People with Medicare and the Health Insurance Marketplace: Frequently Asked Questions
Commonly asked questions by seniors on Medicare and other health law changes are answered here.
While a majority of middle-income baby boomers report having at least a rough retirement financial plan in place, an alarming number—72 %—have no plan of any kind to address the day-to-day care they may someday need in retirement, according to a recent study released by the Bankers Life and Casualty Company Center for a Secure Retirement (CSR) study, Retirement Care Planning: The Middle-Income Boomer Perspective, focused on 1,299 Americans ages 49 to 67 with an annual household income of between $25,000 and $75,000, and found that only one in five (20%) have a rough plan for their retirement care and just 8% have a detailed plan.
More Prepared for Death than Life
In fact, the study cites that boomers today are nearly five times more likely to be concretely planning for when they pass away than to have a detailed plan for the ongoing long-term care they may need, such as nursing care or home care, while they live out their retirement years.
Eight in ten (81%) of boomers have taken at least one detailed action to prepare for when they pass away, including:
By comparison, less than one-fifth (17%) of boomers have taken concrete action to plan for their care during the later years of their life.
Long-Term Care Expectations and Reality
Although boomers today anticipate that they will have less financial security and support in their retirement years than previous generations, the study found that the current generations of retirees significantly underestimate the likelihood of one day needing long-term care. Only one-third (36%) believe they will need long-term care services, whereas the actual chance of needing care is 70%, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
When it comes to discussing retirement care, only about half of all middle-income Boomers have had a conversation with anyone (even their spouse) about how they wish to receive long-term care (43%) or how they will pay for it (56%). Furthermore, eight in ten could not venture a guess on the cost for home health aide services (81%) or nursing home care (78%).
Even though boomers acknowledge that a typical nursing home stay will impact their finances, the vast majority significantly underestimate the annual cost of nursing home care by estimating that a year’s stay averages $46,890 when the actual average cost is nearly double at $90,520. On the other hand, boomers overestimate the hourly cost of a home health aide by more than double.
Source: Assisting Hands Home Care in association with IlluminAge. © IlluminAge 2013
Commonly asked questions by seniors on Medicare and other health law changes are answered here.
If you think Facebook, Twitter, chat rooms, Skype and blogging are only for young people, think again! Today, seniors are…
The United States Chamber of Commerce says the U.S. Department of Labor ruling on on Tuesday, September 17 changing wage...
September is Pain Awareness Month. For many centuries, pain was a mystery to human beings. Like the rising and setting…