age, disability, and current income are all considered.
The penalty is loss of nursing home coverage for the number of months that the amount improperly transferred would have paid for nursing home care at the private pay rate.
As long as you meet the non-financial factors of eligibility for Medicaid, the State will expect you to apply your "excess" income/assets to your nursing/medical care and the Medicaid will pick up the remainder of the medical/nursing bills.
Yes. This degree can help you learn how to manage a nursing home in an office capacity. Read more about it here http://degreedirectory.org/articles/Health_Care_Management_Bachelor%27s_Degree.html
I don't believe that a nursing home has the legal authority to file property liens, altho I suppose they could get a judgment from court and then try to enforce it. Medicare will pay for nursing home care for, at most, a few weeks. After that, the bill becomes your responsibility unless you qualify for Medicaid. In the latter event, the State will file a property lien and/or estate claim to recover the cost of care.
Check with Medicaid, but in Oklahoma I believe you can pay a relative all assets for caregiving to qualify for medicaid
Gerontological nursing is a nursing specialty which revolves around the care of older adults. It is sometimes called "geriatric nursing". These nurse specialists attend nursing school to qualify as nurses then take additional courses to qualify as gerontological nurses.
when is nursing home administrators day
There may not be nursing jobs immediately available to you. You may still need to take classes specifically in nursing in order to qualify for such jobs.
Marcotte Nursing Home was created in 1927.
The Nursing Home Murder was created in 1935.
For health care facilities, you have to qualify basically for health care as nurse and then do some practice in private clinic or nursing home or in the college you study.
No. A nursing home (extended care facility) is a medical facility. Social services may be obtained in a nursing home - but a nursing home is not a social service agency, per se.