AARP:
The American Association of Retired Persons: A nonprofit organization
engaged in activities such as education, lobbying, research, etc.
for the benefit of the senior population.
Activities of Daily Living (ADLs): Activities that people
do everyday - eating, bathing, dressing, moving about (mobility),
transferring (for instance, from a bed to a chair), using the toilet,
and maintaining bladder and bowel continence - used to measure the
ability to function.
Acute Care: Care for illness or injury that usually develops
rapidly, has pronounced symptoms and is finite in length. Medical
care that is required for a short period of time to cure a certain
illness and/or condition.
Adult Day Care: Social, recreational and/or rehabilitative
services provided for persons who benefit from daytime supervision.
An alternative between care in the home and in an institution. Refers
to health support and rehabilitation services provided in the community
to people who are unable to care for themselves independently during
the day but are able to live at home at night.
Adult Foster Care: A live-in arrangement where one adult
lives with and is provided care and/or services by an unrelated
individual or family. Such arrangements may be certified by the
state or managed independently.
Ageism: Prejudice against people because of their age.
Aging in Place: When an older individual continues to live
at home or within the community, outside of an institutional environment.
Alternate Facility: A licensed residence other than a skilled
nursing facility where care services are delivered (i.e. hospice,
assisted living, Alzheimer's or Christian Science setting).
Alternate Plan of Care Benefit: Payment for a special arrangement
of services specifically designed to allow the person to reside
in a setting other than a nursing facility (i.e. services to provide
assistance and capital improvements such as ramps, grab bars and/or
durable medical equipment).
Alzheimer's Disease: A form of organic dementia resulting
in premature mental deterioration, first described in 1906 by German
neurologist, Alois Alzheimer.
Alzheimer's Units: Special living units within skilled nursing
facilities or assisted living facilities specifically providing
care and services for those with Alzheimer's disease.
Aphasia: Loss of the ability to use or understand language.
Assessment: A determination of physical and/or mental status
by a health professional based on established medical guidelines
or functional guidelines.
Asset Protection: Willful legal planning to achieve protection
from Medicaid "spend-down" requirements, typically provided
by irreversible trusts - recently outlawed by Congress except under
specific conditions.
Assisted Living Facility (ALF): A non-medical institution
providing room, board, laundry, some forms of personal care, and
usually recreational services. Licensed by state departments of
social services, these facilities exist under several names including
domiciliary care facility, sheltered house, board and care home,
community-based care facility, residential care facility, etc.
Bed Reservation Benefit: Pays the cost of reserving you a
place in a care facility should you need to be hospitalized during
a covered stay.
Benefit Period: The maximum time, usually in days, that a
policy will pay the daily benefit. The average stay in a skilled
nursing facility is 2.8 years, so many people choose either a 3
year plan (1095 days) or 4 year plan (1465 days) to cover the average
stay plus a little time to spare. Others feel safest with an unlimited
benefit period.
Capital Improvements: Permanent physical adaptations to a
residence which enables an individual to remain and function in
that environment.
Care Coordinator: A health care professional whose training
includes managing and arranging for long term care services. This
person can be a doctor, nurse, social worker or other similarly
trained, and licensed professional.
Care Management: Services provided by a professional, typically
a nurse or social worker, to assess, coordinate, and monitor the
overall medical, personal, and social services needed by an individual
requiring long-term care.
Caregiver - Primary: The key person (usually a relative)
overseeing and providing the care for another person.
Caregiver(s) - Secondary: Relatives or others who assist
part-time in giving care.
Catastrophic Illness: Illness resulting in sudden temporary
or permanent change or significant disruption to a person's normal
lifestyle.
Chronic Care: Care for an illness continuing over a protracted
period of time or recurring frequently. Chronic conditions often
begin inconspicuously and symptoms are less pronounced than acute
conditions.
Cognitive Impairment: Refers to the loss or deterioration
of mental capacity in people suffering from conditions such as Alzheimer's
disease.
Cognitive Reinstatement: A provision to continue a policy
which has lapsed (providing that back premiums are paid) when the
cause of the lapse was due to cognitive impairment.
Continuing Care Retirement Community (CCRC): A residential
community providing a variety of living arrangements and services
from independent living apartments to ALF and SNF care.
Custodial Care: Personal services that can be given safely
and reasonably by a non-medical person, designed mainly to assist
with ADLs, including bathing, eating, dressing and other routine
activities.
Daily Benefit Amount: A specified, maximum, daily, dollar
amount payable on a covered period of care. Your choice should take
into account the local costs of care, how much you could pay for
care out of your own resources, and how much money or care you could
count on from your family.
Elimination Period: A deductible. A specified time period
of covered care where no benefits are payable.
Home Health Care: Refers to a wide range of services, from
skilled care and physical therapy to personal care delivered at
home or in a residential setting.
Homemaker Services: Assistance given in managing and maintaining
household activities that allows you to remain safely in your home
when you can not manage those activities on your own. May include
meal preparation, laundry, cleaning, chores, etc.
Inflation Protection: Increases the daily benefit amount
on an annual basis. If elected, increases benefits in order to protect
against the effects of inflation. Most common is the Compound 5%
Inflation Rider which increases the daily benefit amount each year
by 5% of the previous years daily benefit amount. The compound effect
really begins to take off around the 20th year, so if you are younger
when you buy, this seems to be the best choice.
Intermediate Nursing Care: Assistance needed for stable conditions
that require daily, but not 24-hour, nursing supervision. Such care
is ordered by a physician and supervised by registered nurses. It
is less specialized than skilled nursing care, often involves more
personal care, and is generally needed for a long period of time.
Long Term Care (LTC): Assistance, expected to be provided
over a long period of time, to people with chronic health conditions
and/or physical disabilities who are unable to care for themselves
without the help of another person or assistive technology.
Long Term Care Insurance (LTCI): Insurance available through
private insurance companies as a means for individuals to protect
themselves against the high costs of long-term care.
Medicaid: A means-tested program supported by federal, state,
and local funds and administered by each state to provide health
care for eligible low-income individuals
Medicare: A federal government insurance program to assist
those age 65 and over and the disabled with medical and hospital
expenses. Medicare covers only skilled care in a skilled nursing
facility and limited skilled nursing care at home. It does
not provide benefits for personal or custodial care. Medicare
requires co-payments and deductibles.
Medicare Supplement or "Medigap": Policies that
are private insurance policies that supplement Medicare benefits
by covering CO-payments and deductibles for medical and hospital
expenses. These policies do not provide coverage for personal or
custodial care.
Nursing Home: A facility that provides room and board and
a planned, continuous medical treatment program, including 24-hour-per-day
skilled nursing care, personal care, and custodial care.
Personal Care: Refers to assistance provided by another person
to help with walking, bathing, eating, and other routine daily tasks.
It is provided by aides who are not medical professionals but are
trained to help with these tasks.
Pre-Existing Conditions: Medical conditions that existed
prior to the effective date of the policy. Some policies may exclude
claims stemming from a condition that falls under this definition
for a specified period of time.
Respite Care: Is nursing home or home care that temporarily
replaces the existing level of support received from an informal,
non paid caregiver for the purpose of providing care and supervision
to the patient while relieving the caregiver.
Skilled Nursing Care: Nursing and rehabilitative care provided
by or under the direction of skilled medical personnel - available
24-hours a day & ordered by a physician under a treatment plan.
Can be either in a facility setting or at-home. Note: Medicare and
Medicaid both have their own definitions of "skilled nursing
care" which do not necessarily match those found in LTC policies.
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF): A state licensed institutional
setting which provides nursing and rehabilitative care provided
by or under the direction of skilled medical personnel - available
24-hours a day & ordered by a physician under a treatment plan.
Spend-down: Depleting almost all assets to meet eligibility
requirements for Medicaid.
Third-Party Notification: Gives you the option of having
the "premium overdue" notice sent to a third party as
a precaution to insure that the policy does not unintentionally
lapse.
Waiver of Premium: A provision which allows you to stop paying
premiums once you are in a period of covered care. Usually applies
to only to a facility stay, although some policies do waive premiums
for approved home health care as well. Date when premium stoppage
begins varies with each company. |