1 / 36

After the Alzheimer’s Diagnosis: Legal Planning

After the Alzheimer’s Diagnosis: Legal Planning. Erica Wood, Esq. Commission on Law and Aging American Bar Association National Press Foundation May 24, 2011. Today’s Talk …. Key steps to get affairs in order after diagnosis of serious illness such as Alzheimer’s disease

anstice
Download Presentation

After the Alzheimer’s Diagnosis: Legal Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. After the Alzheimer’s Diagnosis:Legal Planning Erica Wood, Esq. Commission on Law and Aging American Bar Association National Press Foundation May 24, 2011

  2. Today’s Talk … • Key steps to get affairs in order after diagnosis of serious illness such as Alzheimer’s disease • Paying for health care and support • Managing health and personal decisions • Managing money and property • Other key planning considerations • Last resort: guardianship • Get legal documents in order

  3. Plan How to Pay for Health Care and Support Needs • Employer-based disability benefits • Some employers have short-term or long-term disability insurance • Social Security disability benefits • Recent SSA decision to fast track disability decisions for individuals with Alzheimer’s disease • Supplemental Security Income benefits • Means tested program by SSA • Veterans benefits • Broad array of financial benefits

  4. Plan How to Pay for Health Care Needs • Medicare • Primary payer for individuals with Alzheimer’s disease; eligible at 65 or after 24 months on SSDI • Private health insurance • Employer-based or private insurance • Long term care insurance • Medicaid • Federal/state program for low income individuals and children • Each state’s program is different • Veterans benefits • Broad array health care benefits, including long-term care benefits and nursing home care

  5. Managing Health & Personal Decisions • • At some point, someone else will have to make health care decisions for an individual with dementia • Who will be the decision maker? • What guidance will be provided in advance? • How will it be communicated?

  6. What is Surrogate Decision-Making?

  7. Families decide (Devolved/Default) Courts decide (Displaced) Individual (Directed) Others designated by individual (Delegated)

  8. Health Care Advance Directives • In the 1970s -1980s, states generally enacted multiple laws: Living Will, Health Care Powers of Attorney with overlap from consent laws. • Today about half the states have combined/ comprehensive Advance Directive laws • But still much variation in detail, especially focused on forms.

  9. Types of Advance Directives • Living Wills – • Directive that provides guidance or instruction about the care and decisions wanted • Usually includes specific instructions on life-sustaining conditions • Power of Attorney for Health Care • Choose an agent/proxy (and successor) to make health care decisions if unable to make them • Should be someone who can be a strong advocate and willing to make difficult decisions

  10. What ADs Can Do • CAN be an important part of a communication process in “advance care planning” • CAN help you stop and think and DISCUSS. Less about specific medical decisions, more about GOALS, VALUES & PRIORITIES: • CAN empower and give direction if reflective of the patient’s voice. Not the legislature’s canned language.

  11. What ADs Can’t Do • Can’t provide cookbook directions. • Can’t change fact that dying is complicated. • Can’t eliminate personal ambivalence. • Can’t be a substitute for Discussion. • Can’t control health care providers.

  12. 30 years of Research on Advance Directives • Most people don’t do. • Hard to understand the forms. • Standard form not useful guidance. • People change mind. • Agent/proxy slightly better than clueless. • Health care providers clueless about the directive. • Even if providers know directive exists, it’s lost in space. • Even if in the record, it’s still lost in space.

  13. Communication is Key to Advance Planning • Not every medical decision can be anticipated • Communicate wishes, quality of life goals, values and priorities that are important • Discussions are difficult but most important for loved ones and the individual with the disease

  14. Guidance for Health Care Agents, Proxies • Steps in making medical decisions • Working within health care system • Addressing disputes • Special challenges in medical decisions

  15. “Advance Care Planning” • Less focus on formal instructional documents • Legal focus primarily on naming a proxy • Discussion oriented (with proxy, family, health care providers) • More broadly focused on goals + values, spiritual questions, family matters • Less treatment focused, more on quality of life • Conversion of goals to a portable plan of care: POLST if available

  16. POLST – Why It Is a Sea Change • Last 30 years: standardizing patient communications – • statutory advance directives • POLST Paradigm – standardizing physicians EOL orders in order to implement patient’s goals of care. Focus on here and now, high probability crises. • POLST – requires: • Find out patient’s wishes re: CPR, care goals (comfort vs. treatment), antibiotics, N&H. • Translate into doctors orders on visually distinct (bright pink) med file cover sheet. • Ensure form travels with patient. At least 12 States have a version of POLST: CA, HI, ID, MT, NY, NC, OR, TN, UT, VT, WA, WV

  17. Default Surrogate Laws(Family Consent) • Range/Priority of Surrogates • Scope of Decision Making Authority • Triggers/Pre-conditions • How Disagreements are Handled • Close Friend and Unbefriended Patient • Summary chart: • http://new.abanet.org/aging/Pages/StateLawCharts.aspx

  18. Make a Plan to Manage Money & Property • Planning for management of affairs while alive helps maintain control to the greatest extent possible • Variety of legal tools • Powers of Attorney • Representative Payee • Joint bank accounts • Inter-vivos or Living Trusts • Advantages and disadvantages of each

  19. Powers of Attorney • For property • Durable – since planning for incapacity • Document by which one person (“principal”) gives legal authority to another (“agent”) to act on behalf of the principal. • Generally must be signed & notarized. • Governed by state law

  20. PoA Advantages/Disadvantages • Promotes autonomy – puts you in drivers seat • Avoids guardianship • Cuts costs • Helps family members • Lack of monitoring • Unclear standards for agent conduct • Lack of awareness of risks • Broad decision-making authority

  21. Types of POA Abuse • In creating of the POA (power given, not taken) • Incapacity at execution • Forgery/Fraud/Misrepresentation • Undue influence • Implementing POA (agent is a fiduciary) • Transactions exceeding intended authority • Transactions conducted for self-dealing • Transactions contravening principal’s expectations

  22. “Brooke Astor’s Son Guilty in Scheme to Defraud Her” • Wealthy NY socialite Brooke Astor, Alzheimer’s, age 105 • Estate more than $180 million • Son served as power of attorney • Gave self unauthorized raise of $1 million • Other counts of financial exploitation • Neglected mother’s care while enriching self • Exemplifies financial • elder abuse

  23. Build Protections into DPA • Choose someone you trust • Limit gifting powers • Require co-signatory on important transactions • Require periodic accountings • Revocable as long as still have capacity • Seek advice of attorney to customize & ensure meets state law requirements

  24. Uniform Power of Attorney Act • Clear statement of agent’s duties • Act in accord with principal’s expectations, best interests • Stringent requirements for exercising “hot powers” likely to dissipate property or alter estate plan • Third party refuse to honor if suspect abuse • Liability of agents who commit malfeasance • See www.nccusl.org .

  25. Other Options • Joint Bank Accounts: pros & cons • Provides easy access to funds to pay bills • Joint owners have complete access to all funds • Funds may be available to pay joint owner’s debts • Upon death surviving joint owner may become sole owner regardless of will • Inter-vivos or “Living” Trust: pros & cons • Legal arrangement created by contract • Holds property for the benefit a person or persons • Can provide for management of assets during incapacity, avoid probate and provide for care of minors or disabled persons • Can be expensive to draft, to transfer property into the trust and to pay a professional trustee (if used)

  26. Other Options • Representative Payee • If receive SSA, civil service, railroad retirement, VA benefits, agency may require individual to be appointed as a representative payee • Once appointed, the rep payee has authority to manage the relevant income -- but not other income or assets. • Rep payee may have to file an annual report (SSA)

  27. Other Key Planning Considerations • Develop succession plan of a business • Including power of attorney to run a business and buyout agreements • Consider other public benefits, if appropriate • Including food stamps, state prescription drug benefit programs, energy assistance • Prepare will • Legal document that provides for distribution of some or all property at death • If a single parent of a minor or disabled child, can designate a guardian of the child • Plan for care of Dependents • Nominate or appoint a guardian for minor/disabled child • Arrange for financial support for minor/disabled child

  28. Guardianship • Individual (or agency) appointed by court (probate, general jurisdiction) . . . . • With power and duty to make personal and/or financial decisions . . . . • On behalf of another person . . . • Whom court determines lacks decisional capacity. • Terminology – “guardian” “conservator” and more

  29. Guardianship: A Double-Edged Sword • Parens patriae roots of guardianship • Guardianship “unpersons” individual (Associated Press, 1987) • Loss of fundamental rights • Inherent Tension • Between rights and needs • Between autonomy and beneficence • Between self-determination and protection

  30. 51 State Guardianship Laws; Variability in Practice

  31. How is a Guardian Appointed? • “Any person” files petition • Notice, possible appointment of counsel, “guardian ad litem,” court visitor • Hearing • Judicial order – “plenary” or “limited” • Bond

  32. Principle of Least Restrictive Alternative • Growing use of alternatives to guardianship • Representative payee • Power of attorney • Trust • Supports such as money management • Guardianship as LAST RESORT • Enactment of limited guardianship provisions • Use of “substituted judgment standard of decision-making”

  33. Guardian Accountability – Who Guards the Guardians? • Reports & Accounts • Protection of Assets • Court Review of Reports & Accounts • Investigation,Verification & Sanctions • Guardian Training/ Assistance • Funding for Monitoring • Guarding the Guardians: Promising Practices for Court Monitoring, AARP/ABA (2007)

  34. Get Legal Documents in Order • Collect all important legal documents • Including birth certificate, citizenship papers, advance directives, power of attorney, trust documents, will and more • Store important legal documents in a safe and accessible location. • Let people know where the important documents are kept

  35. Conclusion • When faced with diagnosis like Alzheimer’s disease, its critical to get financial and legal affairs in order. • Communicate with family, close friends and trusted legal/financial advisors. • Understanding options and making informed decisions can help maximize control and minimize anxiety at a difficult time.

More Related