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Living
Here Services
Medicaid
For Long Term Care |
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Medicaid For Long Term Care
Financial Rules For Long Term Care Recipients
Medicaid pays for medically necessary nursing home
care for patients in skilled or intermediate care
nursing homes or in intermediate care facilities
for the mentally retarded. The patient's income must
be less than the cost of care in the facility at
the Medicaid rate, and there is a limit on resources.
If the patient or his representative gives away assets
or sells them for less than market value, he may
be ineligible for payment of the cost of care. The
sanction period is based upon the value of the assets
transferred away.
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Medicaid policy specifies that when a legally married individual needs
Medicaid to help pay for nursing facility services, a portion of
the couple's income and assets may be protected for the spouse at
home, the community spouse. The following is a summary of spousal
protection rules:
- Medical services: nursing home care, hospital
care that exceeds 30 days, or services provided
by the Community Alternatives Program (services
which enable an individual to remain at home who
would otherwise be institutionalized)
- The community spouse is allowed to keep one half
of the couple's assets, with a minimum of $18,132
and a maximum of $90,660 (current as of 1/1/2003).
- The protected share is calculated by assessing
the value of all assets owned separately or jointly
by either spouse at the point the individual becomes
institutionalized. The homesite is generally not
counted in determining the value of assets since
the homesite is protected for the spouse.
- The nursing facility applicant/recipient can
reduce his/her assets without penalty by paying
cost of care, or any other expenses the applicant/recipient
or spouse has incurred.
- The protected assets must be transferred to the
name of the community spouse.
- Once assets have been allocated following spousal
impoverishment rules, spousal financial responsibility
ends and each spouse will be treated separately
for Medicaid purposes.
- A portion of a married institutionalized Medicaid
recipient's income may also be allocated to the
community spouse.
- Income is allocated for the needs of the community
spouse if the community spouse's income is less
than 150% of the poverty level (currently $1,562).
It is also possible to allocate additional income
to the community spouse for excessive shelter costs.
- Income may also be allocated for the needs of
other dependents.
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Medicaid law prohibits the transfer of assets for
less than market value by an institutionalized Medicaid
applicant/recipient or anyone acting on their behalf.
- Certain transfers are allowable, such as the
transfer of a homesite to a spouse or disabled
child.
- The lookback period is 3 years (5 years for transfers
to a trust) from the date of application or institutionalization,
whichever occurs later.
- A sanction is applied for a period of time based
on the value of the asset and begins the month
the asset is transferred. The length of the sanction
is determined by dividing the value of the transferred
assets by the average monthly Medicaid cost for
nursing home care (currently $4,200). The sanction
begins with the month of the transfer.
- During the sanction period the individual may
be eligible for Medicaid but Medicaid will not
pay for institutional services.
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- When a Medicaid recipient in a nursing home or
receiving CAP services dies, Medicaid files a claim
against the estate to recover expenses paid by
Medicaid.
- Estate recovery is waived if there is a spouse
or dependents who continue to live on the property,
the total assets in the estate are less than $5,000,
Medicaid charges are less than $3,000, or in cases
of hardship.
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This information is current as of 1/1/2005. Eligibility rules and income/asset
amounts are subject to change. For further information regarding
eligibility for Medicaid payment of long term care services, please
contact the Department of Social Services at:
40 Coxe Avenue
Asheville NC 28802
(828) 250-5500
June Bright
(828) 250-5796
june.bright@buncombecounty.org
or call the Medicaid Eligibility Unit through the
toll free CARE-LINE at 1-800-662-7030. |
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| Copyright
2003© - All rights reserved - Buncombe County, North Carolina
DISCLAIMER: The information contained
in the following pages was considered correct at the time of publication.
Buncombe County Government reserves the right to make changes at
any time and without notice, and assumes no liability for damages
incurred directly or indirectly as a result of errors, omissions
or discrepancies.
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