Turkey, Pumpkin Pie and the Long-Term Care Conversation: LTCI Insider

A Thanksgiving meal

What You Need to Know

The holiday might be a time for adult children, nieces and nephews to ask questions.
Home maintenance, bill-paying and scams should be on the agenda.
You could host part of the conversation.

This is Long-Term Care Awareness Month, and Thanksgiving itself can do some of the work of getting your clients to think about long-term care.

If your clients are planning to spend time with aging parents and relatives during the holiday season, that can be a great time to observe and ask if loved ones are prepared and have plans in place before a long-term care crisis occurs.

Why should clients do that?

Because most of us want to stay at home as long as possible, instead of rushing into an assisted living facility or nursing home.

But even home care is expensive, and the cost of care will continue to increase. Are your clients aware of the impact of aging?

The Statistics

Studies indicate that, as we age, our risk of dementia will drastically increase between the ages of 65 and 85.

Over the next 10 years, one in every three people will likely become incapacitated.

Other family members will be affected by the need to provide care.

This could include time taken out of work to provide needed supervision and even caregiving for a parent in crisis.

The Client Advice Strategy

To come up with ideas about how agents and advisors can help clients start conversations about this topic, I turned to Kristina George, a wealth manager at Northstar Financial Planning.

See also  A Medicare Part D Premium Warning for Financial Planners

She recently completed a new professional designation, the Elder Planning Specialist Designation, which educates financial advisors about how to help clients and their families design a comprehensive aging plan.

Here are eight key questions she suggests that families discuss while loved ones are still in good health.

1. What challenges in their current living situation do the aging family members foresee over the next few years?

These may include privacy, control, safety and avoiding isolation.

2. What are ideas for meeting those challenges?

The discussion could cover transportation needs, in-home support, and issues with the safety of finances.

3. Since many seniors want to stay at home as long as possible, are any repairs needed to make the property safe?

Do aging family members have a trusted handyman?

4. What resources are available?

Can adult children assist, or are they across the country?

What kind of community assistance is available?

Is a team of professional advisors in place?

5. Do the aging family members need help with understanding investments, medical coverage and medicines?

And what about transportation to medical appointments?