| Consider
the following scenario: You have a stroke. It
is serious, but not fatal. After a few days or
even weeks in the hospital, doctors are able to
stabilize your condition and you are sent home.
But you are paralyzed. You are unable to dress
yourself, feed yourself and go to the bathroom
without assistance. Basically, you need so-called
custodial care 24 hours a day.
Question: Does your health
insurance policy cover the costs of the care
you need if this happens to you?
Answer: No, not at all.
So, if the previous scenario happens, what
do you do? Well, if you don't have long-term
care insurance, you pay for the care yourself.
Or, if you have few or no assets, the government
pays for it through Medicaid. But if you do
have assets and you need care that is custodial
in nature, you could exhaust all your assets
paying for this care, particularly if you need
it for several years.
Many people mistakenly believe their health
insurance covers custodial care. In fact, health
insurance is mostly for critical care that gets
you back (or close to) where you were before
you got sick or were injured.
But some injuries and illnesses don't allow
you to get fully healthy again. A stroke can
leave you paralyzed for life. Alzheimer's disease
likely will eventually prevent you from caring
for yourself.
Note. When people think about
long-term care, they usually think of nursing
homes. In fact, only 20% of long-term custodial
care takes place in nursing homes. The remaining
80% is at home. About 90% of at-home custodial
care is provided by family members or friends.
As such, just because you need custodial care
doesn't mean you will have extensive costs.
However . . .
Note. More and more Americans
will need long-term custodial care sometime
during their lifetimes, and it isn't only the
elderly who require custodial care. Currently,
40% of those who need such care in this country
are younger than 65.
Note. One in four people will
enter a nursing home sometime during his or
her lifetime.
Note. Further, of those who
turned 65 in 1990, three out of seven will be
in a nursing home at some point.
Custodial care, if it requires a professional
or professionals, is definitely not cheap. Nursing
home costs range from $40,000 to $80,000 a year.
Home care costs anywhere from $10,000 to $30,000
annually.
Consider these costs when compared to your
current asset base. And remember that you won't
be able to earn much of a living, if any, when
you require such care. More than anything else,
the need for long-term care can cause life savings
to evaporate.
Tip. Long-term care insurance
is the solution to this potential financial
disaster. A good long-term care policy will
cover custodial costs in nursing homes or at
one's residence. A good policy will provide
coverage if you are unable to perform one or
more of what are known as "activities of
daily living." Bathing. Dressing. Eating.
Going to the bathroom. Transporting yourself
in and out of bed.
|