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What is long-term care insurance (LTCI)?
Long-term care insurance (LTCI) is a contractual arrangement that pays a selected dollar amount per day for a selected period of time for skilled, intermediate, or custodial care in nursing homes and other settings (such as home health care). Because Medicare and other forms of health insurance do not pay for custodial care, many nursing home residents have only three alternatives for paying their nursing home bills: their own assets (cash, investments), Medicaid, and LTCI.
In general, long-term care refers to a broad range of medical and personal services designed to provide ongoing care for people with chronic disabilities who have lost the ability to function independently. The need for this care arises when physical or mental impairments prevent one from performing certain basic activities, such as feeding, bathing, dressing, transferring, and toileting--activities known as ADLs (“activities of daily living”).
Long-term care may be divided into three levels:
Skilled care--continuous “around-the-clock” care designed to treat a medical condition. This care is ordered by a physician and performed by skilled medical personnel, such as registered nurses or professional therapists. A treatment plan is created, and it is usually contemplated that the patient will recover at some point.
Intermediate care--intermittent nursing and rehabilitative care provided by registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, and nurse’s aides under the supervision of a physician.
Custodial care--care designed to help one perform the activities of daily living (such as bathing, eating, and dressing). It can be provided by someone without professional medical skills, but is supervised by a physician.
How is it useful as a protection planning tool?
The risk of contracting a chronic debilitating illness (and the resulting catastrophic medical bills incurred) is considered by many to be one type of risk best passed on to an insurance company through the purchase of a LTCI policy.
A number of factors can increase your risk of requiring long-term care in the future. Naturally, your health status affects your likelihood of incurring a long stay in a nursing home. Indeed, people with chronic or degenerative medical conditions (such as rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer’s disease, or Parkinson’s disease) are more likely than the average person to require long-term nursing home care. And because women usually outlive the men in their lives, women stand a greater chance of requiring long-term nursing home care. However, if you already have a primary caregiver (like a spouse or child), your likelihood of needing a long stay in a nursing home will be less, particularly if you’re a man. Because the cost of long-term care can be astronomical and may exhaust your life savings, purchasing LTCI should be considered as part of your overall asset protection strategy.
How much does it cost?
Although purchasing LTCI seems to be the easy answer to the problem of escalating long-term care costs, the premiums for LTCI can be, depending on benefit levels selected, quite expensive.
Your yearly premium for an LTCI policy depends on a number of considerations, including your age when you purchase the policy, your health, the length of the coverage period (for instance, three years, five years, or lifetime benefits), the amount of the daily benefit provided, and whether you purchase inflation protection. When buying an LTCI policy, you must also consider not only whether you can afford to pay the premiums now but also whether you’ll be able to continue paying premiums in the future, when your income may be substantially decreased.
(continued in July 18 issue of the Loop)
Please call me to find out more information, Jennifer Williams, President J. Williams Personal Financial Planning: 413 S. Curry St, Tehachapi, California Office Phone 661-822-7517 Office Email: [email protected] Jennifer is a Registered Financial Consultant. She has over 20 years of experience in the industry.
Article is Courtesy of Forefiled, LLC Securities offered through NPB Financial Group, LLC. A Registered Investment Advisor/Broker-Dealer Member FINRA, MSRB, and SIPC.