Ch 7: Long-term care insurance Flashcards
Describe a long term care insurance contract
(def, 1)
(cust needs, 9)
(group, )
- A long term care insurance conctract may provide a cash benefit or indemnify the insured for the cost of long term care
- Customer needs met
- Finance provision of care/assistance (in old age)
- Financial protection (when a person becomes unable to look after self)
- Protect from insufficient funds/inadequate state care
- Avoid dependence
- Provide comfort (for insured, for insured’s relatives/family)
- Generally doesn’t indemnify
- Uncertainty associated with state provided cover
- Inflation protection of care costs (if indemnity)
- Advice on care
- Group versions don’t typically exist
What is long term care? (7)
- All forms of continuing
- personal care or
- nursing care and associated domestic services…
- …for people who are unable to look after themselves without some degree of support,
- whether provided in
- their own homes,
- at a day centre,
- or in a state sponsored or care home setting.
Describe
(i) the optimal outcomes of long term care, and (1, 2 ; 1)
- Long term care aims to treat the result of the condition, not the condition itself. Ideally we want
- help individual regain independence
- slow down detorioration
- provide necessary care support and environment
- Medical care also important aspect of long term care, where physical/mental breakdown requires doctors/nursing staff. Usually expensive!
Describe
the 3 types of costs associated with long term care (3, 5)
Costs can be related to
-
living:
- food, clothing, hearing, ammenities
- may require special arrangements, and increased cost impact
- housing: rent, mortgage payments, council tax)
-
personal care:
- added costs of being looked after/having body touched (intimacy/personal dignity/confidentiality issues)
- nursing care: needs knowledge/skills of qualified nurse
- intermediary care: focussing on recuperative services acute event (e.g. heart-attack) to reduce hospital admission/minimise dependence on ongoing care
Briefly describe the 2 main ways in which long term care may be provided, in terms of who the providers of care services are, and how qualified these providers are
(1, 3)
(1, 5)
-
Formal care
- Care which is provided via a professional services either in
- Own home
- Homes near relatives
- Managed residential homes
- Care which is provided via a professional services either in
-
Informal care
- Care typically provied by spouses/family/relatives, not provided via professional services, usually limiited to not more than 4 hours per week.
- Often carries indirect cost (lost ecnomic activity)
- Influenced by
- Culural/religious practices
- Attituted towards caring for older generation
- Geographic family dispersion
- Family structure changes (divorces, re-marriage, lower birth rates)
- Proportion of working women
What are the 2 main types of long term care contracts? (2)
(in terms timing of funding compared to timing of when benefits are paid)
-
Pre funded long term care contracts
- purchased by relatively healthy people to protect them against risk of future disability/morbidity
- something else worth noting: because these contracts provide for future disability, a claims trigger will need to be met to pay benefit. This is not the case for immediate needs long term care contracts
-
Immediate needs long term care contracts
- Purchased by people already in a state of needing long term care, needing to protect against uncertain survival duration
Pre funded long term care contracts: discuss the following:
- structure, in terms of the ‘policy being sold by itself’ vs ‘the policy in addition to other policies’ (5)
- funding/financing for the care required by the policyholder…ie premiums payable (4)
Structure may either be:
- Standalone: this is the case most of the time
- Rider: added to
- CI: TPD definition changes at age 60 to ‘loss of independant existence’
- Whole of life: fixed % of benefit accelerated when LTC claim def satisfied
- IP: cover annuities beyond NRA, defs changes from occupation based to activity based
Funding:
- Single premium
- Regular premiums: usually increase with chosen benefit increase rate
- Restricted regular premiums:
- up to certain age (NRA?)
- non during specified level of disability e.g. waiver of premium
- Retrospective payment: equity release after sale of home
Pre funded long term care contracts:
discuss claims definitions
Claims trigger requirements (3)
Examples (2 key points, 10 subpoints)
- Claims trigger requires
- insured incapable perform certain number of activities
- without endangering health/wellbeing of themselve or others
- usually: failure of insured to undertake certain # of ADLs unaided
- Examples of ADLs (activities of daily living)
-
Physical incapacity
- feeding, washing, dressing, toileting
- mobility: able to move indoors, room to room, level surface at normal residence
- transfer: able to move from lying position to sitting position in upright chair/wheel chair
-
Mental incapacity:
- deterioration/loss of mental capacity from organis cause=> need for care/supervision
- organic cause (alzheimer’s, irrversible dementia,
- NOT depression/side effects from other medication
- Covers
- memory
- knowing who/where they are
- awareness of time
- ability to solve simple problems
- make rational decisions
- deterioration/loss of mental capacity from organis cause=> need for care/supervision
-
Physical incapacity
Pre funded long term care contracts:
Discuss the benefits provided in terms of
2 key factors for claim definitions (3)
- Two key factors
- payment depends on claim definition
- single event (depend on level of disability, continuation for a specified period), or multiple set of events
- complex triggers also possible (e.g. need to be disabled and require care during night)
- more stringent definition = cheaper premiums
- payment depends on claim definition
Pre funded long term care contracts:
Discuss the benefits provided in terms of
What benefit depends on (2), and the advantages (4) and disadvantages (3) of this
-
Benefit depends on
- Level of disabiliity e.g. 50% fail on 2 ADLs and 100% fail on 3+ ADLs
- May depend on residence: own vs nursing; not important if inedmnify
-
Advantages
- Care provided at early age if there’s modest imparement
- Bettter match customer needs
- Percieved better value
- Novel feature may attract intermediaries
-
Disadvantages
- Increased admin costs
- Pricing more difficult
- Design more complex=> detailed literature, more effort to sell
Pre funded long term care contracts:
Discuss the benefits provided in terms of
Form of benefits (4)
Other benefit forms (2)
What happens on early death (1)
Surrender value and paid up value (2)
- Benefit forms
- Lump sum
- Annuity certain
- Lifetime benefit (subject to ongoing disability)
- Restricted benefit (maximum period, or maximum total)
- Other benefit forms/topics
- Assistive devices: norm limited to 3 or 6x main monthly benefit
- Independant care advice: at claim, help insured understand choices available and right to state suppose
- Return premiums on early death (single premium unlikely for reg prem)
- No surrender benefit
- Paid up benefit
Immediate needs long term care contracts: discuss the following
Form (2)
Premium and how it’s determined (2)
Benefit level (2)
Death benefit payable (4)
Structure (6)
- Usually some form of impaired life annuity
- Secured by single prem at start of contract…
- …when insured needs care as result of failing ill health
- Premium
1. Calculated individually, based on health status at purchase
2. Premium gaurantees not relevant (for single prem policies)
- Premium
- Benefit level
1. May increase with pre agree benefit increase rates, with specified nursing home list
2. May increase with worsening incapacity
- Benefit level
- Death benefit may be payable
1. gives capital protection of part of single premium
2. higher death benefit => less impact of health status on premium
3. may be subject to minimum payment period
4. usually just amortise single premium
- Death benefit may be payable
- Structure:
1. could be: pure endowment, purchased life annuities, disability covers
2. strcuture should consider - tax position ( of policyholder and life office)
- regulatory capital required
- benefit flexibility
- Structure:
Variations for long term care insurance contracts:
What kind of variations may be found in terms of the level of benefits paid (4)
What are the advantages of having these variations (1)
What are the disadvantages of having these variations(2)
Types of variations
- Guaranteed terms
- Indemnity benefits
- Cash benefits
- Unit-linked
Advantages
- increase level of customer demand (extended range of benefits/enhanced quality)
Didadvantages
- May lead to confusion about product suitability
- May be costly for insurers/reinsurers
Variations for long term care insurance contracts: guaranteed terms
What important need does the provision of guaranteed terms meet/recognise? (2)
What impact does provision of guarantees have on pricing of LTC contracts? (2)
What issues arise through the provision of guaranteed terms: for insurer (1) and for policyholder (1)
What ‘tweaks’ may the insurer make to the guaranteed terms offered to help manage the risk? (2)
- Recognises:
- polocyholders’ intended need for indemnity against all future costs
- can’t take additional risks associated with additional premium/reduced benefit
- May include substanital contingency loadings
- leading to far lower reviewed premiums than guaranteed premiums..
- …may be attractive to policyholders
- Issues of offering guarnateed terms
- True costs could be extensive
- Uncertainty in pricing basis + additional regulatory capital needed due to guarantee
- Favourable experience may not be passed to customer
- True costs could be extensive
- To help manage the risks introduced, guaranteed terms may be
- age dependent: insurer not seeking further premiums/benefit reductions past given age
- limited: protection for 5 or 10 years
Variations for long term care insurance contracts:
Indemnity benefits (1)
What are the characteristics of the benefit paid when indemnity cover is given(4)
What important implication does provision of indemnity benefits have on cost? (1)
What is the common industry practice in terms of provision of indemnity benefits? (1)
- Indemnify insured=> pay for full cost of treatment/care received by polholder
- Benefit
- may be unknown
- may be paid directly to provider=> extract better provider terms with barganing power
- subject to policy conditions e..g deferred period, restriction on provider
- may be subject to overiding maximums, so not full indemnity
- Uncertainty of future costs=> high margins => prohobitavely expensive
- Few insurers give true indemnity; simply too much uncertainty