I’m 66 yo retired RN living in NYC, widowed once and remarried in 2008. My husband was diagnosed with MS in 2009. He also has DMll and is now on insulin. He has cognitive damage, short term memory loss, incontinance , and uses a wheelchair. I was diagnosed and treated for breast cancer in 2014. I’m also being treated for PTSD since 2016 and awaiting settlement or trial. I’ve been through multiple bouts of burnout over the last 10 years. I have scheduled a consultation with an “elder law attorney”. It’s overwhelming!! We have no family assistance. I’m IT! I imagine myself alone and impoverished as the surviving spouse. A frightening prospect.
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I can understand your own feelings especially when diagnosed with a serious illness. Was glad to read that you are now in remission, but the treatment for breast cancer can leave a lot of lasting side effects. Especially those pills one needs to take for 5 to 10 years. I couldn't deal with the side effects any longer so I tossed those pills after 4 years :P And I started eating organic foods, do feel better. Organic corn on the cob is wonderful this time of the year :)
Yes, go see the "Elder Law Attorney", I know I was glad I went. I even had my very elderly parents [also in their 90's] to have all their legal documents updated, as everything they had was older than dirt, and filled with landmines as they didn't use a specialized Attorney in the far past. Anyhoo, an Elder Law Attorney knows the ins and outs of Medicaid, and will guide you.
2. Depending on your husbands other medical conditions he may qualify for Hospice. (It can not hurt to call and ask, no longer is the time on Hospice 6 months or less, my Husband was on Hospice 3 years) Many Hospice will provide incontinence products as well as cream, gloves and other supplies. Not to mention you will get someone in to help a few times a week. And you can request a Volunteer that will come in and stay with him while you run errands or just take a bit of Me time.. (Medicare requires the 5% of the cost of patient care be Volunteer time)
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My understanding of Medicaid qualification is in most states your savings can be split between you and your husband. You will still need to spend down his share of the savings before he can qualify for Medicaid but that will still leave you with some savings remaining.
Buying things at a thrift store is not the same as skipping a meal.
A few practical suggestions, reasonable cost. Purchase energy efficient light bulbs as you go, if can’t replace all. Our home has only emergency efficient bulbs/fixtures.
I purchased a counter top toaster oven/rotisserie. Uses much less electricity than full size oven, rotisserie chicken at home is half price of a deli rotisserie chicken. The Toshiba was under $100.
Finally convinced hubs to be onboard with a small freezer, to allow me to take advantage of meat sales. I found a 5.3 CU FT one, dented, for in the garage, on sale, additional markdown for dents, for $155. It is perfect for our needs, chops off a good deal from grocery budget, when only purchasing on sale.
if you have a dog, consider making your own dog food. I have a dog on expensive prescription dog food, for her tendency to get pancreatitis. After two $1000 emergency surgeries, to figure out the cause, the homemade food replicating the expensive stuff, plus doggy vitamin, saves a lot. Make one month worth at a time, freeze in containers, five days worth, thaw as needed.
The old cook once, eat twice maxim saves not only cooking time, but gas or electricity cost as well. I’m freezing the second cooked meal, cooking double batches each dinner, for when I have surgery.
With your hubby’s health issues, I’m venturing the guess you don’t get out much. Maybe try to only take your car out when you have three or more errands, make best use of fuel and your limited time.
Consider downloading Ibotta, for small amounts of cash back, quite a few stores offer cash back, a couple of grocery stores, Amazon, Walmart. Example: link your customer information with Ibotta. Select the offers you want to use. Then order $100 worth of groceries online through Walmart or Amazon, by first entering the website through the Ibotta link. Once you have $25 cash back credit, you can get the cash back. Now I just have to remember to do it.
If you have a local farmers’ market or produce stand, go when near to closing time; often get your produce at reduced prices end of day, so they don’t have to pack it up and transport back to the cooler. We have something here called Everybody Eats Fresh, once weekly, with free produce distribution, bring your own bag. Very popular with retirees as well as working poor.
If any of your meds are tablets that can be split, ask if you can be prescribed double strength medication, use pill splitter, to get the prescribed dose, at half the copay cost.
if you have emergency fund in low interest CDs, consider taking advantage of bank promotional for opening new accounts. I picked up $850 last year moving emergency money from bank to bank. Be sure to satisfy all the fine print. It’s fast, easy money. Not a lot, but we retirees are looking for the big picture, stretching the overall budget.
For every purchase not made at a thrift store, check price online, and check for discount codes online, for online shopping. No sale, no discount code, not BOGO, sorry, won’t buy this week. I can be stubborn like that. Once you have a good pantry, you only buy sale items you actually use.
I’ll be following the suggestions on Medicare and elder care resources here, to try and reign in expenses further, and obtain community resources as available to us.
We use the Walmart Relion Prime blood glucose meters & strips here, (both of us T2), as they are cheaper than our drug plan copays, & sufficient for our needs. I check my Blood sugar whenever I go for labs, so I can check the fasting blood glucose number on my meter against the one obtained during the blood draw, as my way of assessing my meter’s accuracy. Maybe you can save there on diabetes supplies?
I just had to lay out over $4000 for a portable oxygen concentrator for myself, entire cost falls on the patient. That included the lifetime warranty, but I’m not that old, could use the machine many years, and I absolutely need the portability in order to be his caregiver.
I agree, the medical products we need are horrifically priced! I have a walker here, from hubs’ December hospitalizations disaster, he’s not using at this time. Will be needing that after my surgeries initially. I am currently looking at getting the raised potty seats for myself for the hip surgery, having been through this with one prosthetic hip over twenty years ago. They aren’t that expensive, but the wait to get home health assessment after one gets home from surgery, is going to force me to shell out of pocket. And we need a shower chair/bench as well. We got by without one when he was so ill some months back, but my own unsteadiness with three more joints being bionic soon, (knees buckle for the damage), I need to purchase. With my gut, liver, and bladder issues, I’m also looking at incontinence products for myself before long. I can’t say what’s more dignity-sapping - wearing oxygen, depending on walkers/canes to ambulate, or the incontinence issues from bladder spasms, IBSD, BAM, and symptomatic diverticular disease. My lifelong hypothyroidism is a blessing, compared to the rest of this package!
Besides other’s suggestions on thrift store incontinence supplies, if you do not have a cash back credit card, you might benefit from one. I have the AMEX Blue Cash Back Card, Run all household expenses through it, even online property tax payments. Plus you get 6% cash back, up to $6000 per year on groceries. Even with yearly card fee, I end up with decent cash back every month. I get gas cards at grocery store, when they run the $10 off. AMEX doesn’t see that as part of my groceries purchase, so I end up getting $50 gas card, discounted to $40, plus 6% cash back on the $40, bringing cost of gas card down to around $37 for $50 worth of gas.
Here in GA, disabled seniors get a sizable property tax break, and no school tax. Check for possible discounts there. Also check with your electric power company for possible discount.. We don’t yet qualify, but I check periodically for new discounts.
High medication costs, I sometimes use CanAm for imported prescription drugs. They will tell you the price plus source, when you inquire. It is sometimes cheaper than the copay using your insurance. My FL gastro put me on to them for a safe source. Shop price!