
A big concern of many of my estate planning clients is what happens if they need long-term health care in a nursing home but they cannot make important financial and health care decisions on their own anymore due to dementia, serious injury or prolonged illness. This is especially relevant if Medicaid (MassHealth), the federal/state program that provides benefits to pay for long-term nursing home care expenses, will be necessary. There are two essential estate planning documents that you can complete now to alleviate these concerns: a Power of Attorney and a Health Care Proxy.
A Power of Attorney appoints a person called an attorney-in-fact to make financial decisions on your behalf when you cannot do so yourself. A Health Care Proxy appoints a person called a health care agent to make health care decisions for you if you are unable to do so yourself. Both documents should include specific language to give your appointed agent the authority to manage your long-term care in a nursing home. Below are a few of the provisions that should be included in these documents.
Power of Attorney
Your Power of Attorney should be comprehensive in order to address anticipated and unanticipated long-term care circumstances. For example, the Power of Attorney should include language that permits your attorney-in-fact to complete an application for Medicaid benefits on your behalf and appeal any denial of benefits for you. Your attorney-in-fact should also have authority to sign nursing home agreements on your behalf. However, it is important your attorney-in-fact’s authority is limited so that he or she cannot sign an agreement that restricts your rights (or the rights of your estate) to pursue litigation in the event you suffer harm; many of these agreements mandate arbitration and/or mediation in the event of the nursing home’s illegal or harmful actions toward you. A new federal rule attempts to curtail mandated arbitration in agreements but does not ban it outright. Additionally, it may be appropriate for your Power of Attorney to give your attorney-in-fact the authority to make gifts of your assets, and designate beneficiaries of bank accounts, retirement accounts, annuities and life insurance policies. The Power of Attorney may also include provisions that allow your attorney-in-fact to change your estate plan. The purpose of these provisions is to permit your attorney-in-fact the flexibility to appropriately manage, transfer, or spend down your assets to qualify you for Medicaid benefits, if necessary. Your Power of Attorney can be drafted so that only certain attorneys-in-fact have the authority to take specific actions, and only certain family members can receive gifts of your assets. Although these powers may not be appropriate in every case, if you anticipate that you may wish to apply for Medicaid benefits in the future, your Power of Attorney should contemplate that these types of actions may be necessary.
Health Care Proxy
Your Health Care Proxy should include the standard powers given to your health care agent under Massachusetts law. The Proxy should also contain expanded powers to permit your health care agent to assist with long-term care matters, with the goal of eliminating the need to petition the court to appoint a guardian to make health care decisions on your behalf in certain situations. For example, your Proxy should give your health care agent the ability to authorize the administration of medication, employ and terminate the employment of doctors and other medical providers, admit and discharge you from a medical facility, and sign a MOLST (Medical Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment) on your behalf. In the event it is necessary to go to court, the Proxy’s expanded powers clearly express your wish to give your agent the authority to take certain actions and may simplify the appointment process.
If you already have these documents, I recommend that you contact an attorney experienced in elder law and estate planning to review them to ensure that the necessary long-term care planning provisions are included. If you do not have a Power of Attorney or Health Care Proxy and wish to learn more about them from an estate planning attorney in a one-on-one meeting, an attorney at Samuel, Sayward & Baler LLC can meet and discuss these documents with you. Alternatively, you may join Attorneys Suzanne R. Sayward and Abigail V. Poole on Thursday, October 17th at 1:00 p.m. for a presentation on this topic at the Dedham Senior Center located at 735 Washington Street, Dedham, Massachusetts. Please RSVP to Courtney Daly at (781)326-1650.
Attorney Abigail V. Poole is an associate attorney with the Dedham firm of Samuel, Sayward & Baler LLC which focuses on advising its clients in the areas of estate planning, estate settlement and elder law matters. She is an active member of the Massachusetts Chapter of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA). This article is not intended to provide legal advice or create or imply an attorney-client relationship. No information contained herein is a substitute for a personal consultation with an attorney. For more information visit www.ssbllc.com or call 781/461-1020.
October, 2019
© 2019 Samuel, Sayward & Baler LLC
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