Posts Tagged ‘paying for care’

Incompetent Elders Can’t Sign Legal Papers

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

I am hearing more and more about how someone in a family gets an elder with dementia to sign a durable power of attorney when the person is no longer competent to know what they are signing.
© 2010, AgingParents.comOther siblings are upset and angry about manipulation of the vulnerable elder. Is it legal to get a signature under those circumstances? Of course not. But people do it to take control of money and believe that they can get away with it because the elder won’t object and because it’s expensive to try to stop the person who is the “agent” on the power of attorney.

Is there anything one can do if this has happened to your elder? Yes, there may be something you can do. First, if the elder has “cognitive impairment” or has been diagnosed with dementia, it is important to get a letter from the elder’s physician verifying that he or she is not competent to handle his or her finances any longer. Without medical or psychological evaluation of the elder and evidence from one of these professionals, it is almost impossible to protect the elder from financial abuse.

One way around the problem is to seek the advice of an elder law attorney, who may be able to convince the court to order an evaluation, even if the “agent” objects to having the elder tested for competency by a doctor.

If an agent on a durable power of attorney has taken control of the elder’s finances and is not using the elder’s money for the elder’s benefit, it may be time to get the authorities involved. Taking an elder’s money and using it for any purpose other than to care for and protect the elder’s health, safety and quality of life may be financial abuse. If so, it must be reported to the police, adult protective services in your area, or to a doctor, who will report the problem to the proper law enforcement entity. The letter reporting the evaluation of the elder’s mental competency is a crucial part of reporting alleged elder abuse. Without it, law enforcement may not be able to tell who is being truthful and who is not.

Carolyn L. Rosenblatt, RN, Attorney

Choosing Medicaid to Pay For a Nursing Home

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Choosing Medicaid to Pay For a Nursing HomeHow to Choose a Nursing Home

By Carolyn L. Rosenblatt, R.N., B.S.N., Attorney

Many lawyers who do estate planning spend a lot of time helping where they can to arrange for elderly people to qualify for Medicaid.  Depending on the requirements in your state, various things must be done with money to qualify a person for Medicaid. The idea is to “preserve assets” or protect the elder from having to spend money for care when the elder can qualify for Medicaid and get the state to pay for care.  We’re not talking about folks who are truly poor and have no assets.

What’s wrong with this picture?  I challenge those urging and assisting elders who own expensive homes and have plenty of money to get on Medicaid to explain in detail what care the elder will qualify for, once eligible for Medicaid.  When a lot of help is needed, the only choice is a nursing home.  Does anyone want to purposely impoverish him or herself for the privilege of living in a nursing home?

I have worked in nursing homes. I’ve been an aide, a staff nurse, and a charge nurse in nursing homes with most or all of the beds for Medicaid residents. I have also sued nursing homes on behalf of neglected elders. I don’t recommend it as a choice unless that is the only alternative.

Why do I say this?  It is clear to me, and to any lawyer who has sued nursing homes for neglect of an elder that nursing homes can be unsafe places.  The elder’s new “home” in such a facility is usually like a hospital room.  It may be shared with one, two, or as many as three other residents.  There is no privacy.  It can be quite noisy, and it isn’t going to feel very homey.

Sometimes a nursing home is the best place, because the level of nursing care the elder needs simply can’t be given in any other setting, or the elder can’t afford around the clock care at home.  However, there are those who have been persuaded to choose a nursing home so that their money can go to their heirs, and not be spent on quality care at home.  This exists, ignoring the fact that the rate of depression in nursing homes is about 80% of the residents.

Until we get rid of the hospital model of how a nursing home should be, and focus our resources on making such homes into pleasant places to live, I think choosing to legally hide one’s assets, give them to heirs, and get the forced choice of Medicaid-paid care, we are short-changing our elders.

This opinion will undoubtedly anger some estate planning attorneys, as well as the adult children who can’t wait to get their hands on the money Mom or Dad is giving up to “protect their assets”.  Protect them from what? From actually ensuring that a parent has quality of life in his or her own home for as long as possible by paying for good help on their own?

I hope some lawyers with a conscience and a true understanding of what Medicaid will buy for the elder will urge older people to take care of themselves first and worry less about what their adult children are going to inherit. In too many instances, the price of a generous inheritance is sacrificed quality of life in the parent’s last years or months.

Carolyn L.  Rosenblatt, RN, BSN, Attorney, AgingParents.com