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My mom is in a nursing home with Dementia and will soon be on Medicaid with no income. She has health coverage with United Healthcare and a monthly premium of $180. My sense is that I should cancel the coverage since she can't afford it and since she will be covered by Medicare and Medicaid. She is 88 and has dementia but no know diseases or injuries. Can anyone share your thoughts on this? Thanks!

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My mother is 87, in a NH....she too has dementia....I kept her insurance in tact because Medicaid does not cover some costs that may occur if she had to go to the hospital....play it safe...keep insurance...you will need it for the final billing after the fact....besides Medicaid will just take the extra money for the cost of your Moms stay at the NH....if you do cancel.
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No, don't cancel it. The nursing home can guide you on this. It helped to pay the bills before my father passed to help pay the medical bills. Without it, when it is time to settle the estate, some states can send you a bill for what medicaid didn't cover!
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When my mother inlaw went on Medicaid the (very helpful) woman in the medicaid office helped me with that. In North carolina Medicaid wanted her to keep her Blue Cross Blue Shield extra coverage. It comes directly out of her bank account each month. (she is living on her social security check) Medicaid determines how much they pay based on that insurance. They wanted her to have it.
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BTW, you are not responsible for it; the estate is. So when your mother passes on, they can collect the money from the estate, i.e., you may have to sell the assets to cover the bill if there is no life insurance to cover it.
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I canceled my Aunts on advice from Nursing Home. Then we she got sick what medicaid did not cover was our problem. Even small bills can add up quick($40. and up to $300.). I would suggest really researching it with a social worker for elder care.
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When my mother was in that exact situation, also with dementia, I wondered the same thing, and asked the attorney who helped me file her Medicaid application. She said that I should continue my mother's private medical insurance because Medicaid may not cover certain procedures. Also, as I write in my book "Inside the Dementia Epidemic: A Daughter's Memoir," Medicaid will deduct the cost of the insurance premiums from the amount they expect your mother to pay for her nursing home care; if you cancel the insurance, that money will have to be paid toward the nursing home bill. So either way she won't get to keep that money. I wish you the best of luck as you continue your caregiving journey.
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I have performed medical insurance billing for over ten years and it use to be that if you had straight Medicare and Medicaid/Medi Cal, then you really did not need any additional insurance...Medicare paid their 80% and hopefully Medicaid picked up the remainder and the patient had a zero balance and could not be billed for any outstanding balances. HOWEVER YOU MUST MAKE SURE YOU ARE SEEING A DOCTOR OR IN A FACILITY THAT ACCEPTS MEDICARE AND MEDICAID/MEDI CAL.

Just to let you know, not all doctors or facilities accept Medicare and Medicaid, also known as Medi/Medi. If you go to see a doctor that does not accept Medicaid then they may accept your Medicare but you will be responsible for the remaining 20%. In reality they are suppose to refuse to see you if you are Medi/Medi and they do not accept it, because as a Medi/Medi patient you are not suppose to be billed for any balance.

Now what makes this even worse is many elderly people THINK THEY HAVE MEDICARE, BUT THEY DONT! Many of these people have "signed over their benefits" to insurance companies such as Blue Cross Blue Shield, Humana, Kaiser and they are now in HMO's and some are even PPO's but the elderly person believes they still have their Medicare, which they do NOT!

We now have to run a report every single day on every single patient to see if they truly do still have Medicare or have they signed it over to an HMO or a PPO that we are not affiliated with. These people come to us for surgery so the costs can be thousands of dollars that these people would owe us out of their pockets if we did not check. We have had to call numerous patients and cancel surgeries because from the time surgery was set up to the day of surgery, they changed their insurance coverage and signed up with an HMO and as we all know you can ONLY SEE DOCTORS OR ENTER FACILITIES THAT ARE IN YOUR HMO PLAN AND YOU HAVE TO HAVE PRIOR AUTHORIZATION!

In the State of California it gets even worse, our Legislators in Sacramento in all their wisdom have seen to it to mess up our Medi Cal even worse than it already was. They have now demanded that EVERY MEDI CAL RECEPIENT MUST SIGN UP WITH AN HMO PLAN! But what if you are Medicare/Medi Cal and your Medicare was not signed up with an HMO. I personally have to deal with this, we have straight Medicare and now have had our Medi Cal put into an HMO that none of our doctors are in! So if you go to see your normal doctor and he is not in the Medi Cal HMO plan they have assigned you to, well Medicare might pay, but Medi Cal will not pay and if you did not get a prior authorization for your secondary insurance carrier they will not pay. OUR GOVERNMENT HAS SCREWED THE SYSTEM UP SO HORRIBLY IT DOESN'T WORK ANY LONGER AND NO I AM NOT REFERRING TO OBAMA CARE. I am referring to The State of California!

Let me just say this, before you cancel any insurance on your loved one, speak to a minimum of 2 if not 3 people at Medicare, Medicaid, your private insurance or nursing home and hopefully you will find a knowledgeable person who can best direct you and let you know if there will be balances due that Medicaid will not cover. It may be beneficial to keep the coverage if you can. Someone said you are not responsible for your loved ones expenses, but laws are changing and they are trying to make the children responsible for the outstanding bills of the parent, so please do not go into this blindly. Protect yourself.
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My mom is in a NH and on Medicaid in Texas. She has had a high option federal Blue Cross & Blue Shield secondary insurance since the 1970's (my dad was a fed) and the premium was automatically deduced from her monthly federal retirement annuity. Really excellent policy and no co-pay ever. Once she got into a NH and on Medicaid (took about 6 months to get paperwork through & get approval letter), her BCBS policy can get either cancelled or suspended. We opt'ed for suspended so she could go back onto BCBS if she for whatever reason got out of Medicaid. There was specific forms that she had to do for this and I as DPOA cannot do them as the fed's like SS do not recognize DPOA's. What we were told that once Medicaid is approved then it (Medicaid) becomes the default secondary insurer for whatever Medicare does not pay for, and as such BCBS will decline coverage. Eventually the dual coverage will come up and payments denied retroactively by the non-Medicaid insurer and BCBS will do a clawback on payments to providers. You probably will get a refund of the monthly insurance premium less adminstrative fees.

If you do this (cancel a policy) there can be an issue if the service provider does NOT take Medicaid...as they can private pay rate bill your elder for services. I sent a letter to the NH that BCBS was going to be cancelled once Medicaid was approved and that any & all providers needed to be Medicare &/or Medicaid as of the approval letter date. imho you have to do this to cya as my experience with NH billing is that they make mistakes often and will not do the paperwork to change things. If your parents NH is more private pay residents, then you need to ask what insurance their outside providers accept as payment in full and make it clear that mom is not to have any providers who do not take Medicare and Medicaid as their payment in full.
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Also OrangeBlossom is spot on on the coverage. If your mom is like hers and still is able to go to see MD's outside of the NH, then keep the coverage. My mom is at the point that she physically cannot go to a provider outside of the NH. So much of all this is what their NH can & will do as a part of their care.
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My Mom is in long term care, under Medicaid, with dementia and also needs 24/7 care for basic care and several health problems. When all this started I was advised by several people from different points of view....ltc facilities, insurance companies, other people dealing with similar issues...to keep her supplemental insurance going and I did.

All of her income goes directly to the facility each month and the facility pays her insurance premium. I suspect this benefits the facility in that they can get reimbursed from the insurance company for certain procedures that Medicaid might not cover. In any case, there's nothing to be gained by cancelling the supplemantal insurance as the facility takes all income anyway.

This all started about a year ago and my Mom has had 2 hospitalizations and other extra procedures and there have been no extra charges. Mom is in NJ and a lot of these "rules" seem to vary among states so it's best to check the regs where you live.
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