• About / Contact
  • Calculators and Visualizations
  • Economic Concepts
  • Advertise
  • Disclosure

Don't Quit Your Day Job...

The Intersection of Personal Finance, Economics, and Politics.

RSS
  • Personal Finance
    • Debt
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Health
  • Economics
    • Calculators
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Offbeat
    • Weekender
    • Books
    • Music
    • Sports
  • Real Estate
    • Bay Area
  • Technology

Long Term Care – Not a Long Way Off?

Posted By PK    Last updated July 6th, 2012 4 Comments

Yes, I know, most readers of this site tend to be of the younger variety – the type with young kids. However, being young and ‘invincible’ is no reason to be completely ignorant about the non-invincible folks in our society.  Fact is, with increasing life expectancy comes an increasing amount of the so-called ‘diseases of old age’ (which aren’t necessarily restricted to our elders!).

Long Term Care Statistics & Costs

Pity the Stock Photo Man Chosen to Represent This Article!

Long Term Care breaks down as a service in which people who can not attend to their daily needs are looked to by responsible parties.  Those parties may be friends or family, paid in-home help, or staff and workers in a care facility (such as a nursing home).  The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality estimated that a whopping 43% of people turning 65 will need some form of long term care in their lives, while 20% will need it for a period of 5 or more months.  Women are twice as likely to use long term care as men, and 70% of residents at facilities are women.

Now, some informal estimates say the vast majority of long term care is provided by friends and families, but I was interested in some reasonable estimates as to the cost of long term care.  As you know, I live in California so my numbers are probably on the high end (let’s hear it for high cost of living!).  Check these California numbers out:

  • Homemaker Services and Home Health Aids run around the same cost as a year of private college (and room and board) – right around $50,000 a year.
  • Adult Day Health Care – sort of like Day Care so caregivers can attend to their careers – runs around $20,020 annually.
  • Private Assisted Facilities will cost you around $42,000 annually in California.
  • A private or semi-private room in a Nursing Home will cost you upwards of $90,000 a year(!).

Do You Have Aging Parents?

A generation back there wasn’t as much need for long term care, but the massive rise of autoimmune diseases (not to mention stalwarts like stroke and heart attacks) is causing long term care to be one of the big growth industries.  With people living to be the ages they are, it’s almost not a question if you’ll get an autoimmune disease, but which one(s).  The advanced stages of all of the diseases – be them Arthritis, Crohn’s Disease, Lupus, Diabetes, or Spondyloarthropathy (or one of the hundreds of others) – make it very hard for a person to complete their day to day tasks.  And if you don’t have to contend with these in the near future, maybe you having aging parents or relatives that do.

Truth is, we don’t have to think about long term care every day – but, with an eye on the future, we have to know our options – insurance, day care, in home help or otherwise.

Portions of this article promoted by Genworth Financial.

Have you given any thought to long term care?  Do you have relatives or friends that tend to aging or sick people?  Do you have a long term care plan in place?


If you enjoyed this post, let others know!


Filed Under: Personal Finance Tagged With: day care, insurance, long term care, nursing home

DQYDJ Email Newsletter

Like what you see on this post?

Get the new stuff before everyone else. Sign-up below.


Follow @twitterapi


  • Krantcents

    I saw firsthand how expensive long term care is with my mother.  I bought LTC insurance about 4 years ago.

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      None for me, currently – but like all products that are used quite a bit, I’m trying to understand the necessity and benefits. Thanks for the example!

  • Dr. Robert Weed

    Haveing an affordable plan in place really helps protect your future retirement … but so many people require extended care before they get old because of the advances in medical science. Health insurance does NOT pay for most of it and pays NOTHING toward custodial care, which is wha most people who need care will require (help with everyday activies of daily living). I bought my policy at 46.

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      Right – from what I was reading, Medicare might pay for some of it, but the most likely outcome is family and friends will be spending their time to provide care.

      I don’t have a policy now, but I’m definitely following the advice (and developments) in the field. Thanks for your comment!

RSS Twitter Facebook Email

Connect

Subscribe to DQYDJ's RSS or Email feed:

Newest on DQYDJ

  • Canadian Real Estate: A Rapidly Inflating Bubble
  • Don’t Look Now – Rapidly Changing Mortgage and Predicted Inflation Rates!
  • The DQYDJ Weekender 6/15/2013
  • The Government, The Internet, and The Surveillance State – Graphed
  • Want to Be a Better Investor? Ask Your Wife!

DQYDJ’s Greatest Hits

  • Racial Bias in Foul Rates among NBA Referees
  • Give Me Your Wallet! A Visualization of IRS Tax Collection, 1960 – 2010
  • Is Social Security a Good Investment?
  • Should You Get a Degree or Drive a Truck?
  • Must Reads for Serious Thinkers: The Minimum Wage Crushes the Teen Employment Rate
  • Supply and Demand (And Other Economic Arguments Against the Minimum Wage)
  • The Fundamental Problem With Financial Models
  • Milton Friedman’s Permanent Income Hypothesis
  • Real Bay Area Income and Home Calculator, 2011 Edition!
  • Dr. S&P or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying About the Credit Rating Downgrade

Links

  • I Am One Percent
  • Len Penzo
  • Your Finances Simplified
  • Stacking Benjamins
  • Political Calculations
  • Burbed
  • My Journey to Millions
  • Hope to Prosper
  • Financial Uproar
  • Free By 50

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2013 Don't Quit Your Day Job...

Some links on this page are tied to affiliate programs. See our disclosure page for more information.