What is Long-Term Care?
Living with Health Problems
Long-term care is for people who need help with everyday life tasks because of a prolonged health problem or following a major illness or injury. This loss of independence can affect people of all ages.
Long-term care supplements medical treatment. The illness or disability can be physical or mental, temporary or permanent.
Activities of Daily Living
You may need long-term care if you cannot perform at least two of the following six activities of daily living without substantial assistance:
- Bathing
- Transferring, such as getting in and out of bed
- Dressing
- Toileting (using the bathroom)
- Continence
- Eating (ability to feed oneself)
You also may need long-term care if you have a severe cognitive impairment, such as Alzheimer's disease, that requires substantial supervision to protect you and others from serious threats to health and safety.
Long-Term Care Services
Long-term care can range from a visit from a home-care aide two or three times a week to full-time care in a nursing home. Services will depend on how much you can take care of your personal needs. Examples include:
- Care in a nursing home or hospice facility
- Assisted living care
- Community-based care
- Home health care services
- Informal care-giving
- Alternative and transitional care
For More Information or to Apply for Benefits
Long Term Care Group, Inc.
P.O. Box 64011
St. Paul, Minnesota 55164-0011
Toll free: 1-800-761-4057
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