More than 45 million Americans take care of an elderly family member, usually an aging parent. This can have negative impact on their own family, from finances to strained relationships.
It only seems fair: your parents took care of you when you were young, and now they need your help. Aging parents often need adult children to handle medical care and finances, when they can no longer manage on their own. When the level of care spills over into the adult child’s own finances and impacts their careers, it can become a hardship.
MarketWatch’s article, “Read this before becoming your parents’ caregiver,” reports that, in many instances, the adult child caregiver is still able to maintain a full career and family life. However, in certain situations, the family member who’s assumed the role of a full-time caregiver must reduce his or her work hours or forego a promotion because of the time commitment. In the majority of situations, we see adult children answer the call of caregiving in a crisis when there’s an imminent need. A short-term assignment can be doable for a professional with his or her other family and personal responsibilities, but when the duties last longer, he or she will realize there isn’t enough time or resources to do it all.
A caregiver needs to take the actions necessary to help without putting his or her own family’s financial future at issue. When there are siblings and other family members involved, it is necessary to communicate realistic expectations of what areas of care are needed, responsibilities, time commitments and whether there will be any financial compensation.
A Personal Care Agreement can be a good guideline. It will help to detail which individuals are responsible for various aspects of care, the amount of time required and any compensation. The biggest question that people have about this agreement, is how to get paid to be a family caregiver.
A Personal Care Agreement can give an adult child caregiver the peace of mind and security that he or she won’t suffer undue financial consequences, as well as provide clear details for other family members as to the expectations when assuming these important caregiving responsibilities.
This agreement can help avoid some of the misunderstandings that can occur when many siblings and loved ones are trying to help (or fail to pitch in). It also can protect a family member who is losing his or her own income and time to provide caregiving. This is because reduced hours or an exit from the workforce to care for a loved one, can have a major personal financial impact. In addition, the time for a personal and immediate family life with one’s own spouse and children can nearly evaporate with caregiving demands.
An Elder Law attorney can help create a Personal Care Agreement that will protect you from any accusations of financial elder abuse and clarify the responsibilities and role that you have taken on as the parent’s primary caregiver. This will also protect you from any charges that care payments were a way of hiding assets from Medicaid. It is also suggested that you hold a family meeting, with the Elder Law attorney, if necessary, so that all family members understand the situation.
Reference: MarketWatch (February 22, 2017) “Read this before becoming your parents’ caregiver”
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.