Qualifying for Medicaid LTC Benefits Could Get Tougher
What You Need to Know
The Paragon Health Institute, a research center with Trump administration ties, sponsored the panel discussion.
One participant suggested that private insurance could be part of the solution.
All panelists agreed that too many people are depending on Medicaid to pay for care.
An independent research center that helps Republican officials develop and implement health care policies is thinking about long-term care finance.
The Paragon Health Institute on Tuesday brought in Ken Dychtwald, the CEO of the Age Wave aging issues consulting firm, to moderate a web-based panel discussion on the future of long-term care in the United States.
One of the speakers was Stephen Moses, the president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform, a long-time advocate of encouraging people to do more to plan for their long-term care needs, and the author of a Paragon paper on ways to realign U.S. LTC planning incentives.
“Long-term care in America is broken,” Moses told the attendees.
Moses said the current Medicaid-based financing system is unfair, encourages high-income people to hide assets to qualify for public benefits, and has created shortages of care and problems with quality.
Moses called for Congress to make Medicaid LTC benefits eligibility rules simpler and more consistent on the state level; reduce people’s ability to keep assets out of Medicaid LTC benefits eligibility calculations; and lengthen the “lookback” period for Medicaid reviews of an older patient’s transfers of assets to loved ones to 20 years, from five years today.
What it means: Financial professionals with clients who are thinking about using Medicaid to pay for long-term care services need to keep a close eye on Washington.
Paragon Health Institute: Paragon is a nonprofit policy center that was founded in 2020.
It’s set up as a nonpartisan organization, but Brian Blase, the president and founder, previously was a special assistant for economic policy under former President Donald Trump.
Blase and other Paragon staff members have frequently testified on Capitol Hill in recent years. In March, for example, Blase testified at a House Ways and Means subcommittee hearing on his belief that the Affordable Care Act has increased health insurance costs.
The group has supported efforts by states such as Florida to avoid using ACA money to expand their Medicaid programs, and it has also supported the rollback of emergency Medicaid enrollment expansion rules implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The panel discussion: The Paragon LTC policy event attracted more than 100 online attendees.
Dychtwald, who was just 36 in 1986, when he started Age Wave, and then had two living parents, told the audience that the long-term care planning topic will be critical both as a policy issue and as a personal concern.
“You’ll be dealing with this for the rest of your lives,” Dychtwald said. “And you’ll probably be dealing with it your own family.”
Dychtwald, who will turn 74 this year, said he ended up paying for care for his own father, Seymour Dychtwald, who died in 2013, after his father lost his vision to macular degeneration, and for his mother, Pearl Dychtwald, who died in 2016 after facing Alzheimer’s.