Planning for Long-term Care?
Did you know?
By 2020 one out of six Americans will
be over 65, that is 20 million more senior citizens than
today. (1)
- The number of individuals 85 and older (which is currently
3.5 million) will double to 7 million by 2020, and will
double again to 14 million by 2040. (1)
- 52% of all women and 33% of all men who are now 65
will spend their last years in a nursing home. (2)
- Home health care costs $25.32 per hour on average. (3)
- A day in a nursing home costs $194 per day or $70,912
on average in the US. (3)
- A private one-bedroom unit in an assisted living facility
has an average annual cost of $32,294. Connecticut
(Bridgeport area) has the highest annual cost of $57,556,
while North Dakota and Arkansa were the lowest at about
$21,000). (3)
- The average stay in a nursing home is 2.4 years. (4)
- 73% of Americans incorrectly think that Medicare is
the primary funding source for long term health care. (5)
- 60% of Americans who reach age 65 will need long-term
care at some point in their lives. (6)
1 Aging in the United States, published
by the Bureau of the Census
2 New England
Journal of Medicine
3 Genworth Financial
Research survey February 2006
4 Metlife
2005 Survey
5 Gallup Organization
Inc. Public Attitudes on Long Term Care: The EBRI
Poll. August, 1993; 15.
6 Centers
for Medicare & Medicare Services (CMS)
It's a common misconception that either Medicare
or major - medical
insurance will cover LTC expenses. Medicaid
covers LTC only after a person "spends down" his
or her assets to qualify for assistance. Families
are at risk of forfeiting hard-earned assets to
pay for a loved one's long-term care needs.
Long-term care (LTC) is best defined as ongoing nursing, social,
and rehabilitative personal care, or services provided
in a nursing home, one's own home, or an alternative site,
such as an assisted-living facility. Many people underestimate
the costs of LTC and don't plan adequately for their future.
Planning for LTC is crucial to retirement security plans
because without it, individuals may be faced with insurmountable
long-term care costs that can quickly deplete their life
savings.
As baby boomers get closer to retirement age, there's
been a shift in public policy, with more focus on assuring
the solvency of such programs as Medicare and Social Security
that provide life security to Americans. In so doing, both
Democratic and Republican lawmakers have signaled that
it's critical for Americans to assume personal responsibility
for planning their long-term care and security.
Q: What is long-term care insurance?
A long-term care insurance policy pays you a daily benefit
to cover the cost of long term care. Long term care is
ongoing care for people with chronic disabilities. It includes
custodial care -- assistance with activities of daily life
like eating, bathing and getting dressed -- in a nursing
home, an assisted living facility or in the patient's own
home.
Q: Do you need it?
This type of care isn't covered by regular medical insurance
policies or by Medicare, and it can be enormously expensive.
The average cost of a year in a nursing home today is almost
$71,000 while the average nursing stay is 2.4 years. Government
studies indicate that 60% of Americans who reach 65 will
eventually need some type of long term care. Long-term
care insurance is essential if you are concerned about
protecting your assets and maintaining your financial independence
throughout your life.
It's a common misconception that either Medicare or major
- medical
insurance will cover LTC expenses. Medicaid covers
LTC only after a person "spends down" his or
her assets to qualify for assistance. In fact, 73%
of American incorrectly believe that Medicare is the primary
funding source for long term care. Families
are at risk of forfeiting hard-earned assets to pay for
a loved one's long-term care needs.
Q: What to look for in long-term care insurance?
Good Benefit Triggers
Benefit triggers are what cause benefits to start being
paid. Your policy benefits should be triggered if you
need assistance to perform at least two of the activities
of daily living (ADLs), which include bathing, dressing,
eating, toileting, continence, transferring (moving from
a bed to a chair) and taking medication. Another trigger
should be "cognitive impairment," which means
coverage applies if you are mentally impaired (with Alzheimer's
disease for example) even if you're physically able to
take care of yourself.
Home Health Care Coverage
You will want to make sure your policy pays benefits
for care at home as well as in an institution such as an
assisted living care facility or a nursing home.
Guaranteed Renewable
This feature ensures that you will be able to continue
your coverage without undergoing additional medical exams.
Inflation Riders
An inflation rider will increase the benefit amount by
either a simple or compound inflation rate each year the
policy is in effect. This can be a costly feature, but
it is protection against the rising cost of long term care.
It provides that the policy is much more likely to pay
an adequate benefit in the future.
Q: How much coverage do you need?
Policy daily benefits can provide up to $300 a day. How much
you need depends on what costs are in your area for assisted
living facilities, nursing home and home health
care as well as how much you could pay for from other
resources, like savings and investments.
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