by
Betty Diamond
My interest in long-term
care insurance arose out of a search for a policy of my own.
Because this insurance is expensive, I resolved to become an educated
consumer so that I would not be solely dependent on the insurance
agents’ sales presentations. Unfortunately, I found much of the
information to be confusing and misleading. By the end of my
research, however, I had acquired information that I feel compelled
to share with others who are also looking for the best long-term
care coverage their money can buy.
What is the best long-term care protection for consumers?
It is a policy that includes all three benefit triggers:
1. Physical impairment benefit trigger
2. Cognitive impairment benefit trigger
3. Doctor certification of medical necessity
The critical problem is that the consumer is in danger of losing the “medical
necessity” benefit trigger, which offers the consumer the most
flexible long-term insurance coverage.
What are benefit triggers?
Benefit trigger
is the term a company uses to describe the ways it decides when
to pay benefits. The three types of benefit triggers are Physical
Impairment, Cognitive Impairment and Medical Necessity. Companies
may use different benefit triggers for home health care coverage
than for nursing home care.
1. PHYSICAL IMPAIRMENT BENEFIT TRIGGER:
This is based on Activities of Daily Living
or ADLs. The inability to do activities of daily living is the
most common way insurance companies decide when you are eligible
for benefits. The ADLs most companies use are bathing, continence,
dressing, eating, toileting and transferring. The number of ADLs
in a policy will vary from five to six (a few states require seven.)
A policy pays benefits when you cannot do a certain number of
the ADLs such as two of the six or two of the five. The less restrictive
policy will have more ADLs and the more restrictive policy will
have fewer.
To be eligible for benefits,
some policies require that you be unable to do activities of daily
living or ADLs without substantial assistance. Specifying
substantial or hand-on assistance makes it harder to qualify for
benefits and represents a more restrictive policy.
Consumer-friendly policies,
on the other hand, require standby assistance which means
you need only occasional assistance in doing the activities of
daily living or ADLs and they represent the least restrictive
policies.
Remember, it is important
that you purchase the least restrictive policy!
2 COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
BENEFIT TRIGGER: The policy usually pays benefits for mental
incapacity, when you cannot pass certain tests of mental function.
Coverage of cognitive impairment is especially important if you
have been told you have Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia.
3. DOCTOR CERTIFICATION
OF MEDICAL NECESSITY BENEFIT TRIGGER (referred to as “medical
necessity”): Some long-term care insurance policies will pay benefits
if your doctor certifies that care is MEDICALLY NECESSARY EVEN
THOUGH YOUR ILLNESS OR INJURY IS UNRELATED TO PHYSICAL IMPAIRMENT
OR COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT.
“Medical necessity” is the third benefit trigger that is essential
for best consumer protection. Information to follow will explain
why it is becoming less and less available to the consumer.
What has become of the “medical necessity” benefit trigger?
I was shocked to learn
that since 1997 most (not all) insurance companies have stopped
selling the type of long-term care policies that can provide the
best protection for consumers. Instead, the insurance companies
are promoting only those policies that minimize their future
benefit payments.
I found only one company
in Pennsylvania out of three (from your own research you may find
others) that sells desirable long-term care policies of the type
that best protect consumers. It is puzzling to me, however, as
to why it required persistent research to locate that company.
Who took away the “medical necessity” benefit trigger
from most policies?
CONGRESS!
Tax-Qualified Policies versus Non Tax-Qualified Policies
In 1997, Congress created two insurance policy categories:
Tax-Qualified policies and Non Tax-Qualified policies, and excluded
“medical necessity” from Tax-Qualified policies. Prior to 1997
there were no long-term care insurance policy categories!
All policies received the same treatment in terms of taxation
and tax-deductibility, and some policies included “medical necessity”
while others did not.
You
might be led to believe that preferential tax treatment is the
most important distinction between Tax-Qualified and Non Tax-Qualified
policies. In truth, only a small percentage of consumers with
catastrophic health care costs will be able to benefit from the
Tax-Qualified tax deduction!
Under the 1997 law, only the Non Tax-Qualified policies
were permitted to include the medical necessity benefit trigger.
Conversely, Tax-Qualified policies were prohibited from
including the medical necessity benefit trigger! Without the medical
necessity benefit trigger, the Tax-Qualified policies are more
restrictive and thus do not provide consumers with the best long-term
care insurance protection.
And there are other important ways that Tax-Qualified
policies are more restrictive than Non Tax-Qualified policies.
§ Non Tax-Qualified policies do not require
the doctor to certify that the disability be expected to last
for at least ninety (90) days. However, a Tax-Qualified policy
does include this 90-day requirement, hence, it is a more restrictive
policy.
§ Non Tax-Qualified policies require that
a person need only standby assistance, indicting that only
occasional assistance is required to do the activities of daily
living or ADLs. Tax-Qualified policies, on the other hand, require
that you be unable to do at least two ADLs without substantial
assistance. Therefore, Tax-Qualified policies are more restrictive
than Non Tax-Qualified policies.
§ Non Tax-Qualified policies do not require
substantial supervision to trigger benefits for cognitive impairment.
Conversely, Tax-Qualified policies do require substantial supervision
for cognitive impairment thereby making Tax-Qualified policies
more restrictive than Non Tax-Qualified policies.
The insurance companies are touting the 7.5% tax deduction
included in Tax-Qualified policies as an inducement for you to
buy them. What they do not explain is that the 7.5% tax deduction
can be used by only a small percentage of consumers who incur
catastrophic health-care costs. The tax deduction holds no advantage
for the average long-term care consumer.
In Summary
The Tax-Qualified policy is a more restrictive policy
as compared to the Non Tax-Qualified policy. The Non Tax-Qualified
policies have more advantages than Tax-Qualified policies.
(Please refer to the “PRO AND CON” chart that was derived and
expanded from information published by the National Association
of Insurance Commissioners, Shoppers’ Guide to Long-Term Care
Insurance.)
Should you be concerned about the remote possibility
that if you buy a Non Tax-Qualified policy you could end up paying
a tax on benefits? No! Why? You are better off paying the tax
instead of being denied benefits because your Tax-Qualified policy
excludes the “medical necessity” trigger you may require,
or because of other restrictions found only in Tax-Qualified policies
(see Pro and Con Chart.) It is better to pay a tax rather than
to be denied medical coverage.
NOTE: Non Tax-Qualified policies with medical necessity
must be compared and analyzed just as one needs to do with Tax-Qualified
policies. Upon careful examination, some Non Tax-Qualified policies
will be found desirable and others not acceptable. In other words,
when a Non Tax-Qualified policy includes medical necessity, it
does not guarantee that it is a desirable policy. You need to
do your own comparison of the many factors that can determine
whether or not a policy is right for you. For instance, you
should be looking for a company that is financially strong, has
been selling long-term care insurance for at least ten years,
and that thoroughly inspects your medical history. In addition,
you should compare all the other benefits contained in each policy.
So why is it that since 1997 most (not all) insurance
companies have dropped their Non Tax-Qualified policies with the
“medical necessity” benefit trigger? Is it possible that they
want to minimize paying benefits in the future to maximaize profits?
*********
Beware of possible legislative strategies!
If most of the long-term care insurance companies want
to eliminate medical necessity from the marketplace, but are prevented
from reaching this goal because a few companies persist in offering
Non Tax-Qualified policies with medical necessity, they could
conceivably engage one or both of the following legislative strategies:
§ One strategy could be for the insurance
industry to gain legislation that would tax Non Tax-Qualified
benefits. Tax-Qualified benefits legally cannot be counted as
income.
- OR -
§ The insurance industry would push for
legislation to make only Tax-Qualified premiums fully deductible
for the average person. Only consumers with catastrophic health
care costs can benefit from the current 7.5% tax deduction.
Either one of the above strategies would be blatantly
unfair to Non Tax-Qualified policies and ultimately to the consumers!
Is it time for consumer protest?
If you believe as I do that benefits of Non Tax-Qualified
policies should remain tax free (the law prohibits taxation of
Tax-Qualified benefits) and if you believe premiums of all long-term
care policies should be fully tax deductible, here’s what you
can do. Let your voice be heard. Research has shown that one
letter or phone call represents the viewpoints of 10,000 consumers,
so speak up!
WHAT YOU CAN DEMAND FROM WASHINGTON:
1. If legislation is proposed to make long-term care
insurance premiums fully tax deductible, then the tax deduction
should apply EQUALLY to both Non Tax-Qualified AND Tax-Qualified
premiums.
2. Tax-Qualified benefits are not considered income
so they cannot be taxed. Currently Non Tax-Qualified benefits
are NOT taxable and they should remain non-taxable.
3 While some states like California require insurance
companies to provide both Tax-Qualified and Non Tax-Qualified
policies, some companies in those states are excluding the medical
necessity benefit trigger from their Non Tax-Qualified policies.
Since the law now requires that Tax-Qualified policies EXCLUDE
the medical necessity benefit trigger, consumers should demand
legislation requiring Non Tax-Qualified policies to INCLUDE medical
necessity!
WHAT YOU CAN DEMAND FROM YOUR GOVERNOR:
You want your State Department of Insurance to do the
following:
1. When a long-term care insurance company applies
for permission to sell in your state, the company should be required
to provide both Tax-Qualified and Non Tax-Qualified long-term
care policies. Some states, like California, already have this
requirement.
2. Require that Non Tax-Qualified insurance policies
INCLUDE the medical necessity benefit trigger. (Tax-Qualified
policies must EXCLUDE medical necessity).
3. During
sales presentations, long-term care insurance agents should be
required to inform consumers of the pros and cons and availability
of both Tax-Qualified AND Non Tax-Qualified insurance policies.
Betty Diamond , M.Ed.,
former businesswoman and teacher, lives in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.