Health insurance policies usually don't pay for nursing home care, while Medicare only pays for 100 days of skilled nursing home care if admission follows a hospital stay. Medicaid pays a significant portion of all nursing home costs, but the government has enacted tougher rules to qualify for assistance. Typically, you need to deplete most of your assets before you qualify.
Many elderly individuals rely on family members for help, but the personal toll can be huge. Currently, long-term-care insurance pays a small percentage of all long-term-care costs. That percentage may increase in the future as more people become aware of the risks and look to insurance as a way to fund those costs.
What Policy Options Should You Look for?
If you are interested in long-term-care insurance, you should look into the coverage when you are in your 50s or early 60s. Review the policy for the following features:
-
The
benefit
amount
should
be
reasonable.
Most
policies
pay a
specified
amount
per day,
so you
will
have to
pay the
difference.
-
Benefits
should
increase
with
inflation.
You may
not
receive
benefits
for many
years,
so it's
important
to make
sure
that
your
benefit
amount
increases
with
inflation.
-
Services
covered
should
include
skilled
care,
intermediate
care,
custodial
care,
home
health
care,
and
adult
day
care.
-
No
requirement
should
exist
that you
first be
hospitalized
to
receive
benefits,
that you
first
receive
skilled
nursing
home
care to
receive
intermediate
or
custodial
care, or
that you
first
receive
nursing
home
care to
receive
home
care.
-
Benefits
should
be
payable
when two
or three
activities
of daily
living
can't be
performed
(bathing,
dressing,
eating,
walking,
transferring
from a
bed to a
chair,
using
the
bathroom,
or
remaining
continent)
or due
to
cognitive
impairment.
-
Specific
coverage
should
exist
for
Alzheimer's
disease
and
other
organic-based
mental
illness.
-
The
policy
should
be
guaranteed
renewable,
meaning
the
policy
can't be
canceled
due to
age or
deterioration
in
health.
-
Select a
benefit
period
you are
comfortable
with.
-
Select a
reasonable
waiting
period.
The
longer
you wait
before
benefits
begin,
the
lower
your
premiums
will be.
- Determine if the policy is qualified, which allows you to deduct a certain percentage of the premium, depending on your age, as a medical expense on your tax return. Medical expenses are deductible to the extent that they exceed 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income. Also, payouts from qualified policies are federal income tax free.





