Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Partnership Long-Term Care Insurance. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Partnership Long-Term Care Insurance. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Năm, 30 tháng 7, 2009

Leaders From 18 Long Term Care Partnership States To Attend LTC Agent Summit

Executives from 18 states offering long term care Partnership plaAdd Imagens will attend the National LTCi Producers Summit. The Summit takes place November 14-16, 2009 at the Westin Hotel in Kansas City and brings together hundreds of producers who market long-term care insurance products.

This year's Summit will combine two conferences - the producer sales and marketing conference organized by the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance and the conference for state officials organized by the Center For Healthcare Strategies (CHCS).

Over 18 states will be represented each sending three or four executives from the State Medicaid office, the Department of Insurance, the Agency on Aging and State Dept. of Commerce. Summit attendees will have the opportunity to attend special Partnership workshops in addition to the extensive Summit program.

States Sending Executives Include
Arkansas
Colorado
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Maryland
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri
New Jersey
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin
South Dakota
Texas
Virginia

Summit registration is $275 ($324 for non-Association members) through September 30th.

Registration includes sessions, meals and receptions. Hotel discounts are currently available.
Complete information and registration forms are available online at http://www.aaltci.org/2009summit or by calling the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance at (818) 597-3227.

Thứ Ba, 20 tháng 1, 2009

Long-Term Care Insurance: What Happens After They Buy

One of the most interesting aspects of my job is compiling the data for the annual Long-Term Care Insurance Sourcebook. This is a compilation of all the most relevant data we can compile ... acquire ... and share with members of the Association.

One of the questions I've been asked is "what happends after someone purchases long-term care insurance? How many people keep their policies? How many drop them? How many die?"

It is important information for several reasons. First, most people who purchase long-term care insurance understand the value of what they have purchased. Compared to other forms of insurance, fewer drop this protection that say life insurance or diability products. Thus, one can assure people who buy, they will likely have and keep this coverage should the need for benefits arise.

The 2009 Sourcebook will provide detailed (cumulative) data on what happens after people buy long-term care insurance protection. Here's what it will note based on data reported by the Indiana Partnership for Long-Term Care. Of some 43,475 policies purchased, some 8,086 have been dropped (35,412 are still in force).

The Indiana Partnership was implemented in 1993. Thus, in the 15 years since sales began, 82% of policies sold remain in-force.

Primary reasons for dropping the policies are:
Voluntary (2,016 or 25%)
Died (990 or 12.3%)
Unknown (2,543 or 31.5%)
Not Taken Up (2,381 or 29.5%)
Converted (78 or 1%)

A little tid bit worthy of including should you ever be asked the same question by a prospect or client.

For more information, visit the Association's Producer Resource Center where we will continually add new audios and information.

If you have suggestions for data you want included, send me an E-mail: Click Here.

Thứ Hai, 5 tháng 1, 2009

Long-Term Care Insurance Partnership Protection - What Most People Overlook

To prepare the 2009 Long-Term Care Insurance Sourcebook, which will be sent to all Association members in March, I take the time to review countless studies and reports.

One of the more interesting was published recently by the California Partnership for Long-Term Care. One of the requirements imposed on the initial four Partnership states (California, New York, Indiana and Connecticut) was the preparation of very detailed reports on buyers as well as utilization of policies. Thus, these provide some of the best snapshots of real situations ... what consumers choose and how they use benefits when needed.

I was involved with the launch of the California Partnership and I think many people either overlook or are not familiar with why the Partnership concept came about ... and why it is such a powerful solution for consumers. Bottom line: it is designed to help expand the market to "middle income" consumers who could afford shorter-duration policies with the added protection of being able to qualify for Medicaid while protecting a larger sum of assets from the spend-down requirement.

So, some of the interesting findings from the California report. Some 142,650 applications were initially submitted of which 118,390 resulted in issued policies (some 98,528 are currently active). To date, 2,082 policyholders have qualified to receive benefit payments ... and the total asset protection earned by policyholders who received benefits was $75,367,500 (which means the average payout was $36,199).

Some 187 policyholders exhuasted their benefits (722 died while in benefit) and of these 44 accessed Medicaid (Medi-Cal in California).

There is excellent data that looks at the duration of policy benefits by the people who exhausted their policy and then accessed Medi-Cal. We'll publish that and discuss it more.

But the bottomline message for those marketing Partnership protection, this is excellent coverage for those seeking more affordable plans of protection.