A family I know is having to jump through all kinds of hoops because their Mom has been placed in assisted living and is running out of money. When her house was sold she divide the money 3 ways giving both her sins a third and keeping a third for herself. The son kept her at homefor two years and then decided to put her in a nursing home. They are having to come up with all kinds of receipts proving how her money was spent. Is it always this hard to get assistance from Medicare and Medicade? Are they suspected of using her funds inappropriately or is this just standard procedure when you apply for assistance.
Sadly, there are cases where money was handed over to the grown children knowingly, the children and/or parent just didn't want Medicaid to get their hands on the money. Thank goodness not everyone uses that approach, otherwise Medicaid would be bankrupted or in order to fund Medicaid our taxes would go through the roof.
AND in the Medicaid application you have to provide their awards letters, so again it's known to the penny what their income is.
Say mom sold house for 100K 3 years ago, gets 1K in SS & 1K in retirement every month, and is in AL that costs 3K a month since she sold her home. In theory mom should have a nest egg of 64K left from the house. She is only short 1K a month to pay for AL. So 3 years = 36k she has spent. 64K should be available. Let's say mom has spent 20k on dental; 10k on preneed funeral; 4k on new hearing aid. Mom has the cancelled checks,etc on these too. Even with these expenses Mom still should have 30K. But if mom has zero assets, then medicaid needs to look to see if any gifting happened & if so issue a transfer penalty.
But this mom gave 2/3 of the proceeds to her sons. That is gifting and not allowed. Medicaid requires that all assets are used for their care & their needs. If not the state can place a transfer penalty on the parent. Based on what you described, i bet what the state is doing is trying to establish just how much of a transfer penalty will be placed against mom. that is why all the documentation is being requested.
Transfer penalties are very sticky. If the sons have not seen an elder law attorney, they need to is my suggestion & ASAP. Once a penalty is issued, all medicaid payments will be stopped for the penalty period as the elder is ineligible for Medicaid. The parent will have to private pay to stay & someone ( the sons) will have to sign off on a contract to be financially responsible. Or if they can't then mom moves into one of their homes till the penalty period of time is cleared. A 64K penalty for TX Medicaid would roughly be 412 days of ineligibility. That is a long long time to private pay or have mom move in......
Per chance are you the girl friend of one of the sons?
Penalty varies by state as its set at your states reinbusrement rate as the main interger to do the penalty formula.
fly by poster here but give me credit for at least pretending to help . when her funds run out she can sell her oxycodone for 25 bucks each . its a chunk of change when you consider how many are in a bottle ..