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Home Health Care To
say most of us would rather stay in our homes when the need for long-term
care arises, is an understatement! Fortunately, most long-term care insurance
policies today provide for that contingency to some degree. Staying at
home is less expensive than a nursing home, although, you may have to
pay $20,000 a year, out of pocket, if you do not have long-term care insurance.
(1)
Home Care Services are household services provided by someone other than yourself when you are unable to do them. Services include, but are not limited to, nursing, personal care, homemaker or chore services, shopping, planning menus, preparing meals, home delivered meals, laundry, and light house cleaning and maintenance. Home delivered meals, also known as meals-on-wheels, provides meals to those unable to prepare their own food. A home health care provider is a business providing either the services mentioned above, or Hospice services. The following requirements apply to both:
Home health
care businesses include services provided by a medical social worker,
home health aide, homemaker, and similar services. To see the average cost of home health care in 2005, in your area please visit The MetLife Market Survey on Nursing Home and Home Care Costs. 1. http://www.opm.gov/insure/ltc/snippetts.htm |
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