Will Medicaid Pay for a Nursing Home for Mom or Dad?

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Medicaid's Financial Eligibility Requirements

Income. States will assess both your available income and your available assets in determining whether you qualify for the Medicaid program. Some of your income is considered countable income, while other income may not be counted.

Assets. Some of your assets are considered, while other assets are excluded. While Medicaid's assessment of your income is relatively straightforward, the assessment of your assets is fairly complex.

Exempt assets include a primary residence; personal belongings; one motor vehicle; property essential to self support; life insurance with a face value under $1,500; certain burial arrangements; and assets held in specific kinds of trusts. Unless specifically excluded, any other real or personal property that you and your spouse own is counted in the Medicaid eligibility determination.

Does Medicare Pay for Long-Term Care?

Generally, Medicare does not pay for most long-term care. Medicare does not pay for personal or custodial care (help with Activities of Daily Living), which is the greatest part of long-term care services. Medicare will help pay for a limited skilled nursing facility stay, hospice care or home health care if you meet certain conditions, which are described below.

Medicare will pay for care in a skilled nursing home when:

  • you have had a recent prior hospital stay of at least three days,
  • you are admitted to a Medicare-certified nursing facility within 30 days of your prior hospital stay, and
  • you need skilled care such as skilled nursing services and/or physical or other types of therapy.

If all these conditions are met, Medicare pays a portion of your costs for up to 100 days. For the first 20 days, Medicare pays 100 percent of your skilled nursing facility costs. For days 21-100, you pay your own expenses up to $128/day (as of 2008) and Medicare pays the balance, if any. You pay 100 percent of costs for each day of a skilled nursing facility stay after day 100.

Medicare payments for home health care are limited to reasonable and necessary part-time or intermittent skilled nursing care and home health aide services as well as physical therapy, occupational therapy and speech-language pathology that are ordered by your doctor and provided by a Medicare-certified home health agency. It also includes medical social services, durable medical equipment (such as wheelchairs, hospital beds, oxygen, and walkers), medical supplies, and other services. Unlike nursing home services, there is no co-pay for home health. There is also no limit on the duration of service as long as services continue to be medically necessary and your doctor requests or reorders these services at least every 60 days.

Hospice is covered for people with a terminal illness, generally individuals who are not expected to live more than six months. Services include drugs for symptom control and pain relief, medical and support services from a Medicare-approved hospice provider, and other services not otherwise covered by Medicare (such as grief counseling). Hospice care is usually provided in your home (which may include a nursing home if that is where you live) or in a hospice care facility. However, Medicare does cover some short-term hospital and inpatient respite care ¾ care provided to a hospice patient to allow the usual caregiver to rest.

 


For more information

National Clearinghouse for Long-Term Care Information
A web site developed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to provide information and resources to help you and your family plan for future long-term care (LTC) needs.

 
 
 

Comments

 
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patpizarro45

Give a Hug

Dec 15, 2010

Please I need some kind of help or some one to tell me what to do with my mother she has dementia behaviors problems she is 92 years old,always being independent and does not want to live with no one not even with me, I tried for her to be at my home but she gets very resless and rude with my family.I live in texas and she lives in los angeles in senior complex,but she cant be by her self.I already look around some places to put her but they are very expensive.If any body knows about were i could take her and use her medicare please let me now . I love my mother very much and I just dont want to put her in just any home . Carlos Pizarro

 
 

debh312

Give a Hug

Dec 2, 2011

I have a lot of the same problems with my 87 year old mom. She tells her doctor that she's all up for the assisted living and as soon as we leave his office she says she isnt's going to one. She burs up pots and is not suppose to use the stove..we tried my sister and me taking turns staying in the say and we were "hoverind", we tried having someone come in and and that didn't work. We looked in to senior living. I know medicare is income based, so if your mom has any assets they will take that in to consideration. Medicare doesn't cover this as far as I know..maybe 3 months with a Dr.'s order. I am still checking too and we live in a small town..my last suggestion is to check with the United Way.

 
  •  Comments 1 to 2 of 2 

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