An alternative to cruising?
Long Term Care insurance (LTCi) is one of those coverages, like disability, that everyone says folks need, that all the financial guru�s says folks need, that all us insurance folk say folks need [ed: getting a little �folksy,� aren�t we?].
But so few people actually DO buy it (or buy into it).
Now we learn that one reason that so few folks own LTCi is because they can�t get it:
�More than half (57.2%) of individuals who apply for long-term care insurance after their 80th birthday are declined coverage according to Long-Term Care Insurance Sales Strategies magazine. At older ages, the percentage of applications declined was significantly higher...only one in 10 (10.7%) applicants who were between ages 50 and 59 were declined coverage.�
Now, granted, anyone who waits until their 80 to start even looking for such coverage is most likely going to be disappointed. But my take on this is that maybe I haven�t really been pushing it that hard with my clients. First, this type of insurance is a bit more complicated than, oh say, term life insurance [you need more!], but it doesn�t have to be rocket science (or as my techie wife would say, �it�s not computer science!�).
Really, when you get right down to it, LTCi is nothing more than disability insurance for retired people. That is, it�s a way to protect your assets from being eaten up by a need for care, whether in a nursing facility or the comfort of your own home. Now, statistics seem to show that only about 1/3 of folks over age 65 actually end up needing such care.
But think about this: there's only about a 1 in 1200 chance that we'll have a house fire, but we all have homeowner�s insurance, right? Granted, the bank makes us buy that, but you get the point: it�s much more likely that we�ll need long term care than that our house will burn down.
It�s all about managing risk.
BTW, a group of governmental agencies have launched the Long-Term care Consumer Awareness Project, with the goal of increasing consumers' awareness of the need to plan for potential long-term care needs. For more information, and even printed materials, check out http://www.ltcaware.info.

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