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- Partnership Home
- Overview
- Fact Sheet
- OBRA 1993
- Replication Activity
- Publications
- Participating Insurers
- CHPRE Home
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- Master of Public Health Program
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Partnership for Long Term Care
Approximately 40 percent of the 65-and-over population will eventually
need long-term care, with an average stay of 2.5 years at
a cost ranging from $30,000-$65,000 annually. And although many elderly
Americans still believe that their long-term costs will be covered by
Medicare, the truth is that only after spending down to impoverishment
will they receive public support through Medicaid.
The Partnership for Long-Term Care provides an alternative
to spending down or transferring assets by forming a partnership
between Medicaid and private long term care insurers. Participating states
work with insurers to create insurance policies that are more affordable
and provide better protection against impoverishment than those commonly
offered. Once private insurance benefits are exhausted, special
Medicaid eligibility rules are applied if additional coverage is necessary.
The authority for instituting the Partnership for Long Term
Care (PLTC) program resides in state plan amendments rather
than Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) waivers. There
is a provision in Medicaid law that allows a state to alter the asset
eligibility criteria dependent on a state specified requirement. In this
case, it is the purchase of a state certified long term care insurance
policy.
The Partnership is sponsored by The Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation.

