Home Caregivers Accreditation of America becomes Shield Accreditation - Senior Home Care
Home Caregivers Accreditation of America, LLC (HCAOA), the only non-medical senior home care accreditation in United States has become Shield Accreditation. Dedicated to offering the safest and most professional home care agencies to American seniors, the firm confirms that care companies have the following insurances: general liability insurance, worker's compensation, a dishonesty bond and a business license where required. Shield Accreditation has a more focused approach to seniors and their agencies.
Strategies on Paying for Nursing Home Care and Medicaid
The decision to place your loved one into a nursing home is an
extremely difficult decision, often causing much guilt for the
caregiver. It is a very emotional decision for most clients we see and
most are under a certain amount of stress, often great, when facing what
they consider to be a drastic course of action.
Medical Monitoring USA Medical Alarms Announces New Low Price for Reliable Assisted Living Alternative
Most medical alarm companies are over priced and pressure you into contracts or high equipment costs. Medical Monitoring USA has done away with high costs and contracts and is now making their product and service more affordable to seniors and people with fixed incomes. This is a wonderful opportunity for protecting seniors and persons with disabilities, and is now affordable to everyone.
Nutrition Specialist Helps Senior Citizens Live Longer
The first of baby boomer generation will become senior citizens this year. Nutrition specialist from www.babyboomercaretaker.com gives health tips to help American baby boomers to live longer.
Living Large: Overweight Seniors Fueling Growth for Home Instead Senior Care Businesses
Home Instead Senior Care announces that the business is witnessing a dramatic demographic shift as the ranks of obese seniors grow and need personal care services. It might be called the tale of two Boomers: One day you hear that older adults have never been healthier; they're working out and buffing up at YMCAs and fitness clubs throughout America, and living longer as a result. At the same time, half of middle-aged adults between 55 and 64 have high blood pressure and two and five are obese, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.
Elder Law and Long Term Care -- A Free Seminar for Seniors
A Life Long Learning Seminar titled, "Elder Law and Long Term Care" is being held Wednesday, April 18th, 2007, from 11:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at Mount Royal Towers Retirement Community.
This free educational seminar will feature speaker Alan Zeigler, a local attorney, who will educate seniors on elder law, estate planning, real estate matters and financing long term care.
Long-term care Training by Ecumen To Teach Nurses on Psychoactive Medication and Alternatives
Classes designed to ensure directors of nursing and nursing staff separate myth from reality and learn non-pharmacological techniques to treat behaviors
Senior Summer School featured on Living Live!
William Levy, Presdient of Senior Summer School, Inc. is interviewed on Living Live! with Florence Henderson.
Seniors Living Longer - 5 Steps You Must Do Now
Of all the high priority activities you re now doing in your life, what could be more important than those that promote your ability to increase the quality and length of your life? Here are five major steps that you must start developing now to accomplish this.
Arizona Assisted Living Homes -- The Alternative to High Priced Senior Care
The cost of skilled nursing care is slowly rising. Currently, the average cost of care in Arizona ranges from $3,500 to $4,500 per month.
Long Term Care and Long Term Care Insurance
A person might need long term care (LTC) if he/she cannot perform activities of daily living such as eating, taking shower or getting dressed by him/herself anymore. Certain disease can also make long term care necessary.
HomeWell Senior Care is Here to Take Care of Your In-Home Care Needs
HomeWell Senior Care provides live-in and hourly personal care, companionship and homemaker services for seniors so they can remain in the comfort of their own home. HomeWell Senior Care makes life more comfortable with our personalized in-home care service. As the 'Senior Care Specialists', we work hard so seniors can enjoy the quality of life they deserve while remaining in the comfortable and familiar surroundings of their own homes indefinitely.
Arizona Senior Housing: Care Options for Seniors Who Can No Longer Live Alone
The following are a few of the care options available for seniors who can no longer live on their own and require assistance with their Activities of Daily Living (ADL), or require skilled nursing care. Every state is a little different in terms of availability and cost, state regulations, and the specific names used for each care option:Assisted Living Home- A facility consisting of 10 or fewer residents in a private home setting located in residential neighborhoods.
Seniors Living Longer - Being Heallthy and Active Your Entire Life
The focus currently on the various possible ways to extend our life spans may be off-target, in one sense. The real desired goal is to extend the length of time that we maintain a healthful lifespan.
Senior Living Communities: A Great Place To Retire In Style
All through our lives we dream of long vacations in sunny places. We always want to take time to relax and spend time with friends and do fun activities. We want to be able to take advantage of our lives and really enjoy ourselves. Unfortunately most of us have very busy lives.
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Hide My Assets From Medicare
In social functions, I always get asked about the new Medicare nursing home qualifications. Seniors become very anxious about having to spend-down their assets with no cap on the amount that they can keep. This unlimited drain on their funds is of major concern to the healthy spouse, and because the sick spouse can?t do anything about getting sick, they become more and more depressed. These folks are of the World War II generation and the market crash of 1929 mentality. If you don?t have the cash you don?t buy it. Most of them got a credit card only because they had to pay their prescriptions over the mail.
Their health and well-being depends on knowing that they can tap into their resources to get what they need or when their grandkids come to visit they want to reward their visit with a few bucks. My mother is of this vintage, and I know that when my kids drop in for a visit, it makes her day. She wants to give them something in return, not because it?s an enticement to come back, but she doesn?t get out enough visits and she values their time, especially in this day of instant gratification with Ipods, Internet, cell phones, video, etc. and because they valued their grandmother more. So, how can I hide my assets from Medicare is relevant to their lives. My answer is that if they did not do something as far back as five years ago, chances are that trying to do something now, could very well be considered a fraudulent conveyance in order to defraud a potential creditor. For example, if they were to put their son or daughter on the deed of the house without adequate consideration, it would be considered a? fraudulent conveyance? because they did it for less than the fair market value, they received nothing back in return. Or, if they did recognize that they gave away the house to their children it was a taxable gift and taxes are due on the transferor (the person giving the gift has to pay the tax, the person receiving the gift is always after taxes). But like many people they don?t think it through in terms of filing of a gift tax return or fraudulent conveyance. They just do it for their convenience.
The new Medicaid spend down provisions are very restrictive. The intention is that if you (the elderly) have assets, before you qualify for nursing home assistance, they want you to become a welfare recipient. And that?s what seniors are afraid to become. Their generation never asked for assistance if they had a strong back, they worked for their dignity. They don?t want to become ?welfare recipients? it a very humiliating concept to them.
Most common mistakes committed by seniors when trying to hide their assets:
1.Naming their children as (Parent?s name ?and? Child ?s name) (Parent name ?or? Child?s name) on their savings, checking, investment accounts, or near cash accounts. THIS IS NOT A GOOD IDEA. Too much risk, what if child gets sued, or divorced, or worse dies. You open a new can of worms.
2.Give the house to the children. You name one or more of the children. Again not a good idea. What if the children get sued, divorced, or prematurely dies. There?s too much risk.
3.Cash under the mattress, in between the walls, in the basement, etc. Well it works, but unless you tell someone the hiding place, then what? Or, leave the cash to lose interest or depreciate with inflation?
In God we Trust.
Trusts are the most common and useful legal devices. An ?Irrevocable Trust? works best for hiding your assets. Your assets are RE-POSITIONED from you to an irrevocable trust. You ?legally? no longer own the assets. This involves the actual transfer of assets to an independent trustee who will independently manage and actually own the assets for the benefit of all beneficiaries. This type of control over assets is not new, it goes back to medieval times when landlords went off to the crusades and left their lands in trust of monks for when they returned. There are specific laws and it?s generally accepted by the judicial system as a legal, acceptable method of protecting one?s assets for legal protection and tax minimization.
Rocco Beatrice, CPA, MST, MBA, award-winning trust & estate-planning expert.71 Commercial Street #150 Boston, MA 02109tel: +1.508.429.0011 fax: +1.508.429.3034Sign up for a FREE newsletter & learn how you can reduce your taxes, protect your assets & secure your privacy. http://www.UltraTrust.com
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