Has caregiving cost you a bundle personally?
I have read so many heartbreaking stories on here about various caregiving situations. My mom helped caregive for both of my grandparents but while they did not pay her, they did have insurance and savings for medications, supplies and of course their health care coverage paid their medical bills. My dad worked and mom was a stay at home mom, so she did not quit an outside job.
I hear about so many people who quit their jobs, take out loans and exhaust savings paying for medicines and treatments and supplies for their parents and many have their own children/families. Are the majority of these situations like my parents where one spouse works an outside job and one stays at home caregiving? Are adult children moving in with their parents into their home and using their parents pension to live?
I just don't see how the caregivers make it financially. I am thinking about things such as if you quit your job, you are not paying into any social security or a pension (depending on your job) for yourself. If you take on loans for medical treatments, how do you pay them off?
Also, many of the parents I see mentioned are in their late 70's at youngest with many in their 80's and many have nothing. No savings, some with no home and many with no insurance. How? Do insurance companies drop patients at a certain age or is insurance not afforadble? I just know my relatives always kept insurance even if it meant giving something else up.
I also have known people to quit jobs to caregive with young children and there seems to be no thought into college accounts and sometimes even basic needs for their children.
If you are in this position, how do you make it work financially without going into bankruptcy?
May God Bless the caregivers.
Through the grace of God, Mom is off the ventilator, has been responding by nodding her head fo over a year now. You have to be a very special person to caregive, but if your heart is in it, and you Love that person you will do whatever you have to for them. I DO.
We are in uncharted waters. Some families already face this problem or worse when the elder has no pension and only a small social security or SSI payment. Most costs associated with in home care are funded by the elder or their caregiver.
We need to develop a better method of helping the elderly and their caregivers.
Elizabeth
And the really heartbreaking aspect is when you see questions posted about verbally or physically abusive seniors who the posters say have been that way their entire lives. So in many cases, these are not always loving, giving individuals we are talking about. I do realize there however are exceptions. However, to play the other side of the card, how could a loving parent even ask their child to quit their job, lose their pension or social security, go into bankruptcy or lose their home?
Maybe it's just because I have been through a version of this same play 20 years ago and am going through it again with just a different set of actors that I already know how the play ends.
My heart goes out to anyone that caregiving has ruined financially.
I am wondering if congress will look at caregiving for seniors the same way they look at moms who choose to stay home and not work. Just like you don't receive income for mommy duty, they may make the same argument. Moms are told all the time that there are options of daycare, a family member or private baby sitter. When they say it costs money, the response is: "well it was your choice to have the child." Same with adult caregiving, there are adult daycares, home sitters and nursing homes. When adult children say that it costs money, the response will be that the senior adult should have financially planned more or the adult child should pay it (the finial laws -- sorry if I misspelled it).
I am wondering if the one shot is to say how much money it would save the government if they paid people to stay home vs. so many going on medicaid. If it benefits them...that may make them listen.
I am a court ordered caretaker
they say I volunteered, who said?
I never had a voice in court proceedings or otherwise,
Who wouldn't want to take care of somebody better than assisted living, daycare. or a nursing home? Our 86 year old lost weight(went down to 95 lbs) had the flu and grew unresponsive in the the assisted living. She was used to one on one care , why shouldn't we be allowed to take care of our loved ones and get pafd for it? When I was in college, I would get these mass emails that congress was voting and wanted our senators to know how we wanted to vote, fill out a form aqnd click, click our representative knew how we felt. am going to find out how to get one of those, may be we can do 1,000,000 email march on washington.
I only learned recently that there are changes coming where hospice is concerened when your family member is in a nursing home. To my understanding patients are receiving nursing home care and hospice -- almost like double dipping and it is draining money.
Our family has not had hospice service but we had hosparus service for a short amount of time and while I understand our situation was not the norm, upon researching I found we were not alone in feeling there was some major waste of time, money and resources going on.
I have been with 3 people who died after long, long illnesses and hospice or hosparus was never in the picture. But to my understanding, this summer there will be more nursing homes that do not accept the service.
I also think seniors are going to be more encouraged to give a hard look at their spending habits, their savings and retirement age.
It would be awesome if caregivers should be paid -- but there are those who would question if that should fall on the government or on the parent to provide a wage to their child. It would save the government money by not having so many seniors on medicaid but there are also parents who willingly pay home health care attendants or private sitters but would never consider paying their adult child.
I asked my mom the other day if she would reflect on when she was a caregiver. She was a stay at home mom who took care of my grandmother off and on for 15 years and also my grandfather for a period of time. I asked her if she was not a stay at home mom already and if she was working a job and it took her income and dad's to make it financially or lose everything to caregive if she would do it? Her response, "no. If I relied on my income to make house payments or pay into a retirement and I would lose it and everything we worked for, my parents would have had to find another means of help."
When I read about the financial hardships, the college funds for their own children gone, the bankruptcy, the lack of social security/pensions paid into, I have to ask: what is the straw that breaks the camel's back? Will it literally take people being put out on the street to realize the situation is a sinking ship?
I also don't understand how all these seniors can be poor (I read about ones who took trips to vegas or had shopping addictions), how they can have no money saved, little to no insurance, retirement and none can afford help, nursing homes but evidentally they also don't qualify for medicaid. It just makes no financial sense to me.
I think it comes down to advice that our parents give to us (if they were thinking) when you get married, "you can't live on love." Yes, I know it has to take love to give up everything and caregive but the harsh reality is -- you can't live on it.
You might want to look into groups which do advocate for the uninsured and to address the elderly issues. Sometimes good groups are out there and we don't know of their efforts because they lack the funding to advertise their work.
I think long term care insurance in the absence of a national policy to care for middle class elderly, while expensive, is a needed expenditure. Normally the elderly need in home or nursing home care from 1 to 3.5 yrs at the end of their life. If family does all the care and can afford not to work, then obviously they may not need the insurance coverage. However, as a single person, I lack the family support and do not wish to end my life in a nursing home having to spend down my very last dime and hop on Medicaid (our nation's unofficial long term care policy) to pay for my nursing home once I am broke. Since my parent lived into his 90's I can't count on a short retirement, so I will plan for a long retirement which will need home health aides at the end. It is my nursing avoidance program and I pray it works.:)
Elizabeth
If you can, there are therapists that you can see for little to no money and they do help with alleviating your stress, some will even come to your home verses you having to leave the house if you cannot get out. Take advantage of it....I do and it helps!
So here I am with no job/income, no adequate retirement for when that time comes, no health insurance, and no family or community support system in place for down the road. I recently learned that hospice has an advocacy arm, and I am going to look into what that organization is doing to bring the issues of caregivers to the attention of Congress. I don't think Obamacare really contributes much help to this, but who really knows at this point what it will cover and what hoops one will have to jump through or what loopholes various insurance companies will use to do the least for the most profit. I will have to do a fair amount of research to scope out the situation properly, and anyone wanting to help me is welcome to pitch in with information.
I think former Senator Kennedy had a provision in the new health care law to form a long term care provision or encourage a public run policy. However, it never made it into the final bill that was passed. It might have given more elderly long term care insurance for caregiving fees.
Just like they want to reduce social security's CPI, they apparently don't want to develop a plan for caregiving. It could be done, but we seem to want to do everything on the cheap when it comes to caring for the elderly or disabled people in this country.
We like to see ourselves as #1 in this or that, I long for the day when we are #1 on how we treat the elderly and their caregivers.
Elizabeth