Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Once again, I thanks you all for your comments and suggestions. We are on Medicare, but we cannot affor a higher monthly cost, which results in higher co-pays foe everything. I have tried to keep up with it all, but, as I said, these trips to the hospital do result in mounting costs. I am now without a car, as it was in a wreck a weeke ago and am still waiting for the adjusters to let me know what they are going to do. The value of it will be negligible-a 2005 Jeep with almost 200,000 miles, multiple dents and in poor mechanical condition. I was assigned a social worker at the hospital, but connecting with her has been very frustrating at best. I have gotten the forms from the VA to fill out for Aid and Assistance. I need to point out clearly that although these outbursts of violence do frighten me, I know that I am not in immanent danger, and am prepared to leave the home if necessary. This is a man who has always been loving and calm, and it is, as I know that you can understand, heartbreaking to watch his decline. We had hoped to sell our home this month but that has been cancelled due to the leased solar panels we placed through the Tesla Solar City company /federal govt. program. Our buyer did not want to be a part of it and the complications resulting in the escrow process. So... No sale of the house, no savings, no car and our journey continues. Honestly, I am at a loss as to which way to turn next. We do have a decent income, but because of some poor choices we have tremendous credit card debt-all but one account now closed and paying them off one by one-and I truly never counted on husband's illness and the additional monthly expenses. Our home is tiny and before this we thought we were going to resolve things and manage it. And in the midst of it all, son got very ill with pancreatic tumor-very long story there but the one good thing is that it was not malignant. We are to blame, I know, for the rest. So-one step at a time. Thank you again.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My petite, little mama bites and scratches like a wild tiger when they try to clean her.
That's with her meds!
If we up the dose, she sleeps all day and her geriatric psychiatrist prefers not to heavily medicate. It takes three well trained, strong, professionals just to dress and clean her up.
I'd be scared she'd break my nose or worse.
Her nursing home is a godsend, they take this in stride.
I still visit everyday.
I like to check on her and I bring toiletries and little goodies.
I decorate her room for each holiday. It's filled with Easter bunnies now.
I'm involved in her care, but now I'm safe and so is she.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

You must listen to the wonderful advice on here. Do it for your health now. You seem to be quite frazzled. You bought solar panels that you didn't need, et al.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

She1934;

Be sure you have the correct forms for the VA. Mine were sent to me by Veteran's Financial. They are an organization that "assists" with the process. They said to fill out the forms and provide all the required documents, and fax or mail it to them for review (VA is VERY picky!) They do not charge us for this "service". I'm not sure who pays them (no one works for free!) but so long as they do not charge us, it is worth working with them (I chose to just mail in the forms without review.)

That said, I do not have a fax (yes, there are places I could pay for this.) First I filed the "intent to file" form with the VA, and another form that grants me limited representative capability, which is supposed to lock in the date (if application is filed within a year and is accepted, payments can go back as far as that "intent" date.)  I finally got all the papers together and mailed them. Once I had some time after other issues were taken care of, I called to find out status. I was told it was rejected and a letter was sent. I received NO letter. While on the phone, they said it was the wrong form (21-534EZ) and sent via email the SAME form! By mail I received the letter (vague) and the NEW form (21P-534EZ) BE SURE you are using the correct forms!!

Interesting that the form was ALREADY expired when Veteran's Financial sent it to me (I looked it up in email to check the form # and see that it has an expiration date at the top, which was BEFORE they sent me the forms!) Now I have to fill out this new form... It is 'fillable' online, however every time I try to print it, the bottom of the page is lost, which includes the form ID, so I am resorting to manually filling it in.

There are many ways the VA provides assistance - in our case we are trying to get the survivor's assistance to help with the MC cost. You may be requesting other assistance (in-home care assistance, VA placement, etc.) Be aware there is also a maximum income amount. Depending on how they process it, some of your costs will reduce that income you have and perhaps allow you some assistance. Be very careful how you fill out all the forms and include EVERYTHING!!! In speaking with someone they did indicate that the cost of her placement will likely be considered (her actual income is below the maximum, but we have to supplement SS and pension with feed from a trust fund we set up, which is then included as income. This will eventually run out, but if approved this benefit will extend the life of the trust!)

Also, for your credit card debt - consider consolidation. I would stay away from a bank/CU debt consolidation, as these are considered personal loans with no collateral and the interest rates are ridiculous! There are many cards that offer X months of balance transfer at low or no interest. Some will charge a fee (for us these varied from 3-5% of the balance) for the transfer, but over the life of the term, it can reduce how much interest you are paying! I have made use of these for myself and my son (0 transfer and 0 fee are the best!) Generally for me it was just to extend something to give me a little more breathing room (I pay all cards off each month, except those that were no-fi already - my transfers were always the no fee no int ones, so I just extended the 'term'. My son was paying over 20% in interest, so whatever transfer I did for him, even with minimal interest or up-front fee, saved him most of that interest! He just makes payments to my cards, and is good at doing it.) The only caveat is beware of those that will back-charge you if you do not pay off the balance by the end of the term. Some do, some do not. Stay away from those that do, just in case you get behind for other costs that pop up and be sure to make at least the minimum payment each month to avoid other charges. If you find some offers, CALL each one and ask many questions. It is best to make enough payments each month to pay the balance in time (BAL/months), because paying the minimum will not do it! If need be, a few here and there can revert to less if other payments come up, but you can make up for that later! Just be sure that payment is at least the minimum! Even with the up-front fee cards, the savings in interest over the life of the term will offset that considerably!

EDIT:  ** IF you do this and IF something impedes your ability to pay it off before the end of the term, you can always resort to another balance transfer - just be sure any costs associated with the new transfer are less than the interest you might pay on the remaining balance.

For Medicare - I forget what the rules are regarding supplemental or advantage plans (they may require sign up at the onset, I'm not sure - I signed up because I know Medicare only covers so much, and does not cover some things, even though so far I have only used the yearly physical and take no meds.) If you can still sign up for one of these, even though it would increase your monthly cost, it would cover so much more and reduce or eliminate some of the deductibles, co-pays and non-covered costs you are incurring. Depending on income, sometimes you can get this subsidized. It cannot hurt to ask.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter