
Empty Nest Finances Pt. 1 With Jim Burns
04/26/22 • 25 min
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Healthcare Trends and Changes With Lauren Gajdek
Hi, I’m Rob West. Like many industries, healthcare has struggled with a tightening labor market that was already causing problems even before the pandemic. This is impacting the relationship many patients have with their healthcare providers. Lauren Gajdek with Christian Healthcare Ministries joins us today to talk about those issues. Lauren Gajdek is vice president of communications and media at Christian Healthcare Ministries, an underwriter of this program with an alternative way believers can meet their health care costs. HEALTHCARE COST AND ACCESS The healthcare industry was dealing with staffing shortages before COVID-19 arrived, but the pandemic has accelerated those trends while driving up healthcare costs overall. However, Gajdek says that has not had a meaningful impact on Christian Healthcare Ministries’ (CHM’s) ability to serve members and share healthcare costs. Even as the pandemic appears to be winding down, COVID is still straining healthcare systems as people seek medical care for other conditions for which they may have delayed treatment during the pandemic. But CHM members have an advantage in finding care they need because they are not limited to a network of particular providers. They are free to seek medicare anywhere from any provider, in accordance with organization’s guidelines. CHM does not have a healthcare provider network. TELE-MEDICINE The pandemic fueled an explosion of interest in tele-health visits. Tele-health visits are also eligible for sharing for CHM members. The organization has also launched a tele-health program called Healthiest You, which provides free tele-medicine support. The program has saved members almost $7 million dollars since October. This is largely intended for everyday malities that people may experience. It’s a 24/7 service with a mobile app connecting members with board certified physicians. Gajdek said tele-health does not seem to have been impacted by staffing shortages to the same extent as conventional office visits. WHAT IS A CHRISTIAN HEALTHCARE COST SHARING? Health cost sharing is not insurance. It’s a way to satisfy your healthcare costs and help fellow Christians while upholding your Christian beliefs and sticking to your budget. Members’ pre-set monthly financial gifts to CHM are the funds used to share each other’s healthcare costs. Learn more here. CHM is celebrating 40 years as the nation’s first and longest-serving health cost sharing ministry. On today’s program, Rob also answers listener questions: ● How are beneficiaries determined without a will? ● Is there a good way to get out of a timeshare? ● What would be a good investment option for a person in her 80s? RESOURCES MENTIONED: ● Ally Bank ● Capitol One 360 Checking ● Marcus Remember, you can call in to ask your questions most days at (800) 525-7000 or email them to [email protected]. Also, visit our website at MoneyWise.org where you can connect with a MoneyWise Coach, join the MoneyWise Community, and even download the free MoneyWise app. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/1085/29
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Stop Helping Adult Children
As parents, we always want to help our children. But at the same time, we don’t want to encourage our children to have a slack hand. That sometimes leads to tough decisions. We’ll talk about that today on MoneyWise. TO HELP OR NOT TO HELP? Some parents find great joy in helping their adult children financially, especially if a child has chosen a career field that doesn’t pay very well. It’s a joy that can be experienced while you’re still living, as opposed to leaving an inheritance. The problem is that many parents are willing to help their kids even to the point of their own detriment, even when it jeopardizes their retirement. A recent Bank of America survey showed that more than half of parents are sacrificing their own financial security for children who should be supporting themselves. More than 3 out of 4 parents said they provided at least some financial support to their kids when they left the nest. This inability to cut the financial umbilical cord can have a detrimental impact on both parents and children. The kids may begin to expect regular financial handouts and become dependent on them. So much for the joy of helping. And as that survey showed, many parents are likely to go beyond the occasional financial gift, creating a pattern that threatens their own financial security. Too much help can also jeopardize the parents’ marital relationship when one parent sees the need to put on the brakes, and the other wants to continue full speed ahead. In another survey by Bankrate, half of retired couples said they’d made or are making financial gifts to their kids that impacted their retirement savings. Sometimes this starts when the parents are in a strong place financially and they can easily afford helping their kids. But the recent pandemic showed that anyone’s income can be negatively affected by unforeseen circumstances. In an economic downturn, the kids may be expecting more help. At the same time, parents are less able to afford it. And many parents will be reluctant to share their financial difficulties with their children. The effects of unbridled giving to kids can have long term consequences. Not only can it prevent parents from saving enough for retirement, it may also condition the kids to expect a lifestyle they can’t afford. It may also lead them to make critical choices that inhibit their ability to earn more and become financially independent. All of this can also negatively impact the parent/child relationship. When financial support is expected, it’s often not appreciated. Parents may then resent being taken for granted. TIME TO PULL BACK? Now, you may know that you’ve been helping your adult children too much and enabling them to remain dependent, but you’re struggling with the idea of turning off the financial spigot. God’s Word has encouragement and advice: Proverbs 22:6 tells us, Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it. It’s never too late to start teaching your children financial responsibility. And Proverbs 29:15 reads, The rod and reproof give wisdom, but a child left to himself brings shame to his mother. God wants and expects you to help your children achieve independence. In their book, Beyond Success and Failure: Ways to Self-Reliance and Maturity, Marguerite and Willard Beecher write that parents need to gain freedom from their children so that children can be free of their parents. The parent has to take the first step. They also maintain that parents shouldn’t do anything for a child that he or she might do for themselves and profit from it. So you may have a weaning process ahead of you. You might begin to give incrementally less to your adult but still dependent child or you can set a deadline when all financial help will stop. Either way, you’re likely to experience some bumps in the road, but the payoff will be worth it. Then, start putting the extra money you’ll have into your retirement account. When the day comes when you have to stop working, you’ll need it more than your children will. On today’s program, Rob also answers listener questions: ● Is it a good security practice to divide your money between multiple checking accounts? ● Can paying off loans cause your credit to drop? ● Would it be wise to extend the benefits of a whole life policy? Remember, you can call in to ask your questions most days at (800) 525-7000 or email them to [email protected]. Also, visit our website at MoneyWise.org where you can connect with a MoneyWise Coach, join the MoneyWise Community, and even download the free MoneyWise app. To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/1085/29
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