How to Plan for Long-Term Care
Many older people are independent. But later in life, you or someone you love may
need help with daily activities. These include shopping, cooking, and bathing. A variety
of services and facilities can provide help that lets people stay active and connected
with family, friends, and neighbors.
Planning ahead
The key to successful long-term care is planning. To get started:
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Talk with your healthcare provider or family and friends if you're having trouble
with everyday activities. These include walking, managing finances, or driving.
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Learn about the types of services and care in your community by talking to healthcare
providers, social workers, family, and friends. The Area Agency on Aging and local
and state offices of aging and social services can give you lists of home healthcare
providers, adult daycare centers, meal programs, companion services, and transportation
services.
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Learn how much long-term care would cost. Find out how much of the costs Medicare
or your insurance plan will pay. You may want to look into long-term care insurance
or other plans that can help pay the costs. The Area Agency on Aging and local and
state offices of aging and social services may have information to help.
Needing more care
At some point, support from family, friends, and local meal and transportation programs
may not be enough. If you need more help with everyday activities, you may need to
move to a place where care is available 24-hours a day. These are two types of residential-care
facilities:
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Assisted-living communities. These offer different levels of care that often include meals, recreation, security,
and help with bathing, dressing, medicine management, and housekeeping. Residents
often have their own rooms or apartments as part of a larger community. These could
also include continuing care retirement communities. They have several different levels
of care that residents can move through.
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Nursing homes or skilled-nursing facilities. These give round-the-clock service and supervision, medical care, and rehabilitation
for residents who are mostly frail, very ill, or have dementia.
Finding the right place
To find long-term care for yourself or someone else:
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Ask questions. Your state's office of the long-term care ombudsman can give information about specific
nursing homes.
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Call around. Contact places that interest you. Ask questions about vacancies, number of residents,
costs, and payment methods. You should also ask about services that may be important
to you. For example, special units for people with Alzheimer's disease. Talk with
others who may have had similar experiences in searching for places.
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Visit the facilities. When you find a place that seems right, go and talk with the staff, residents, and
residents' family members. Check out the facility for cleanliness and safety. Watch
the way the staff treats residents.
For more information, visit the National Institute on Aging, the Eldercare Locator, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).