Long Term Care
One of the more difficult things for a family or individual to do is to accept the fact that they may need long term care when they get older. By talking with a Certified financial planner in Philadelphia, a New Jersey private wealth management group, or an NJ wealth management firm, this can be planned for rather simply. A financial planning guide even can suffice for some people as their only financial planning help.
“The concept of eldercare or long term care planning is fairly new. A fast-growing generation of elderly people needing care is starting to put a great deal of pressure on caregiving family members and government programs for long term care. More and more we are seeing articles and books about the burden of long term care on families. And a huge group of 77 million baby boomers, poised for retirement, is causing alarm in the eldercare provider community.
Over the years, we have met with many families in a crisis mode, struggling to find services and preserve assets for loved ones needing long term care. When statistics tell us about one out of two people will need long term care, it’s appalling that most of the current generation of elderly have not planned for this crisis in their lives.
And the current pre-retirement generation is doing no better. Sometimes I think Americans are about as unprepared as the ancient tribes of Israel wandering in the desert. When the time comes for long term care, most people believe help will come to them like manna from heaven. In most cases this won’t happen.
I’ve encountered it so many times, I am no longer surprised when people ask me if there’s not some kind of government program that will pay them to quit their jobs and to stay at home and provide long term care for their loved ones.
According to research By the National Care Planning Council only about 16% of long-term care services are covered by the government. The other 84% are provided free of charge by family caregivers or provided by services paid out-of-pocket by families or from those receiving care. And the bulk of government care services are provided only after a care recipient has depleted all of his or her savings. The Council also estimates that at any given time approximately 22% of the population over age 65 is receiving some form of long term care support.
According to an April 2005 congressional hearing press release from Congresswoman Nancy L. Johnson (R-CT), Chairman, Subcommittee on Health of the Committee on Ways and Means,
“…In 2004, according to CBO, approximately $135 billion was spent on long term care for the elderly. Sixty percent of this amount was financed through Medicaid and Medicare, one third through out-of-pocket payments, and the remainder by other programs and private insurance. This funding excludes the significant resources devoted to long term care by informal caregivers (primarily spouses and children). The CBO estimates that informal care is the largest single component of long term care….”
As you can see, there is some funding for long term care. By trying to find a financial advisor, this funding can be found much quicker and more efficiently.
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