursements.
  • The quality of publicly financed LTC will continue to decline.
  • It is true already and will be more true in the future that access to quality long-term care at the most appropriate level is assured only to those who can pay privately.

You are the heroes who will show the next generation how to avoid the pitfalls of publicly financed long-term care.

One of the things I love most about speaking with my many friends who have been selling long-term care insurance for two decades or more, is to hear their stories about clients who have gone on claim.

Those clients are so appreciative that they elevate the producers who sold them their policies to the status of demigods.  How enormously proud that must make them . . . you . . .  feel.

And that’s what the future holds for you if you stay on course.  You are the last line of defense between the people you meet and the dismal future that awaits them if you allow their denial about LTC risk to prevail.

So my advice to you is “Go forth with confidence and pride.  Know that long-term care insurance is good and people need it.  Everyone you protect is one less person to drag down the social safety net for the truly needy.”

Thank you.

Stephen A. Moses is president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform (www.centerltc.com).  Contact him at 206-283-7036 or smoses@centerltc.com.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: assisted living, Brown and Finkelstein, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Medicaid, Social Security, Stephen Moses, Steve Moses

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

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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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