New York is considering ending a practice that allows one spouse to
legally refuse to pay for nursing home care for the other — while
passing the bill to Medicaid.
While some see the practice as a scheme benefiting the wealthy, a
growing number of advocates for middle-class elderly New Yorkers
strongly support it as an essential option to keep a “well” spouse out
of poverty when health care costs are exploding.
The last five governors targeted the maneuver, known as “spousal refusal,” for repeal 28 times.
New York and Florida are the only states that allow the practice.
But this year, the state Medicaid Redesign Team is considering
whether to scrap the decades-old practice, said state budget spokesman
Freeman Klopett. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo appointed the group of health care
leaders to cut $2.5 billion from Medicaid, a federal and state health
care system.
The team’s recommendations for cuts are due by mid-March.
“There are multimillionaires living in skilled nursing in New York
State on the taxpayers’ dime,” said Michael McRae, president of St.
Ann’s Community elderly housing services.
At last week’s Medicaid Redesign Team hearing in Rochester, McRae
urged the MRT to “give political cover” to legislators to eliminate
spousal refusal, which has long been protected by the Legislature.
Eligibility for Medicaid is based on family income and wealth and there can be many exemptions and special circumstances.
Generally, a couple in which both are 65 years old or older can have
no more than about $38,000 in annual income and assets of no more than
about $120,000 if one spouse is to be covered by Medicaid for nursing
home care or comparable home care.
Income and assets above those ceilings must be devoted to help pay
for such care, which averages more than $10,000 a month in New York.
Spousal refusal allows the “well” spouse to collect more income and to keep more of the couple’s assets under his or her name.
The complex process, filled with loopholes, is further complicated by
federal law aimed at protecting more assets to avoid “spousal
impoverishment.” The complexity has helped give rise to an entire area
of legal practice called elder care. And for nearly 30 years spousal
refusal has had enough support in the state Legislature to block
attempts at repeal.
But a confluence of factors could make this the year for the major change.
The state has a mandate to cut $2.5 billion from Medicaid in New
York, Cuomo has told the Medicaid Redesign Team to consider ending
spousal refusal and the team’s recommendations are to be included in the
new state budget.
“The purpose of Medicaid is to help people who financially can’t
afford health insurance,” said David Friedfel, director of state studies
for the independent Citizens Budget Commission. “Spousal refusal
basically provides a way for individuals or families who know how to
negotiate the process to get around the requirements … It is unfair.”
How much spousal refusal costs the state isn’t clear.
In 2016, the price was estimated at $10 million. But that doesn’t
account for the continuing annual costs of each refusal, or increased
costs of care as the spouse who entered a nursing home gets older.
In 2013, a congressional oversight committee targeted spousal refusal
in its investigation of Medicaid waste and abuse in New York.
The panel said it had “learned that relatively affluent people in New
York artificially impoverish themselves in order to qualify for
Medicaid and have taxpayers pick up the cost of their long-term care
services. At least in Suffolk County … a legal technique called spousal
refusal, which is essentially when one spouse abandons all financial
care of a sick or disabled spouse and leaves him or her as a ward of the
state, is widely used.”
“One reason New York’s Medicaid costs are so high is that the state
makes it too easy for higher income people to qualify when they need
long-term care,” said Bill Hammond, director of health policy at the
fiscally conservative Empire Center think tank.
“People with means ought to buy long-term care
insurance, but the ready availability of Medicaid has crowded out that
market,” Hammond said. ” … The only way to incentivize people to buy
long-term care insurance is to make it much harder to game the system.
Ending spousal refusal would be a step in that direction.”
Those familiar with the law acknowledge it’s an oddity.
State Social Services law says Medicaid coverage “shall be furnished”
even though the “applicant has a responsible relative with sufficient
income and resources to provide assistance.” The law follows the state
constitutional mandate that no one be denied medical care.
Spousal refusal has a growing legion of supporters.
They say the practice helps middle class families contend with
skyrocketing health care costs, prevents couples from having to spend
their savings and give away assets to qualify for Medicaid and makes it
unnecessary to divorce only to protect assets.
Experts cite another benefit: A spouse could enter a nursing home
sooner because Medicaid payments will kick in immediately, avoiding the
lengthy process of determining eligibility.
The New York City Bar Association and a panel of the state Bar
Association strongly oppose eliminating spousal refusal. In a study, the
state bar’s elder law panel said without spousal refusal, the cash
remaining for everyday expenses for a spouse, “are completely
unrealistic for living expenses throughout most of New York state
today.”
“We rely on spousal refusal as an important part of eligibility
planning for people and in eligibility counseling,” said Valerie J.
Bogart, an attorney with the nonprofit New York Legal Assistance Group.
“These are loving couples; they are devoted to each other,” Bogart
said. “They have been married 50 years and they don’t just readily sign a
form that says they refuse to help their spouse … but we say you need
to do this to survive.”
“Who can live on this in New York?” she said. “That’s what you’re
using to pay your taxes in Nassau. That’s what you’re using to fix your
roof.”
Bogart continued, “Are there some millionaires on Medicaid? Probably.
Are there people who take advantage of the rules in every part of our
system? Yes, that’s human nature. But we see people really struggling
with Medicaid. Nobody would go through the hoops they make you go
through — and it’s pretty humiliating — if you could afford to do it
otherwise.”
https://www.newsday.com/news/region-state/medicaid-cuomo-budget-1.42042478
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