I found this info on this webpage
http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/syncri.htm
“Asset spend-down in nursing homes is the process by which individuals enter nursing homes as private pay clients, deplete their available assets in paying for their care, and then enroll in the Medicaid program once they are impoverished. “Medicaid asset spend-down” is a source of considerable concern to disabled elderly persons who face the prospect of extended nursing home care.”
Just the sound of this is frightening. Work your entire life, then, faced with some terrible illness that requires strangers to take care of you, spend all your money on your health care so that you can have the government finish “taking-care” of you for the rest of your life. And if you have a spouse that is healthy, they will become impoverished too, right along with you as you spend down your combined assets.
And from this site
http://www.financinglongtermcare.umn.edu/basics/financialoptions/
factsheet/spenddown/spenddown1.htm
“What is it like to spend down to Medicaid?
Marlene S. Stum, Ph.D. Family Social Science
What is a spend down?
“A spend down occurs when private or family finances are depleted so far that an individual becomes eligible for public sources of payment through Medicaid. This process of voluntary impoverishment is a transition from private to public sources of payment for long-term care.” (Stum, 1998).
What is it like to spend down to Medicaid to pay for long term care?
A study of families who were spending down to Medicaid to pay for long term care and those who had already become eligible for Medicaid, found that families experienced multiple losses including; loss of control, choice and dignity (Stum, 1998). The following are quotes from the study that illustrate the specific themes that emerged from the research both for families that were in the process of spending down to Medicaid and those who had already become eligible for Medicaid.
Families in the Spend Down Process
Stretching Personal Resources
Lack of Control
“I just keep hoping that our money is going to hang on and that the house will sell. They say, ‘Oh this must cost $100 per month in here!’ I just say ‘yes’. I know it would kill both of them if they felt they were going to run out of money.” (Niece caregiver of two aunts in their nineties in a nursing home.)
“Everytime we have to dip into savings to pay for some of Dad’s care, it is a real concern to Mom that eventually she is not going to have anything. We try to reassure her that it will be okay, that we can only take it day by day. I think she feels that she is no longer in control and that she is going to lose her savings. We don’t know if Dad’s care is going to increase or if he might live to be 102. I say, ‘you know Mom, Dad could die tomorrow and we wouldn’t have to worry-we just don’t know-and we can’t sit and worry about the unknown.’” (Daughter of mom (age 75) and dad with dementia in a nursing home.)”
My friend Bob has a plan for you. He’s recommended this plan to many low income seniors as a way to hang on to some personal assets and still have coverage for medical expenses. We’ll be letting you know about it in the very near future.