Council hears briefing on Medicare-covered GUIDE dementia program offering respite and care navigation
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Members heard a presentation on GUIDE (Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience), a Medicare-covered program that can provide roughly $2,500 per year in respite (about nineteen four-hour visits) plus monthly remote care navigation; Best of Care and local care managers can perform live eligibility checks and provide in-home assessments.
A board member introduced the GUIDE (Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience) program as a new service covered under Medicare designed to help caregivers of people with memory changes. The presenter explained the program's structure: an initial eligibility check using Medicare Parts A and B and verification of memory changes, an in-home assessment performed by a nurse or care manager, and then access to respite and care-navigation services.
The meeting summarized benefits: roughly $2,500 a year in respite funds (translated in the briefing to about nineteen 4-hour visits per year), live eligibility checks through a CMS participant platform (Crosby Health) and ongoing monthly contact with a care navigator plus 24/7 access to a medical team. The presenter noted that Medicare Advantage plans do not qualify and that people in skilled nursing or on hospice are excluded.
Best of Care was identified in the meeting as a local organization that can run eligibility checks directly and provide in-person follow-up; attendees were told there is an email contact (guide@bestofcareinc.com) and that an 1-800 entry phone number was cited during the discussion for immediate use. One board member read a number during the meeting as "803105800" when discussing a point of entry; others urged staff to re-circulate the correct entry points and contact details to ensure straightforward access for island residents.
Board members asked whether eligibility checks and care navigators are physically local; presenters said care managers and nurses are available on Nantucket for in-home follow-ups while some remote staff will perform the eligibility checks. The board asked staff to re-circulate entry contacts and to clarify whether elder services or Best of Care should be the first call for residents seeking enrollment.
The board concluded by agreeing to follow up offline to confirm the single best entry point (phone and email) and to distribute clear instructions to the community.
