Title:Critical Conversations About Financing LongTerm Care
Description:
Weve never seen or talked to anybody about financing. ... Dont understand risk costs financing options ... Understand Financing Alternatives and Consequences ...
Title: Critical Conversations About Financing LongTerm Care
1 Critical Conversations About Financing Long-Term Care
Marlene S. Stum PhD
University of Minnesota
mstum_at_che.umn.edu
2
Plan for later life events
Changing health and independence
--including long term care
Act
Identify and communicate
strategies to manage the
risk of long-term care
3 We didnt think it would turn out this way Weve never seen or talked to anybody about financing . . .we would have to get to a point where its a concern. Sometimes I think it is better to take your chances hoping that you die before you get there. What we thought wed do is go the way we are until we run out of money and then figure out what to do --Husband with Parkinsons and caregiver wife 4 We didnt think it would turn out this way No one plans to have their health change or wants to admit they might need long term care someday. We planned for a shorter and healthier retirement I never expected to live this long! 5 Financing Long Term CareDilemmas and Decisions
Major gap in financial planning throughout the lifecycle
Critical gap in later life financial security
Few have done any planning
Wont admit we might personally be affected
6 Financing Long Term CareDilemmas and Decisions
Think we know more than we do!
Significant gaps in perceived versus actual knowledge of 45 year olds and baby boomers
Dont understand risk costs financing options
Believe we have coverage when we probably do not (existing insurance/government sources)
Gaps in knowledge makes it tough to plan for long-term care!
7 Existing Educational Resources
Misrepresent what long term care involves
Are developed by sources with a self-interest in the message
Are too complex overwhelming and technical
Focus on one private or public financing alternative
8 Existing Educational Resources
Focus on solutions without helping consumers understand the problem
Ignore complex family values and goals
Ignore long-term care risk as part of retirement planning
Too general or too specific given differences in state policies/practices
9 Opportunities for Extension
Provide knowledge-based messages
Offer objectivity and credibility in messages
Present holistic picture of issue/decisions
Offer plain language tools
Focus on individual and family decision making processes
Address legal financial and social/emotional dimensions of the decision situation
10 Opportunities for Extension
Collaborate with credible partners
Area Agencies on Aging
Health Insurance Counseling Network/SHIP
Human resources/benefit departments
Providers of specific alternatives
Build family decision-making research base
Train other professionals and providers
11 Challenges for Extension
There are no answersor simple formulas
Just tell me what to do
A changing and complex moving target
Finding teachable moments
Marketing the topic
Baby boomers and younger audiences
Integrating with retirement and risk management planning
12 Challenges for Extension
Establishing appropriate boundaries
As Extension
Depth and detail decisions
Focus on one alternative only NO
Interpreting rules--eligibility/assessment NO
Personal financial planning role NO
Avoid duplication--who is doing what in your state
Wide range of personal social and medical services
Provided in a variety of settings in-home community skilled nursing facility
17 Most who need long term care
Live in their own homes
Receive unpaid care provided by family/friends
Overestimate the chance of needing nursing home stay
Underestimate need for in-home and community services
Are unprepared for needs increasing gradually overtime
Are unfamiliar with new and changing options
18 Whos at risk
The long-term care population is diverse in age and level of disability.
A risk across the lifecycle
57 over age of 65
40 below 65 years of age
3 are children
19 Whos most at risk
Individuals 85 years and older
Need help with more activities of daily living
Experience increased rates of home care and nursing home use
Individuals with chronic health problems
Individuals who lack social support and unpaid caregivers
Women
20 Prevalence of Long Term Care Need
Age 65-74
In Community 11
In Institution 1
Age 75-84
In Community 22
In Institution 5
Age 85
In Community 49
In Institution 21
21 What are the risks
After age 65 almost 3/4ths will need some home care and almost half will spend some time in a nursing home.
Average lifetime home care use is just over 200 visits.
Average lifetime nursing home use per person is one year.
22 Potential Costs Underestimated
In-home care
Degree of need and health status
Type of service used
Home health aide 80/hour
Community services
Adult day care 60/day
Assisted living
Skilled Nursing Home Care
One month average in U.S.-- 5000 (60000/year)
Northeast and West highest
CT-223/day CO--133/day Arkansas--79/day
23 Sort out Later Life Financial Goals and Expectations
Multiple complex and competing goals are behind later life financial decisions
There are no right goals--beware of assumptions
Understanding the meaning of a goal is essential (e.g. what does control mean)
Make unwritten and unspoken goals explicit
Goals provide direction for selecting financial alternatives
24 If I would need long term care I would expect to
Remain financially independent
Maintain control of my finances
Keep my financial affairs private
Involve family members (care/financially)
Utilize government services
Leave an inheritance
25
Family will not be one voice
Goals can be a common source of conflict
Between spouses/partners
Across the generations
Help elders and family members prioritize competing goals
Identify where there is agreement and/or disagreement
26 Understand Financing Alternatives and Consequences
Identify the range of private and public alternatives
Personal resources
Private insurance
Government options
Help understand factors that can and/or should affect which alternative to select
Lead to specific credible resources
27 Understand Financing Alternatives and Consequences
There is no one financial answer or solution
Consider a combination of alternatives
Later life financial goals should influence which alternatives are most appropriate
Options and choices typically decrease with age and increased risk
What was may not longer be . . .change is a given.
28 Who does pay for long term careA patchwork of public and private sources
Income and life savings of elders
Unpaid family caregivers
Medical Assistance/Medicaid for low-income
Long-term care insurance
NOT existing health insurance policies Medicare Supplement policies
Role of Medicare blurred with expansion into home health care coverage
29 Critical Conversations About Financing Long-term Care
Facilitators Guide
Content and suggested activities
PowerPoint presentation
Participant handouts
Myths/Facts Quiz
Protect Your Later Life Financial Health fact sheet
Critical Conversations About Later Life Financial Goals worksheets (versions for older generation and adult children)
Financing Long-term Care Alternatives and Considerations
Evaluation tools
30 Impact Evaluation
Improved overall financial knowledge and literacy
Risk
Costs
Alternatives
Changed behaviors and practices
Gathered information
Assessed situation
Discussed with others
Selected financial alternatives and strategies
31 Critical Conversations About Financing Long-term Care
Access curriculum after April 25th
Go to www_at_reeusda.gov/financialsecurity
Click on educator bar
Go to Programs/Resources
Select Critical Conversations curriculum
Follow guidelines for making state-specific
Identify and critique existing state-specific resources before using
32 Coming Fall 2002
Web-based resource providing anytime access to educational tools
up-to-date
unbiased
plain-language
practical
interactive
33 Website Critique
Examined a random sample of first 100 sites found using top seven search engines and financing long term care key words
Majority of sites
macro-policy level decision making
government related sites (regulating implementing)
102 of 700 sites addressed how to finance long term care and focused on helping individuals make financing decisions.
62 sponsored by a company
31 directly selling long term care insurance
34 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
The goals of this site
Improve what people know about long term care as a family financial issue.
Help families who are planning ahead make more informed decisions.
Help families take action before a crisis.
35 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Whats different about this site
We are not selling financial or long term care products or services
We offer unbiased research-based information for educational purposes
We understand long term care financial decisions are about more than money!
36 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families The Basics Decision-Making Toolkit Educator Toolkit Who We Are 37 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
The Basics An introduction to financing long term care and later life financial security
Why Plan Now
Are You Prepared
Know Your Financing Options
Creating Your Plan
Carrying Out Decisions
38 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Know Your Financing Options
Conversation Starters
Fact Sheets
Common Myths/Facts
Planning Tools
Family Experiences
39 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Decision-Making Toolkit A variety of resources to help make more informed decisions.
Conversation Starters
Fact Sheets
Common Myths
Planning Tools
Family Experiences
40 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Fact Sheets
Creating Your Plan
Why cant we talk
What are common later life financial goals
Factors to consider
41 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Planning Tools Worksheets quizzes and interactive planning guides to help you examine your own situation.
Are you at risk of needing long term care
Who should be responsibility for paying
What are your later life financial goals
Couple decision-making
42 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families
Educator Toolkit Proven resources to help teach others about financing long term care decision making.
Teaching Outlines
Case Studies
Participant handouts
PowerPoint Presentations
Recommended reading
Relevant research
43 Welcome to Financing Long-term Care A Resource Center for Families The Basics Decision-Making Toolkit Educator Toolkit Who We Are
Develop State-specific Links
On-line courses/workshops
A clearinghouse (for research)
Future Additions 44 Critical Conversations About Financing Long-term Care
Recognize your risk of long term care
Understand possible costs and potential financial implications
Sort out expectations and goals
Understand financing alternatives and consequences
Why plan now before a crisis
45 Suggested Reading Visit the annotated bibliography at www.reeusda.gov/financialsecurity/
The following articles by Stum M. focus on financing long-term care and family decision making
Financing long-term care Examining decision outcomes and systemic influences from the perspective of family members. Journal of Family and Economic Issues (2001).
To buy or not to buy Examining long-term care insurance decision-making from the employee perspective (Dec. 2001). Executive summary at http//fsos.che.umn.edu/stum/lresearch/ltc-dm/desc ription.html
Later life financial security Examining the meaning attributed to goals when coping with long-term care Financial Counseling and Planning (2000)
The meaning and experience of spending down to Medicaid in later life Advancing the Consumer Interest (1998)