Life Insurance

Insuring a Non-Working Spouse

Presented by Jim Linn Have you ever considered the cost to replace a stay-at-home spouse?  According to an article on http://www.businessinsider.com/value-of-stay-at-home-moms-2013-5 that value is in excess of $100,000 per year.  Consider the fact that the role of a stay-at-home spouse encompasses cooking, cleaning, errand running, chauffeuring and child care along with a list of additional daunting day to day tasks.  In the absence of this individual, the surviving spouse would be faced with the costs to hire someone to assume these duties.  Life insurance can provide a lump sum benefit that can provide the needed income to cover these costs.  Even though the non-working spouse does not receive a pay check there is still value in what they do and insurance carriers recognize that.  The amount of life insurance that can be placed on a non-working spouse varies by carrier and is anywhere from half of the working spouses amount of coverage up to 100% of the working spouses coverage.  As you meet with families that have a non-working spouse be sure to educate your clients on the value of a non-working spouse.  As always, your life marketing managers are here to assist with any questions you may have.  You can reach them at 1-800-397-9999.
Long Term Care and Disability Insurance

The Aging of the Baby Boomer Generation has an…

Presented by Leonard Berthelsen It was only a matter of time before the effect of the aging of Baby Boomers hit the Federal & State budgets. With less than 10% of this class of folks owning long-term care insurance, it has become necessary for the Federal Medicare and Medicaid system to review their budgets but also review what they are approving for payment. The big challenge that the federal government faced when trying to find ways to rein in some of these costs was that they were being looked at as being a heartless bureaucratic entity. By putting some of the burden back on the consumer for payment of services, they are scrutinizing those services and in many cases simply saying no to services altogether. That hasn’t set well with this generation of folks. The government was accused of developing “death panels”, as they were called, to try to rein in some of these expenses by considering the likelihood of patients’ recovery and ongoing quality of life. Medicare & Medicaid are jointly spending trillions of dollars every year and there is no light at the end of this tunnel. As a class of people, we are living longer, yet dying slower with health issues that are expensive to treat. It would be great if our government would pay whatever was needed to provide medical services for anything and everything that could medically go wrong. However, we know that is not practical or sustainable. Yet we still want the best care, by the best trained medical staff and at the lowest cost. Somewhere, something had to give. The Medicare and Medicaid system are in fact taking a hard look at rehab invoices and home health care bills. If the facility or provider is not following the letter of the rule, then Medicare and Medicaid will choose not to pay for the services. It then becomes the responsibility of the patient to pay out of pocket for this care. This could be several hundred dollars to several thousand. Medicare is allowing hospitals to admit recipients for non-emergency admissions under the term “observation” instead of full admission, thus putting more of a financial burden on the patient. What can you do to help your clients? Certainly, long-term care insurance will help tremendously with the outpatient side of the medical expenses. Also such plans as Recovery Care, Hospital Confinement & Home Care coverage will fill in the voids that we are seeing being created by both Medicare and Medicaid as they struggle to make their budgets work. Having the patient be more in-tune with what is actually being charged for those services certainly makes the government feel like they are being better stewards of our tax dollars than what we have seen from them in the past.
Long Term Care and Disability Insurance

Protection for the stay-at-home spouse?

Presented by Donna Ries   Few carriers allow disability income insurance protection for the homemaker due to lack of income.  Another alternative to consider is a critical illness plan. In the case of a major event such as cancer, heart attack or stroke, a lump sum payment may help the family cope with such a situation.  To qualify for critical illness, there is typically limited income restrictions, limited occupational analysis and an easy solution to a huge potential financial burden on the family. The hidden cost of major health crisis is something we don’t give much thought to.  Transportation, housing and time off of work all become big issues if care is being received away from where a person lives.  Health insurance policies don’t pay for the non-medical cost of care. “Cancer, heart attacks and strokes happen at all ages and most people are not prepared for either the emotional or financial cost,” explains Jesse Slome, Executive Director of the Industry Trade Organization.  “Nearly two-thirds of U.S. bankruptcies are the result of medical expenses and 78 percent of those filing for bankruptcy had health insurance when they were first diagnosed.” A lump sum payment may be the answer to help the affected spouse to concentrate on recovery.  Your Financial Brokerage marketer is here to help you place more of this business.  Give us a call today at 800-397-9999 to discuss the plans available.