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A few years later, I worked for a financial planner with one of the largest companies in the U.S. One of his clients informed me that her sister (also a client) had purchased LTC insurance and the particular plan had so many stipulations that they did not feel it was worth the preminum paid. Read all the fine print, make certain you realize what the premiums are and if they change coverage at a certain age. And if you are in a nursing home and someone is telling you that you or your family doesn't qualify, ask someone else...then ask their boss..then ask again...then call the company (in other words be the pain in the well...ya get the picute). ;)
John
John Hancock's policy looks better, and the one I got through CNA at work is reasonable. You may do best with a reputable independent insurance specialist who understands the ins and outs of things.
Scott
The benefit eligibility requirements that I outlined above were made into law in 1996 by the federal government. These benefit eligibility requirements are REQUIRED in every policy that meets the federal guidelines. These requirements are not just for "cadillac" policies. EVERY LTCi policy that meets the federal guidelines uses these same benefit eligibility requirements. About 95% of the long-term care policies that have been purchased meet these federal guidelines.
Whoever explained your mother's policy to you, doesn't understand how your mother's policy works. There has never been any LTCi policy sold that would use language in it like you've described. A policy like that would never have been approved by any state department of insurance because a policy like that is useless.
Scott
You are mistaken about the benefit eligibility requirements for long-term care insurance.
There has never been any long-term care policy that was sold that required that one to need assistance with walking and eating in order to be eligible for benefits.
The eligibility requirements for long-term care insurance are regulated by both state and federal law.
The requirements to be eligible for benefits are needing assistance with any 2 of 6 Activities of Daily Living (aka ADL's). The 6 ADL's are: bathing, dressing, eating, toileting, transferring and maintaining continence.
If your mother can't walk without assistance, that would imply that she needs assistance to bathe, she probably needs assistance to get into or out of a bed or chair (a.k.a. transferring) and she probably needs assistance to get on and off the toilet as well. Therefore, if your mother owns a policy that meets the federal guidelines (and most policies do), she should already qualify for benefits.
The federal government recently did an audit of the claims practices of 7 of the leading long-term care insurers.
Scott
The corruption is epic.
I feel for the voiceless as well as the exhausted caregiver who doesn't know how she/he will continue another day.
Keep fighting and venting!
lovbob
BTW: TRANSAMERICA has terrible reviews, I googled them and read a ton. Not just me complaining. I have to hound them every month to pay. They "claim" they "never got the time sheets", when I know the care giving agency faxes them the 5th of every month. She is lucky to have me fighting for her....
And now we know that TRANSAMERICA is garbage. thanks Rox!
sharing info like this can keep the next person from being taken advantage of.
Good alternative Lilliput!
lovbob