I keep seeing the advice...put him/her in a nursing home
I think if the senior does not have substantial resources...this may be the only advice that makes sense. But, it often does not when there is a fair amount of financial resource
Consider the situation with my parents.
Had Mom put Dad in a NH when the dementia started to drive her a bit nuts (1997) the result would have been..after 19 years (he died in 2016) she would be in poverty with nothing left for herself.
The cost of the Nh would have taken everything except the max. State Medicaid allows....$90,000 and her own social security. Everything else would have gone completely to 19 years of care. That would have meant that today Mom would not be able to afford in home caregivers. Would not have a driving service when she needs it. Would not be able to keep her home (cost of maintenance would have eaten away the remaining savings)
Yes, having a home aide a couple hours a week and dealing with the rest was a hardship for her. But, the hardship of losing all financial security would have beaten her down more over those years.
Mom feels strongly that she will not be in a NH..ever! She has the financial ability to live independent for the presumed remainder of her life. The long term home health policy she purchased in 2000 was expensive through the years...but it is paying off very well now.
I have worked her finances back and forth...she can keep in home health aides for 10 hours a day 7 days a week ...and live comfortably without worry for 10 years.....her life expectancy is 5 years.....hopefully she will outlive her "sell by" date.
The awful reality of the poverty of the remaining spouse has to always be considered. "Put him in a nursing home" may not be good advice when you take into consideration the living situation left behind.
We are buying a house which is not saleable, because of liens. I am living on just my social security, which makes me responsible for paying all the home expenses.
I have received bills for Dave's nursing home. I am asking why me and what should I do?
Dee Worry
How do you know that a facility will take Medicaid after the self-pay money runs out? You simply ask them when you investigate them. "My mother is self-pay now. Will you accept Medicaid when her money runs out?" Will she get lesser care then? No. But Medicaid pays so much less that if she is in a private room she may have to move to a shared room.
It looks like you are on top of the finances. Good for you!
True enough, she may need more care and require a NH in time...but, she will have options...not just whatever she might get into with Medicaid. I read that being able to self pay for a couple years will get a better placement.
I have often wondered...if entering a very nice NH self pay...what keeps them from bouncing the senior out when they go on Medicaid? What guarantees do they have that the self pay provides a nice NH after the money runs out?
I expect that Mom will remain at home. I am downsizing her now to something that is much smaller and thus a much smaller drain on her resources. Between us, we can pay for the monthly living costs...then it just all the extras that will come from savings. I think we can make it go a lot longer that way. Or, free up enough to pay the extra 14 hours a day if that is the answer.
If your mother had placed your father in a nursing home when caring for him was daunting, wouldn't she have gone to work? I'm not sure your analysis is taking all factors into consideration.
You are assuming that your mother would always be able to function with only 10 hours of in-home care per day. That would not have been true for my husband, with dementia, or for my mother with dementia and mobility problems.
But in any case you are certainly right that finances should be a consideration. The trouble is, we can't foresee the future. Nineteen years is an extremely long time in a nursing home. The average stay is less than 3 years. At the point one needs to make a decision, one can't look into the future and know these kinds of things.