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Should I buy long-term care
insurance?
- Four key reasons to buy long-term care insurance
1. Preserve your assets for your family instead of spending
the money on long-term care.
2. The odds are one-in-three that a man over 65 will need
long-term care; for a woman over 65, the odds are one in two.
3. New rules make it hard to qualify for Medicaid.
4. Premiums may be partially tax-deductible
- Typical policy features
The best policies pay for care in a nursing home, assisted
living facility or at home. Benefits are typically expressed
in daily amounts, with a lifetime maximum. Some policies pay
half as much per day for at-home care as for nursing home
care. Others pay the same amount, or have a "pool of benefits"
that can be tapped as needed.
- Eligibility triggers
Make sure you know when benefits kick in. The policy should
state the various conditions that must be met.
1. The inability to perform two or three specific "activities
of daily living" without help. These include bathing,
dressing, eating, toileting and "transferring" or being able
to move from place to place or between bed and chair.
2. Cognitive impairment. Most policies cover stroke,
Alzheimer’s and Parkinson's disease, but other forms of mental
incapacity may be excluded.
3. Medical necessity, or certification by a doctor that
long-term care is necessary.
4. Prior hospitalization. Some older policies require a
hospital stay of at least three days before benefits can be
paid. This requirement is very restrictive and should be
avoided.
5. A benefit period that may range from two years to lifetime.
You can keep premiums down by electing coverage for three to
four years -- longer than the average nursing home stay --
instead of lifetime.
6. A waiting or "elimination" period. Premiums will be lower
if you pay for an initial period of care yourself instead of
electing first-day coverage.
7. Inflation protection is an important feature,
especially if
you are under 65 when you buy benefits that you may not use
for 20 years or more. The best inflation provision compounds
benefits at 5% a year.
8. Guaranteed renewable policies must be renewed by the
insurance company, although premiums can go up if they are
increased for an entire class of policyholders.
9. Waiver of premium, so that no further premiums are due once
you start to receive benefits.
10. Third-party notification, so that a relative, friend or
professional adviser will be notified if the policyholder
forgets to pay a premium.
- Optional Features
1. Restoration of benefits. This feature ensures that maximum
benefits are put back in place if you receive benefits for a
time, then recover, and go for a specified period (typically
six months) without benefits.
2. Non-forfeiture benefits return a portion of premiums or
keep a lesser amount of insurance in force if you let the
policy lapse. This provision, required by some states, adds to
the cost of the policy.
Insurance Information Institute
www.iii.org/individuals/longtermcare/ |
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