The following 12 questions will help
unravel the complexities and gather the information you need in shopping
for a long-term care policy, including whether you should be
shopping for one at all.
Why buy long-term care
insurance?
Tip!
Another source to go through for long term care insurance coverage
is through your employer. Usually the premiums are lower due to a
package plan.
There are many elderly people who, due
to some physical or cognitive disease, are unable to care for
themselves. Long-term care insurance could potentially cover nursing
homes, assisted living facilities, adult day care, in-home care and
other functions that help us get through everyday life. It is NOT
medical insurance; it is simply for everyday life functions and living.
It is also not, however, just for the
elderly. If a person in his 30s were to purchase long-term care
insurance, and soon after become paralyzed in an accident, or be
diagnosed with a degenerative disease, he could then be covered for life
as far as functioning care -- depending on the individual policy.
What happens if I get sick and don't
have this insurance?
If a person is in need of, let's say, a
nursing home, and is without insurance, the home would need to be paid
for out of the person's assets. Government assistance would usually not
kick in until not only that person's assets were virtually depleted, but
the assets of their spouse as well, if that assistance were available at
all. Therefore, anyone with assets to protect may want to consider this
insurance.
Tip!
If you think you will be very short of money by the time you need long
term care you may qualify for Medicaid. Medicaid steps in to pay for
medical care for the very poor.
At what age should long-term care
insurance be purchased?
It is sometimes advised that people 60
and over should be looking at this insurance. However, there are a few
reasons to reconsider this advice, and instead think about purchasing it
as early as possible.
Reason one is that, as stated above, a
life-changing occurrence can occur at any age. If you are left paralyzed
at 30, you could conceivably need life assistance of some sort for the
next 60 years. If you're covered, you could be set. If not, it's too
late.
But the second and less-obvious reason
is that purchasing the policy at a younger age may cost less overall
than purchasing it when older, even accounting for inflation. If you're
shopping for this policy at a younger age, ask your financial adviser to
compare your purchase now with a purchase at 60. You may find the
numbers work more favorably if you purchase now.
Where should I shop?
Once you make the decision to purchase
long-term care insurance, you need to go shopping. While there are
several big insurance companies that offer the insurance, you should
also consider working with an independent broker.
Clay Cotton is a former broker, and
founded the National Advisory Council for Long Term Care Insurance in
late 1996. Ironically, Cotton, now 53, hadn't yet purchased this
insurance for himself, but was preparing to in 1997 when he was
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Now, he's ineligible. He did however,
purchase a policy for his wife Suzanne, who was soon after diagnosed
with hepatitis C.
Cotton is a strong advocate of using
independent brokers to purchase insurance (and has a list of them on his
Web site), as opposed to agents bound to one company, who he calls
"captive" agents.
"Avoid a captive agent," advises
Cotton. "They can only sell you their company's party line. If that
company doesn't have favorable wording on things like the deductible,
that's all that agent has to offer."
Cotton also recommends consumers read
the National Association of Insurance Commissioners' "Shopper's Guide to
Long Term Care Insurance," a booklet that most insurance agents and
brokers who sell that insurance will carry.
How expensive is long term care
insurance? Of course, this number can vary wildly depending on numerous
factors, age being the most important. For people in their 30s, the
insurance may cost in the $400-per-year range, while that can increase
closer to $1,000 per year for those in their 50s and 60s.
What type of setting for coverage
does the policy provide?
While the wording may differ per
policy, there are three basic categories into which care may fall: home
settings, assisted living and skilled nursing facility. The ideal policy
will cover all three, since you never know which you'll need. You could
wind up with a condition that could be cared for at home, but if your
policy covers only nursing home care, you may be out of luck, or maybe
prematurely forced into a nursing home.
Conversely, if you're only covered for
home and assisted living care, you're out of luck if your condition
worsens to the point where you need the full-time skilled care only a
home can provide.
How long will the policy pay out
once it's triggered?
The best is an unlimited payout, but
there are policies that cover smaller increments of time, such as four
years or six years. You'll need to weigh what you can afford against how
much you're willing to gamble you'll need. Obviously, the longer
coverage is provided, the better.
What triggers the policy?
Different policies dictate different
reasons for the policy to kick in, such as cognitive impairment, failure
of ability to perform daily activities, and medical impairment. But not
all policies allow for all reasons, and some policies even refuse to
consider medical necessity as a trigger. Make sure you understand the
policy's trigger, and try to find one that will include medical
necessity.
Also, certain policies require you to
be hospitalized before any nursing home or home health care benefits
kick in. Try to find a policy without this restriction.
How much will it pay out every day?
Some policies may cover expenses
totaling more than $50 or $75 per day, and others may cover $200 and up.
All are different. Make sure you fully understand the payout policy on
any coverage you're considering. In doing so, take into account the
difference in potential nursing home costs where you are. For example,
the cost of a nursing home in New York may run $300 to $400 per day,
while a home in the Midwest may be less than $100.
What is the deductible?
This part gets especially complex.
These policies can measure the deductible not in dollars, but in days. A
policy's deductible may run 30 days, 60 or 120. And, the length may mean
different things, depending on the policy's wording. The days may be
consecutive, or not. The deductible that's right for you will depend on
your ability to cover your own costs until the policy kicks in.
Be sure you fully understand the
implications of the deductible before signing on, and weigh it against
your projected assets at age 70 or 80. This is one topic you should
definitely discuss with your financial adviser.
Does the policy have inflation
protection?
Many policies include a clause that
increases your benefit with inflation, without raising your premium. Be
sure to ask about it.
Does your policy allow for shared
care?
Some policies allow you to link your
policy with your spouse's, so that if your coverage runs out, you can
draw on your spouse's coverage. Discuss with your spouse if this is
something you want to have.
Make sure you fully understand every
aspect of a policy before signing on, as any detail could make a big
difference come redemption time. |