October 5, 2006 5:55 AM
Long Term Care Insurance: Sales Pitches And Their Catches
Long term care insurance is a big investment into your future, so you should look through the common sales pitches and make sure you get what you want.
From Consumer Reports:
The pitch: You need to buy long-term-care insurance when you are young. More than 40 percent of people who need long-term care are under age 65.
The catch: Only 159,000 of the 238 million people under age 65, or less than 1 percent, receive nursing-home care.
The pitch: There is nearly a 50 percent chance that a person will require 24-hour care in a skilled-nursing facility.
The catch: One percent of those ages 65 to 74 live in a nursing home, 4 percent of 75- to 84-year-olds, and 19 percent of those age 85 and older.
The pitch: If you are over age 65, you don’t need inflation protection.
The catch: According to the most recently published figures, the average age of admission to a nursing home is 83, and costs are expected to rise more than 5 percent a year. At age 65, you face 18 more years of inflation.
The pitch: You’ll get into a better nursing home if you have insurance.
The catch: While some nursing homes may prefer to take residents who do not have to rely on Medicaid, there is no guarantee that those homes provide better care.
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