For those of you who are active or retired military
you have access to certain types of medical coverage that the
general civilian world does not. The bad news is youre not
covered any better for the problem of long-term care. These pages
will help lay out accurate information regarding both TriCare
for life and the VA so you can better understand what you have
and more importantly
what you may need.
TRICARE For Life (TFL)
Introduced in October 2001 was designed for Medicare-eligible
military retirees allowing them to save the money that would otherwise
have been spent on a Medicare Supplement program.
TFLs most significant feature is as a second
payer to Medicare taking the place of traditional Medicare supplements
by paying any Medicare deductibles or co-payments. While this
site will not provide a primer on all aspects of TFL, it will
focus on long-term care issues and the services or lack thereof
provided by TFL.
for complete information on TFL.
As mentioned in the Medicare section, a retired
person with Medicare can expect up to 100 days of covered skilled
nursing care, 20 days paid in full and the remaining 80 days in
which you will pay the first $101.50/day and Medicare will pay
whatevers over. TFL will pay the $101.50 thus potentially
giving a person 100 days of skilled nursing care following a three-day
hospital stay. If you remember from our Medicare discussion, after
100 days Medicare pays nothing, but TFL may pay 75% if you meet
certain criteria.
TRICARE and long-term care
Probably the most important thing to remember about TRICARE is
what it does not do. According to TFLs publication TRICARE
for Life, The Road To Honoring Healthcare Commitments, put
out by The Retired Officer Magazine, under Services covered by
Neither Medicare nor TFL: You remain responsible for the
cost of non-covered services, e.g., routine dental care, hearing
aids, eye glasses, and long-term care.
Certainly TFL puts military retires in a much better
situation than there were in, but still leaves a gap in coverage
for long-term custodial care (the kind most people need). Many
military retirees take advantage of the money saved by TFL and
purchase a long-term care insurance policy.
Currently many military organizations and groups
including The Retired Officers Association endorse General
Electrics long-term care plan as the best available. If
you would like information on this particular plan and we will forward you the appropriate information.
VA Benefits
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To start, Id like to personally thank all veterans
who are visiting this site for their contribution to freedom
and maintaining the way of life in the United States. I
thank you and appreciate your sacrifice as well as that
of those who didnt return.
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Again this will not be a primer on VA benefits,
but will stay focused on the issue of long-term care. To learn
all about VA benefits visit:
While many veterans were promised a lifetime of
care after service it appears that the government cant afford,
or wont provide needed long-term care services for veterans.
According to a recent VA benefits pamphlet here is how the VA
decides who gets health care services according to a priority
rating system:
-
Veterans with service connected disabilities
50% or more.
-
Veterans with service connected disabilities
30-40%.
-
Former POWs, or Purple Heart and 10-20%
disabilities.
-
Veterans who have been determined to be catastrophically
disabled.
-
Non-serviced connected veterans and services
connected veterans rated 0%.
-
All other veterans.
Note: For veterans meeting numbers 1 and 2 the US
is already over capacity with waiting lists for those.
Financial Assessment
Any veterans who want to enroll in priority group 5 based on their
inability to otherwise defray the costs of long-term care must
provide the VA with information on their annual income and net
worth to determine whether they are below the means test
threshold. This threshold is adjusted annually and includes all
sources of household income.
Nursing Home Care
Nursing Care in VA facilities or private nursing homes may be
provided for veterans
for a service connected disability
rated at 70% or more. Non-service connected disabilities must
complete financial section VA Form 10-10EZ to determine if they
will be billed for nursing home care.
Armed Forces Retirement Homes
The following veterans may be eligible to live in two retirement
homes based on some criteria:
-
20 years or more of active service.
-
Incapable of earning a livelihood because of
a service-connected disability.
-
Other veterans incapable of earning a livelihood
because of injuries, disease, or disability who served in
the war theater during a time of war declared by Congress.
Note: New residents must be capable of living independently
in dormitory type facilities.
The VA is not capable of providing long-term care
services to most of its veterans. Of the very narrow range of
people who would qualify, there just arent enough facilities
available. As for the US Soldiers and Airmans Home,
and the US Naval Home, you must be able to take care of yourself,
and thus long-term care is not provided.
Options
The government is encouraging people to take care of themselves
by purchasing private long-term care insurance by making certain
tax provisions available. Benefits from a tax-qualified long-term
care plan will not result in income taxes, and the premiums you
pay for the insurance may be a tax-deductible medical expense.
If you would like details on a tax-qualified plan please for information.