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If a person is in a state where Medicaid pays for assisted living, they pay their monthly income to the NH (e.g., social security, pension), less the allowed "personal needs allowance" they get to keep (which is in the $40-80 range). This is their "share of cost." The state Medicaid program sets the monthly rate it pays for various levels of residential cares; Medicaid would pay the balance of the monthly cost the person cannot pay from their income. So you can see that the exact Medicaid amount would vary, depending on how much income the person has to pay themselves. This would be true for nursing homes (LTC) as well.
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Reply to newbiewife
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It would be best for you to talk to a social worker in your area that knows the ins and outs of your area.
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Reply to needtowashhair
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Assisted Living, as this forum defines it, isca private paid facility that may not allow Medicaid. In my State, you havevto at least pay privately forvtwo years to apply for Medicaid. Even then the AL has to allow Medicaid and have not reached their % of Medicaid recipients they allow.

It really doesn't matter what Medicaid pays. Lets say a NH charges 10k a month with private pay. Medicaid has an arrangement they only pay a set amount. The recipient hands over their Social Security and any pension they receive. Thats all the NH receives. Family is not responsible for the rest.

There are a number of factors when it comes to being excepted by Medicaid. Assets can only be a certain amount and same with monthly income amount. If there is a spouse, then assets need to be split.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Many ALF, as private for profit models owned often by corporations, do not accept Medicaid. Some do. It would be up to you to explore which in your area do so. Good luck.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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Mvc1111 Sep 14, 2024
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