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Medicaid Spousal Impoverishment Rules: Protection From Nursing Home Costs For the Husband or Wife Staying at Home
One of the greatest fears senior couples have is for nursing home care to take all their available money, leaving the husband or wife who is living at home penniless. Until 1988 this was sometimes the case. Public welfare, or worse, became the lot of some elderly spouses because their husband or wife could no longer be cared for at home. In the last 20 years things have improved some.
places. According to a recent study released by Genworth Financial Services, the average cost of a semi-private bed in a nursing home is $183.25 per day, or almost $66,900 a year, not including the cost of supplies and medicines. these rates for very long. senses and enacted legislation to prevent what they call "spousal impoverishment," which is government talk for sending the husband or wife at home to the poorhouse. Some of Their Assets play when one of a couple enters a nursing home expecting to stay for at least 30 days. At that time the powers that be take a "snapshot," of their combined resources. etc.) are combined on paper. Income, such as Social Security, retirement or interest is another thing entirely, and is not included in these calculations. Separate property doesn't count here, either...everything is combined, no matter whether it's jointly owned or separate property. The home, household goods, one car, and burial funds are backed out. The result is the couple's "combined countable resources." the amount used to calculate the "Spousal Share." calculate the spousal share, or the amount the spouse at home (the community spouse) will be permitted to keep while the nursing home spouse receives Medicaid help, the formula subtracts a "Protected Resource Amount" for the at-home spouse from the spouse at home's half: Resource Amount is the largest of: 2009); or between $21,912 and $109,560 in 2009; or to the community spouse for her/his support as directed by a court order; or community spouse's protected resources up to the minimum monthly maintenance needs standard. from the community spouse's share of their combined countable resources, the balance is considered to be available for the nursing home spouse's care. than the state resource limit ($2,000 in most states) then the nursing home spouse will immediately be eligible for Medicaid. If the amount is greater than the limit, the nursing home spouse will have to "spend down" by paying privately for care until that limit is reached. here are some examples: combined assets after backing out their non-countable things like the house, the car, etc. John needs nursing home care:
However, John and Mary have consulted with an elder law attorney, who
has petitioned the court to raise Mary's protected resource amount. Mary relies
on investment income, and with her investments not producing what they once did,
she needs a greater amount invested to keep her standard of living. The state
hearing officer agrees, and Mary's protected resource amount is raised to
$200,000. She now must only transfer $50,000 to John. Depending on a couple's
circumstances the protected resource amount could be expanded even
more.
Again, the amount Arnold may keep could be increased by a judge or a Medicaid
hearing officer. |