Going to the Mexican Nursing Homes
Posted by Kim on August 17th, 2007 / Print This Post
Here’s a twist: American elderly are going to Mexican nursing homes and assisted living facilities because the costs are far less than anything in the US…
AJIJIC, Mexico — After Jean Douglas turned 70, she realized she couldn’t take care of herself anymore. Her knees were giving out, and winters in Bandon, Ore., were getting harder to bear alone.Douglas was shocked by the high cost and impersonal care at assisted-living facilities near her home. After searching the Internet for other options, she joined a small but steadily growing number of Americans who are moving across the border to nursing homes in Mexico, where the sun is bright and the living is cheap.
For $1,300 a month — a quarter of what an average nursing home costs in Oregon — Douglas gets a studio apartment, three meals a day, laundry and cleaning service, and 24-hour care from an attentive staff, many of whom speak English. She wakes up every morning next to a glimmering mountain lake, and the average annual high temperature is a toasty 79 degrees.
“It is paradise,” says Douglas, 74. “If you need help living or coping, this is the place to be. I don’t know that there is such a thing back (in the USA), and certainly not for this amount of money.
She’s right. Absolutely right.
What are some of the benefits of moving to Mexico?
Many expatriates are Americans or Europeans who retired here years ago and are now becoming more frail. Others are not quite ready for a nursing home but are exploring options such as in-home health care services, which can provide Mexican nurses at a fraction of U.S. prices.
Correct.
And:
Retirement homes are relatively new in Mexico, where the aging usually live with family. There is little government regulation….
[...]
Residents such as Richard Slater say they are happy in Mexico. Slater came to Lake Chapala four years ago and now lives in his own cottage at the Casa de Ancianos, surrounded by purple bougainvillea and pomegranate trees.He has plenty of room for his two dogs and has a little patio that he shares with three other American residents. He gets 24-hour nursing care and three meals a day, cooked in a homey kitchen and served in a sun-washed dining room. His cottage has a living room, bedroom, kitchenette, bathroom and a walk-in closet.
For this Slater pays $550 a month, less than one-tenth of the going rate back home in Las Vegas. For another $140 a year, he gets full medical coverage from the Mexican government, including all his medicine and insulin for diabetes.
“This would all cost me a fortune in the United States,” said Slater, a 65-year-old retired headwaiter.
More than a fortune.
But there are some problems:
The U.S. Embassy said it had no record of complaints against Mexican nursing homes, but some residents in the Lake Chapala area reported bad experiences at now-defunct homes.The first home that Jean Douglas lived in after she moved from Oregon was staffed by “gossips and thieves,” she said. It went out of business.
Irene Chiara of Los Angeles also lived in a home that was shut down by Jalisco state authorities.
“It was filthy, and the food was very bad. It was all made in the microwave,” she said.
Some Mexican managers also underestimate the costs and difficulty of running a retirement home. Two hotels turned into assisted-living facilities, The Spa in San Miguel de Allende and The Melville in the Pacific Coast city of Mazatlán, recently abandoned the business, their managers said.
“It was very expensive to run it,” said Luis Terán, manager of The Melville.
Some managers said they were especially selective when admitting foreign residents, to make sure they’ll be able to pay. Medicare, Medicaid, the Department of Veterans Affairs and most U.S. insurance companies will not cover care or medicine as long as patients are outside the United States.
I wonder how many of these people are medically fragile? And how many will become so sooner than later, and what will come of their care needs? A lesson from this newer trend, for American nursing homes AND those who work for them: Keep an eye on costs. Unions which drive up wages and benefits might begin losing residents to Mexico. We’re already losing American aides with Mexican immigrants who take our jobs (at far less pay…) The free markets can fix all of this if we allow it. Too many regulations and third party players are ruining nursing homes.












