Is There A Sure Way To Tell If Your Client Has Diminished Capacity?

Is There A Sure Way To Tell If Your Client Has Diminished Capacity?

Diminished capacity is sort of a catchall term that can mean different things. A person can have the capacity, for example to create a will or a trust, but at the same time that person might not have the capacity to understand the risks of buying a complex financial investment. Capacity is on a continuum. The more sophisticated the decision needed the more capacity it takes. The dividing line between impaired and unimpaired is not clear.

Is there any way to measure capacity? We have a number of things in the medical field that help give us clues and data, but there is no one, single thing that tells us for sure. We can’t see inside a person’s thoughts. What we do have is testing of the various areas of the brain, with standardized instruments that give us information about how a person thinks. We call it neuropsychological testing.

What is neuropsychological testing?

Neuropsychological testing (using groups of related paper and pencil and verbal question and answer tests) can provide useful information to take the question of capacity outside the realm of speculation. Test data provides numbers, scores, something specific.

This kind of testing can give useful information about which tested parts of a person’s cognitive function do or do not compare normally with the tested function of people of similar age and education.. When a person falls below a measure of what is normal, and we have test scores to tell us where and how, it can give us guidance about whether to allow a person to keep making financial decisions.

Testing is underused in helping us find out about a person’s mental capacity for numerous kinds of things, such as memory, following verbal instructions, understanding information and learning a new task. Not enough families know about it and request it and not enough others refer clients to the right source for considering it as a tool to give us more information. Perhaps older people resist it out of fear not “passing the test”. If clients secretly know that they are losing their memory and do not want to be found out, they will strongly resist any suggestion of testing.

What can the advisor do?

If you are worried about a client who seems to be “losing it” and you aren’t sure you have enough information about that, you can suggest that the client get a medical checkup, and that he ask the doctor to check into his memory. This is not a sure path to neuropsychological testing, to be sure. Unfortunately, doctors spend very little time with patients these days and a brief visit may not result in the follow up testing you would like to have done. But in some cases, clients are willing, particularly when encouraged to do so by a concerned spouse or other family member. In spite of obstacles, know that this objective way of measuring things does exist and it can help everyone involved in the senior’s life.

Want to learn more about best practices for clients with diminished capacity? Know the red flags and feel confident about what to look for.

Get an easy to read, quick summary of the red flags of diminished capacity in Succeed With Senior Clients: A Financial Advisor’s Guide to Best Practices HERE. A checklist in the book will speed you on your way to spotting and documenting the things you need to look for with aging clients.

By Carolyn Rosenblatt, RN, Elder law attorney

Does Your Aging Client Have Diminished Capacity?

Does Your Aging Client Have Diminished Capacity?

Have you ever wondered about one of your own client’s capacity for making financial decisions?  Professionals who directly or indirectly sell services and products to aging people may not be clear about financial capacity. It is indeed a complex...
Best Practices For Managing Clients With Diminished Capacity – CFP Approved Course

Best Practices For Managing Clients With Diminished Capacity – CFP Approved Course

“Best Practices For Managing Clients With Diminished Capacity”

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Summary of course:

Our population is living longer than ever. The risk of dementia rises with age. That means that most of us are going to encounter problems of aging in our clients.

We need to recognize the red flags of impairment that will affect financial capacity.  These include:

  1. Cognitive signs, such as memory loss and difficulty understanding the conversation
  2. Communication, calculations and orientation problems
  3. Emotional signs that are out of character for your client.

It is essential for every financial professional to understand the complexity of financial capacity and appreciate how many parts it has. There are 9 domains of financial capacity.  You cannot determine if a person is impaired or not just by talking on the phone with her or having a brief meeting in which you  give information.

A normal social conversation with the client is not a measure of whether or not the client has diminished financial capacity.
The more aware you are as a professional, the better chance you have of protecting your client from loss and protecting yourself as well.
 Learning objectives:
  1. Prepare yourself for the wave of aging clients by understanding the demographics of our aging population and the risks of dementia associated with aging.
  2. Understand the 9 domains of financial capacity and learn how to spot problems with any one of them.
  3. Be able to identify red flags of impaired cognition that should prompt you to act.
  4. Develop a personal plan for what to do when you see warning signs of diminishing financial capacity

What’s Wrong With Delaying Transactions When A Client Has Diminished Capacity

What’s Wrong With Delaying Transactions When A Client Has Diminished Capacity

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Why Delay Is Not A Solution
The securities industry is pushing  to impose temporary holds on certain transactions that may be precipitated by a clients’ declining mental capacity, or purported loved ones who may be trying to swindle them.  Sounds good in theory. Too bad it won’t solve the problem of financial abuse.  Does the industry think that waiting is going to make the problem of predators go away?
Here is an example of a real case in which this exact method of the broker waiting and hoping didn’t do a thing for the elder who was being abused.  READ what happened:

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