My 92 year old Dad has been my 82 year old mom's caregiver for many many years (stroke and vascular dementia) but dad's automobile accident has forced us to move to the next phase. I have taken over their finances and currently have part time nursing aide help that comes into their condo for 8 hours a day in split shifts to cover the mornings and evenings.
Dad continues to decline cognitively over time, and I'm starting to look at Assisted Living facilities for the potential/eventual move that will need to happen.
The costs have been eye opening. I am in the DC metro area and AL is going to run around 130K-150K a year for the two of them. If dad predeceases mom, mom will need memory care which will run 130K a year and up just for herself.
My parents have LTC ins. that I have started tapping and still have a collective 400K balance left, and all told they have about 700K in assets (including the sale of their condo). Between my dad's pension (which includes survivor benefits) and their SS, they also have about 62K coming in per year after tax.
As it is right now, with the in-home nursing care, housing, transportation and food, they are already spending around 110K a year, so at this point the cost to go to Assisted Living would not be that much more.
If I look at the actuarial tables, they can afford to move into an Assisted Living Facility and they should be ok. But if they deteriorate rapidly, requiring much higher levels of care, or if they live longer than expected, they could run out of money.
How do you plan for this? My wife is super concerned (she's a worrier). I told my wife that if we moved forward with Assisted Living and a black swan type event happens, I would be willing to go back to work to cover their expenses (I retired 4+ years ago) but she wasn't happy with that answer.
How is everyone else dealing with all these unknowns?
dad has since passed but I have handles all their affairs both financial and health wise.
i would be happy to share where I placed my parents. It is a newer facility with care levels going up to memory care. My parents started out in a two bedroom apartment. Dad and Mom were level 2 care and Mom went to level three soon after. Compared to other facilities the cost was reasonable for their needs due to them wanting separate rooms.
when Dad passed last year I moved Mom into a lovely efficiency apartment and she is very happy. I would be happy answer any questions you have in terms of cost etc. It is overwhelming at first. I had to fight with the insurance company. They love to take the premium but hate paying out.
In Florida her memory care rent was $4750 a month and was all inclusive and she was in a very nice place. Her out of pocket was $2000 a month for rent. Above that count on medical expenses which go up and down and monthly incidentals. I would recommend looking out of state if you can and avoid Medicaid at all costs. It seems that you could use your parents income to visit out of state and pay less than where you are.
Look for a facility that has the licenses so your parents can age in place. This means you can hire Hospice and your parents can live there until they die. Most people will not have to go to a nursing home. My mom did not have much money, but what she had was enough to last her until she passed away which was nowhere near what your parents have. I looked up the life expectancy for Dementia at her age and figured she would be all right.
Have three facilities evaluate your parents for admission and maybe a fourth. There evaluation will tell you if they can go to assisted living or need memory care. Remember your parents have to want to go to a facility you cannot force them.
Instead of selling the house, would it be a better financial decision to rent the house/condo? How much rent could it pull in? Do they pay taxes each year? Would the rental of the house decrease the amount they would have to pay in taxes due to depreciation?
Look at their tax situation. If they are currently paying taxes, is there a way to reduce the amount that they pay?
My Mom's MC cost is about what yours is. However, after you add in all the incidentals like OTC meds and Depends, etc, it is near the upper end of your estimate. Once we get her condo rented, the out-of-pocket cost will drop about 25%.
As someone posted, I would start researching facilities now as well as talk to an elder attorney/accountant. In addition, I would look to see if a neighboring state might be a way to reduce the sting of state income taxes, gasoline taxes, retirement income, etc. It does no good for a senior to get a free bus pass, if they can't ride the bus.
I'm glad you are looking into this now. I'm sorry for the "shock," however, at least you have time to prepare for the future.
Remember also that any signed agreement or guarantee can be tossed out the window at the end of the lease agreement (usually a year long contract) should the facility be sold to a new owner. Yeah.... the whole picture kind of sucks.
Start researching now. I personally have found that the well established non-profit facilities sometimes offer better service than the corporate entities. While you are projecting your annual costs, don't forget to add in the annual rent increase and make sure that you find out what the annual increases have been over a 5 year period when you are taking your facility tours.
I recommend at least two visits to any facility you are interested in.... the second one unannounced. Plan your visits around lunch time or slightly before dinner time. Get a list of the planned activities and of the menu. Try to take a second set of eyes with you.
Good Luck on this journey
if you go with AL , Google care advisors. They are a realtor of sorts. Paid by the facility with placement. An invaluable service. Get someone local who will meet you for tours and arrange everything. They know the ins and outs of it. Availability, cost amenities, reputation… I used a franchise called care patrol.
absolutely do not go back to work
If your parents end up living to be 100 like my mother in law and happen to run through the LTC benefits and their assets, they will have to apply for Medicaid. I think you're a ways away from that though....
I agree with your wife that going back to work is not the answer. Running yourself down physically and financially is not going to help anything. Utilize the LTC insurance as much as possible.
I ended up moving my Mom out of assisted living in Florida back to her apartment in NY and went from two-12 hour shifts to full time live-in care givers (more economical and consistent). I managed her health care, hiring (and firing) full time care givers and shopping and cooking. After 2 years, Mom passed away (99 1/2),at home with Hospice care the last month. She was surrounded with one on one care, attention and love. It comes at a high cost financially and emotionally.
Mom passed away almost 5 months ago. It was a gift for her and for me.
I’m so glad I did it. I had a team of medical specialists that advised me for two years ( neurologist, palliative primary, gastroenterologist , I couldn’t do it without them.
Here's what I would do.
Consider either renting out the condo (it's a good renters market and you can get a property management company to handle the whole thing for a cut of the rent). That might bring in $2-4K a month, giving their income a boost up. Or sell the condo if the market is still good and get the money into bonds/CDs and get some income coming in with the proceeds.
Find a nice apartment where they would have no maintenance worries and where the cost is probably 5 times less than AL. Keep the home health care and just up the hours. Your parents will require someone there all the time eventually. An AL is not going to provide them with that. An AL will have maybe 50 residents with 1-3 caregivers. They won't be getting the care they need. They will with home health care. I've had to hire home health care in addition to the little support mom gets from AL, so we're moving out. An apartment and home health care is about $40-50K less a year than AL.
You look for ways to have their money make money. You also look for a ton of ways to save them money. I've been able to reduce my mom's expenses by about $1,000 a month. She doesn't need the ultra expensive diapers, and if I buy them in bulk, I save, a ton of money. We cut cable and went with streaming services that offer their same favorite programs. Coupons! It's amazing what you can do to save money.
You should not go back to work for your parents. There's ways to make that money stretch and work to cover expenses. AL is not one of them.
First step, IMHO others have said, is find a good elder care attorney licensed in your state (you said you live in the DMV area, but the attorney should be licensed to practice where your parents live currently as each state has different legal aspects of all of this). Your parents should pay for the lawyer. For reference, about 2 years ago when dealing with a similar situation, the lawyer we found in MD charged $7 as a flat fee. Another reputable firm I contacted asked for $12K as the flat fee.
Many legal steps may be need to be completed, such as executing durable Power of Attorney (POA) docs if they do not already exist with you and or other siblings having it. Also "Advance Directive" or "Medical Agent" documents to allow you to serve as your parent's "agent" in dealing with any assistive living, nursing or memory care facilities as time goes on AND to make medical decisions on their behalf if they cannot make such decisions. Obviously Wills, Trusts or any other legal structures to protect either parent when the other passes or is not competent or both are not competent to make decisions.
You may be able to get them into what are called "continuum of care" facilities, but honestly they may be a bit on the older side for that. Most of these facilities prefer two healthy and independent seniors when first entering. These facilities have a large up front fee (often $100K) AND one has to buy a unit. Units may be huge, 3 bed 2 bath down to studio sizes. Typically, folks sell their home and roll over those proceeds to do this, to pay the up front fee and to buy their unit. The facility then guarantees as the folks need more services including up to full on memory care or nursing care; they are guaranteed a bed at the facility. But again, many want folks to "enter" when both are independent and healthy. You can check with a few places or there are services that can help ID them and the elder care lawyer might have suggestions too re: which facilities might consider taking them both.
Other than "continuum of care" facilities which have from independent living arrangements, to assistive living arrangements (which might include a menu of additional services such as "medication management," "help with dressing/bathing," "house cleaning" etc.), to licensed nursing and/or memory care all in one place and ALL licensed for each; others are generally all separate. In other words, most assistive living facilities will NOT have licensed nursing home care (which is regulated/licensed by the federal government and qualified by Medicare and Medicaid and requires things such as RNs all the time). Assistive living is regulated and licensed by each State and many are NOT Medicare nor Medicaid qualified. In such assistive living facilities, one is entirely private pay and when one runs out of money; the love one has to be moved to a different facility that is Medicare/Medicaid qualified. Some assistive living facilities have memory care, others do not.
Given the age of your parents and that dementia is already an issue, IMHO looking for a facility that has Medicare and Medicaid qualified nursing home AND memory care beds would be best. They could go in as private pay (facilities like that) and with LTC insurance, that is another plus for the facility. Sadly, given mom has dementia and likely needs memory care; they may separate them. But your dad can go visit. All things to ask about.
Generally, the pattern is folks "spend down" all their assets (spousal impoverishment rules can protect one spouse, but it sounds like your dad cannot remain in their condo and live independently so this may be moot). Medicaid can pay once the asset limit ($2.5K in total assets, for MD but VA or DC may be different) is reached.
I tell you all this to say.....don't worry. See the EC attorney. He'll set you straight about Medicaid in your state SHOULD the need arise for you to apply for it for long term care for mom. I had the app ready to go for my mom, and a SNF picked out too, but she passed before her funds ran out. There was NO WAY I was going back to work to fund her extreme old age in long term care, and neither should you. And with their funds, you shouldn't have to even consider it.
Take your wife with you to the attorney visit and set both of your minds at ease. No point borrowing trouble. Good luck.
From what you have shared, an AL may be a very short stop gap. Change can cause a sudden drop in ability when dementia is involved, moving your parents could very well increase their care needs.
I was faced with a similar financial situation for my dad, except, he couldn't afford to set up a Miller Trust, see a CELA or afford a nice facility and had no insurance. I looked outside the box and found board and care homes. They don't offer all the amenities and activities of large facilities but, my dad wouldn't use that stuff anyways. Some of them keep the residents through hospice, they are prepared for care needs increase, if you choose the right facility.
I would not go back to work to cover their expenses. I would look around, even into different states and find the best facility that meets their actual needs and can keep them together or as together as possible. Enrichment activities are cheaper on an as needed basis, so forget about in house, unless your parents are social butterflies and will be utilizing these services daily.
You are really fortunate that they have a decent income, insurance and some assets. You don't have to worry for years or ever, if you can find a facility even outside their area that can accommodate increased care needs, at a more reasonable price, right through hospice. (It is important to verify that ANY facility will accept hospice, not all do.) When a facility becomes a reality, location isn't as important, because their world will largely exist within the facililty and you can create excitement about new adventures outside the home.
Tell your wife that worrying won't change anything except her health, so try not to. Your parents really are positioned okay with some creative solutions.
When my Mom needed to go into a nursing home, Dad hired 3 shifts of caregivers for himself as he couldn't live alone in his house. The caregivers were costing him $20k per month. The nursing home was costing $12k per month. Big bite out of the financial pie.
After Mom passed, Dad did the math and noticed it was quite a cost savings to move into a senior facility. He started out in Independent Living full size apartment then moved to Memory Care at the same facility.
Since I was Dad's Power of Attorney for both health and finances, I was able to see how much my parents had saved over the years. They were the children of the Great Depression so they lived well below their means. Thank goodness they did. They saved for that rainy day, and now it was pouring outside.
I, too, was always worrying if Dad would run out of money depending on how long he would live. Dad was already in his mid 90's. In the back of my mind, I knew that there was Medicaid [which is different from Medicare] if Dad should need it. I didn't know if the facility would even take Medicaid. Dad had passed a couple years later. Thankfully he and Mom had their Wills updated at my stern request, as the old Wills were older than dirt, and would have been a logistical nightmare. Plus they had prepared a current Revocable Trust. If you need an Elder Law Attorney, I can highly recommend a firm on Wiehle Ave in your area.
What you also need to find out is if Medicaid will pay after at least 2 years of paying privately in an AL. Your parents assets should be split. Each spending down their half and when the money is gone, then Medicaid is applied for.
I think in your situation seeing an Elder Lawyer well versed in Medicaid would be a good idea. You can use parents money for this. You want to make sure you do nothing that will jeopardize your parents from getting Medicaid eventually.
If either becomes eligible for Hospice that can help. Hospice will provide all the supplies and equipment needed. It will not pay for the facility they are living in but some other costs are absorbed. And you get another set of eyes looking in on them (also the Hospice CNA does not duplicate what the facility does, if the Hospice CNA is bathing mom or dad the facility staff will not)
It sounds like you have things planned out, a discussion with an Elder Care Attorney might be good just to make sure there is nothing that you might have over looked or not known about.
I am sure you will get a few much more detailed responses very soon....