| LONG TERM
CARE NEEDS
As people grow older, they should begin
to make plans for later years. It is important to think about
retirement and those activities you would like to pursue.
It is important also to think about the possibility that,
at some time, you or a loved one might require some help with
ordinary everyday activities or need care over an extended
period.
Usually, when people think of long term
care, they think of nursing homes. Long term care means more
than nursing home care. It also means, for example, home health,
personal care or help with chores. However, many people have
limited financial resources available and this is a major
factor in one’s ability to obtain the care or services
needed.
Social Security was never intended as
a complete security program for retired people. Medicare is
not intended to cover long term care. Ordinary health insurance
does not cover long term care. There are, however, long term
care insurance policies becoming available in the marketplace.
It is important to understand how the costs of long term care
are paid and how to evaluate your needs and private insurance
options that may be available to you.
WHERE THE NEED ARISES
Many think that long term care means
nursing homes; in reality, it means much more. Long term care
also means medical, personal and social services provided
at home, in a community program such as an adult day care
center or in a nursing home.
If an illness or disability made it impossible
for you to carry on as you do today, would you know how to
find help? Do you know what services cost? Do you know what
protection Medicare and your current private insurance coverage
offer regarding long term care?
Long term care is distinguishable from
acute care such as that provided in a hospital. It refers
to the level of care needed by those people with chronic illness
or disability requiring continued support.
Private long term care insurance differs
from the usual health care insurance with which most people
are familiar. Long term care insurance is emerging as one
way to cover the costs of caring for the chronically ill not
typically covered by health insurance plans. It appears to
be one option that makes up for the lack of public funding
programs.
Private long term care insurance is beginning
to appear in the marketplace. Although it is not yet widely
available and policies vary considerably, this approach holds
some promise as one way to cope with the high costs of chronic
illness.
HOW SERIOUS IS THE NEED?
Long term care has become the greatest
health care need of older people. It represents the primary
catastrophic health care expense today.
Every day, thousands of people in this
country turn age 65. More than 2.5 million people are over
age 85. The likelihood of chronic illness or disability increases
with age. Nearly one person in five, age 65 or older will
use a nursing home at some time. For every person in a nursing
home, another two or three people in the community have at
least the same, if not greater, need.
The nature of services required may vary
widely. People may need help around the house, with shopping,
or with transportation. They may need personal care (such
as help with bathing or dressing), rehabilitative care such
as that following a stroke or intensive long term skilled
nursing care. Some may be fortunate enough to have family
and friends to help. For many, however, the cost of receiving
needed care and services can reach devastating proportions.
The only way to avoid crisis decision
making and to cope with exorbitant financial demands is to
plan ahead by thinking about your potential needs, your personal
preferences and the costs associated with your choices.
THE COST OF LONG TERM CARE
Depending on the level of care provided,
the cost of care in a nursing home averages $58,000 a year,
and can easily exceed $100,000 or even $125,000 depending
on location and the level of care which is required.
Half of all nursing home expenses are
paid directly by individuals and their families. A recent
study conducted for the House Aging Committee found that approximately
two-thirds of single older people and one-third of couples
were impoverished after only 13 weeks of nursing home confinement.
Long term care provided at home is also
costly. Home health care provided by licensed professionals
can range from $10,000 per year for skilled nursing services
to $20,000 per year for home health aides and other supportive
services.
UNDERSTANDING THE COVERAGES
Medicare is not intended to cover long
term chronic care. However, this care is very often critical
to a person’s ability to remain independent. Coverage
for long term care is limited and currently pays less than
two percent of the nation’s nursing home bills. Such
policies generally cover only 100 days of skilled nursing
care if an individual meets specified criteria and even then,
there is a substantial co-payment. They rarely cover custodial
care, which is most commonly needed by those with chronic
illness.
Medicare will pay for home health care,
but only under certain conditions. Personal care and supportive
services are usually provided by home health aides. Medicare
covers this level of care only if it is provided in conjunction
with skilled nursing, and that is rarely the case.
Medicaid is a federal/state-matching
program that covers services for the aged, blind and disabled
poor. A variety of services may be offered at the option of
the state to those individuals determined to be financially
eligible. Becoming financially eligible generally means that
a person has depleted assets and life savings.
In recent years, Medicaid paid less than
40% of nursing home costs.
States are required to cover skilled
nursing home care as well as home health care. Most states
provide intermediate and custodial care to the categorically
or medically needy.
Medigap or supplemental health insurance
does not generally cover additional services, but rather pays
the costs Medicare does not for covered services (e.g., hospital
deductibles and physician co-payments). Some plans may pay
for drugs or services such as private duty nurses. It is important
to understand the coverage and limitations of supplemental
policies.
All people over age 60 are eligible to
receive services under the Older Americans Act, such as home
delivered meals, chore services, adult day care and homemaker
services. Through the Social Services Block Grant, low-income
older people may receive similar services, but one may have
to wait before services can be made available.
In summary, those services most likely
to be covered by existing programs are those that are of a
medical nature provided in an acute care setting (e.g., hospital).
These programs typically are not able to address the needs
of an Alzheimer’s victim, a person with crippling arthritis,
a person whose rehabilitation potential following a stroke
is limited or a person with extensive vision impairment. That
continually increasing segment of the population coping with
chronic and disabling conditions is virtually “on its
own.”
The private sector has begun to respond
to these gaps in the financing system. Long term care insurance
represents one response. In planning for potential long term
care needs, consumers must be informed about how to evaluate
policies based on individual needs and preferences.
Source: GE Financial, Long Term Care
Division, GE Long Term Care Insurance Nursing Home Survey,
March 2002.
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