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Reference Materials
 

 

Medicaid Planning

by Thomas Day
Click here to learn more about Thomas Day

A person facing the prospect of long-term care with moderate income and assets may eventually have to rely on Medicaid to pay part or all of the cost of care. In the Medicaid chapter we learn of provisions to protect a healthy spouse financially. But many states rob a healthy spouse of a previously adequate income by allowing too little in protected resources and income. Likewise, children, relatives and friends are not recognized for the financial sacrifices they make in providing the early care before a recipient becomes bad enough to need Medicaid funded professional help.

Medicaid planning, using a professional Medicaid planning advisor or qualified elder law attorney, allows you to correct inequities in the system. Medicaid planning has gotten a bad name because some individuals, who would normally have too many assets to ever qualify for Medicaid, deliberately use it, many years in advance, to give away everything to their family so as to qualify for Medicaid. It is wrong to abuse the system in this way and to use taxpayer dollars to insure an inheritance for the family. And if that person is not anticipating immediate care, this strategy is just plain dumb.

Some Medicaid planners will attempt to discredit other forms of funding long-term care such as using insurance or a reverse mortgage. They do this in order to discourage the public from using these other strategies. The intent is to limit competition ensuring that paying clients will rely entirely on Medicaid planning as a solution. On the other hand, many long term care funding specialists will use the same strategy against Medicaid planners to eliminate competition from their services. These people make Medicaid planners appear as evil or dishonest. Medicaid planning is no different from tax planning. In fact a Supreme Court decision condones honest methods of eliminating income taxes or estate taxes. Tax planning and Medicaid planning both put an additional burden on taxpayers, but one is considered ethical and the other not.

We believe that all strategies have their place in the scheme of things. Medicaid planning fits certain circumstances usually where families are in a crisis mode trying to preserve a few assets such as a house or a savings plan. There is no attempt to take advantage of the taxpayers. Using other strategies for paying the cost of care is much better for a younger generation wanting a plan that will allow for home care, assisted living and a choice in care services. (14 pages printed)

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The Need for Long
Term Care Planning
The Process of Long
Term Care Planning
Knowing Who to
Contact for Help
Paying the Cost of Care
Long Term Care Insurance
Wills, Trusts, Powers of
Attorney & Loss of Capacity
Medicaid Planning
Using Life Settlements
Using a Reverse Mortgage
Using a Care Manager
The Caregiver's Handbook
Medicare: Supplements
Advantage Plans, Part D
Elder and Family
Mediation Services
Using Professional
Home Care Services
Community Aging Services
and Senior Centers
Using End-of-Life Services
Find Assistive Technology
& Monitoring Services
Find Specialists, Advisors
Care Managers, Attorneys
Find Home Care, Nursing
Homes, Assisted Living
Find State & Federal
Long Term Care Services