The Aid and Attendance Benefit is for veterans and their surviving spouses who require the aid of another person to assist in eating, bathing, dressing, walking, medication dosing, taking care of the needs of nature and to insure a safe environment.Individuals who are blind, who’ve been diagnosed with a form of Dementia such as Alzheimer’s, and those who are a patient in a nursing home or assisted living facility because of mental or physical incapacity may qualify. Those receiving care in their own home may be eligible as well. This benefit is greatly underutilized because many veterans are unaware it exists. According to VeteransAidBenefit.org, roughly one out of four seniors in the U.S. could qualify for the Aid and Attendance Benefit under the right conditions. Only about five percent of U.S. seniors are actually receiving this benefit.
snip To qualify for the Veterans’ Aid and Attendance Benefit a veteran must:
• have received an honorable or general discharge
• have served at least one day during the following active wars WWII, Korea, Vietnam (certain criteria apply) AND have a minimum of 90 days of active duty service
• have doctor’s orders stating he or she needs the aid and assistance of others
• meet specific financial requirements regarding income and assets read more>>>
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