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Some 30 states currently have laws making adult children  responsible for their parents if their parents can't afford to take care  of themselves.  These “filial responsibility” laws have rarely been enforced, but six years ago when federal rules made it more difficult to qualify for Medicaid long-term care coverage, some elder law attorneys predicted that nursing homes would start using the laws as a way to get care paid for. 
 It looks like this is starting to happen.  This week, a Pennsylvania appeals court found a son liable for his mother's  $93,000 nursing home bill under the state's filial responsibility law. Health Care & Retirement Corporation of America v. Pittas (Pa. Super. Ct., No. 536 EDA 2011, May 7, 2012).
 Facts of the Case
 John Pittas' mother entered a nursing home for rehabilitation  following a car crash. She later left the nursing home and moved to  Greece, and a large portion of her bill at the nursing home went unpaid.  Mr. Pittas' mother applied to Medicaid to cover her care, but that  application is still pending.
 Meanwhile, the nursing home sued Mr. Pittas for nearly $93,000  under the state's filial responsibility law, which requires a child to  provide support for an indigent parent. The trial court ruled in favor  of the nursing home, and Mr. Pittas appealed. Mr. Pittas argued in part  that the court should have considered alternate forms of payment, such  as Medicaid or going after his mother's husband and her two other adult  children.
 The Pennsylvania Superior Court, an appeals court, agreed with  the trial court that Mr. Pittas is liable for his mother's nursing home  debt.  The court held that the law does not require it to consider other  sources of income or to wait until Mrs. Pittas’s Medicaid claim is  resolved.  It also said that the nursing home had every right to choose  which family members to pursue for the money owed.
 First of a ‘Wave of Lawsuits’?
 The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 made it much more difficult for the elderly to transfer assets before  qualifying for Medicaid coverage of nursing home care. With enactment of  the law, advocates for the elderly said that nursing homes would likely  be flooded with residents who need care but have no way to pay for it,  and that in states that have filial responsibility laws, the nursing  homes might seek reimbursement from the residents' children.
 After Pennsylvania re-enacted its filial support law in the mid-2000s, Williamsport ElderLawAnswers member attorney Jeffrey A. Marshall forecast that the new Medicaid law would trigger a wave of lawsuits involving adult children.
 "Litigation between nursing homes and children is likely to  flourish," Marshall wrote in the January 20, 2006, issue of his firm's Elder Care Law Alert.  (To read Marshall’s recent blog post on the Pittas ruling, click here.)
 In 2005, the National Center for Policy Analysis, a conservative policy group, released an issue brief proposing that states begin enforcing filial responsibility laws in order to reduce long-term care costs. 
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 For the full text of the Pennsylvania court’s decision in the Pittas case, go to: http://www.pacourts.us/OpPosting/Superior/out/A36025_11.pdf
 For more on filial responsibility laws. click here.
 For more on the changes to Medicaid's transfer laws, click here. 
Reprinted with the permission of ElderLawAnswers.com