Both of my parents are in a nursing home with dementia and both have a small life insurance policy. Both are on Medicaid. The first beneficiary on both policies is the surviving spouse followed by myself. Hypothetical scenario: if parent A dies, parent B will receive the proceeds from the life insurance which is $10,000. Will parent B lose their Medicaid eligibility due to the $10,000 insurance proceeds? If so, is there some way I can prevent this from happening as their power of attorney?
Someone here also mentioned changing the beneficiary but be very careful about this or it will cross the line into either theft or coercion, both of which can get you in very serious legal trouble. If the wards already had these life insurance policy is in place when they were competent, I would leave it alone and not go changing the beneficiaries unless you want some very serious legal trouble on your hands. I'm currently dealing with a very similar matter under the care of a lawyer. My dad had a life insurance policy when he worked for Ford. He worked there pretty much his whole life and built up a pretty big life insurance policy and it's been suspected that something suspicious happened while he had Alzheimer's. Be very careful messing around with someone else's life insurance policy that they long since established because you can possibly get yourself in very hot water over this if the person is no longer competent to make competent decisions to change a beneficiary. If they already had the policy when they were competent, leave it alone!
These days you really must have everything in writing by the rightful owner of the insurance policy or sometime somewhere along the line someone is going to start looking at you when something goes amiss and the right people start noticing something's just not right, and if something doesn't seem right, the person having that feeling is probably right. This is a very firm warning from someone whose dad was most likely coerced despite having Alzheimer's. Don't do it, just don't or you could end up with a very hefty fine and maybe even some prison time. If you've ever watched enough shows on prison, you'll see that just from those shows what inmates go through and they are blocked there for a number of reasons including changing beneficiaries when you had no permission to do so, and changing claiming funds you're not entitled to. Be very careful and have it in writing before you go changing the beneficiary because once someone has dementia or Alzheimer's, you could very easily cross the line and land in some very serious legal trouble. I currently have a pending estate case, and my lawyer is helping me through this situation because someone may have taken advantage of my dad when he had all Alzheimer's.
I'm currently keeping a discussion open for ohioans on my thread, it's for newbies who have never dealt with estate issues before. I post updates as I get them to help Ohioans know what to expect as they are dealing with their own estate issues. My thread started out as a question and with developments, it became a discussion and then an update thread to help Ohioans. My thread has become a development able to help Ohioans through their own estate issues, especially where insurance policies and property is involved. If the OP happens to live in Ohio, definitely check out my thread
Best advice is to call your local medicaid office and ask.
It pays to be honest with Medicaid because it can come back on you.
Normally, I would advise a child in this situation to utilize the $10,000 by spending it down within the month of receipt so it will not cause disqualification. Pre-paying funeral and burial expenses is usually advisable, but in your case they have decided to donate their bodies and thus this is not an option. Ask the nursing home if it possible to purchase anything for the parent's room that might benefit them; that way it is not a penalty-causing gift. The idea is to spend the benefits down in the month of receipt: in the month of receipt it is deemed income, but in the following month it is treated as an asset and must be reported to Medicaid. At that point, your surviving parent will be over-resourced, i.e., have too much money to qualify for Medicaid till the money is spent down again.