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READ STEVE'S BIO

Did you miss our well-received CLTCR Webinar:
Maximize the Value of WWW.CENTERLTC.COM? No worries! View a recording of
this informative Webinar and explore with Steve Moses the Center's
multi-faceted, content-rich website.

CHECK
OUT OUR BRAND NEW
LTC ALMANAC
(Members Only)
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a CLTCR member? Get a free trial membership for your sneak peak at
our LTC Almanac and Members-Only Zone. Contact us at 206-283-7036 or
info@centerltc.com
Read
Medicaid Planning Quotes
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Updated: Thursday, May 15, 2008 10:01 AM (Pacific)
Dateline: Seattle, WA--
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LTC BULLET: THE LTC SCORE
LTC Comment: How the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) "scores"
proposed legislation helps or hinders passage often inversely to the
proposals' merit. LTC tax deductibility is a case in point, after the
***news.***
*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau, a Master General
Agent who helps LTCi producers nationwide. Claude is the lead author of
Tillinghast Broker World Individual and Group LTCi Surveys. His mentoring
skills help you build whichever market suits you best (individuals,
executive carve-out, multi-life, affinity, financial institutions,
referrals from other professionals, etc.). Claude has been actively
involved in the State Partnership movement and has campaigned to allow
independent review of LTCi claims. Test Claude by calling 800-999-3026,
x2241 to discuss opportunities or emailto:cthau@targetins.com. ***
*** LTC TOUR RESUMES. My second respite from the rigors of the LTC Tour
is coming to an end. I'll board a ViaRail train in Vancouver, British
Columbia on Sunday, May 18 for the three-day, three-night journey to
Toronto, Ontario. Arriving there, hopefully on time, at 8PM Eastern on May
21, I'll bus to the airport, retrieve the Silver Bullet's FJ Cruiser tow
vehicle from long-term parking, and head to Cleveland, Ohio for an
interview with Long-Term Living, a leading LTC provider trade
magazine. Thence on to Jackson Center, the tiny town in Ohio where
Airstream built the Silver Bullet, and where our LTC Tour's media magnet
awaits my return after three weeks in the loving arms of its mother and a
full servicing of all her many systems. Then the Silver Bullet, the LTC
Tour, and I will proceed full speed ahead toward Washington, DC where one
of our first activities will be to meet with a delegation from the Prime
Minister's office of the United Kingdom. They wonder why LTC insurance has
not taken off in the U.S.A. and I have a few things to tell them about
that. Furthermore, what I have to say is very relevant to the future
prospects of the embryonic private LTC insurance market in the UK! Stay
tuned for more exciting adventures from the National Long-Term Care
Consciousness Tour. ***
*** SUPPORT THE CENTER AND THE TOUR. Traveling the country (especially
at the ground level with today's gas prices) to beat the drum for
responsible LTC planning and rational LTC public policy . . . IS VERY
EXPENSIVE! If you appreciate what we're trying to do, please help. Be part
of the solution. Join the Center with a $150 annual membership; or get
your organization or company to join with a group membership (negotiable.)
Bring the LTC Tour and the Silver Bullet of LTC to your town while the
cost is nominal during this year's road trip. We're having a lot of fun
and making a big difference. Find out how to get involved: call or email
Damon at 206-283-7036 or
damon@centerltc.com. He can refer you to Regional Representatives of
the Center for Long-Term Care Reform who have already hosted the LTC Tour,
scheduled successful programs for the public and financial advisors, and
attracted important media attention to our issue AND to their own
businesses. Seek their advice. Then if you want to participate, work
directly with Steve Moses to plan and accomplish your LTC Tour program.
***
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LTC BULLET: THE LTC SCORE
LTC Comment: The "white knight" for long-term care insurers is tax
deductibility. Above-the-line preferably; part of cafeteria plans as a
fall-back; or through IRA/401(k) plans at least.
Tax deductibility for LTCI would certainly help. Let's leave aside
today the more fundamental issue that the private insurance market will
never really take off, regardless of tax deductibility or education
efforts, as long as the government pays for the vast majority of home care
and nursing home care for middle class and affluent people.
What's holding back tax deductibility for LTCI? Simple. The government
figures it would cost too much. How does the government know that? CBO
estimates (scores) the cost of every proposal.
Therefore, exactly how CBO schedules LTCI tax deductibility proposals
is critical to their prospects for passage. Unfortunately, the methods CBO
uses handicap the proposals unfairly.
The following (slightly abbreviated) column by Merrill Matthews,
Director of the Council for Affordable Health Insurance (www.CAHI.org),
explains how CBO scoring impedes good public policy regarding LTCI tax
deductibility.
Read Merrill's thoughtful piece, but don't despair. There is a way to
pass all three kinds of LTCI tax deductibility AND finance a much-enhanced
education program to encourage responsible LTC planning.
How? Improve Medicaid and cut its cost radically by targeting the
program to people truly in need. Use the savings to fund LTCI tax
deductibility and public LTC education. You'll have enough left over, no
matter how daunting the CBO scores, to improve Medicaid radically for a
smaller number of genuinely needy recipients. (For details, see the
articles, speeches and reports at www.centerltc.com.)
Furthermore, government and the tax payers will reap the added benefit
of Medicaid savings and improved care for all that a supercharged market
for private LTC insurance will deliver. CBO's mis-calculations to the
contrary, notwithstanding.
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The following column is republished with permission from the author.
And Now You Know...
by Merrill Matthews, CAHI Director
The biggest enemy of moving to a consumer driven health care system may
not be those wanting a government-run system, but the way certain federal
agencies "score" various pieces of legislation.
Before Congress can vote on a bill, it must get an estimate, or score,
from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) or the Joint Tax Committee of
how much money the legislation will cost or save the federal government.
To most Americans, that sounds like a reasonable procedure. Don't most
families, before remodeling a room, estimate how much the project will
draw from the family budget and whether that's a workable number?
But like so many things in Washington, it's not that easy. Take, for
example, the long term care (LTC) legislation that CAHI has supported for
several years. The legislation would allow workers to pay their long term
care premiums out of their tax-deferred IRA or 401(k) account. Rep. Lee
Terry (R-NE) introduced a version of this legislation.
There is a different bill that has been floating around for years --
and going nowhere -- that would create a new tax break for LTC premiums.
But it received a very large score, that is, Congress would lose a lot of
money. That cost has effectively killed the legislation.
But the Terry bill wouldn't create a new tax break; it simply made LTC
premiums a qualified distribution of an existing tax break. It's fair to
say that some people would increase their IRA and 401(k) contributions,
but both programs' contributions are capped. So the federal government
would certainly lose some money, but it would be minimal.
However, the score assumed another factor -- one that drove up the
"cost" of the legislation. It asked how much money the government would
lose if people bought all of those LTC policies with after-tax dollars. Of
course, they wouldn't be buying those policies without the tax break in
the first place, so the government wouldn't actually lose a dime on the
sales. But that's beside the point. That assumption added a significant
cost to the legislation, making it more difficult to move.
And because these scores usually look only 10 years out, they didn't
capture all the future savings to the Medicaid program, which would be
paying out less for long term care.
I can't tell you how many times good legislation has been thwarted by
bad scores and bad legislation has been boosted by good scores. . . .
Scoring will also be a huge hindrance to Medicare reform. Almost any
market-oriented Medicare reform envisions paying providers a reasonable
fee for their services. But Medicare price-controls most of those fees
now. So the score for market-oriented reforms almost always looks more
expensive than the status quo -- even when everyone knows that the current
system is unsustainable and the proposed legislation would be affordable.
So while we can count on the usual suspects opposing good health
reforms, the biggest hurdle may come from those who can't count.
Source: Health Care Central, May 6, 2008,
www.cahi.org
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Updated: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 11:18 AM (Pacific)
Dateline: Seattle, WA--
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THE ZONE UPDATED WITH NEW COST OF CARE DATA
LTC Comment: We update the Center for Long-Term Care Reform's "Members
Only Zone" every time new cost of care data is released.
Go to "Long-Term Care Cost Surveys" at
http://www.centerltc.com/members/ltccostsurveys.htm, enter your user
name and password, and you'll find:
(1) links to the latest cost of care data reported, and for comparison
(2) links to cost of care data for the past few years.
The latest survey comes from Genworth Financial. A summary and some
highlights from the AHCA / NCAL Gazette follow.
You've doubtlessly seen this data reported elsewhere already. Our
purpose with today's LTC E-Alert is to remind Center members that you can
always find the latest cost of care data in The Zone.
And while you're there, check out the many other features of The Zone,
such as:
(1) The Almanac of Long-Term Care,
(2) Links to all the annually updated Medicaid and Medicare numbers,
(3) Documentation on the government programs' "unfunded entitlement
liabilities," and
(4) Reasons Why Veterans Should Not Depend on VA Benefits for Long-Term
Care.
Not yet a member of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform? Don't have
access to The Zone? That's easily remedied. Contact Damon at 206-283-7036
or damon@centerltc.com. He'll
have you enrolled in the Center with your personal user name and password
for The Zone in a flash. Individual membership is $150 per year or $12.50
per month. Group or corporate memberships, entitling everyone in your
organization to all the benefits of Center membership, are negotiable.
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Study finds increases in nursing home, assisted living costs; Nursing
home costs up 17 percent from 2004. By Eileen Alt Powell, The Associated
Press. Apr 29, 2008 1:00 PM EST
In its 2008 Cost of Care Survey, released yesterday, Genworth Financial
reports that the average cost for a private room in a nursing home is now
$209 per day, or $76,460 a year. The average annual cost in 2004 was
$65,185. Alaska had the highest cost last year at $515 per day while
Louisiana had the lowest at $125 per day.
The cost for assisted living facilities averaged $36,090 nationally, up
25 percent from $28,763 in 2004. New Jersey had the highest average cost
at $4,921 per month, while Arkansas had the lowest, at $1,981 per month,
according to the study.
Read article.
* The 2008 Cost of Care Survey can be found
here (click on the survey on the right side of the page)
* Access Genworth's other new report:
'A workforce to care for our aging'
AL: Alabama annual nursing home costs increase by 14 percent to $57,591
By Jimmy DeButts. Birmingham Business Journal. Apr 29, 2008.
Read article.
* NJ nursing homes cost 25 percent more than national average Newsday:
http://www.newsday.com
http://www.bizjournals.com
* Miami nursing home care up 28 percent since 2004 South Florida
Business Journal
http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/stories/2008/04/28/daily22.html
* Nursing home costs creep up in Utah, By Lesley Mitchell. Salt Lake
Tribune
"The cost of long-term care in Utah and other states has been climbing
in recent years right along with the cost of health care," said Dirk
Anjewierden, executive director of the Health Care Association. Rising
costs and labor shortages have affected long-term care. "Just try to find
a nurse right now," he said.
http://www.sltrib.com/ci_9101554
Source: AHCA / NCAL Gazette - Wednesday, April 30, 2008
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Updated: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 10:01 AM (Pacific)
Dateline: Seattle, WA--
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LTC DISCONNECT
LTC Update: Enjoying your respite from the Center's daily publications?
I sure am. But don't think we're snoozing. I'm in Seattle for my second
R&R from our 2008 LTC Tour. Nevertheless, Damon and I are working hard on
preparations for the next leg of the Tour. I'm headed toward the Central
East next, including DC, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania,
Delaware and New Jersey. Your LTC Tour updates from the road will resume
soon. In the meantime, we'll touch you with the occasional e-message like
this one.
LTC Comment: According to the following national survey, running out of
money is right up there with losing one's health as the biggest worry in
later life.
So, insuring against that risk must be a slam/dunk estate planning
decision. Yeah, right!
Go figure. Are consumers stupid? Are LTC insurance producers
incompetent? None of the above.
The real answer is simple. Government has paid for most expensive LTC,
such as it is, for 43 years. That put the public to sleep about the risk.
The only people waking up and buying LTCI have been through a wrenching
experience with a loved one. Wait for all the parents of baby boomers to
require LTC and the market will finally improve.
But the waiting game is for suckers. The better strategy is proactive.
Advocate public policy to target government financed LTC to people truly
in need. Use the savings to incentivize LTCI and reverse mortgages for
people with wealth to protect or use. Everyone wins because the more
private money in long-term care, the better the access, quality and
diversity of care for everyone, rich and poor alike.
Side note: the sponsor of the study described below is the National
Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers ( NAPGCM,
www.caremanager.org). It's a
fine organization but for some unaccountable reason has always been
connected at the hip to the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA),
the trade association of the Medicaid planners.
Talk about strange bedfellows. NAPGCM and its members depend entirely
on private LTC financing to survive and provide the critical service they
offer. NAELA and its members' cash cow is artificially impoverishing
affluent people to qualify them for welfare-financed LTC, which never pays
for geriatric care managers.
Oh well, I learned long ago not to expect rational behavior from
stakeholders in the long-term care system. Present company excepted, of
course.
------------------
Geriatric care managers association releases results of consumer survey
Consumers' top concerns include losing their physical or mental health
and not having sufficient finances to support themselves or their
spouses/partners later in life
(5/5/2008)
TUCSON, ARIZ.-The National Association of Professional Geriatric Care
Managers (NAPGCM) recently surveyed 2,075 U.S. adults 18 years of age and
older about elder care and aging issues.
Highlights of the survey results:
* While losing their physical or mental health was the top-rated
consumer concern overall (83%), at a close second (78%) was not having
sufficient finances to support themselves or their spouses/partners later
in life.
* A relatively high percentage of consumers (71%) were concerned about
having to leave their homes or losing their independence.
* Losing a spouse/partner and/or having to live alone weighed heavily
on the minds of many of the respondents (66%) as did a spouse/partner
having to care for a person if he or she was to become frail or was dying.
* Other major concerns noted were losing the ability to drive (65%) and
having to care for a spouse/partner as they became ill or were dying
(58%).
* Overall, 32% of respondents were at least familiar with the roles and
responsibilities of the geriatric care manager profession.
Source:
Long-Term Living E-News, 5/7/8
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Updated: Monday, April 28, 2008 12:17 PM (Eastern)
Dateline: Lakeview, Ohio--
(LTC Tour Mile 10,450; State #13)
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LTC E-Alert #8-043: LTC Tour Goes International
LTC Comment: This morning, I'll drop off the Silver Bullet at the
Airstream factory in Jackson Center, Ohio. Home to momma for the trailer.
Fitting, with Mother's Day so close. A full servicing will be done.
In the meantime, I'll head north, do a program and media interview in
Findlay, Ohio, proceed to Detroit to meet with two Regional
Representatives of the Center, and then cross the border into Canada. (At
that point, I'll be offline for awhile, so no more LTC Bullets or LTC
E-Alerts temporarily and little or no email.)
On May 1, I'll board a ViaRail train in Toronto for a three-day,
three-night journey to Vancouver, British Columbia. This is the start of
my second return home to Seattle for rest and relaxation after the rigors
of the LTC Tour. A much-needed break.
But, why not make the most of the train trip professionally? I plan to
interview fellow passengers informally on how their countries handle
long-term care service delivery and financing. Although Canadians will be
on board the Toronto-Jasper-Vancouver run, I anticipate I'll also share
tables in the dining car and chat in the "dome" car with people from all
over the world.
So, in a couple weeks, when I come back online regularly, expect an
essay about what I learned over there about how the other side handles LTC.
In the meantime, I'll be catching up on professional reading, updating the
"Almanac of Long-Term Care" in The Zone, and planning the next exciting
stretch of the National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour.
If you miss your daily dose of information from the Center for
Long-Term Care Reform, may I suggest this would be a great time to explore
the wealth of information at
www.centerltc.com? You'll find archives of all the LTC Bullets, links
to "articles, speeches and reports," information on the LTC Tour including
how to get involved and much, much more.
See you soon, but for now . . . hasta luego. Oops! Wrong border.
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Updated: Friday, April 25, 2008 1:19 PM (Eastern)
Dateline: Clarksville, Indiana--
LTC Tour Mile 10,150; State #12--
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LTC TOUR AT CHURCHILL DOWNS
LTC Comment: The Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care visited Churchill
Downs in Louisville, Kentucky yesterday. The 134th running of
the Kentucky Derby will take place on May 3 at that venue. What better
place could there be, I thought, to point Center members and readers to
"The LTC Triathlon: Long-Term Care's Race for Survival."
That's a study I conducted documented in a report I published on
December 7, 2000. "The LTC Triathlon" analysis is more relevant and
important today than it was back then. So, in the YouTube video at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3H_1Xhe9Gw , I encourage you to look
up the report at
http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/triathlon.pdf and read it.
To pique your interest, the "LTC Triathlon's" Executive Summary follows
below. But first, check out these photos depicting progress of the Center
for Long-Term Care Reform's National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour.
Here's a
map
of the United States with the LTC Tour's route indicated in black
lines. The solid line shows the Silver Bullet's itinerary. The dotted line
indicates where I flew in to do presentations: from Greensboro, NC to
Chicago for the American Medical Association and from Memphis, TN to Miami
for the Dade Association of Health Underwriters "LTC Expo." The second
picture shows the LTC Tour map positioned on the Silver Bullet of
Long-Term Care.
Although the LTC Tour has racked up over 10,000 miles and touched
thousands of lives with our message of responsible LTC planning and
rational LTC policy, we've only just begun! The best is yet to come. After
some R&R back home in Seattle, I'm taking on the nation's capital, the
mid-Atlantic states, the Northeast, the Midwest, and before we're done,
the West.
Check out the LTC Tour's "Calendar" at the top of
www.centerltc.com. Read how you
can participate as a "Regional Representative" of the Center: http://www.centerltc.com/Regional_Rep-Sponsor_Level.htm.
Get your company involved as a Platinum, Gold or Silver sponsor with
signage on the Silver Bullet and recognition in our elegant presentation
package:
http://www.centerltc.com/LTC_Tour_Sponsor_Packet.pdf.
If you're happy with the current condition of long-term care service
delivery and financing in the U.S. . . . if you're protecting more people
from the risk and cost of LTC than you can handle . . . if you think the
public needs no awakening about LTC . . . if you think government can go
on paying for most LTC, then ignore this appeal.
But if you care about fixing LTC, get involved, help the 2008 LTC Tour
succeed, join the Center, sponsor the Tour, donate your time to organize
events and reach out to the media. That investment will pay dividends: for
your clients, for your country, and for you.
#############################
Executive Summary of "The LTC Triathlon: Long-Term Care's Race for
Survival," by Stephen A. Moses, Center for Long-Term Care Financing,
December 7, 2000,
http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/triathlon.pdf, footnotes omitted
Our parents and grandparents fought two great wars to make the world
safer and more free for us. They struggled through the Depression,
scrimped and saved, so we could enjoy greater prosperity. For the past 35
years, however, we have rewarded their long, hard efforts with an
inadequate long-term care system based primarily on institutionalization
and welfare financing. Most would agree, we owed our "Greatest Generation"
better treatment. Surely, no one believes the current system can meet
future needs. Our challenge today is to find and finance a better way of
providing long-term care before the clock runs out on us baby boomers
leaving an even bigger problem for the next generation. We must not fail
our children as we let down our parents and grandparents. The clock is
ticking. We're in a race, a race for survival, the LTC Triathlon.
Despite the most benign economic conditions in United States history
[we know now the "internet bubble" was about to burst], America's
long-term care service delivery and financing system is a tragic mess.
Seven major nursing facility chains have declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Consequently, between 10 and 20 percent of all nursing home beds in the
country are in bankrupt facilities today. Hundreds of home health agencies
have gone under financially. Many new assisted living facilities are
filling far more slowly than anticipated. Long-term care stock prices are
down precipitously. New capitalization by debt or equity is almost
non-existent for publicly held companies. Caregivers are in desperately
short supply, whether they are low-wage nurses' aides in long-term care
facilities or unpaid friends and family in private homes. Formal long-term
care services are too expensive for most Americans to afford, but Medicare
and Medicaid pay too little to assure quality home- or nursing home care.
Litigation against nursing homes and assisted living facilities for
providing allegedly poor care is on the rise and is driving liability
insurance premiums through the roof. Only seven percent of seniors and
virtually none of the baby boomers own private insurance that could help
them with the catastrophic cost of long-term care. America's gigantic and
rapidly aging baby-boom generation guarantees that the challenge of
long-term care will become greater and far more expensive with time. As of
now, we are losing the long-term care race.
What is wrong and how can we fix it? That depends on whom you ask. The
government blames providers. The providers blame government. Who's right?
Probably both positions have some merit, but the government has the
biggest bullhorn so its point of view often prevails in the popular and
academic media. No one gives much attention or credence to the private
sector components that struggle, against ever-increasing odds, to build,
operate and maintain the long-term care service delivery system. The
purpose of this study was to listen to a sample of the Financiers,
Providers and Insurers of long-term care, give their point of view a
voice, and begin the search for a better way. We asked 119 telephone
interviewees four open-ended questions to find out their opinion regarding
what is wrong, who is at fault, what should be done, and how.
We tapped into a gusher of anger and frustration directed primarily at
the public programs that finance most long-term care in the United States:
Medicare and Medicaid. (To help the reader find what our respondents had
to say, most of the direct quotes in the report are highlighted.) For
example: "Medicaid does not cover costs" and "There is no
question the nursing home sector was killed by Medicare cuts." The
government demands "Ritz-Carlton care for Motel 6 rates" and
simultaneously enforces an "unprecedented regulatory Jihad."
Although assisted living providers depend far less on government than do
nursing homes and home health agencies, they too are tempted by and
frightened of public financing. What should be done? According to our
respondents, government financing is necessary but not sufficient. It must
go only to the needy with private funding and insurance for all others.
Most respondents agreed that (1) excessive government involvement caused
many of our long-term care problems, (2) increased public financing is not
the permanent solution, (3) past public financing impeded the growth of
private financing alternatives, and (4) long-term care insurance is the
most promising answer for the future. Such was the thrust of their
analysis and recommendations.
If more private financing is the key to a solution, however, why
haven't private financing and insurance played a larger role already and
what should be done to effectuate such a result? We heard many opinions,
but little agreement. The Financiers, who provide capital for the
industry, have depended traditionally on Medicare and Medicaid to cover
their cash flow requirements. They know little about private financing
sources such as long-term care insurance. The Providers, who offer
services directly to the public, either relied heavily on public financing
in the past, had little or negative experience with private insurance, or
both. The Insurers, who try to protect people against a risk about which
most Americans are in denial, do not understand the Providers' problems or
trust their intentions. Each of these groups has different challenges,
different stakeholders, and different priorities. Each group, by its own
report, lacks a long-term vision for its business. Each pursues its own
private interests and public policy objectives independently, and so far,
less effectively than all would prefer.
Nevertheless, all three groups are in agreement that a better
understanding of each other's businesses could advance their own, their
clients', their customers', and America's interests. They share a common
purpose to pursue long-term care policy that is less dependent on
government and more reliant on private financing. A near consensus
prevails among the Financiers, Providers and Insurers interviewed for this
study that, toward the goal of better coordination and cooperation, more
industry-cross-cutting conferences, publications and speeches are highly
desirable. The problem is where to start and how to begin. Most
respondents stated that making such a beginning would be a difficult and
thankless task. Nevertheless, the Center for Long-Term Care Financing
would like to try. We will distribute this report widely in order to
encourage mutual understanding of the challenge. We hope to convene an "LTC
Summit" conference in 2001 to facilitate a conversation between long-term
care financiers, providers and insurers. We will speak and publish widely
on the importance of communication and cooperation between the primary
private sector stakeholders in long-term care. And we will encourage and
assist the major long-term care trade associations to unite in the
identification and pursuit of mutually beneficial public policy
initiatives.
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Updated: Thursday, April 24, 2008 12:55 PM (Eastern)
Dateline: Frankfort, Kentucky--
(LTC Tour Mile 10,500; State #11)
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LTC BULLET: LIVIN' IN ALUMINUM
LTC Comment: Broker World magazine captures the LTC Tour's first
quarter, after the ***news.***
*** CAPITOL NEWS: Check out the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care at the
State Capitol building in Frankfort, KY ***
*** LTC TOUR $: If you appreciate the LTC Tour and enjoy following our
progress, please help support the Tour and the Center. Become an
individual member ($150 per year or $12.50 per month) or a corporate
member (negotiable). We want to carry the LTC Tour's message of
responsible long-term care planning and rational LTC public policy all
across this land. We're doing it, but we need your help. Please pitch in.
Join the Center, and if you have the time and inclination, join the Tour
by helping to plan events in your area. Help us make a difference. Contact
Damon at 206-283-7036 or
damon@centerltc.com. He'll explain the opportunities and put you in
touch with me if you want to get involved. ***
*** SUBSCRIBE TO LTC BULLETS. Please encourage your colleagues to fill
out the simple online subscription form at
http://www.centerltc.org/bullets/subscribe_to_bullets.htm .
Subscriptions are free to everyone for the first month. After that, we'll
ask you to help support the cause: rational long-term care public policy.
***
*** REFERRALS. Thank you for reading the Center for Long-Term Care
Reform's latest "LTC Bullets" newsletter. If you know someone who would be
interested in this publication, please recommend us by clicking here
http://www.centerltc.com/bullets/recommendus.htm. If you have received
this edition as a forward, and would like your own subscription, you may
subscribe here
http://www.centerltc.com/bullets/subscribe_to_bullets.htm. Thank you.
***
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LTC BULLET: LIVIN' IN ALUMINUM
LTC Comment: Sharon Chace, editor of Broker World, invited me to
report once a quarter on progress of the Center for Long-Term Care
Reform's National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour. This month's issue of
the magazine contains my first update.
Broker World doesn't publish online, so don't miss future updates:
subscribe here for a mere $6 per year!
http://www.brokerworldmag.com/2004/order/formOrder.asp
To watch and hear Antsy McClain sing "Livin' in Aluminum," go to
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcTeEEzHxgQ&feature=related.
Now, here's the article, republished with permission:
The LTC Tour Update . . . "Livin' in Aluminum" -- The First Quarter
by
Stephen A. Moses
In late December '07, I purchased a new 16-ft. Airstream trailer and a
Titanium-Metallic Toyota FJ Cruiser in Tampa, Florida and began the Center
for Long-Term Care Reform's 2008 National Long-Term Care Consciousness
Tour.
I'm living in this "Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care" as I work my way
around the country: six regions for two months each starting with the
Southeast in January and February, and moving to the Southwest, Central
East, Northeast, Midwest and finally out West late this year.
The purpose of our LTC Tour is to raise awareness among the public,
legislators, policy-makers, and the media about the importance of
responsible long-term care planning and public policy. Toward that end,
I'm working with regional representatives of the center and major
corporate sponsors of the LTC Tour all around the country to schedule and
deliver speeches, meet with public officials and print reporters and
appear on radio and TV shows.
So far the media interest has been exceptional and audience feedback
wonderful. For example, in Chattanooga, TN, all three television networks
had me and, in one case, the Silver Bullet, on the air. A public forum
brought out a large audience eager to learn how to prepare for the risk
and cost of long-term care. The Nashville-based Tennessean
newspaper did a big story, as well. Representatives from TennCare
(Tennessee's Medicaid program) met with Regional Representative Phyllis
Shelton, LTC Consultant, Hendersonville, TN, and me and to hear our
analysis and recommendations.
In Florida, I spoke to groups of financial advisors and insurance
agents, did two radio shows and a "podcast" for a magazine.
In North Carolina, I addressed 300 nursing home providers in Greensboro
and I delivered the Shaftesbury luncheon speech at the John Locke
Foundation in Raleigh celebrating publication of my latest report:
"Long-Term Care Financing in North Carolina: Good Intentions, Ambitious
Efforts, Unintended Consequences," sponsored by the John Locke Foundation
(http://www.johnlocke.org/site-docs/policyreports/NC_LTC_finance.pdf
).
While I'm living and traveling full time in the Silver Bullet, I'm not
tied down to it. I parked the rig for several days and flew to Chicago to
deliver a speech to a committee of the American Medical Association that
is planning the AMA's policy position on long-term care financing.
Early in February there was a stopover in Knoxville, TN, to affix logos
of the LTC Tour's major corporate sponsors. Platinum, Gold and Silver
sponsors receive signage on the Silver Bullet and recognition in the
presentation packet to be distributed at major events.
Mid-February took me to Columbia, SC, to speak at the South Carolina
Association of Health Underwriters "Day on the Hill" annual lobbying
campaign and on to Atlanta, GA, where I spoke to the Atlanta Association
of Health Underwriters, met with a Wall Street Journal reporter,
and addressed BRAMCO, a brokers' group.
Finally, I attended the Long-Term Care Insurance Producer's Summit in
Atlanta, GA, before heading home to Seattle to enjoy a two-week respite
for this weary road warrior. But I was back at it March 16 to 19 at the
Intercompany Long-Term Care Insurance Conference in Jacksonville, FL,
where the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care was prominently displayed at the
entrance to the conference hotel.
Would you like to take part in the National Long-Term Care
Consciousness Tour? Read all about it at www.centerltc.com. I'll provide
updates on the LTC Tour's progress once quarter in Broker World..
Help us stir up interest along the way!
"Livin' in Aluminum" is a song about an Airstream trailer searchable
and viewable on YouTube.
#############################
Updated: Wednesday, April 23, 2008 11:50 AM (Central)
Dateline: Nashville, TN--
(LTC Tour Mile 9825, State #10)
#############################
MEDI-CAN'T
LTC Comment: People and groups who claim to care about aging Americans
often insist that Medicare is a magnificently successful program. But it
only seems so if you blank out the program's dismal financial condition
and hopeless future.
An important message of the National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour
is that Medicare can't continue propping up Medicaid-financed long-term
care. As Medicare retrenches from its heretofore generous funding of
nursing home and home health care, the Medicaid LTC safety net will fray,
then break. That will hurt not just the poor, but the middle class, for
whom Medicaid has been the principal payor of long-term care.
Here's more evidence about the Medicare's likely future. Following is
the abstract and conclusion of Joseph Antos, "Medicare's Bad News: Is
Anyone Listening?," Health Policy Outlook, AEI Online, April 16,
2008,
http://www.aei.org/publications/pubID.27825/pub_detail.asp. The
remainder of the paper is well worth reading.
"Medicare is in serious fiscal trouble, but no one seems to be paying
attention. The Medicare trustees recently issued their annual report, and
the news is not good. If current trends continue, Medicare's Hospital
Insurance (HI) trust fund will be depleted in 2019. To make good on the
health care benefits promised to Americans, future generations face a tax
bill of $85 trillion (measured in today's dollars). That makes the
mortgage bailout, which is unlikely to cost more than $1 trillion, look
like chicken feed. Why are we ignoring a calamity that will affect every
American? What can we do to avoid fiscal disaster? . . .
"Conclusion
"Unlike the mortgage crunch, Medicare's fiscal crisis does not seem
real to most people. Medicare seems to be functioning adequately now, the
trustees' estimates are difficult to truly understand, and the average
American is more worried about gasoline prices than about the uncertain
promise of government health benefits in old age. No wonder politicians
have been unwilling to take the kinds of actions necessary to reform the
program--the next election is always just around the corner, and without a
palpable sense of crisis, the public would not back such policies.
"The trustees' report clearly demonstrates that it will soon be
difficult to ignore Medicare's problems. If recent trends in spending per
beneficiary continue, the influx of the baby boomers will rapidly drive up
program spending. Left unchecked, Medicare will drain money from the
budget, making it increasingly difficult for Congress to find the means to
fund other urgent policy priorities.
"Joseph Antos is the Wilson H. Taylor Scholar in Health Care and
Retirement Policy at AEI. Research assistant Tal Manor worked with Mr.
Antos to produce this Health Policy Outlook."
Our thanks to friend-of-the-Center and LTC expert Terry Savage (www.terrysavage.com),
the nationally syndicated financial columnist of the Chicago Sun-Times,
for bringing this article to our attention.
#############################
Updated: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 2:01 PM (Central)
Dateline: Nashville, TN--
(LTC Tour Mile 9825, State #10)
#############################
LTC BULLET: LTC MYSTERY TOUR IN CAIRO AND ATHENS
LTC Comment: The Center for Long-Term Care Reform's National Long-Term
Care Consciousness Tour took a detour yesterday to the LTC Pyramid and the
LTC Parthenon. Check it out after the ***news.***
*** TODAY'S LTC BULLET is sponsored by Claude Thau, a Master General
Agent who helps LTCi producers nationwide. Claude is the lead author of
Tillinghast Broker World Individual and Group LTCi Surveys. His mentoring
skills help you build whichever market suits you best (individuals,
executive carve-out, multi-life, affinity, financial institutions,
referrals from other professionals, etc.). Claude has been actively
involved in the State Partnership movement and has campaigned to allow
independent review of LTCi claims. Test Claude by calling 800-999-3026,
x2241 to discuss opportunities or emailto:cthau@targetins.com.
Don't miss our YouTube video interview of industry leader Claude Thau
at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdD6WAqR_Aw. ***
*** TO SPONSOR AN LTC BULLET of your own, contact Damon at 206-283-7036
or damon@centerltc.com. ***
*** GREAT DEAL. For a free subscription to "Long-Term Living" (formerly
"Nursing Homes" magazine), go to
www.ltlmagazine.com . I've published in and been written about in this
excellent trade journal for many years. To follow the LTC provider
industry, it's a must-read. Go to the link, click the "New Subscription"
button, "continue" to the subscription form and you're on your way. ***
*** The latest update to our series of pictures of the Silver Bullet of
Long-Term Care at state capitol buildings is here. Check out the Silver
Bullet at the
Tennessee State Capitol and
other capitol buildings. ***
#############################
LTC BULLET: LTC MYSTERY TOUR IN CAIRO AND ATHENS
LTC Comment: Welcome again to LTC-TV. We have several new YouTube
videos for you to watch. To find them, go to
http://www.youtube.com/user/LTCconsciousnessTOUR.
Here's a synopsis of what you'll discover there:
THE LTC PYRAMID: The LTC Tour took a side trip to Cairo, Egypt for a
visit to the pyramids. Well, not exactly. The "pyramid" in the video at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivbmlKo3n98 is actually an event venue
in Memphis, Tennessee. I used it as a prop to make an important point
about the "Pyramid of LTC Financing." To wit, the LTC financing pyramid is
upside down. Most nursing home and home health care in the United States
is funded by Medicaid, Medicare, spend-through of Social Security income
by people already on Medicaid, other income, and other government
programs. Only a small amount comes from asset spend down. LTC insurance
accounts for a tiny fraction of the total. No wonder America's LTC system
is a mess. Let's turn the pyramid right-side-up. Most LTC financing should
come from private insurance. Then savings and home equity should be tapped
for those who fail to insure. Close to the tip of the pyramid, government
safety net programs should provide high-quality long-term care for people
truly in need. Under such a system, everyone would have access to
top-quality LTC at the most appropriate level.
THE LTC PARTHENON: After Cairo, we moved on to the Parthenon, on the
Acropolis, in Athens, Greece. Well, not exactly. The "Parthenon" in the
video at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVSDYGTfksQ is actually a
full-sized replica of the classical structure. It was built for the 1897
Tennessee Centennial Exposition in Nashville, TN. I used it as a prop to
make a wish I hope you'll all share.
THE LTC SUMMIT VIDEOS: At the 2008 LTCI Producers Summit in Atlanta,
Georgia in February, we "filmed" a series of interviews with LTCI industry
leaders. Technical difficulties prevented our bringing these videos to you
until now, although a few were posted earlier. Check them all out at
http://www.youtube.com/user/LTCconsciousnessTOUR. And while you're
there, subscribe to our YouTube channel so you won't miss a single new
video as we post them in the future.
LARRY THOMAS, Chief Marketing Officer for Equitable Life and Casualty,
talks about his passion for long-term care planning and the reasons his
company has supported the Center for Long-Term Care Reform for many years.
"You've been a lone voice out there in the wilderness, fighting for us,"
says Larry Thomas about the Center.
TOM RIEKSE, SR, Managing Partner of LTCI Partners, a Silver Sponsor of
the 2008 LTC Tour. Mr. Riekse talks about how he got involved in the
long-term care field 19 years ago and why his company supports the Center
for Long-Term Care Reform and our National Long-Term Care Consciousness
Tour. "We think public awareness of the problems and the inability of our
government to handle those problems and the passion, Steve, that you bring
to this thing is important to us and so we financially support you," says
Tom Riekse, Sr.
MARK RANDALL of GoldenCareUSA, the 2008 LTC Tour's "coordinating
sponsor," interviews Center president Steve Moses about the allegory of
"The Elephant, the Blind Men and Long-Term Care." Steve uses this analogy
to introduce his two-hour mini-version of the Center for Long-Term Care
Reform's "LTC Graduate Seminar." The LTC Grad Seminar has been a hit at
meeting after meeting around the country on the LTC Tour.
TODD ANDERSON, Vice President for Marketing, GoldenCareUSA, the 2008
LTC Tour's "coordinating sponsor" discusses his start in LTC insurance and
why his company supports the LTC Tour and the Center for Long-Term Care
Reform. "We need more people like yourself out there looking at the big
picture. I remember one of your articles about the bankruptcy of America
with the boomers coming in. That's why we've been a sponsor of the Center
for many years."
We hope you enjoy "LTC TV." We'll bring you more video interviews with
industry leaders and more coverage of the National Long-Term Care
Consciousness Tour as time goes on.
#############################
Updated: Monday, April 21, 2008 11:48 AM (Central)
Dateline: Memphis, TN--
(LTC Tour Mile 9590, State #10)
#############################
LTC EXPO
LTC Comment: The National Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour took a
detour to Miami, Florida last week.
I joined the Tour's national PR and marketing consultant--author,
speaker and LTCMonth.com founder Marilee Driscoll--to deliver a one, two
punch at the Dade Association of Health Underwriters' annual "LTC Expo."
After two hours of my mini-LTC Graduate Seminar, Marilee batted
clean-up with a well-received luncheon address.
Read the excellent evaluations of our Miami program which follow below.
If you haven't yet made plans to have the Center's 2008 LTC Tour visit
your town, start now! We have a sponsorship opportunity to fit all
budgets. Check out the details at the top of
www.centerltc.com. Then contact
Damon at 206-283-7036 or
damon@centerltc.com. He'll fill you in on all the opportunities and
refer you to me for scheduling.
One way to support the LTC Tour is to become a Regional Representative
of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform. Details at
http://www.centerltc.com/Regional_Rep-Sponsor_Level.htm.
The Center's Miami Regional Representative, LTC Specialist George
Braddock, CLTC, chaired this year's LTC Expo and brought me in from
Memphis for my second stint in Miami under his management. Great work,
George!
Special thanks to George's mother, Ruth Braddock, author of the book
"Julia's Daughters" about women's contributions to Miami's history, for
giving me such a warm welcome and putting me up in her home for two
nights.
And thanks to Dade Association of Health Underwriters President Doug
Jacobs for his strong support and generous hospitality.
But thanks most of all to the AMGs (altruistic, masochistic, geniuses)
who attended the program. They struggle daily to convince a public in
denial that long-term care is a personal responsibility for which they
must plan.
We greatly appreciated the wonderful feedback they delivered in
response to our two-hour LTC Graduate Seminar. A sample of that feedback
follows.
#############################
Robert Newman: "Steve Moses really delivers a great educational seminar
on LTC."
Cornelia Philipson: "Great presentation. Depth & breadth of knowledge
on the LTC crisis is amazing. Thank you!"
Sandeo Kaskel: "It's a pleasure to learn the history of LTC from
someone who is objective and who sees the broader picture."
Jean Ritter: "Stephen was a refreshing source of new information. Great
new tools for marketing LTC."
Leni Cohen: "My experience as V.P. of long term care sales has put me
in front of thousands of consumers each year. Your description of
consumers living in a 'lookback' world of government taking responsibility
is always part of their belief system. You have hit the 'nail on the
head.' You have made it easier for me to explain this to my agents."
Holmes Braddock: "Very good and insightful - too bad you can't be on TV
and/or radio regularly." (Mr. Braddock is Regional Rep George Braddock's
father and a highly regarded institution in the Miami insurance
marketplace.)
Ken Gamelin: "Very insightful & enlightening presentation."
Jim Moore: "Fantastic presentation! It's always easy to look back at
what happened, but very difficult to see what's coming."
#############################
Updated: Thursday, April 17, 2008 12:51 PM (Eastern)
Dateline: Miami, FL--
#############################
LTC Tour Update: I'm in Miami to speak at the Dade Association of
Health Underwriters' annual "LTC Expo." The LTC Tour's national PR and
marketing consultant, Marilee Driscoll, will deliver the luncheon address.
Then I'm on for two hours with the "LTC Graduate Seminar." Thanks to the
Center's Miami Regional Rep for arranging this excellent opportunity.
Don't worry about the "Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care." The LTC Tour's
media magnet and my home on the road is safely ensconced at a campground
back in Memphis adjoining Elvis Presley's Graceland mansion. Rock on!
LTC Comment: The key message of the LTC Tour is that people must plan
for LTC looking forward, not backward.
Look at LTC planning through the rear-view mirror and you'll see
government-financed nursing home care.
But, look through the windshield and you'll discover a brick wall of
fiscal reality rapidly approaching that will end government LTC financing
for the middle class and force much more personal responsibility in the
future.
What I predict is that Medicaid will make eligibility much harder than
ever before and Medicare/Social Security will be gradually means-tested so
that most baby boomers won't qualify for full benefits within a decade or
two.
The evidence mounts every day as our latest economic recession looms
more ominously, tax receipts dwindle, and welfare rolls escalate.
A couple days ago, Presidential candidate John McCain proposed
means-testing Medicare Part D. Of course, Medicare Part B premiums are
already higher for higher income people.
The presidential campaign debates have mostly ignored unfunded
entitlement liabilities. No matter who is elected, that $102 trillion hole
in public financing will be front and center, compelling attention in the
next administration.
And it looks like the bottom is already falling out from under
Medicaid. Look at these links, following below, as provided in the "SPN
Medicaid Exchange" e-letter for 4-16-2008.
By the way, if you want to follow developments in health and LTC public
policy, that newsletter is a great resource. Subscribe at
http://www.ncpa.org/sub/. Every
issue cites the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, usually several times.
For example: Where in the Heck is Steve Moses This Month? Steve and the
Silver
Bullet have been hitting several state capitols this month.
http://www.centerltc.com/TourPictures/Silver_Bullet_at_State_Capitols.htm
Also, read Steve's analysis of a long-term care proposal being
introduced in New York.
http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/NY_Compact.pdf
#############################
States Struggle with Medicaid Costs
#############################
o
House Report Stirs Tempest over Proposed Medicaid Cuts
o
Colorado: Medicaid Rules Could Slash Funds to State's Hospitals
o
Georgia: Medicaid Cuts Could Shut State Hospitals
o Heartland
Institute: A Three-Part Plan for State Health Care Reform
o
Illinois: Comptroller Says State's Medicaid System is Broke
o
Kentucky: State Could Lose $1 Billion in Federal Medicaid Money
o
Massachusetts: Health Care Cost Increases Dominate Budget Debate
o
Massachusetts: State Health Plan Underfunded
o
Mississippi: Panel Passes Higher Cigarette Tax as Solution to Medicaid
Shortfalls
o
Rhode Island: State to Apply for Medical Records Funds
o
Viewpoint: Unpredictable Pricing Complicates States' Health Reform
Programs
o
Vermont: States Worry About Medicaid Funding
#############################
Updated: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 11:46 AM (Central)
Dateline: Memphis, TN--
LTC Tour: Mile 9,425, State #10
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOW TO CURE LTC
LTC Comment: "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term Care," after the
***news.***
*** FEEDBACK from Steve Moses's 2-hour LTC Graduate Seminar presented
yesterday to the Central Arkansas Health Underwriters Association:
"I have never sold LTC coverage but your presentation convinced me
there is a need! In fact, I need to buy myself and family members should
buy also!" Alanna Scheffer
"What an eye-opening presentation. You are obviously an expert in the
field. Thank you for taking the message across the country." Helen Todd
"Very enlightening. I had no idea how this all came about!" Maxine
Fricioni
"Thanks for turning on the head lights as we look out the windshield
[and not the rear-view mirror] of the LTC car." Michael Ferguson ***
*** GET THE SAME COURSE FOR YOUR MEMBERS. Thanks to the financial
support of our LTC Tour coordinating sponsors, we're able to make the
2-hour LTC graduate seminar available free of charge to NAHU and NAIFA
chapters all across the country. Check with Damon at 206-283-7036 or
damon@centerltc.com to schedule
your event. Pick a date when the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care (and I)
will be in your area. Consult the LTC Tour's calendar, schedule and
itinerary at the top of
www.centerltc.com, specifically
http://www.centerltc.com/TourCalendar/General.htm#April. Scroll
through the months until you find your state (listed by region right below
the month). Then look for an open date that fits within the dates and
locations already scheduled. ***
*** GET THE FULL DOSE. Alternatively, you can sign up for the full
eight-hour LTC Graduate Seminar and watch it online at your leisure.
First, watch a free 30-minute Webinar that describes the course at
http://www.centerltc.com/WebinarAnnouncingLTCGradSem.wmv. Allow a
couple minutes to download. Learn even more about the new online LTC
Graduate Seminar at
http://www.centerltc.com/LTC_Grad_Seminar/online.htm. Questions or
comments? Contact the Center for Long-Term Care Reform at info@centerltc.com
or 206-283-7036. You can get the full LTC Graduate Seminar webinar AND a
whole year of membership in the Center for Long-Term Care Reform for only
$225. Based on the feedback from past attendees and Center members, that
is an investment you should recoup very quickly as you help many more
people protect themselves against the risk and cost of LTC. ***
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOW TO CURE LTC
LTC Comment: Want to read a succinct report that sums up the problem
with long-term care financing policy and proposes the right solutions?
Here's your chance.
Lewis Andrews and Natalie Kindred of the Yankee Institute for Public
Policy in Hartford, Connecticut delivered the goods.
Read their April 2008 report "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term
Care" at
http://www.yankeeinstitute.org/files/pdf/82463_Yankee_Three_Cure_Study.pdf.
The "Executive Summary" follows, but here's the bottom line. To fix LTC:
(1) give Medicaid back to the poor; (2) promote private LTC insurance; and
(3) encourage the use of home equity to fund LTC. Right on!
Thanks to Center member and supporter Tony Stratidis of Marsh PCLIS for
bringing the published report to our attention.
#############################
Executive Summary of "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term Care" by
Lewis Andrews and Natalie Kindred of the Yankee Institute for Public
Policy in Hartford, Connecticut (www.yankeeinstitute.com)
Already spiraling toward financial crisis, Medicaid is facing a
challenge of unprecedented proportions in the years ahead. Because of the
tremendous cost of long term health care (LTC) and Medicaid's porous
eligibility structure, too many citizens obtain full coverage for their
institutional long term care. The financial strain this practice imposes
on Medicaid threatens the very future of the program.
That one must literally become poor in order to be eligible for
Medicaid is a misconception. People can become eligible for nursing home
care under Medicaid as long as their income falls under the cost of
nursing home care. In fact, they can retain an unlimited number of exempt
assets, including their homes.
Because Medicaid reimbursement rates usually fall below the actual cost
of care, the poor, who rely solely on Medicaid for their long term care,
receive a reduced quality of care.
As long as Medicaid's eligibility loopholes allow people to feel
insulated from the often staggering costs of long term care, which can
total hundreds of thousands of dollars, individuals have no incentive to
prepare for long term care financing.
Aging baby boomers represent a massive uptick in long term care demand,
expected to test the limits of Medicaid in the decades to come. This is
especially true in Connecticut because of the state's disproportionate
number of older citizens. Demand for long term health care services in
Connecticut is expected to jump 30 percent by 2030.
The consequences of Medicaid overuse will only balloon as baby boomers
enter retirement and beyond. Now is the time to reform Medicaid and to
offer solutions to the long term care conundrum.
This study describes the problems posed by long term health care
financing to both individuals and the Connecticut economy as a whole.
Three practical solutions are proposed:
1. First and foremost, the disincentives to taking personal
responsibility for long term care financing must be eliminated. To do so,
policymakers must reform Medicaid eligibility to prevent overuse by
citizens for whom this program is not intended.
2. Once Medicaid eligibility is tightened, individuals will inevitably
seek alternative methods of long term care financing. For those who are
able, long term care insurance represents an affordable and viable
solution to preparing for long term care. Policymakers and private
insurance companies should publicize and promote information on long term
health care insurance.
3. Converting home equity into a source of long term health care
financing is another option available to consumers. Using reverse
mortgages, long term care consumers may remain in their homes (health
permitting) while enjoying an adequate flow of funding for their expensive
health needs.
#############################
Updated: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 11:42 AM (Central)
Dateline: Memphis, TN--
LTC Tour: Mile 9,425, State #10
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOW TO CURE LTC
LTC Comment: "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term Care," after the
***news.***
*** FEEDBACK from Steve Moses's 2-hour LTC Graduate Seminar presented
yesterday to the Central Arkansas Health Underwriters Association:
"I have never sold LTC coverage but your presentation convinced me
there is a need! In fact, I need to buy myself and family members should
buy also!" Alanna Scheffer
"What an eye-opening presentation. You are obviously an expert in the
field. Thank you for taking the message across the country." Helen Todd
"Very enlightening. I had no idea how this all came about!" Maxine
Fricioni
"Thanks for turning on the head lights as we look out the windshield
[and not the rear-view mirror] of the LTC car." Michael Ferguson ***
*** GET THE SAME COURSE FOR YOUR MEMBERS. Thanks to the financial
support of our LTC Tour coordinating sponsors, we're able to make the
2-hour LTC graduate seminar available free of charge to NAHU and NAIFA
chapters all across the country. Check with Damon at 206-283-7036 or
damon@centerltc.com to schedule
your event. Pick a date when the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care (and I)
will be in your area. Consult the LTC Tour's calendar, schedule and
itinerary at the top of
www.centerltc.com, specifically
http://www.centerltc.com/TourCalendar/General.htm#April. Scroll
through the months until you find your state (listed by region right below
the month). Then look for an open date that fits within the dates and
locations already scheduled. ***
*** GET THE FULL DOSE. Alternatively, you can sign up for the full
eight-hour LTC Graduate Seminar and watch it online at your leisure.
First, watch a free 30-minute Webinar that describes the course at
http://www.centerltc.com/WebinarAnnouncingLTCGradSem.wmv. Allow a
couple minutes to download. Learn even more about the new online LTC
Graduate Seminar at
http://www.centerltc.com/LTC_Grad_Seminar/online.htm. Questions or
comments? Contact the Center for Long-Term Care Reform at info@centerltc.com
or 206-283-7036. You can get the full LTC Graduate Seminar webinar AND a
whole year of membership in the Center for Long-Term Care Reform for only
$225. Based on the feedback from past attendees and Center members, that
is an investment you should recoup very quickly as you help many more
people protect themselves against the risk and cost of LTC. ***
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOW TO CURE LTC
LTC Comment: Want to read a succinct report that sums up the problem
with long-term care financing policy and proposes the right solutions?
Here's your chance.
Lewis Andrews and Natalie Kindred of the Yankee Institute for Public
Policy in Hartford, Connecticut delivered the goods.
Read their April 2008 report "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term
Care" at
http://www.yankeeinstitute.org/files/pdf/82463_Yankee_Three_Cure_Study.pdf.
The "Executive Summary" follows, but here's the bottom line. To fix LTC:
(1) give Medicaid back to the poor; (2) promote private LTC insurance; and
(3) encourage the use of home equity to fund LTC. Right on!
Thanks to Center member and supporter Tony Stratidis of Marsh PCLIS for
bringing the published report to our attention.
#############################
Executive Summary of "Three Cures for What's Ailing Long-Term Care" by
Lewis Andrews and Natalie Kindred of the Yankee Institute for Public
Policy in Hartford, Connecticut (www.yankeeinstitute.com)
Already spiraling toward financial crisis, Medicaid is facing a
challenge of unprecedented proportions in the years ahead. Because of the
tremendous cost of long term health care (LTC) and Medicaid's porous
eligibility structure, too many citizens obtain full coverage for their
institutional long term care. The financial strain this practice imposes
on Medicaid threatens the very future of the program.
That one must literally become poor in order to be eligible for
Medicaid is a misconception. People can become eligible for nursing home
care under Medicaid as long as their income falls under the cost of
nursing home care. In fact, they can retain an unlimited number of exempt
assets, including their homes.
Because Medicaid reimbursement rates usually fall below the actual cost
of care, the poor, who rely solely on Medicaid for their long term care,
receive a reduced quality of care.
As long as Medicaid's eligibility loopholes allow people to feel
insulated from the often staggering costs of long term care, which can
total hundreds of thousands of dollars, individuals have no incentive to
prepare for long term care financing.
Aging baby boomers represent a massive uptick in long term care demand,
expected to test the limits of Medicaid in the decades to come. This is
especially true in Connecticut because of the state's disproportionate
number of older citizens. Demand for long term health care services in
Connecticut is expected to jump 30 percent by 2030.
The consequences of Medicaid overuse will only balloon as baby boomers
enter retirement and beyond. Now is the time to reform Medicaid and to
offer solutions to the long term care conundrum.
This study describes the problems posed by long term health care
financing to both individuals and the Connecticut economy as a whole.
Three practical solutions are proposed:
1. First and foremost, the disincentives to taking personal
responsibility for long term care financing must be eliminated. To do so,
policymakers must reform Medicaid eligibility to prevent overuse by
citizens for whom this program is not intended.
2. Once Medicaid eligibility is tightened, individuals will inevitably
seek alternative methods of long term care financing. For those who are
able, long term care insurance represents an affordable and viable
solution to preparing for long term care. Policymakers and private
insurance companies should publicize and promote information on long term
health care insurance.
3. Converting home equity into a source of long term health care
financing is another option available to consumers. Using reverse
mortgages, long term care consumers may remain in their homes (health
permitting) while enjoying an adequate flow of funding for their expensive
health needs.
#############################
Updated: Tuesday, April 15, 2008 12:21 PM (Central)
Dateline: Little Rock, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 9,250, State #10
#############################
LET SLEEPING DOGS (NEW YORK LTC COMPACT) DIE
LTC Comment: I did a briefing on LTC financing public policy for the
Arkansas Insurance Department yesterday. One of the attendees asked if I'd
heard of a proposal being pushed by the elder law bar in New York called
the LTC Compact.
I said I'd not only heard of it, I'd done a comprehensive study and
published a report about it. Bottom line, it's a bad idea pushed by
Medicaid planners trying to salvage their practices by overwhelming
publicly financed long-term care. If implemented, it would ruin any market
for responsible long-term care planning.
"Thanks," my listener said, "I thought that proposal gave off a fishy
smell."
Read the Center for Long-Term Care Reform's report titled "The New York
Long-Term Care Compact Proposal: Update, Analysis and Recommendations" at
http://www.centerltc.com/pubs/NY_Compact.pdf.
Seriously, you need to read it. The New York Medicaid planners have
written to all the State Insurance Commissions pushing that proposal. This
is not the first time I've been asked about it on the LTC Tour by state
staff who've been urged to implement the LTC Compact.
Most recently, the "nAliens" (NAELA is the National Academy of Elder
Law Attorneys, the Medicaid planners' trade association) have
misrepresented the LTC Compact and my opposition to it in their yellow
e-journal "Eye on Elder Issues."
What can I say? The people with all the money and power are the ones
who make LTC free after the insurable event has occurred by loading the
financial liability onto the Medicaid program and taking a cut for
themselves.
The purveyors of responsible long-term care planning have to be AMGs
(altruistic, masochistic geniuses) to survive selling a product (LTCI) the
government gives away with such a hefty "commission" to the Medicaid
planners.
The LTC Compact is dead. Our study and report administered an honorable
coup d' grace. But the Medicaid planning bar just won't give up. So keep
an eye out for signs of life. Send the Center's LTC Compact report to your
Insurance Commissioners with a message to watch out for appeals on the LTC
Compact's behalf from New York Medicaid planners.
It's not enough to let this sleeping dog lie. Kill it! Good long-term
care public policy depends on it.
#############################
Updated: Monday, April 14, 2008 12:03 PM (Central)
Dateline: Little Rock, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 9,225, State #10
#############################
LTC TRAILER TRASH?
LTC Comment: Okay. I know what some of you are thinking. Steve Moses is
driving around in that "Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care." But, bottom
line, isn't it just a trailer? Isn't he staying in trailer parks? Do we
really want to market to trailer trash? How's that going to advance the
cause of long-term care planning? Let me bring you doubters some
enlightenment.
First of all, the "Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care" is an Airstream.
Airstream is the Lexus of travel trailers. Think of it as a land-based
parallel to the MetLife blimp for publicity. Click here
http://www.centerltc.com/TourPictures/Silver_Bullet_at_State_Capitols.htm
for pictures of the Silver Bullet in front of several state capitol
buildings. I've conducted major studies of the long-term care financing
systems in two of those states (FL and TX). Read the reports at
http://www.centerltc.com/reports.htm. One of the LTC Tour's chief
goals is to influence long-term care public policy at the state level.
Second, if you're thinking "trailer trash" and "trailer parks" when you
think about the LTC Tour, think again. Today's Recreational Vehicle (RV)
culture is something to behold. The "RV Parks" are often resorts in
idyllic settings with pools, hot tubs, saunas, stores, recreational
equipment, boats, bikes, etc. available. And the RVs themselves? Motorized
palaces costing hundreds of thousands of dollars each and carrying all the
comforts of home. Here's a picture of a millionaire's row at the lovely
wooded park where I happen to be staying in Little Rock, Arkansas:
http://www.centerltc.com/TourPictures/BigRigs.JPG . I didn't ask but
those four rigs could easily be worth $1,000,000.
(I'm in Little Rock to meet with the Department of Insurance today and
to give a 2-hour version of the LTC Graduate Seminar to the Central
Arkansas Health Underwriters tomorrow.)
Third, the people driving around in those mobile mansions are prime
candidates for long-term care planning. They have money; they're newly
retired or semi-retired; and, judging by how they constantly query me
about the "Silver Bullet" and its sponsors' logos, they have the interest
and time to talk about long-term care. They probably won't buy "on the
road," but I'm not selling. I'm just getting a lot of people thinking
about the importance of planning for long-term care. When they come home
from the road, you sell them the coverage they need. Even if they're "full
timers," their rigs are registered someplace where they'll show up sooner
or later.
So far, I've only talked about the lives we're touching at the RV
Parks. But, as I drive from city to city, people pull up beside the Silver
Bullet frequently and ask what it's all about. Rubber neckers stare at the
Airstream, bedecked with the logos of major American corporations. It
doesn't take them long to see the "2008 National Long-Term Care
Consciousness Tour" signage and put two and two together. Maybe each
sighting is just one more feather of awareness, but enough feathers and
you eventually break the camel's back of denial about long-term care risk
and cost.
Finally, the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care has been a magnificent
"media magnet." It draws the attention of TV, radio and print coverage to
the LTC Tour. That's how we'll expand the LTC Tour's reach to millions of
people before we're done.
So, my friends, that's the story on the Silver Bullet. We still have
room on the Bullet for a few more major sponsors. The LTC Tour Sponsors
Packet at
http://www.centerltc.com/LTC_Tour_Sponsor_Packet.pdf explains all the
benefits and costs of Platinum, Gold, Silver and other sponsorship levels.
Don't let your company fill the blank in this question I hear everywhere I
go:
"Why isn't your company name here represented on the Silver
Bullet?"
#############################
Updated: Friday, April 11, 2008 12:00 PM (Central)
Dateline: Little Rock, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 8775, State #10
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOST THE LTC TOUR: A DO-IT-YOURSELF GUIDE
LTC Comment: Our LTC Tour is a big success and most of America still
lies ahead! Want to join the fun, get some publicity, make new contacts,
help more people? How to do it, after the ***news.***
*** MORE LTC TOUR VIDEOS: Damon has added a bunch of new videos to the
LTC Tour's YouTube channel. Check 'em out at:
www.YouTube.com/LTCconsciousnessTour. You'll find the Silver Bullet of
Long-Term Care at the famous Biltmore mansion in Asheville, NC with a
hopeful analogy explained. You'll see Steve Moses interview Tennessee
State Representative Ferguson about his passion for good LTC public
policy. Watch Steve and Center for Long-Term Care Reform Regional
Representative Phyllis Shelton horsing around for the camera. Catch Steve
being interviewed on the early morning TV show "ThisNThat," thanks to the
PR efforts of Regional Rep Gail Lindsey and her associate Jason Hillner.
These videos will give you a taste of the LTC Tour. Read on for how you
can get involved directly. ***
*** CORRECTION. Yesterday's "LTC E-Alert" cited David Landwehr as the
author of an article which expressly permitted republication: "You are
welcome to use the free 'LTC Elerts' to educate your members." Turns out
that, although there was no indication in the publication itself, the
piece was actually ghost-written by Marilee Driscoll. Marilee Driscoll is
a Gold Sponsor of the LTC Consciousness Tour. You can find information on
her "Ghost Written Press Release" program, along with other products, at
www.LTCsalesTools.com. ***
#############################
LTC BULLET: HOST THE LTC TOUR: A DO-IT-YOURSELF GUIDE
LTC Comment: The purpose of our 2008 LTC Tour is to promote responsible
long-term care planning and rational LTC public policy. Read all about the
Tour at the top of www.centerltc.com.
If you've been following the LTC Tour's progress, you know we've
received wonderful media coverage (TV, radio, and print). My presentations
to groups of financial advisers, LTCI producers, policy makers, and the
public have received rave reviews. (See the end of this LTC Bullet for the
latest examples.) Regional Representatives of the Center for Long-Term
Care Reform who have already sponsored the LTC Tour in their local areas
are very happy with the results.
HOW TO BRING STEVE TO YOUR EVENT AT NO CHARGE (Sweat Equity Required)
Now, I'd like to get even more people involved in planning LTC Tour
events. If you can schedule an opportunity for me to meet with a reporter,
speak to a group of 25 or more people, or visit with a policy maker (state
legislator, Insurance Commissioner, Medicaid Director, etc.), I (Steve
Moses) will do the program at no charge. The only catch is that you must
arrange a date, time and location that fits the LTC Tour's schedule. That
means I pull up in the Silver Bullet of Long-Term Care, do the event, and
get right back on the road.
WHEN WILL STEVE BE IN YOUR AREA?
To find out where I'll be when, check the LTC Tour calendar frequently
at the top of www.centerltc.com or
go directly to
http://www.centerltc.com/TourCalendar/General.htm#April.
ATTENTION LITTLE ROCK, MEMPHIS AND MIAMI
For example, I'm in Little Rock, AR through April 15, booked for a
morning event on 4/15 but with some time available between now and then. I
have some free time in Memphis, Tennessee late afternoon on April 15 and
early morning on the 16th. Then I detour by air to Miami
through the 19th. Some time might be free on the 17th
or 18th in Miami depending on what Regional Representative
George Braddock already has planned for those days. In other words, check
with me at smoses@centerltc.com
or 425-891-3640 if you have something in mind that might fit into the
schedule.
ATTENTION: TN, KY, OH, MI
As of now my days between April 20 and April 30 are wide open except
for driving from Memphis, TN to Toronto, Ontario via Jackson Center, Ohio
(the Airstream trailer factory.) Get out your map; plot my course; and if
I'm coming through your town (or close by) let's get the LTC Tour in front
of your group, your local paper, your Rotary Club, whatever! It looks like
my late-April route will take me through Nashville, TN; Louisville, KY;
Cincinnati, OH; Cleveland, OH; Detroit, MI and on to Toronto.
ATTENTION: NM, WA, OH, PA, WV, DC
From May 5 to 9, I'm in Santa Fe, New Mexico with time available but
without the Silver Bullet. From May 12 to 16, I'm in Seattle, WA for R&R,
still without the Silver Bullet, but available. By May 21, I'm back in
Toronto and headed toward Washington, DC. via Jackson Center, OH where
I'll pick up the Silver Bullet again, after factory servicing. From there,
between May 23 and 29, it looks like my path will take me through
Columbus, OH; Wheeling, WV; either Pittsburgh, PA or Morgantown, WV; and
points in between.
TO BOOK ME
If you'd like to plan something along that itinerary, let me know at
smoses@centerltc.com or
425-891-3640. For later dates and times, check the LTC Tour Calendar at
http://www.centerltc.com/TourCalendar/General.htm#April and consult
with me. If we can work your town and event in, we will. Keep in mind,
however, that Regional Representatives of the Center, who have ponied up
$500 of earnest money, get first call on the schedule as do all corporate
sponsors of the LTC Tour.
Now, assuming you have a time and location that works, what shall we do
and how do we set it up? You'll need to do most of the work, but Damon can
help. Call him at 206-283-7036 or email him at
damon@centerltc.com.
HOW WE SUPPORT YOU
Damon has been trained in PR by an expert--author, speaker and
LTCmonth.com founder, Marilee Driscoll, the LTC Tour's national consultant
for public relations and marketing.
Next, consult the Regional Representatives Tool Kit at
http://www.centerltc.com/Regional_Rep_ToolKit/index.htm. Even if
you're not a full-fledged Regional Rep for the LTC Tour sponsoring a full
day of events, you should find this resource helpful for many purposes.
You'll find a draft press release announcing the LTC Tour's visit. Add
details on your event and send it to local newspapers, radio and TV.
How do you know whom to send the press release to? Check out
"Organizations to Contact," also in the Regional Rep's Tool Kit. You'll
find lists of websites to help you locate the right reporters at your
local media. You'll also find lots of ideas on organizations that might be
willing to host the LTC Tour for a speaking event.
Reach out to local LTC providers, especially the ones most dependent on
private payers such as Continuing Care Retirement Communities and Assisted
Living Facilities. They understand the need for private financing and
they're also wonderful potential sources of prospects in need of LTC
protection. Their residents' families know first hand why they need LTC
insurance having just put their loved one in care.
If you have time to plan, consider sponsoring a Long-Term Care Graduate
Seminar, either the two hour mini-version or the full-day program. You'll
find the two-hour version described in the Regional Rep's Tool Kit and
details on the full-day version at
www.centerltc.com.
Check out "Planning Your LTC Tour Event" in the Tool Kit for more
ideas.
You'll also find my professional bio, a picture of the Silver Bullet,
and the "LTC Pledge for Baby Boomers" in the Regional Representatives Tool
Kit.
HOW TO HELP THE LTC TOUR, IDEA #2
Now, let's say I'm not going to be in your area for awhile, but you'd
like to get involved and help the LTC Tour achieve our goals. Is there
anything you can do right now?
Absolutely. Help us reach potential corporate LTC Tour sponsors. Who
should sponsor the LTC Tour? Any organization or company active in
long-term care service delivery or financing. For example, LTC providers,
LTC insurers (carriers, brokers and/or producers) and reverse mortgage
lenders.
How do you know if the company you have in mind already sponsors the
LTC Tour?
Major sponsors at the Platinum, Gold or Silver levels with signage on
the Silver Bullet include:
-- GoldenCareUSA
-- Bankers Life and Casualty
-- OneAmerica
-- Prudential
-- MetLife
-- Marilee Driscoll's LTCMonth.com
-- The American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance (AALTCI)
-- Penn Treaty
-- LTCI Partners
-- Long-Term Care Financial Partners
HOW TO BECOME A MAJOR SPONSOR OF THE LTC TOUR
If the company you have in mind is not on that list, find out why not!
Ask them to support the LTC Tour. The benefits are many including signage
on the Silver Bullet, ads in our elegant Presentation Packets, and the
right to schedule speaking engagements for Steve Moses at no extra charge.
The question I get asked most often after speaking engagements as I'm
giving "tours" of the Silver Bullet, is "Why isn't Company X or Company Y
on the Silver Bullet?" Good question. If your company isn't there, help us
correct that oversight. Anyone interested can get all the details at the
top of www.centerltc.com. Or send
them directly to the "LTC Tour Sponsor Packet," which explains all costs
and benefits in detail, at
http://www.centerltc.com/LTC_Tour_Sponsor_Packet.pdf.
Why wouldn't any company that cares about the future of long-term care
financing support the LTC Tour? Makes no sense not to . . .
Hundreds of thousands of people will see the Silver Bullet on the road.
We'll reach millions through the radio, TV and newspapers. Another goal is
to touch 15,000 financial advisors in person with the message that they
have a moral and fiduciary responsibility to get their clients protected
for LTC. (They don't have to sell LTCI, but if they don't, they do have to
send their clients to someone who does.) We hope the LTC Tour will add
heavily to the rolls of LTCI producers and LTC specialists all around the
country.
#############################
Recent feedback from Steve's presentations:
Van Gilbert: "I am a former nursing home administrator and now a
financial advisor. Your message is dead on."
Nicholas Munoz: "Great first presentation in understanding the
direction of Medicare/Medicaid and LTC."
Chuck Poole: "I wish Steve Moses was at one of these Q&A sessions with
Barack and Hillary."
Donna Wrabel: "Great presentation, it needs to be heard in Washington,
DC, where the real denial exists."
Christi Cheramie: "Excellent information. I market LTC to all my
investment clients. Everyone needs an LTC policy!!"
#############################
Updated: Thursday, April 10, 2008 11:45 AM (Central)
Dateline: Hot Springs, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 8705, State #10
#############################
NOT ONLY ELDERS NEED LONG-TERM CARE
LTC Comment: This article by Center for Long-Term Care Reform
supporter, LTC Graduate Seminar alumnus, and old friend David Landwehr
makes a good point. The piece deserves wider distribution, so here it is.
"Retiring Talk Show Host Reminds Us: Not Only Elders Need Long-term
Care,"
by
David Landwehr (www.LTCareSolutions.com)
March 27, 2008
Montel Williams was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in 1999. Earlier
this year, CBS reported that this season of his daytime talk show, the
17th, will be the last. The reason is the declining health of the host.
His story is a teachable moment for long-term care planning. The lesson
is this: none of us knows when our health will change, and we don't tend
to get healthier as we age. Mr. Williams is 51 now, which would mean he
was only 42 years old when he was diagnosed. A diagnosis of MS makes it
next to impossible to get long-term care insurance (some workplace
policies may offer some coverage to employees who are actively at work
during a specific enrollment time, even if they are otherwise
uninsurable).
Like another famous entertainer, Christopher Reeve, Mr. Williams'
health changed for the worse at an age that he had no reason to expect
that it would. By all appearances, Williams was someone who was fit,
healthy, and physically active. He is a veteran and a graduate from the
United States Naval Academy.
Christopher Reeve needed many years of long-term care before he died.
While no one can know the future, it is likely that Montel Williams will
also need extended long-term care. MS, in William's own words, "(means)
excruciating pain and that eventually I could lose control of my body." MS
is a potentially debilitating autoimmune disease that affects the brain
and spinal cord.
Although celebrities may have the resources to weather the financial
consequences of extended long- term care, most Americans find the
financial implications can be devastating.
As Reeve's story and Williams' situation demonstrate to us, our best
intentions to buy long-term care insurance in the future may be derailed
by a health change at a relatively young age. There are many Americans who
will need long-term care well before age 65, and even before age 50. The
causes are many, from brain tumors to car accidents to debilitating
illnesses such as MS and early Alzheimer's.
Since illness or injury can strike at any age, purchasing long-term
care insurance by age 50 or even age 40 may be a very smart financial
decision.
Learn more...
About LT Care Solutions
LT Care Solutions, Inc. specializes in LTC planning for both group
programs for companies and for individuals since 1992. We believe that
dabbling is dangerous and LTC is an important decision best made in
consultation with an experienced LTCi advisor. Call us at 316-945-2011 or
Go to www.LTCareSolutions.com for more info.
Website:
http://www.LTCareSolutions.com
LT Care Solutions
David Landwehr CLTC
President
email:
dlandwehr@ltcaresolutions.com
phone: 316-945-2011
#############################
Updated: Wednesday, April 9, 2008 2:00 PM (Central)
Dateline: Hot Springs, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 8705, State #10
#############################
LTC BULLET: LTC PLANNING REQUIRES EMOTION AND THOUGHT
LTC Comment: A PBS special "Caring for Your Parents" engaged the heart
but not the mind. Analysis after the ***news.***
*** LTC TOUR UPDATE. After weeks of constant travel, speaking
engagements, and computer problems, the LTC Tour has hunkered down in Hot
Springs, AR for a few days to catch up with research, scheduling and
fund-raising. We've posted our recent progress and described the main Tour
events in "LTC E-Alerts." So here are a few items to personalize the LTC
Tour.
In Houston, hosted by Center for Long-Term Care Reform Regional
Representative and LTCI specialist par excellence Honey Leveen, I
gave several talks at The Forum, an outstanding Continuing Care Retirement
Community. The Forum provided meeting rooms, a highly visible parking spot
for the Silver Bullet and graciously offered me their comfortable guest
quarters for two nights.
Here's a
picture
of The Forum's Director of Community Relations Kate Dowlen, Honey Leveen
and myself beside the Silver Bullet.
Here's a picture
of Lillie Pontello (posted with permission), a charming and thoughtful
resident of The Forum, who attended my presentations and took the Silver
Bullet "tour":
Finally, check out this
interview with
Kate Dowlen and her Forum colleague Natalie Rogers, who describe The Forum
and explain why their company hosted the "National Long-Term Care
Consciousness Tour." ***
*** CHECK OUT OUR YOU-TUBE CHANNEL. Finally overcoming some technical
challenges, we're posting much more content to the Center for Long-Term
Care Reform's 2008 LTC Tour YouTube Channel. Check it out at
http://www.youtube.com/LTCconsciousnessTOUR. Then scroll down for more
videos. Check the channel often for the latest videos from the National
Long-Term Care Consciousness Tour. ***
*** CHARMAINE GOLSAN, Center for Long-Term Care Reform Regional
Representative for Baton Rouge, Louisiana graces the cover of Life
Insurance Selling magazine this month with her assistant Tawny Roberts
and long-time client Pat Ketelson. See the cover here:
http://www.centerltc.com/images/CharmaineGolsan.pdf. Check out editor
Gordon Bess's excellent and moving article "A Lifetime of Caring" about
Ms. Golsan and her LTCI practice in this month's issue. ***
*** GAIL LINDSEY, yet another Center Regional Rep, this time for
Chattanooga, Tennessee, is in the news. Her website at
http://lindseyassociatesltc.com/ cites links to five news stories she
and assistant Jason Hilner made happen about the LTC Tour and the
importance of responsible LTC planning and rational LTC public policy. ***
LTC BULLET: GOOD LTC PLANNING REQUIRES EMOTION AND THOUGHT
LTC Comment: "Caring for Your Parents," a Public Broadcasting System
documentary, tracked five families coping with the challenge. It aired
Wednesday, April 2, 2008. You can watch the program streamed, as I did
last night,
here
In the week between the show's broadcast and when I viewed it online,
numerous "LTC Bullets" readers contacted me with the same criticism:
"Caring for Your Parents," they said, was accurate and heart wrenching in
its depiction of the problem. But the show did nothing, zero, to suggest
solutions. Many of the emotional and financial problems depicted so
movingly in the program could have been mitigated if the families had
planned ahead, our readers suggested. Specifically, if they'd had
long-term care insurance, they could have afforded high-quality,
professional, and loving assistance with the caregiving challenges.
Here's an example of such criticism from Center member and LTCI
producer Barbara Hanson of California: "Another lost opportunity for sane
planning! Lots of need and no realistic relief . . .what will it take to
get the media awake?" Barbara's message cited several examples from her
own clients whose LTC experiences were easier thanks to their LTCI
coverage.
My initial reaction to such criticism of the show was dismissive. Why
does every program have to focus on planning? Why can't we just watch and
feel and empathize? Wouldn't such emotional immersion also make us start
to think? Does every program about caregiving have to focus on money,
planning and insurance?
Then I watched the show. I felt their pain. My eyes welled. I compared
the problems described in the program with LTC challenges in my own
family. I let the show wash over me emotionally.
About half way through, however, my brain kicked in. Wait a minute, I
thought, there is plenty in this program about planning, or rather, the
lack of planning. There is plenty in this program about financing, only it
is government funding, not private funds. There are plenty of clues in
this program about what causes people to end up in the emotional and
financial distress the program so movingly describes.
For example, consider these notes I took while watching the show. They
aren't direct quotes, just paraphrases:
Nurses provided by the state put in four hours per day.
Man put both parents in a nursing home--guess who paid.
Medicaid pays for some in-home care, and Thelma makes up the
difference.
I can't visit my parents as much as I want because of the money.
In a nutshell, lack of private funds to purchase home and respite care
account for the worst of the emotional and financial strain of caregiving.
Medicaid ameliorates the strain slightly, but not enough. By the time the
families in the show reached the climactic caregiving portrayed, it was
too late for private insurance to help.
It is well-known that people most likely to buy long-term care
insurance--and avoid some of the worst problems of LTC for their own
families in the future--are people who have been through a difficult
caregiving experience themselves.
Older boomers are going through such experiences with their own parents
today. So the average age of purchase of private LTCI is declining toward
the average age of the front cusp of the boomer generation.
If we wait 18 years for the boomer generation to run its course, maybe
everyone will wake up to the need for responsible and early long-term care
planning. But if we wait that long, a great many people will suffer
needlessly.
So, when I apply my mind and not just my heart to "Caring for Your
Parents," I come away with the same bottom line as our readers. This fine
program was an opportunity lost.
For a much better treatment of the problem AND the solution, read
nationally syndicated Chicago Sun Times financial columnist Terry
Savage's
article titled "Who'll look after you? The Savage Truth: If you're
counting on long-term government aid for the elderly, think again."
Published just two days before the PBS special aired, this article gives
sound advice:
"If you can pay for your care, there will be many alternatives ranging
from home care to assisted living to nursing homes that accept only
privately paying patients. But typically this cost can devastate a
family's retirement savings -- and leave a surviving spouse without any
assets.
"The first step is to consider the purchase of long-term care
insurance. It may be too expensive for everyone, but those who can afford
at least some coverage will ensure that they do not spend their last years
in an underfunded, overcrowded nursing home. . . .
"And what if you never use your policy? Congratulations. I hope you
never need it -- or your homeowner's insurance in case of a fire. But the
chances are 10 times as great after age 65 that you'll need some form of
care than that your house will burn down.
"Insurance is always a bet against the odds. But you can't collect if
you don't bet. And that's The Savage Truth."
The subject families in "Caring for Your Parents" didn't bet and they
lost big.
(Thanks to Center member and LTCI veteran Murray Gordon for bringing
this Terry Savage article to our attention.)
#############################
Updated: Tuesday, April 8, 2008 1:00 PM (Central)
Dateline: Hot Springs, AR--
LTC Tour: Mile 8495, State #10
#############################
LTC STUFF YOU SHOULD KNOW
LTC Comment: Today is the first I've had in a full month without
driving or speaking responsibilities and WITH email and internet access.
So I'm catching up on reading and research. Here is some interesting LTC
miscellany to help catch you up too.
############################
LTC Comment: Here's the latest from the Heritage Foundation on the
entitlement funding crisis.
CHARTS AND SLIDESHOWS
2008 Federal Revenue and Spending Book of Charts
41 information graphics are provided in this online resource including
key charts on mandatory spending and entitlement burdens:
http://www.heritage.org/research/features/BudgetChartBook/
Some key charts:
Mandatory Spending Consumes Growing Share of Total Spending (chart)
Entitlement Reforms are Needed to Control Spending (chart)
Entitlement Spending Will More Than Double by 2050 (chart)
Federal Budget Deficit Will Reach Levels Never Seen Before in U.S.
(chart)
Future Burden of Medicare
A PDF slideshow by Dr. Tom R. Saving, Director of the Private
Enterprise Research Center at Texas A&M University and a trustee of the
Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds from 2000 to 2007:
HERE
HERITAGE RESEARCH
Medicare and Social Security: The Challenge of Giant Entitlement Costs
by David C. John and Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D.
WebMemo #1857
March 25, 2008
Social Security and Medicare have promised $42.9 trillion more in
benefits to senior and disabled workers than the programs will be able to
pay, according to a new report. The 2008 annual report of the trustees of
the Social Security and Medicare trust funds concludes that both programs
will require progressively larger transfers from general revenues to
maintain the projected levels of spending. The burden from Social Security
and Medicare will fall directly on younger generations and this report
affirms the need for Congress to begin a serious overhaul of both of these
vital programs.
www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/wm1867.cfm
2008 Social Security Trustees Report Continues to Show the Urgent Need
for Reform
by David C. John
WebMemo #1868
March 26, 2008
The 2008 Social Security Trustees Report was released on March 25. This
WebMemo explains the important facts and answers the frequently asked
questions about Social Security's financial outlook.
www.heritage.org/Research/SocialSecurity/wm1868.cfm
Congress Must Not Ignore the Medicare Trustees' Warning
by Greg D'Angelo and Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D.
WebMemo #1869
March 26, 2008
Congress needs to get serious about Medicare reform. On March 25, the
Medicare Trustees issued a Medicare funding warning that triggers
presidential and congressional action to reduce the Medicare's excessive
dependence on general revenues as part of its overall financing. Congress
enacted the Medicare "trigger" to call congressional and public attention
to the enormous financial challenge the Medicare program faces. As the
baby boomer generation starts retiring and health costs continue to
escalate, the Medicare Trustees urge decisive congressional action.
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