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Protecting Your Family: Health Insurance, Life Insurance,
And, Don't Forget! - Disability Insurance
A recent survey by Harris Interactive for America's
Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) found that most Baby Boomers
underestimate their risk of missing work for an extended
period of time due to a disability. Yet they believe
that they are more likely to suffer such a disability
than to die prematurely. What's wrong with this picture?
Like most breadwinners, Boomers buy family health insurance
and life insurance to protect their families while skimping
on long-term disability insurance.
How far off are the disability risk guesstimates
of most Americans? A study sponsored by the Life and
Health Insurance Foundation for Education called "The
Real Risk of Disability in the United States" found
that a white-collar worker between 35 and 65 years of
age has a 27 to 31 percent chance of becoming disabled
for 90 days or longer. Unfortunately, the duration
of disabilities has increased substantially in the past
few decades. In the 1970s and 80s, a 35-year-old male
with such a disability would have been out of work,
on average, almost four years. Today it's six, because
better medical care means that people with terminal
illnesses are living longer. It does not, however, mean
they are able to pull in their pre-disability income
while they're ill.
Steven Crawford, a Maryland-based disability insurance
specialist, believes that a well considered policy is
the keystone to any sound financial plan. Unfortunately,
he notes, most financial advisers, not to mention the
media at large, rarely mention the subject, even though
a person's ability to generate income is by far their
most valuable asset.
"Everybody should have the maximum [benefits]
they can afford," Crawford says. "Somebody
20 years oldtheir liability is huge. A 55-year-old's
liability is less."
Figuring out how to find quality, low cost health insurance
suited to your specific needs is a time-consuming process.
First, you have to determine how much you'll need to
maintain your lifestyle, remembering to factor in new
expenses that could arise due to your disability. Then,
you calculate what income you'll receive from sources
beyond a private health insurance plan. These include
benefits from your employer's group plan, your personal
savings, and possible government benefits such as social
security disability insurance.
"If you're making a six-figure income, you
really shouldn't be covered by a group long-term plan,"
Crawford says. The coverage is cheap, but you're not
going to receive nearly enough of your pre-disability
income to sustain your current lifestyle. Sixty
percent is the standard rate of income replacement on
most plans. Why not higher? According to Crawford, the
insurers want to pay "the maximum amount needed
for you to get by without removing your incentive to
go back to work."
The subject is unpleasant for many, which may explain
why so many people think of injury when they hear the
word "disability." In fact, according to AHIP's
Guide to Individual Disability Income Insurance (www.cap.org/apps/docs/insurance_programs/AHIP_Guide_Individual_Disability.pdf),
89.5 percent of claims are caused not by injury, but
by illness. The guide is a great source of information
about the many types of policies out there and the enormous
variety of choices within each and every one of those
policies. It also contains a checklist of questions
to ask a reputable, knowledgeable agent when you're
ready to face the realities of your disability insurance
needs.
Author: Ryan Patterson
Ryan Patterson is president of US Insurance Online,
based in Austin, TX. He graduated in 2000 from the University
of Texas with a combined business and computer science
degree, and started US Insurance Online in May of 2005
with fellow entrepreneur Jim Waltrip. Visit http://www.usinsuranceonline.com
for help shopping for insurance and for free insurance
quotes.
Keywords : family health insurance, low cost health
insurance, private health insurance
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