This is one of the consequences that must be discussed when title to property is transferred. Generally the owner of the property is the defendant in any lawsuit affecting the property. They must also be the owner of any insurance policy that covers the property. You should discuss this issue with an attorney who is familiar with the laws of your state.
Children-Elderly was created in 1997.
Children-Elderly ended in 1997.
A life estate is the right to the possession, use and income from a property for the duration of one's natural life. For example, an elderly couple who owns a home could convey the property in fee, by deed, to their adult children. In the deed they could reserve a life estate for each of them. By doing so they could continue to live in the property for the rest of their natural lives and upon their deaths the property would be owned free and clear by their children. While the parents are still alive, although their children are the owners of the property, the children would need the parents' signatures to sell or mortgage the property.
The children and the elderly were gassed.
Children
An elderly owner's property cannot be quitclaimed in order to avoid the property being used to pay nursing home fees. After any transfer the property is generally subject to attachment for fees for a period of five years depending on the jurisdiction and the details. You should consult with an attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on this issue.
Children and the elderly.
No
Hypernatremia is especially dangerous for children and the elderly
Children are more able to do stuff then the elderly.
Pneumonia can kill, from babies to elderly. All ages are vulnerable, but especially babies/children, and the elderly or infirm.
It is generally the adult children of the elderly person that tries to get their parent into a nursing home if the elderly person is no longer competent to look after themselves, but in many States and in Canada this has to be doctor approved for the security of that elderly parent because some elderly parents are quite capable of living with their grown children or even on their own. However, either in a Will or if the elderly person is lucid (thinking very clearly) they can name anyone to become Power of Attorney to care for them if they do not trust their adult children's decisions.