Tuesday, June 20, 2017

CDC Reports that LTC the Overwhelming Source of Legionnaires' in Healthcare Facilities

Legionnaires' disease tends to be more common and deadly within post-acute care facilities than others — and providers need to do more to reduce the risk to residents.

Researchers with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently conducted a study finding that 76% of Legionnaires' cases reported in 2015 could be traced to healthcare facilities. Of those cases, 80% were linked back to long-term care facilities, followed by 18% at hospitals and 2% to both.

Eighty-eight percent of Legionnaires' cases that year were reported in patients older than 60, the CDC said. About 25% of patients in healthcare facilities who contract legionnaires' die from it. That's two-and-a-half times the rate of all who contract the disease, which comes from inhaling water containing Legionella bacteria.

According to an article in McKnight's:

“Legionnaires' disease in healthcare facilities is widespread, deadly and preventable," CDC Acting Director Anne Schuchat, M.D. said during a press conference. “People can inhale the bacteria from small water droplets from showers, water therapy spas, baths, cooling towers, decorative fountains and medical equipment, like respiratory therapy equipment.”
The report comes three days after the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a memo to surveyors explaining that healthcare providers soon will be expected to have policies in place to reduce the risk of Legionnaires'.

Marc Siegel, M.D., told providers to monitor patients with pneumonia for Legionnaires', and to keep their facilities sterile, according to MedlinePlus.

“This is all about improper maintenance, improper sanitation and improper sterilization, and a vastly underreported problem,” Siegel reportedly said.

Legionnaires' disease is a severe, often lethal, form of pneumonia.  Like many diseases, it presents greater risk to populations likely to reside in skilled nursing facilities, such as:
  • People 50 years or older;
  • Current or former smokers;
  • People with a chronic lung disease (like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or emphysema);
  • People with weak immune systems or who take drugs that weaken the immune system (like after a transplant operation or chemotherapy);
  • People with cancer;
  • People with underlying illnesses such as diabetes, kidney failure, or liver failure.
The fatality rate of Legionnaires' disease has ranged from 5% to 30% during various outbreaks, but "Hospital-acquired" Legionnaires' has a fatality rate of 28%.  

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Medical Evidence in VA Claims

Although many factors are considered in the determination of eligibility for Veterans Administration (VA) benefits, one of the most important factors is assembly and production of the medical evidence.  Karen McIntyre, R.N., and a VA Accredited Agent has penned an excellent article regarding the importance of of medical evidence supporting VA claims. She writes:
In both service connected and non-service connected claims, the medical and mental condition of the veteran is crucial in the outcome of the claim. In service connected disability compensation claims, there are two routes to take; i.e. nexus or presumptive.
In nexus claims, the veteran (or survivor) must show a likely connection between the disability (or death) and military service.  In other words, does the disability (or did the death) have a connection in some way to military service and if so, how?  Proof of this rests in the medical evidence.
In presumptive claims, the claimant does not have to prove a nexus between military service and the condition (or death).  In these claims, only proof of the condition (or cause of death) during a statutory time frame and/or place of service must be shown.  These claims are much easier to win than nexus claims.

In both claims, the veteran's condition must be authenticated by a medical professional; ideally, by a private physician since many VA doctors are notorious for their lack of cooperation.  It is true that the VA will want their own doctors to exam the veteran filing a disability compensation claim, but the additional supporting evidence from the private sector can go a long way in winning a claim.
Since there are no official guidelines for doctors, Ms. McIntyre  suggests thati t may be beneficial for the claimant or his/her representative to seek medical assistance from a qualified registered nurse or other medical professional who fully understands not only diseases and conditions, but also the VA's interpretation of its unique and crucial forms.

Monday, June 12, 2017

Do-Not-Hospitalize Orders Underutilized, Could Reduce Hospital Stays

Do-not-hospitalize (DNH) orders help reduce the number of hospital stays and emergency department visits for nursing home residents, but they are used by a relatively small portion of the population, according to a new study reported by McKnight's.
Researchers with Rutgers University and State University of New York at Albany analyzed data for more than 6,000 nursing home residents to determine the impact of DNH orders. Their findings showed 61% of residents had do-not-resuscitate orders and 12% had feeding restrictions, but just 6% had DNH orders.
Residents with DNH orders had significantly fewer unnecessary hospital stays and emergency department visits in their last 90 days of life than residents without them, the researchers reported in the May issue of JAMDA. The orders also helped reduce hospital stays for residents with dementia.
The findings suggest skilled nursing providers should encourage residents to complete DNH orders, researchers said, in order to “promote integration of the resident's values and goals in guiding care provision toward the end of life."

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

"Guardianship: As your Special Needs Child Becomes An Adult:" New Video from Summit County Probate Judge Stormer

Summit County Probate Court Judge Elinore Marsh Stormer has released a new video titled "Guardianship: As your Special Needs Child Becomes An Adult," to help parents of developmentally disabled children make decisions about their child's transition into adulthood.  In the video, parents ask questions about guardianship, and share their hopes and dreams about their developmentally disabled child.  

The video is just another in a series of videos that Judge Stormer has published to help people understand the probate court's role, and facilitate probate and guardianship related decision-making.  All of the videos can be found here

B Cepacia Outbreak at Nursing Homes Traced to Contaminated Medical Products

Researchers have traced an outbreak of Burkholderia cepacia  also called B. cepacia, at skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) spanning five states to contaminated saline flushes. B. cepacia poses little medical risk to healthy people, but poses serious risk to the elderly, young children, cancer patients, pregnant women, and people with chronic health problems like weakened immune systems or chronic lung diseases.  B. cepacia bacteria are often resistant to common antibiotics, and the mortality rate for already compromised patients, for example, those with lung diseases like Cystic Fibrosis, is particularly high. 

The outbreak was discovered on Sept. 22, 2016, when four B. cepacia bloodstream infections were found in patients receiving IV therapy at a Maryland skilled nursing facility. Officials notified colleagues across state lines, and clusters of B. cepacia infection were discovered in other SNFs.  Investigators abstracted patient records and visited SNFs affected by the outbreak in two states in the hope of finding the source. The investigators found that all the infected patients were staying at SNFs supplied by a certain pharmacy that on Sept. 1 began distributing saline flushes from a specific manufacturer. They then focused on SNFs using flushes from that manufacturer.

The investigators found 162 cases of B. cepacia infection at 59 facilities in five states. Epidemiologic and laboratory evidence indicates the contamination of saline flushes produced by the manufacturer was the source of the outbreak, but  investigation and surveillance for more cases of B. cepacia are ongoing.
This is not the only recent outbreak of B. cepacia linked to contaminated medical products. A 2016 multistate B. cepacia outbreak was traced to syringes of liquid docusate, a stool softener. 

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Universal Life Insurance Policy Holders Face Premium Hikes

Over just the last two years, tens of thousands of universal life policyholders have been hit with double-digit premium increases from companies such as Axa Equitable, Voya Financial, and Transamerica.  

Universal life is a permanent and somewhat flexible hybrid life insurance policy that is intended to combine the reasonably affordable aspects of term insurance with a savings element similar to whole life. Universal life insurance typically offers policyholders a “cash value” savings account that earns tax-exempt interest along with the flexibility to adjust premiums and to increase or decrease death benefits. The policy’s investment account accumulates cash when interest rates are high, but can plummet when rates are low. In the 1980s and ’90s, the most common guaranteed rate in universal life contracts was 4%; some insurers guaranteed more.  Many new policies are tied to the stock market and don’t guarantee returns at all.  

Life insurers blame the economy for the premium increases. Interest rates began to slowly decline in the 1980s, but then plummeted during the 2008 recession as the Federal Reserve tried to improve economic conditions by making money cheap to borrow. But low interest rates are bad for the investment.  Low interest rates mean  lower profits.  In response, life insurers have begun to raise premiums on older universal life policies.

Understandably, universal life policyholders, many of whom were assured by agents that their premiums would never increase, are angry.   There are now a dozen lawsuits against insurers who sold those policies

Of course, regulatory reforms are suggested to help minimize the impact of these premium increases.  The New York Department of Financial Services, for example, proposed a rule that would require insurers to notify the agency at least 120 days before an “adverse change” in “non-guaranteed elements of an in-force life insurance or annuity policy.” This rule would also force insurers to notify consumers at least 60 days before the change. The regulation could be used as a precedent for other state insurance departments.  The Consumer Federation of America last year sent a letter to all state insurance commissioners asking them to study and prohibit any unfair price increases being imposed on consumers owning universal life policies.  Regardless, these reforms don't offer insureds a financial solution- only time to react.

Scott Hanson, a senior partner and founding principal of Hanson McClain,  a financial advisory firm in Sacramento, California,  offers the following advice to insureds holding universal life policies:

  • Get ahead of the curve by contacting your insurer to find out just how much your policy’s cash reserves are worth.  Depending on the amount you have accrued over the years, you might be able to afford future premium hikes.
  • Alternatively, consider working with your insurer to lower the policy’s death benefit, and by extension, your costs.
  • You could also inquire about changing policies. What else does your insurer have to offer you? Fair warning: It can be hard to get approved for a life insurance policy when you’re in your 60s or older.
  • If all else fails, you could look for a life insurance agent or company who would buy the policy from you now in exchange for receiving the death benefit later.

For more information regarding life insurance in estate and financial planning, go here.

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Oregon Court Orders DHS to Restore In-home Care- An Object Lesson in a State's Lack of Commitment to Home and Community Based Care

When state and federal agencies proclaim support for aging in place and home based care, there is reason to doubt their resolve.  A recent example can be found courtesy of a court case against the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS).  A court has ordered Oregon DHS to restore previous levels of in-home care services, at least temporarily, to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in a federal lawsuit contesting recent cuts.

DHS determines every year how many hours of in-home care someone with an intellectual or developmental disability is eligible to receive.  Disability Rights Oregon, an advocacy organization that filed the suit last week, objects to how those decisions are made, saying the process lacks clarity.

The lawsuit alleges that under federal law, the agency violated the civil and due process rights of Oregonians receiving these services, as well as the Medicaid requirement that the Office of Developmental Disabilities Services must provide such services “as needed.”  Last year, the agency implemented a new assessment method on a rolling basis, which the lawsuit argues resulted in a reduction of in-home care hours for many people — although the amount of help they needed at home had not changed.  Not all people receiving in-home care services have yet felt reductions, because the changes have been implemented gradually.

In 2013, after the expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, and a specific federal funding option called the Community First Choice Plan that provided funds so people with disabilities could access community-based services, there were significant increases in those eligible for in-home care — and in costs to the state.  In 2015, Oregon legislators agreed to pay for the unanticipated costs in the upcoming budget cycle, but asked DHS to come up with a way to contain the rate of cost growth in the future. That became the method that advocates are now contesting in court.  Cost of care

The Department of Human Services makes up a significant chunk of the state’s approximately $20 billion general fund budget, which lawmakers are busy trying to balance in the face of an approximately $1.6 billion shortfall.  Reducing in-home care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities by 30 percent, as DHS had planned prior to the court order, would have saved the state’s general fund a comparatively paltry  $6 million in the upcoming two-year budget.  

Cost considerations, i.e., saving $6 million of a $1.6 billion shortfall, could send people with intellectual and developmental disabilities currently being treated at home to foster care, group homes, and skilled nursing facilities.  To put this in context,  a state audit found that Oregon Health Plan caseworkers were “knowingly” extending benefits to illegal immigrants and unqualified people. Also, 4,400 people who were above the income limits still received benefits. The total cost to Oregon taxpayers is $4.3 million a year.   Further, an Oregonian survey helped to unveil $1.4 billion in uncollected debts to the state. It appeared that most state agencies have a collection problem and the actual cost may be even higher than $1.4 billion. Among the examples was a business that bought $50,000 of supplies made by blind workers under the State Commission for the Blind, for which they never paid. 

Home and community based care, it would seem, is a too-easy target for money-grubbing administrators.   

This article is heavily reliant upon the article found here.

Monday, May 1, 2017

May is Older Americans Month

May is  Older Americans month. The Administration for Community Living (ACL)  has a website dedicated to older Americans month.  The theme for 2017 is Age Out Loud.  Need ideas for events? ACL offers that here.  Helpful hints for using social media are offered as well.
The following comes from ACL:
Getting older doesn’t mean what it used to. For many aging Americans, it is a phase of life where interests, goals, and dreams can get a new or second start. Today, aging is about eliminating outdated perceptions and living the way that suits you best.

Take Barbara Hillary, for example. A nurse for 55 years who dreamed of travel, at age 75 Hillary became the first African American woman to set foot on the North Pole. In 2011, at age 79, she set another first when she stepped onto the South Pole. Former president George H.W. Bush celebrated his 90th birthday by skydiving. Actress Betty White, now 95 years old, became the oldest person to host Saturday Night Live in 2010, coincidentally during May—the same month recognized as Older Americans Month (OAM).
Since 1963, OAM has been a time to celebrate older Americans, their stories, and their contributions. Led by the Administration for Community Living (ACL), the annual observance offers a special opportunity to learn about, support, and recognize our nation’s older citizens. This year’s theme, “Age Out Loud,” emphasizes the ways older adults are living their lives with boldness, confidence, and passion while serving as an inspiration to people of all ages.
Our firm will use OAM 2017 to focus on how older adults in our community are redefining aging—through work or family interests, by taking charge of their health and staying independent for as long as possible, and through their community and advocacy efforts. We can also use this opportunity to learn how we can best support and learn from our community’s older members.

Throughout the month, I and my paralegals will conduct activities and share information designed to highlight changes in care giving and long-term care than empower aging Americans to age in place.  We encourage you to get involved by sharing this post and other articles from this blog, referring a client to suitable social, financial, or legal services that s/he might protect themselves from medical, legal, and financial threats.  Later this month, we will post a video regarding Aging in Place, and its importance in medical, legal, and financial planning. 

Join us and ACL as we speak up for #OAM17 and #AgeOutLoud this May!

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Health Care Ageism And Senior Profiling

Those of us who regularly work with and for the elderly are painfully aware of pervasive latent ageism that often adversely impacts decision-making  concerning them.   Dr. Val Jones has penned an excellent article in the blog, better health warning of ageism in the health care industry.  Dr. Jones is  board certified in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation,  and serves as a traveling physician to hospitals in 14 states.  She is a graduate of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and an award-winning writer.  She writes:
 Over the years I’ve become more and more aware of ageism in healthcare – a bias against full treatment options for older patients. Assumptions about lower capabilities, cognitive status and sedentary lifestyle are all too common. There is a kind of “senior profiling” that occurs among hospital staff, and this regularly leads to inappropriate medical care.
 *          *          *
Hospitalized patients are often very different than their usual selves. As we age, we become more vulnerable to medication side-effects, infections, and delirium. And so, the chance of an elderly hospitalized patient being acutely impaired is much higher than the general population. Unfortunately, many hospital-based physicians and surgeons — and certainly nurses and therapists — have little or no prior knowledge of the patient in their care. The patient’s “normal baseline” must often be reconstructed with the help of family members and friends. This takes precious time, and often goes undone.
Years ago, a patient’s family doctor would admit them to the hospital and care for them there. Now that the breadth and depth of our treatments have given birth to an army of sub-specialists, we have increased access to life-saving interventions at the expense of knowing those who need them. This presents a peculiar problem – one in which we spend enormous amounts of resources on diagnostic rabbit holes, because we aren’t certain if our patients’ symptoms are new or old. Was Mrs. Smith born with a lazy eye, or is she having a brain bleed? We could ask a family member, but we usually order an MRI.
My plea is for healthcare staff to be very mindful of the tendency to profile seniors. Just because Mr. Johnson has behavioral disturbances in his hospital room doesn’t mean that he is like that at home. Be especially suspicious of reversible causes of mental status changes in the elderly, and presume that patients are normally functional and bright until proven otherwise.
Dr. Jones gives examples of ageism impacting elderly care.  She describes the plight of an elderly woman admitted to a local hospital where it was presumed, due to her age, that she had advanced dementia. Hospice care was recommended for the woman at discharge. The woman had been leading an active life in retirement, serving  as the chairman of the board at a prestigious company, and caring for her disabled adult son.  She was physically fit , and an "avid Pilates participant."   It turns out that a new physician at her practice recommended a higher dose of diuretic, which she dutifully accepted, and several days later she became delirious from dehydration.  Dr. Jones concludes, "All she needed was IV fluids." 

Dr. Jones explains her recent treatment of an attorney in her 70’s who had a slow growing brain tumor that was causing speech difficulties. The attorney was written off as having dementia until an MRI performed to explore the reason for new left-eye blindness revealed the tumor.  The patient's tumor was removed successfully, but she was denied brain rehabilitation services because of her “history of dementia.”

Another patient, an 80-year-old male, was presumed to be an alcoholic when he showed up to his local hospital.  The patient, had, in fact, suffered a stroke.

These cases, and the countless cases like them, underscore the importance of good health care planning as part of a comprehensive estate plan.   I recommend that every client select and appoint a  trusted primary care physician, by name, in his or her estate planning documents.  I recommend that this person be given the authority to render decisions regarding competency and capacity.  I urge clients to develop a healthy on-going relationship with this physician, so that the physician will be aware of the client's lifestyle, speech patterns, comportment, and the like.  I urge clients to nurture this relationship even during periods during which the client is healthy, and without need for acute care.  Too often, the first time that a medical professional is evaluating a patient is immediately after an acute event or occurrence, inviting erroneous presumptions and judgements.  

Particularly for my clients hoping to Age in Place, this lifetime planning is vitally important. Inviting or acquiescing to a set of circumstances that result in health care decisions being made by professionals without knowledge or experience about you, only increases the possibility that institutional  long term care is your outcome.  Most of my clients work with legal counsel, their families, and their health care professionals to prevent unnecessary and avoidable long term institutional care.  

For more information regarding Aging in Place planning, go here.  For more information regarding LegalVault®, a system through which health care and legal documents are stored, protected and made available to health professionals upon demand, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a years, go here.  

Friday, April 28, 2017

Filial Responsibility Laws Complicate Estate and Financial Planning

Warning of the challenges created by state filial responsibility laws, Jamie Hopkins, co-director of the New York Life Center for Retirement Income at the American College of Financial Services, has penned an excellent article for advisers entitled,  Family-Responsibility Laws Could Cost Your ClientsBe Aware of Laws Aiming to hold Family Members Financially Responsible for Other Family Members.


The article explains filial responsibility laws which "aim to hold family members financially responsible for other family members," by providing that "children can be held responsible for their mother and father’s nursing-home costs."   The article warns that although these laws have not been applied often because of the prevalence of social programs like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, "with more and more retirees unable to meet their expenses, some providers have turned to filial laws for payment of debts."  



The article continues:

"The most widely cited recent application of filial law is 2012’s Pennsylvania case, Health Care & Retirement Corporation of America v. Pittas, in which the court held that a son was liable for a $93,000 nursing-home bill owed by his mom.
Since 2012, some care facilities have begun using filial laws to entice children of nursing-home residents to make payments or to ensure that the Medicaid application process is properly completed. However, there has not yet been a major uptick in lawsuits applying filial laws to recover unpaid bills.
Perhaps more interesting than the Pittas case is Eori v. Eori, in which the Superior Court of Pennsylvania upheld a monthly filial-support obligation of $400 from one brother to another in order to pay for long-term-care support for their seriously ill mother. The plaintiff son, who himself provided a lot of the care at home, was able to demonstrate that his mother could not pay all of her costs and needed financial assistance.
This case helps show the far-reaching potential of filial-support laws, as siblings can be required to help support their parents even if they are not in a nursing home or other professional facility.
This blog last warned about filial responsibility in the article Filial Responsibility Laws Lead to Chaos.  Many conclude that it is not a question of whether filial responsibility laws will find widespread application to long term care cases, it is a question of when.


To read more about filial responsibility, go here,  go herehereherehere, and here.  

Monday, April 24, 2017

Beware Direct Transfer Designations (TODs and PODs)

If you are planning to Age in Place, you should not rely upon direct transfer designations, like POD's (payable on death designations) and TOD's (transfer on death designations), or simple beneficiary designations as a primary component of your estate plan.  These designations are mechanisms by which an account or other asset is transferred or paid on the death of the owner to a beneficiary. They are often recommended by the administrator of the account, such as a bank, broker or life insurance company. While these can be very effective and inexpensive means by which to avoid probate and transfer assets at death, they are not without their risks and challenges. A lack of careful consideration of the risks and rewards of these mechanisms can be disastrous. A carefully prepared estate plan will consider, and resolve, all of the risks and challenges they present.

Benefits of Direct Transfer Designations

Direct transfer designations have several benefits. The most important benefit is that they are inexpensive and relatively easy to employ. Most institutions will permit you to make such designations as a service, for no additional fee. They are simple to create, and there is no need for an attorney or other professional. Most of these designations are made by account owners without legal or professional advice or counsel. Particularly because of this simplicity, they are very popular.

The second benefit is that the payment or transfer is more or less immediate and direct. Where there is a need to make cash or other liquid assets immediately available to a child or grandchild for some purpose, a TOD or POD appears attractive at first glance. Beneficiary transfers, however, typically require claim forms, and documentation in support of the claim. In reality, the process may take more time and effort than succession of ownership (such as through a living trust or joint tenancy with right of survivorship). Nonetheless, it is the assumption that funds are available immediately that often causes folks to choose direct transfer designations.

Unquestionably, direct transfers can have unique benefits as a result of direct payment to a beneficiary, whether or not immediate. For example, if you are widowed and want the bulk of your estate to pass to your children, but still desire a particular asset, fund, account or benefit to pass to a significant other or second spouse, without involvement of your children, a direct transfer seems suited for this purpose. Of course, such circumstances are specific, unique, and situational. The proper method for accomplishing an intended result depends upon first carefully considering all options to ensure that the proper tool is selected.

The third benefit is that a direct transfer designation may avoid probate, provided, however, that the beneficiary is alive at the death of the account holder or owner, and there is no intervening circumstance that interrupts direct payment to the living beneficiary; a beneficiary's disability, need for government benefits eligibility, creditors, marital disputes, and the like, may frustrate an effort to protect assets from legal or court administration. 

If the beneficiary passes before or after, the asset may be probated. Particularly because the avoidance of probate may not be effective, TOD's and POD's are of limited utility in a carefully planned estate. Not surprisingly, because they are available at little or no cost, they are often used for the sole purpose of avoiding probate - an inexpensive substitute for more comprehensive planning. Make no mistake--these devices are NOT substitutes for comprehensive plans or living trusts. If you have utilized TOD's or POD's in your estate plan, particularly if you have done so without professional guidance, you may want to consider carefully the many possible disadvantages of these tools, and consider a more appropriate planning technique.

These designations simply do not, at least effectively, accomplish goals best achieved by proper estate planning. For example, these devices do not avoid estate taxes, reduce the risk of guardianship, protect assets from control by a court-appointed guardian, or permit in and of themselves management of assets during periods of incompetency or incapacity. They may not even avoid probate of the asset.

Additionally, there are several potential drawbacks to such devices, particularly if they are used without careful consideration or the advice of counsel. The biggest drawback to these plans is that they do not and cannot plan for contingencies. Additionally, use of such designations can cause illiquid estates, lead to or cause unintended disinheritance, lead to lawsuits or disputes, and can facilitate or encourage guardianship.

Proceeds from Direct Transfer Designations Do Not Have to be Used as Intended

Among the most common mistakes is to leave an account to a particular person, usually the person you intend to be the executor of the estate, for a specific purpose such as paying your funeral bill, or satisfying a mortgage. Unfortunately, the beneficiary is not required to use the funds for your intended purpose.  This can result in one of your children receiving a windfall, by pocketing the account, and having the obligation to be paid from other estate assets. 

Consider the following example:
Mrs. Smith leaves a twenty thousand dollar ($20,000.00) CD payable upon death to her daughter Patty, her executor, so that Patty will have immediate funds available to pay the funeral bill.  Mrs. Smith directs her home and her bank and savings accounts, worth a combined one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000.00) to her three daughters by way of a Last Will and Testament. 
Although she intended each daughter to receive an equal amount, or fifty thousand dollars ($50,0000.00), this is not the result. Patty keeps the twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00) as her own.  Patty acts as executor of the estate, and pays the ten thousand ($10,000.00) funeral bill as an expense of the estate. Patty pays six thousand five hundred dollars ($6,500.00) in medical and other bills, and expenses from the estate.  Patty is paid six thousand dollars ($6000.00) as the executor, and an attorney is paid seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7500.00) in attorneys fees, costs and expenses. The resulting net estate is one hundred thirty thousand dollars ($130,000.00), resulting in each daughter receiving an equal approximately forty-three thousand dollars ($43,333.33).  Patty received total distributions from her mother in the amount of sixty three thousand dollars ($63,333.33), twenty thousand more than her sisters. Additionally, Patty also received an executor's fee for the work that she performed in settling the estate.  
Direct Transfer Designations Do Not Avoid Estate Tax

If you have any incident of ownership in or to an account or other asset, it will be included in your taxable estate for estate tax purposes. Consequently, direct transfer designations are not appropriate tools for estate tax planning.  If you intend to remove the value of the asset from your taxable estate, you must do more. Generally, unless some other reason for excluding the account exists, the account will be included in your taxable estate notwithstanding the direct transfer designation.

POD's and TOD's May Not Avoid Probate

There are numerous instances where these techniques have been used to avoid probate, and yet the assets of the estate are nonetheless probated. Transfer upon death designations are not typically made for personal property, and may in fact be unavailable to transfer such assets. If there are sufficient assets to probate, the other assets will pass through probate, even if liquid or other property avoids probate.

Moreover, these designations do nothing to protect assets from administration by a guardian or conservator in the event of incompetence or incapacity. They also do not prevent challenges to a will, appointment of executor, or other legal disputes which may ultimately be resolved by the probate court.

Finally, these designations will not avoid probate if the beneficiary passes away either before or after the account or asset owner. A probate administration may be necessitated, whereas property passing by way of trust will not need to be probated in the event of the death of an heir, whether that death occurs before or after death of the owner.

Direct Transfer Designations Do Not Aid In Aging in Place

Aging in Place is the desire of almost every senior.  For some, it is only a  hope, desire, or aspiration.  For others, it is a fundamental objective forming the basis of a comprehensive estate and financial plan. Direct Transfer Designations do nothing to aid in a plan designed to enable you to Age in Place.  Simply, because these designations only "work" after you have passed, they are incapable of aiding in your efforts to Age in Place.  

Moreover, to the extent that the use of such designations abandons more comprehensive plans that, for example, change traditional fiduciary duties to permit use of assets for more expensive alternatives to institutional care, they indirectly frustrate your Aging in Place plans.  For more information regarding Aging in Place, go here.    

Direct Transfer Designations Do Not Avoid Guardianship

Direct transfer designations do nothing to protect assets from administration by a guardian or conservator in the event of incompetence or incapacity. Failing to protect yourself and your estate from guardianship impairs any plan to Age in Place.  For more information regarding the danger of guardianship generally, consider the Open Letter to Congress, drafted by the National Association to Stop Guardian Abuse, or review Guardianship over the Elderly: Security Provided or Freedoms Denied?Hearing Before the Special Committee on Aging, United States Senate.

 Direct Transfer Designations May Create Illiquid Probate Estates

One potential drawback to these designations, particularly when placed on all liquid checking, savings, and investment accounts is that an estate can be made illiquid. Lack of liquidity can be a problem where there is real estate, personal property, or other assets that must be probated. Probate administration and estate taxes must be paid, and if the probate estate is insufficient to do so, heirs may be required to return cash to the estate, or property may be sold at fire sale prices to satisfy obligations. It is important to consider that ad hoc asset level planning to avoid probate often leaves assets to be probated.

Direct Transfer Designations Do Not Plan For Contingencies

The biggest disadvantage is that these devises are usually limited, and do not provide for contingencies. These plans very rarely answer the "what if?" questions considered by a carefully prepared estate plan. For example, what if the transferee or payee dies shortly before or after the owner? In most cases, the designation will simply pay the estate of the deceased transferee or payee. If, for example, the payee is your son, and he dies before you, without a will, the account or asset will be paid in whole or part to your daughter-in-law. You may desire that no part of your estate pass to the spouses of your children, in order to protect your grandchildren in the event of remarriage. Moreover, if you intended to avoid probate of your assets, you may fail in your efforts.

There are numerous examples of contingencies that a living or even a testamentary trust can address which are not typically addressed by POD's and TOD's. What if the property passes intentionally or unintentionally to a minor? Do you want the property to be distributed to the minor upon his or her reaching age eighteen or obtaining emancipation, or would you prefer to protect minors from their inexperience and lack of wisdom in managing assets?  Did you anticipate that a guardian for the minor may need to be appointed in the probate court to oversee the assets, with the attendant burden, cost, and expense, even if you trust the minor's parents to manage the assets? 

What if the heir has financial difficulties, lawsuits, judgment liens, tax liens, or similar problems at the time of your death? If you do not intend your assets to pay the claims of third parties against your heirs, you should consider an alternative to a simple TOD or POD.

What if your heir is undergoing a divorce, dissolution, separation, or other marital difficulty? A TOD or POD may or may not be involved in such a dispute, depending upon a number of factors and your state law.

What if an heir is handicapped mentally or physically at the time of your death. If you want to protect that heir, you may want more than a simple TOD or POD.

What if an heir suffers from a substance abuse or other dependency that could affect their ability to manage their affairs? TOD and POD clauses rarely protect a family from such contingencies.

What if an heir joins or becomes a member of a religious organization, cult, or other organization pursuant to which your heir agrees to surrender or deliver all of the heir's assets? You may not want your worldly possessions to facilitate or benefit the organization or cult.

What if there is a dispute, contest, or lawsuit? How is the dispute to be resolved, and on what basis?

Regardless which "what if" question concerns you now, you should consider many possible contingencies. As a result, a carefully considered and well drafted estate plan will consider and provide solutions to all of these and many more. TOD's and POD's simply have no solutions, because they are not, in and of themselves, "plans."

Direct Transfer Designations Can Lead to Unintended Disinheritance

Another disadvantage of direct transfers is that they can lead to unintended disinheritance. This occurs because folks often use these to segregate accounts. In other words, a person will select one account with a TOD or POD designation for one heir, and another account for another heir. This is often done to keep confidential account balances which may favor one heir as against another. These can be disastrous in an estate plan. Consider the following example:
Mrs. Smith has three children and three CD's. Two CD's are worth ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00), but the third is worth twenty five thousand dollars ($25,000.00). Smith's oldest daughter lives very near, is often helpful in Smith's day-to-day activities, and is Smith's designated attorney-in-fact/agent. Smith makes the larger CD payable upon death (POD) to the oldest daughter, but makes the others payable to the other children. Unfortunately, Smith suffers a stroke and undergoes lengthy period of convalescence, including a stay in a nursing home. The expenses require the daughter, now acting through power of attorney, to liquidate one of the smaller CD's, and to liquidate the larger CD to cash, of which she spends ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00). Assuming the only asset remaining at Smith's death is the checking account, which is now worth only approximately fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000.00), and the remaining CD which is worth ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00), you can see how the POD failed to effectuate her wishes. The checking account is divided equally between the children (five thousand dollars ($5000.00) each. Widow Smith probably assumed like many people that the checking account would only have a nominal amount of money in the account, which may not be true as the family deals with medical or other crises. Instead of the oldest daughter receiving twenty five thousand dollars ($25,000.00), she receives only five thousand ($5000.00). One of the other children receives fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000.00). It is obvious the results were not in keeping with the intentions of Widow Smith.
An Attorney-in-Fact May Change Your Wishes

Most people who have utilized direct transfer designations assume that their estate plan is set, and their wishes will be followed. Sadly, nothing could be further from the truth. A direct transfer designation is typically a contractual right, which can be changed by an attorney-in-fact. Moreover, an asset can be transferred, and the designation "undone" by any person with authority over you or your estate, such as a guardian or conservator. Bottom line? A beneficiary designation is simply not an adequate estate plan for most people.

Direct Transfer Designations May Lead to Lawsuits Or Disputes

For all of the foregoing reasons, and countless others, direct transfer designations may cause your estate to be contested, and may encourage, rather than discourage lawsuits and litigation.  Particularly because these designations may create expectations in the minds of heirs, and because their use certainly does not discourage, and may encourage disputes, reliance on these in your estate plan might even encourage a guardianship application by an otherwise well-meaning heir as he or she seeks to protect their inheritance from others.

Guardianship proceedings may be necessitated by assets passing to contingent beneficiaries, as well, such as underage grandchildren. Since the goal of such designations is primarily probate avoidance, careful and limited use of such designations in an estate plan is warranted.

There is no substitute for a carefully considered and well drafted trust to ensure that your wishes are expressed and carried out.

[Note: This article is largely based upon another, earlier article written by Attorney Donohew, which article can be found here.]  

Friday, April 21, 2017

Most Procrastinating on Planning; Those That Plan Don't Protect Their Plans

A BMO Wealth Management survey finds 52% of adults have no will, 40% of parents have not discussed estate intentions with children, and only 28% of adults know their parents' legacy wishes. 

For those who have an estate plan in place, the survey indicates that most are not making an effort to notify heirs regarding the location of important estate planning documents.  Only one in three respondents said that their heirs were aware of the locations of estate planning documents such as a will or powers of attorney.  For married adults who had a will and powers of attorney, 25% responded that only their spouse knew where the documents were located. 

BMO sponsored the survey of 1,008 Americans age 18 and older in December.  For a more complete discussion of the survey results, go here.

BMO found that most respondents planned to leave each of their heirs equal portions of their assets, and that spouses and children were most often indicated as heirs. Yet some planned to distribute their estate unequally (between 5 percent and 15 percent, depending on marital status) or not leave an inheritance at all (between 7 percent and 20 percent).  As a result of the survey, BMO warned that such plans could cause division within families if not properly communicated to heirs ahead of a client’s death. 

Only 28 percent of the respondents said that they had estate planning discussions with their parents. Perhaps as a result, 40 percent of those surveyed felt that the distribution of their parents’ estates was unfair.

Of course, these survey results only underscore the many studies confirming what we know: most people do not plan, and those who do plan make too little effort to protect their plans.   This blog contains numerous similar reports, including the recent  New York Times report illustrating the major problems with advance directives, including that the existence of these legal documents is often not known about by medical professionals or loved ones (and even if it is, the physical location of these might not be known). 

Our clients have a convenient system that protects their wishes by vaulting them, and making them available to medical professionals and family members when necessary. LegalVault® is a great tool which allows you to securely store your advance directives and estate planning documents. Here’s how it works:

  • The client executes an up-to-date General Power of Attorney for Health Care, and Advanced Directive/Living Will;
  • Each document is electronically scanned, and an electronic image of each document is made (which is far superior to a copy);
  • Each  client is given a secured LegalVault® account;
  • Our firm uploads the image of the  documents to the client's LegalVault® account;
  • LegalVault® sends out an Emergency Access Wallet Card which contains instructions for healthcare providers on accessing healthcare-related documents online or via a 24/7 fax back service;
  • Once an account has been created, the LegalVault® physician notification system sends a notice to the primary care provider informing him or her of this invaluable service and the storage of advance directives, ensuring that these important planning documents never fall to the back of a medical chart where they go unnoticed for weeks; 
  • Clients control what information is available to health care providers, and can quickly update the account with up-to-date documents or information (such as medications or allergies) from their home computer or smart phone;
  • With the client's permission, images of other estate planning documents (Wills, Trusts, Powers of Attorney, etc.) are uploaded to the client's LegalVault® account; 
  • Clients can log in to their accounts to share other non-healthcare-related documents with our firm, or even upload copies of family keepsakes (photos, home videos, letters to children, family trees, intellectual property, copyrighted materials, publications, art) to ensure these are safely secured and passed down to younger generations;
  • Clients can keep or maintain important legal and financial records such as insurance policies, annuities, savings bonds, stock certificates, leases, contracts, and other instruments, potentially lost, stolen, discarded, or destroyed by third parties at a time of death or disability;
  • Clients can alert authorities of significant needs or concerns, such as "disabled child at home," "pets at home," or the like;
  • A separate vault, inaccessible to our firm, accessible only to the client, and an executor, successor trustee, or personal representative, can store passwords to online accounts;
  • Upon renewal of the LegalVault® account (every 3,5, or 7 years) updated documents are executed, ensuring that the documents are never out-of-date.

There is no limit to the storage space available for estate planning documents, pictures, letters, financial documents, and the like.  The cost of such a service is probably less than you might imagine. Contact us if you want to add this valuable service to your estate and/or financial plan. We include the service with many new estate plans at no additional charge for the first three years.

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