Information on Long-Term Care Insurance Sometimes
Incorrect
This time of year many people start talking with spouses and
children about long-term care or discuss the issue with financial
advisors. When looking at articles about this issue, remember
some articles have incorrect information.
(PRWEB) December 7, 2005 -- You see news stories about long-term
care and long-term care insurance all the time. This makes
a lot of sense since long-term care is a major public policy
issue facing the western world. People are living longer due
to the advances in medical science. Medical conditions that
used to mean death, no longer mean death, at least right away.
The problem is today we linger. People end up requiring help
with activities of daily living, otherwise known as "ADL's".
This help, no matter if done in a person's own home, adult
daycare, assisted living or nursing homes, is expensive.
Health insurance and Medicare will pay for a small amount
of this care (up to a 100 days in most cases). This leaves
the remaining amount is your responsibility, comes out of
pocket, or you force family to take care of you which brings
about a whole bunch of other problems.
"Much of the information written about this issue makes
you want to shake your head in disbelief," said Matt
McCann, a well known speaker on long-term care issues and
an Illinois based expert on long-term care insurance.
This time of year many people start talking with spouses and
children about long-term care or discuss the issue with financial
advisors. When looking at articles about this issue remember
some articles have incorrect information.
"Don't expect the federal or state government to pay
for your long-term care," McCann says. While you will
read articles that suggest this might happen, McCann says
demographics and cost prohibit it.
"There is a reason why the federal government has been
pushing the idea of private long-term care insurance. Lawmakers
on both sides of the aisle know the government does not have
the money it would require because of the numbers involved,"
McCann said.
The Medicaid program is for the poor and was never intended
to pay for long-term care services. However, the program is
spending millions on long-term care since so many people are
forced to spend down assets to pay for these service and they
end up poor.
Another item which makes no sense is when a writer suggests
that if you have a million or more in assets you don't need
to consider long-term care insurance.
"This make no sense at all," McCann says, "paying
a small amount for a premium which will pay for care with
tax free money is just common sense compared to risking hundreds
of thousands of dollars of your own money to pay for future
care," he said. "Not one person would consider self-insuring
their home or car, for example, and those risks are much smaller
than the risk of needing long-term care services at some point
in a person's life," he added. He also note premiums
are not expensive.
McCann also notes that most long-term care policies will provide
independent case management which helps relieve much of the
burden on the family. This allows the family to be loving
and supportive as opposed to running around making arrangements
and figuring out which caregiver or facility has a good reputation.
Some articles suggest a person buys a policy when they are
in their 70's so they don't have to pay premiums for so many
years. McCann says this is a "criminal statement."
"A married 50 year-old in good health could pay about
$750.00 a year for a good policy in Illinois," he says.
If that person pays 35 years before they either die or go
on claim, they would have paid in $26,250 in premiums during
that time. They would have just under a million bucks to pay
for care at that time. But a health married 75 year-old might
pay around $3800 or more in premium. They pay for ten years
and they paid in over $37,000 in premiums, much more than
the 50 year-old," McCann says.
McCann also notes that health problems make it very hard for
people over 70 to health qualify for a policy to start with.
The federal government says that 40% of all people who require
long-term care services are under the age of 65 ... so a long-term
care situation can happen at any time in life.
"You can't wait until you have a chronic health condition,
you need to purchase long-term care insurance when you are
healthy otherwise it will either cost more or you may not
be able to obtain it to start with," McCann said. He
says check with a long-term care insurance specialist to advise
you on your insurability and options.
Some articles tell people to buy group policies for long-term
care. This advise can cost you money. McCann explains that
most group policies end up costing more than non-group policies,
especially if you are married and in good health. Group plans
tend to have much limited benefits and cost more so you should
always shop first. Remember to compare apples to apples. Many
group plans do not include automatic inflation protection
but only offers to buy more insurance in the future. This
is not the desirable way to obtain inflation protection and
will cost a consumer more over the time than a policy that
inflates every year automatically.
"If you want to preserve assets, protect the lifestyle
of a spouse or partner and relieve the burden on the family,
then long-term care insurance should be considered as part
of retirement planning," McCann says. He suggests working
with a person who specializes in long-term care insurance
and works with the top companies.
McCann's web site is www.McCannLTC.com and can be emailed
through the site. His phone is 800-513-0020.