Guest guest Posted December 16, 2008 Report Share Posted December 16, 2008 Colleagues, the following is FYI and does not necessarily reflect my own opinion. I have no further knowledge of the topic. If you do not wish to receive these posts, set your email filter to filter out any messages coming from @nutritionucanlivewith.com and the program will remove anything coming from me. --------------------------------------------------------- The New Old Age | Caring and Coping December 9, 2008, 6:00 am More Reasons to Beware L.T.C. Insurance By Jane Gross http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/09/policyholders-at-risk/ Few subjects have generated more interest here than long-term care insurance. And I’ve found myself both alarmed and amazed at how many of you think that such a policy is the all-purpose solution to exorbitantly expensive nursing homes, assisted living facilities, home health aides and other forms of “custodial care’’ for the frail, demented or otherwise incapacitated elderly. My mother had such a policy, a new product in the 1970s and one that looked very different from the policies of today. Because of her age when we bought it, the annual premium was $7,000. I can’t recall how many years we paid for it and prefer not to check my records to find out. What good would it do me now? Leaving aside the eye-glazing technical details, nothing she needed was covered. The policy gave me peace of mind but otherwise was an utter waste of money. Still, I have my own policy now, one of eight million Americans who do, most bought by people in their 50s and 60s, for an average cost of $1,950 a year. My annual premium is $1,700, and the benefits include many things my mother’s didn’t, including home modification, a small portion of the costs of assisted living (although not the apartment itself), greater flexibility in the choice of home health aides, inflation protection and other bells and whistles I can’t recall. But, often I think about canceling it, because my gut tells me once the huge baby boom cohort starts filing claims, not even the biggest players in the field will be able to cover the costs. Laziness stops me, and the drumbeat of opinion from my financial advisor, my friends and colleagues, many of the eldercare lawyers and geriatric care managers I’ve interviewed over the years — and now, also, from you, dear readers. The consensus seems to be that any of us fortunate enough to be able to afford a policy will be just fine. But some formidable journalists are warning us otherwise. Last year, in The Times, my colleague Duhigg reported that thousands of policyholders, many with coverage from Conseco and Penn Treaty America, two of the nation’s largest insurers, were finding it difficult, if not impossible, to get their claims paid. A Congressional committee quickly took up the issue. And last week The Wall Street Journal’s Web site described a new problem at Conseco, which, according to reporter M. P. McQueen, “dumped a chunk of its long-term care policies into an independent trust, putting tens of thousands of policyholders at risk of reduced benefits or big premium increases.’’ Mr. McQueen writes that Conseco’s move came because the policies were a “drag on earnings because they were underpriced and required constant capital infusion to meet the long-term needs of policyholders.’’ My repeated advice has been “buyer beware’’ when selecting a policy or even deciding whether to buy one. Clearly, I’ve not been persuasive, since comments come in almost every day from readers who consider these policies a foolproof private sector solution to a growing public policy crisis. So ignore my caveat emptors, which after all are based on little more than my mother’s experience and my own neurosis. Instead, read the stories by Mr. Duhigg and Mr. McQueen. They are way smarter than I am, and their reporting is not based on a sample of two. -- ne Holden, MS, RD " Ask the Parkinson Dietitian " http://www.parkinson.org/ " Eat well, stay well with Parkinson's disease " " Parkinson's disease: Guidelines for Medical Nutrition Therapy " http://www.nutritionucanlivewith.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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