Start planning now to care for elderly parents
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[October 11, 2017]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - If you have an aging
parent and want a glimpse of what the future holds, look no further than
Leslie Glutzer.
The 66-year-old from Chicago has a mom who is 92, dealing with dementia,
now living in a local nursing home. Those costs are not covered by
Medicaid, so Glutzer and her husband are spending more than $5,000 a
month from their savings.
"It really starts to add up," Glutzer says.
This financial struggle is one that is shared by many.
For nursing homes, in particular, the costs can be astronomical. A new
study from insurance giant Genworth Financial found that a private room
in a nursing home averages out to $267 per day or $8,121 a month, up 5.5
percent from the year before. Semi-private rooms are not far behind, at
$7,148 a month on average.
Overall, long-term care costs rose by 4.5 percent from 2016 to 2017,
according to Genworth's "Cost of Care" survey. That is the
second-highest annual increase since the yearly survey began back in
2004.
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Experts agree that it is important to start thinking about caregiving
costs now. Waiting too long means you cannot stockpile resources, take
out affordable insurance policies or plan ahead for a thoughtful
drawdown of assets.
"At that point, your choices become very limited," says David O'Leary,
president and CEO of Genworth's U.S. Life Insurance division.
So exactly how can you provide compassionate care for your parents
without bankrupting yourself and sabotaging your own retirement? The
following are five tips:
TAKE FINANCIAL INVENTORY
Have a family meeting and take stock of the financial resources
available. Folks in their 70s or 80s may have a pension, as well as
Social Security and personal investments, which could help soften the
financial blow for adult children.
Figure out if all siblings are going to share eldercare costs equally,
or if some who may not have the means can contribute in other ways, like
arranging hospital appointments.
Be sure to find out what your parents envision for their future.
"As the child, we want to make the decision we think is right," O'Leary
says. "But we really have to look at everything through the eyes of our
parents."
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HOME EQUITY
If your parents own a home, consider tapping it to pay for caregiving
expenses.
"Think of it as an investment that can be used to pay for care," says
Joy Loverde, an eldercare expert and author of the new book "Who Will
Take Care of Me When I'm Old?"
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A young carer holds the hands of an elderly woman in a residential
home for the elderly in Planegg near Munich in this June 19, 2007
file photo. REUTERS/Michaela Rehle/Files
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That might mean selling it, downsizing elderly parents into a smaller space, and
using those funds for long-term care. It might also mean that adult children buy
the place, lease it back to the parents and potentially tap the home equity.
Or it might mean a reverse mortgage, which allows homeowners to borrow money
against the value of their homes, receiving proceeds as a line of credit, fixed
monthly payment or lump sum.
MEDICAID QUALIFICATION
Medicaid can cover long-term care costs like nursing-home admission, but only
for those under a certain level of personal wealth. That might require shifting
assets in a thoughtful (and legal) way.
"One of the most effective planning strategies has been to encourage our clients
and their elderly parents to consider gifting their assets into irrevocable
trusts, including their primary residence," says Ian Weinberg, a financial
planner in Woodbury, New York.
GET COVERED
Long-term care policies can definitely help with eldercare costs, but only 8
percent of the population is currently covered by them, according to Genworth.
The trick is to secure them while you are healthy and early enough - say, in
your 50s - so that they are still relatively affordable.
"I have at least one client dealing with these costs for his parents, and thank
God we had the good sense to buy LTC insurance," says Kashif Ahmed, a financial
planner in Woburn, Massachusetts. "Otherwise, their assets would be depleted in
no time."
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CONSIDER LESS EXPENSIVE OPTIONS
Nursing homes are not the only option. These days it is more like a "continuum"
of care. For instance, parents might move in with their adult children. Or they
might prefer to stay right where they are, perhaps with a home health aide
coming in occasionally.
The next level up might be an assisted-living facility, which should offer an
array of services for independent living, and even different levels of care
within the same facility. Those will not cost as much as nursing homes, at $123
per day or $3,750 a month on average, according to Genworth.
(Editing by Lauren Young and G Crosse)
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