<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="-1278756484"><artname>Key Financial Variables in a Long-Term Care Insurance Policy</artname><p>These are the key terms and concepts involved in putting together a <glossary def="A policy that allows one to transfer to an insurance company part of the risk of monetary loss from a specified event that requires long-term care services." primary="Long-Term Care Insurance">long-term care (LTC) insurance</glossary> policy. Let's revisit them with some observations that might be helpful in particular situations.</p><artsub>Maximum Daily Benefit</artsub><p>This is the most important policy design choice. It should be based on today's cost of a nursing home of your choice&#8212;do not use ballpark or <nodef>average</nodef> figures. Taking account of your expected out-of-pocket <glossary def="A deposit to a health savings, retirement, or other account. Contributions must be made in cash." primary="Contribution">contribution</glossary>, if any, you and your <glossary def="A contract in which one party, called the insurer, agrees to protect another party, called the insured, against loss, damage, or medical costs in return for a premium. Another way to look at insurance is to see it as the assumption of risk by another party. In return for a periodic fee (the premium) and a set of requirements by which to abide, an insurance company will assume risks taken by those covered. Insurance companies are regulated by the insurance commissioners of their respective states or territories." primary="Insurance">insurance</glossary> advisor can determine the daily <glossary def="The amount to be paid to an insurance policyholder or a beneficiary at retirement, death, or at the end of a period of insurance or other coverage. In retirement planning, benefits are the amount to be paid upon retirement." primary="Benefit">benefit</glossary> you need.</p><p>With virtually all policies now sold, any portion of the daily benefit that is not used remains available. For this reason, it is usually far better to have a higher daily benefit than a longer <glossary def="The length of time for which an insurance company agrees to pay benefits, up to the policy's maximum daily benefit." primary="Benefit Period">benefit period</glossary>.</p><p>In fact, a <glossary def="1. A regular periodic payment for an insurance policy. 2. An additional cost above the normal cost. 3. The amount by which a security sells above its par value. If an investor buys a $1,000 bond for $1,030, she has paid a premium of $30." primary="Premium">premium</glossary> dollar is most often better spent on buying the highest possible daily benefit than on any <glossary def="A clause or amendment that is added to an insurance policy or a contract. It does not appear in the original policy, but is attached to it." primary="Rider">rider</glossary> or <nodef>option</nodef>&#8212;except for <glossary def="In reference to long-term care insurance, protection that provides an annual increase in the maximum daily benefit to account for cost increases due to inflation." primary="Inflation Protection">inflation protection</glossary>. Statistics indicate that the <nodef>average</nodef> nursing home stay is about three years. It is better to cover the full <glossary def="What one must pay for materials, services, and other necessities to operate a business, organization, or household." primary="Costs">costs</glossary> for three years than partial costs for a longer term, as the longer term most likely <nodef>will</nodef> not be needed. If it is, then other <glossary def="Anything of value that a person or organization owns. Examples include cash, securities, accounts receivable, inventory, and property such as land, office equipment, or a house or car. (Compare with liability. The same item can be both an asset and a liability, depending on one's point of view. For example, a loan is a liability to the borrower because it represents money owed that has to be repaid. But to the lender, a loan is an asset because it represents money the lender will receive in the future as the borrower repays the debt.)" primary="Asset">assets</glossary> can be used or <glossary def="A joint federal and state government program that pays for medical care for low-income Americans." primary="Medicaid">Medicaid</glossary> <nodef>will</nodef> apply.</p><artsub>Benefit Period</artsub> <p>The benefit period usually serves only as a "multiplier" of the daily benefit amount in determining the total benefits available from a policy. A three-year benefit period, for example, usually does not mean that all benefits must be paid within three years. (This is especially so with newer policies.)</p><p>Instead, it means that the policy <nodef>will</nodef> pay, at most, the daily benefit (e.g., $100) multiplied by the number of days in three years (1,095), or $109,500.</p><p>If any of that sum has not been used after three years, it remains available. That is why the benefit period is of much less importance than the choice of daily benefit amount.</p><artsub>Elimination or Waiting Period</artsub> <callout align="right">Expenses during the waiting period must be paid by the insured. They are like a deductible.</callout><p>The elimination period or <glossary def="The time between application of registration for a security and the date of its first issue." primary="Waiting Period">waiting period</glossary> is the number of days you must wait after qualifying for <glossary def="Services generally performed for elderly or disabled people who are unable to perform ordinary activities of daily living. " primary="Long-Term Care">LTC</glossary> policy benefits until actually becoming entitled to payment from that <nodef>point</nodef> forward. Remember, however, that expenses during the waiting period must be paid by the insured. They are like a <glossary def="1. The amount an insurance policyholder must pay on their own for medical services before the insurance policy coverage begins. 2. Able to be subtracted from one's adjusted gross income to reduce the amount of income subject to tax." primary="Deductible">deductible</glossary>. For example, with a thirty-day waiting period, the insured must receive long-term care thirty days at his or her own expense before the insurance company starts to pay benefits going forward.</p><p>The length of the <glossary def="The number of days one must wait after qualifying for insurance policy benefits before actually becoming entitled to payment from that point forward. Every insurer offers a choice of several elimination periods. A longer elimination period tends to decrease the policy cost relative to a shorter one." primary="Elimination (Waiting) Period">elimination or waiting period</glossary> is an important choice. It has a predictable effect on the policy price&#8212;longer period, lower premium, and vice versa. For this reason it might be tempting to choose a long elimination period for the sake of affordability.</p><p>Since the waiting period also contributes to the financial burden, you should be prepared to assume expenses until benefits begin if you make a <glossary def="1. A demand by a policyholder to an insurer to be compensated for a loss or medical service covered by an insurance policy. 2. A demand to be paid from an estate or from a company's assets." primary="Claim">claim</glossary>. Would you be able to afford the cost of care&#8212;at prices twenty years from now&#8212;for ninety or more days until benefits begin?</p><p>While it might seem counterintuitive, the <glossary def="A tool individuals, companies, and governments use to plan earnings and expenses for a period. A personal budget lists income and expenses such as housing, food, clothes, and entertainment. A balanced budget also includes saving a portion of income. To budget is to create a plan for funds, time, or other items." primary="Budget">budget</glossary>-conscious should consider choosing a shorter elimination period and compromising in other ways to hold the premium down.</p><p>An insurer may use one or more of the following methods to determine what a day is in the elimination period:</p><ulist>   <item>Certification by a licensed healthcare practitioner</item>   <item>Payment for <nodef>qualified</nodef> services by the insured</item>   <item>Under certain circumstances, care provided by a family member may qualify.</item>   <item>Inflation protection. Inflation protection is so important that it should be considered carefully in the policy design process. The economic value of a policy without inflation protection <nodef>will</nodef> erode, so that even a more-than-adequate daily benefit today <nodef>will</nodef> leave substantial costs uncovered after only ten to fifteen years. The practical value of such a policy could be nil.</item></ulist><p>Inflation protection adds so much to a policy's cost that the consumer should look at this <nodef>option</nodef> early in the decision-making process. For some of us, once the <glossary def="A rise in the general price level of goods and services; inflation is the opposite of deflation. The Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index are the most common measures of inflation. As a probable result of inflation, labor asks for higher wages to buy more, prices rise to meet those wages, and inflation becomes a cycle." primary="Inflation">inflation</glossary> benefit is included, other <nodef>options</nodef> and choices might become unaffordable. Because of its expense, older policy buyers sometimes do without the optional benefit and use an alternative approach in dealing with inflation.</p><p>Those around the ages of seventy to seventy-five might find it more effective to select an extra-large daily benefit initially (if they can qualify at all), forgo the optional protection, and just let inflation run its course.</p><artsub>Indemnity LTC Insurance Has Some Advantages</artsub> <p>In certain circumstances an indemnity policy might be more valuable than a reimbursement policy. These situations commonly involve home care arrangements or a need to cover expenses that a reimbursement policy <nodef>will</nodef> not necessarily pay for.</p><p>The indemnity form of <nodef>coverage</nodef> pays the full daily benefit directly to an insured who qualifies, with no questions about expenses. It's his <glossary def="The medium of exchange used in trade or commerce." primary="Money">money</glossary>. The setting in which LTC is provided does not matter. So there are no decisions to be made regarding <nodef>coverage</nodef> of home or community care in the purchase of an indemnity policy.</p><artsub>How the Home and Community Care Benefits Are Calculated</artsub><p>This is an important <nodef>issue</nodef>, but very easy to overlook. Policies typically state benefits as "daily" amounts, and that reimbursement policies using the popular "pool of benefits" approach <nodef>will</nodef> hold unused daily benefits for <nodef>future</nodef> use.</p><p>But even these policies do not necessarily pay more than the specified maximum for any single day. That could leave you with uncovered expenses on high-cost days.</p><p>Some policies, however, state a weekly benefit maximum (seven times the daily maximum). In that case, covered expenses can be lumped together on a weekly <nodef>basis</nodef> as well. Benefits not used on one day of the week are available to cover the high-cost days that week.</p><p>This is a desirable policy feature. Of course, it is not free. Sometimes it is offered as an extra-cost <nodef>option</nodef>; other insurers that allow weekly "expense lumping" build the feature and its cost into the basic policy.</p></article>	