I care for all my Mothers needs including showering, fixing all meals, medical appointments, medicine, financial needs. I am an only child and all her assets go to if she passes away. I live in MA and my mother only income is Social Security with some modest investments and savings.
You will need to bring the Rx from the MD for home care, specifying what assistance and how many hours are needed for her.
He paid X amount for garbage, water, phone, cable, newspaper, food, gas, electric, mortgage and all the rest of the household expenses. Any personal items I had to save receipts and when approved I could take that from his account. the approved items I could write a check each month.
I would consult an Elder Care Attorney and set this up correctly.
The lawyer may cost a bit but it will be far less expensive for you to do it right the first time than try to "fix" what you did.
You may have to become her Guardian.
And as a Child you can charge for being her caregiver. As a spouse I could not pay myself for being my husbands caregiver.
Mom didn't want to leave her apartment. She thought she was fine where she was. One of my other sisters took her aside and "confided" in her that Sis was having some financial problems since she retired and she really needed to rent out her extra rooms. Oh, well, in that case my mother was willing to move to help Sis out!
Old folks deserve the opportunity to pay their own way, to the extent that they are able to. Why should they be deprived of that dignity?
I come from the perspective that of 5 children, I am the only one willing to take care of mom the way she wanted, which was to stay home. She was not able to stay in her home due to the location, but she is in my home. As the caregiver you take a lot of hits: mentally, socially, spiritually, financially, physically, and in personal health. I am also a parent of two daughters. I would expect that if either or both of my children decided to take care of me in the event my health declined to that level, I would expect that whatever financial resources I had would be used on my care first and then for whatever financial needs they needed due to taking on my care. They will end up of with whatever I have anyway. I wouldn't expect them to suffer financially if it wasn't necessary. With that said, I do take rent from my mom with the POA's permission. I can't talk about the legal aspect of that because no doubt I will get caught up in the down side of that, just seems to be the trend. The two older siblings stole what money they thought they deserved over several years by taking advantage of mom's memory loss. The two younger siblings are the joint POA's and make all final decisions anyway. I, the middle child, was written out of the will, why you ask? I have no idea, but don't really care. So bottom line is, I don't believe a parent choosing to have children and then raising them, can be compared to a child taking care of their aging parent(s). Being the only child is to your advantage, because even with siblings, the one that steps up ends up being an only child in the caregiver capacity anyway. If I was able to maintain the job position that I had and the income level I was at when mom moved in, I would not have ask for rent nor did I. But when I lost 52% of my income and I have the needed flexibility to my work schedule, I'm grateful to have a job. But we all have bills to pay. There seems to always be a price the primary caregiver pays. I'm not crying about it because I am grateful to have the opportunity to give back to my mom. I know she would not want that to be at a financial hardship for me. Look in to the legal aspect in the event Medicaid becomes a need. Your own needs and health are extremely important. Without that you cannot provide the best care to your mom. Plus, she wouldn't want you to give up your health on top of everything else you are doing for her. Take care of yourself.
"The government should consider supplementing the income of caregivers who need the money to make it possible to care for elders." However, this is an entirely different suggestion.
Who would fund these kinds of "supplements" to caregivers? Payroll tax on workers? Sales tax on goods, luxury items, or "sin" taxes?
A basic issue of increasing benefits, including to a specific population, is how to fund them. The new regime isn't as friendly to families and workers as it will be to businesses. Maybe we caregivers should create one person LLCs or businesses so we can get more benefit from an obviously corporate oriented
taking power in 2017.
I don't challenge the concept of your suggestion, merely the implementation and funding.
Good luck.
She buys all of her own medicine, incontinence products and most of her daytime food (she eats dinner with us). Mom also pays for gas for her van.
She pays M-F 8-4 caregivers out of her money.
We had to move to a bigger house to accommodate her and the difference in the mortgage was approx. $800 a month. We have her pay us $800 a month. The value of her apartment (attached to our house), should we rent it out, is close to that.
In hindsight, we should have asked for more money up front but we didn't anticipate the wear and tear on our family. When we brought her onboard, she was much more independent and now, she needs almost constant care and attention.
She pays us approx. 10% of her monthly income.