I just signed all paperwork at the SNHF, where my Mother is being admitted next week. In the paperwork, there was a page that said I was responsible for unpaid amounts. I'm uncomfortable with this! Is this common and part of the POA's responsibility?
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Or file of life documents whjich are delivered to health care facilities. hospital,nursing homes, re-hab etc include the following directtive:
IF Nursing home admission is necessary all the paperwork must be handled by Kathy Nealon our attorney 508 435 6869. (Hopkinton, MA). {she has our DPOA}
I would go back to the NH with the form and ask for an explanation. It may not be what you think. If it is, tell them that you made a mistake when you signed because you misunderstood. (Legally, if either party is not made to understand the contract, that contract becomes voidable.) Tell them that you are not responsible for your mom's expenses; she is responsible for her own expenses. Look the person in the eye and don't back down. In light of that, offer to get your mom to sign for her own responsibility or amend your signature to read "(your name), daughter and POA for (mom's name)." That will indicate that you signed for HER, not for yourself. and please keep us posted. Don't be afraid, these are just people who work in a nursing home office (no offense, just trying to say they have no power over you.)
Unless you added "pursuant to DPOA dated ....., 20xx" after your name, I would think you're liable. Why is it done? To ensure that someone's on the hook for their costs.
As others have suggested, I would read the rest of the application/contract today, see what the cancellation terms are, and cancel it ASAP, but also find another place as quickly as you can.
Or you could state something to the effect that you were under pressure when you signed and didn't realize that you would be committing for her care, personally. But since then (a) don't have the resources to pay, (b) you have consulted an attorney, and (c) therefore (and this is important as well) you would be committing to perform actions for which you lack the financial resources. I believe there's a financial "lacking capacity" legal construct that would come into play in this situation.
This could actually be construed as not having the requisite legal intent to honestly execute the documents since you knew or should have known that you couldn't pay for the care. It might even be construed as fraud.
Tell them that if you have to; it might shake them up.
Alternately, ask them what other methods of payment exist since you personally have no way of paying for the care.
Attorney at law Kevin P. Keane:
"agreements not reduced to writing, are NOT worth the paper they ain't written on."
ANY changes to agreement get them in writing
You or they sign an agreement you/they own it.
I would find out if there is legal time period for cancelling a signed contract
The way I look at it, if you sign LaMama/POA that means you are signing for your Mother, and not for yourself.
And I understand the "what ifs" and your concern about future payments if your Mom runs out of money. Right there "runs out of money" should help your Mom qualify for Medicaid.
I would talk to an attorney asap. Dave may be right. Don't admit her. Do not believe what anyone at the NF tells you. What you signed speaks for itself.
Please don't misunderstand my first sentence. That was written for everyone. We're unsure when presented with forms like that. "Omg!! What should I do???" The only answer is NOT to sign your own name unless you are prepared to pay.
You are now financially responsible for your Mother, when she's in the SNHF if she goes broke and Medicaid deems her unqualified
Maybe the choice is getting her into a different NH and not signing your life away
Is is possible for your mom to sign this paperwork herself, even with a scribble?
In some states you have a certain period of time in which you can rescind a contract. If you come to your senses the day after your "free demo" and conclude you don't really need a $2,000 vacuum cleaner you can cancel, for example. I have no idea if something like that might apply here.
Did Medicaid tell you why she could not qualify?