Started the Medicaid process to prepare Doc for either home care or a facility. They sent a supplemental asking for lots of “household” financial documentation and proof. Does that mean I have to give my tax records and all financial info to them, too? Seems so intrusive and makes me not want to do this.
Very overwhelmed....and beyond frustrated. Came home from court today and FIVE HOURS LATER I can finally sit down to write this. Walk in to a complete and utter disaster of sh*t smeared on the floor, had a dozen diapers disgustingly smeared and used to clean the floor, the counter, the walls and the carpet again. Husband rushes home from the office - drops all he is doing, to come and shampoo the carpet AGAIN.
Doc took 3 showers at my repeated insistence as he dragged his feet and spread it on the carpet and his bed, and still had it smeared on his leg that I had to clean, along with all his bedding AGAIN. This was the first time we’ve had to deal with this level of bowel issues. Now we are past little spots or leakage from the diaper. Now we are past the line that I cannot stomache. Now what?
How do my home caregiving friends do it? How do you breathe?? Laundry is still going and I challenge any one of you mates to a contest of who goes through more laundry detergent or toilet paper - I guarantee you, I’d win by a mile. Gotta go shopping AGAIN to stock up for this merry go round. Then the septic company (who was just here 6 mos ago), just came to respond to our call that it already stinks - as if it can’t get worse - we need a whole new septic.
Unbelievable. I can’t do this anymore and I don’t want to deal with the state digging into our financials. I do not want this responsibility anymore but God help me, I see no way out without having to sacrifice even more than we already have. We have paid so much and I don’t want to spend another dime on this madness, we don’t deserve this! Feel like a whip driven slave to mental illness. What hurts the most is that I do not feel anything other than negative about Doc, and he has been my loving father for 20 years. In tears and emotional shambles right now. I hate dementia and I hope I never ever ever encounter it again in my life!!
It will not matter to Medicaid about your household expenses unless Doc has been paying for them, which probably would have meant you couldn't claim him as your dependent for tax purposes either. I'm assuming you claimed him as your dependent because he couldn't pay for his own needs. Unless he's been giving away his money for the last five years, or can't explain where it went, Medicaid approval should be pretty smooth.
You questioned what an attorney could do for you. For one thing, answer your question about revealing your household expenses. Our experience in applying for Medicaid for father-in-law went like this:
May 30 he went into nursing home for a 5-day "hospice respite" so mother-in-law could have surgery. She did not recover well, so nursing home agreed to another 2 weeks at private pay.
2 weeks after surgery, MIL finally admitted she couldn't care for him anymore and agreed to meet with Elder Law specialist attorney because she didn't want to pay for the nursing home forever.
Got an appointment with attorney for June 22.
Got a list from the nursing home of what info Medicaid would want (you already know this, evidently), and took it to appointment. All their financial statements, insurance info, bills, titles to vehicles, prepaid funeral policies, etc.
The attorney agreed to get the application in before June 30, which meant Medicaid would start paying July 1 if he was approved.
We paid the nursing home for all of June, then told them we expected him to be approved for Medicaid for July. They kept billing. We kept them informed of what the lawyer said and paid them the amount we expected to be his obligation once Medicaid was approved.
Medicaid asked for some more info--pretty much stuff they already had been given--and the attorney took care of all the replies.
By September 21, his application was approved back to July 1, and Medicaid eventually paid the nursing home.
The cost for the attorney was about $7500 I think--paid for from father-in-law's funds--about the same as a month in the nursing home, so IMO paying the attorney to get the job done quickly was well worth it. I think the attorney knows how to present the information in a way that Medicaid is familiar with; and I think Medicaid trusts the attorney to sort of "pre-screen" applicants before submitting the paperwork, so I believe they don't expect the possibility of an attorney-submitted application being suspicious or questionable, as they might otherwise. Besides, he knew how to legally protect more of the family assets than Medicaid will tell you about if you go it alone.
So, I advise an Elder Law specialist.
As to nursing home placement, if you already have a good facility available, I urge you to not wait. You can have a beautiful holiday season with your family, including lots of pleasant and cheerful visits with him in his new home. Pleasant, cheerful visits; decorating for the holidays, sharing special treats, music, stories. Not horrific, gagging, carpet-cleaning sessions--or were you just thinking about having some Halloween fun with the neighborhood kids: "Come inside, my sweetie, and see what we have for you in here........mwa ha ha!" Sorry......that just came to mind, and I am just crass enough to say it.
I hope you get my point without taking offense, because I am sincere in wishing you and Doc and all your family all the best for now, for the holidays, and in the future. Please get outside somewhere for a deep breath of fresh air with a promise of a better future. This is what the Doc who loved and cared for you did that for--for you. You honor him with your gratitude for that, not with sacrifice. He never wanted you to make this sacrifice--he only hoped that one day you'd be happy because he helped make it so. Please don't dishonor him now by replacing that joy with a misplaced sense of responsibility that only brings you misery and him embarrassment.
CaringForDoc - several posts ago you asked what a bathrooming schedule looks like.
In the world of autism it is referred to as Trip Training. It’s lengthy to explain the method so I’ll refer two sites whom I think do a good job explaining and use steps and techniques that should be fairly easy to tweak to elder care.
One is AutismSpeaks and the other is Milestones. Look for Trip Training or Toilet Training on their site search.
A few things to keep in mind -
Toileting on a schedule requires that someone is with or available to the individual pretty much all the time - at least until a successful schedule is set - which can take a while.
Dont discount the use of actual pictures set in sequential order as a storyboard. Not now and hopefully not ever, will it come to this for Doc - but some elderly individuals with dementia can start to loose the meaning of words. They can also forget the order in which things get done - basic steps. As with many individuals with autism - the auditory is or becomes meaningless but visual cues still make sense.
Forget any language the site instructions may say about this being a process that leads to bathrooming independence- for those with bathrooming isssues related to dementia - Elvis has left the building.
And lastly - when instructed to leave the individual sitting on the toilet for X amount of time - keep in mind circulatory issues in the elderly. Even for able bodied individuals the legs can “go to sleep” when left in the potty sitting position - making it impossible to get up. Worst yet - upon getting up, with the numbness and/or pins and needles sensation, a person could easily fall.
Hope this helps you - or anyone else out there that might find this info useful.
Best of luck!
Why not make the holidays nicer for your children?
My grandmother with (probably) Alzheimer's moved into our house while I was in high school. It was horrible. It didn't last but a few months, because my grandmother wandered (and my mother worked).
I have been through the process with my father and will soon be doing the same for my mother. She has enough assets to live in a nice Assited Living facility for 3-4 years and then I will apply for a Medicaid waiver that will cover the cost. In Ohio the family is not responsible for her financial costs.
It would have been great if my parents had planned and saved for old age and ill health but they didn’t. I am happy to have Mom spend all of her money on herself and live a comfortable old age and have never expected any inheritance.
Ohio has a free service called Passport that can help you with finding help for your father. There is also a free legal consultation that was a huge help to me in understanding Medicaid. I did contact an elder care attorney but it would have cost $2500 for the initial consultation and that's just crazy when with a little work you can get the info for free!