by Thomas D. Begley, Jr., Esquire, CELA<\/p>\n
Generally, Medicare Set-Aside Arrangement (MSA) funds are deposited in a custodial account with a professional trustee or given to the client to self-administer. For cases less than $100,000, giving the funds to the client to self-administer makes sense. CMS has issued a letter of instructions to be delivered to the client who would be administering his or her own custodial account. Even if a client misuses the money, the personal injury attorney should be off the hook with respect to a subsequent malpractice claim.<\/p>\n
If the MSA funds are self-administered by the client or administered by a professional custodian and held in a custodian account, they will be considered countable assets that will disqualify the client from asset-tested public benefits such as SSI and Medicaid. The solution to that problem is to deposit the funds in a Special Needs Trust. MSAs are generally administered by custodians (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" by Thomas D. Begley, Jr., Esquire, CELA Generally, Medicare Set-Aside Arrangement (MSA) funds are deposited in a custodial account with a professional trustee or given to the client to self-administer. For cases less than $100,000, giving the funds to the…<\/span><\/p>\n