CIBR Flashcards

1
Q

What is the Critical Illness Benefit Rider?

A

This rider provides a benefit equal to 10% or 25% of the total face amount of the policy, with a maximum benefit of $250,000.

Upon initial diagnosis of a covered critical illness event, the insured receives the entire critical illness benefit pool in a lump sum. The CIBR creates a separate pool and does not accelerate the death benefit.

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2
Q

How many covered illnesses are there, and what are they?

A

Cancer

Heart Attack

Stroke

Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting

Kidney Failure

Major Organ Failure

Paralysis

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3
Q

Who must make the initial diagnosis of a covered critical illness?

A

Must be made by physician or specialist expert in the medical field diagnosing the specific critical illness.

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4
Q

When does the diagnosis have to be made?

A

30 days after the rider’s effective date

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5
Q

Does the insured have to supply receipts in order to receive the benefit?

A

No. Receipts are not needed, and the funds can be used for any expense.

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6
Q

True or False: Electing the Critical Illness Benefit Rider removes the potential need for the LTC Rider.

A

False. A proposed insured may need the CIBR along with the LTC Rider and/or the Accelerated Benefit Rider to adequately cover their risk.

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7
Q

How is the qualifying event of the CIBR different from the qualifying event for the LTC Rider and the ABR?

A

CIBR: initial diagnosis of a covered illness (does not need to be terminal)

LTC: unable to perform 2 of 6 ADL’s

ABR: terminal diagnosis with one year or less life expectancy

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8
Q

What is the waiting period for the CIBR and how does it compare to the waiting periods for LTC and ABR?

A

The waiting period is the amount of time that must pass before a critical illness diagnosis is made, and for the CIBR that’s 30 days. The clock for the waiting period starts running on the rider’s effective date. Once the rider is effective, and 30 days have passed, then an initial diagnosis can be made.

An elimination period is different. It doesn’t begin running until the qualifying event occurs. Then the insured must wait out this time, generally around 100 days for LTC, before receiving benefits.

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9
Q

What is the tax treatment of CIBR charges, and how does that compare to charges for the LTC Rider and ABR?

A

Monthly rider charges for the CIBR are deducted from the policy value, which constitutes a distribution, and thus may have Federal income tax implications.

On the other hand, charges for the LTC Rider are considered a non-taxable distribution and reduce the policy’s cost basis.

There is no charge for the ABR, until it’s exercised.

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10
Q

What is the tax treatment of CIBR benefits, and how does that compare to the tax treatment of benefits for LTC Rider and ABR?

A

Benefits from both the CIBR and LTC Rider are free from Federal income tax. However, benefits from the ABR may be taxable.

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11
Q

How are CIBR benefits paid, and how does that compare to the LTC Rider and the ABR?

A

The CIBR and the ABR are both non-taxable cash payments which are paid in a lump sum.

LTC benefits are paid on a reimbursement basis up to the monthly maximum benefit amount.

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12
Q

Does a claim under the CIBR impact other riders?

A

No. A claim for the CIBR does not impact LTC or the ABR, and vice versa.

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13
Q

Can CIBR benefits be coordinated with benefits provided by other coverage?

A

No. The benefits from the CIBR cannot be coordinated with benefits provided by other coverage. The same goes for the ABR.

But, benefits received under the LTC rider will be coordinated with other John Hancock LTC policies and Medicare.

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14
Q

Are CIBR benefits an acceleration of the death benefit?

A

No. Benefits from the CIBR are paid from a separate pool, and are not an acceleration of the death benefit. Payment of benefits does not affect the base policy face amount.

For LTC and the ABR, the opposite is true. Both of these riders accelerate the death benefit.

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15
Q

Is consent of a third-party required to receive benefits under the CIBR?

A

No. The CIBR and LTC Rider do not require the consent of a third party. However, for the ABR, the consent of the irrevocable beneficiary and/or assignee (if any) is required.

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16
Q

How can the CIBR work together with the LTC Rider?

A

Using an example of a 55-year old income earner who has a stroke: although he has the LTC Rider, there’s a 100-day elimination period where he is not only not bringing in income, but also incurring medical and long-term care costs.

The benefits from the CIBR can be used for those medical and LTC costs, as well as for income replacement. And, if he never goes on claim under the LTC Rider, his base policy face amount won’t be affected.

17
Q

Why might an insured need the CIBR if the policy has the ABR?

A

Take an example of an insured, female, who is 60 years old and plans on working until she is 65. She’s been diagnosed with cancer, but it’s not terminal. Even though it’s not terminal, there are still significant medical costs. Here, the CIBR provides benefits immediately, and the benefits can be used for anything the insured needs. Since the diagnosis is not terminal, the ABR doesn’t help.

18
Q

How are the CIBR and LTC Rider different?

A
  • CIBR benefits are indemnity benefits paid in a lump sum while LTC benefits are paid on reimbursement method
  • 30-day waiting period for the CIBR and a 100-day elimination period for LTC
  • CIBR charges are taxed as distributions while LTC charges are non-taxable distributions
  • No acceleration of the death benefit when CIBR benefits are paid, but LTC benefits are an acceleration of the death benefit
  • There’s no coordination of benefits with the CIBR but there is with LTC Rider benefits.

But, one way in which these two riders are the same is that benefits from both are free from tax.

19
Q

How is the CIBR similar to the ABR?

A
  • Both are non-taxable cash payments that can be spent on anything
  • Neither benefit is not subject to coordination of benefits
  • CIBR and ABR do not affect LTC Rider
20
Q

How are the CIBR and the ABR different?

A
  • With the ABR, the insured can go on claim immediately, whereas the CIBR has the 30-day waiting period.
  • ABR claimant needs the consent of an irrevocable beneficiary and/or assignee, if any. This requirement doesn’t exist with the CIBR.
  • Third, benefits received from the ABR are an acceleration of the death benefit. Benefits from CIBR are not, and don’t reduce the base face amount.
  • Fourth, ABR benefits may be taxable while critical illness benefits are not.
21
Q

How does John Hancock’s Critical Illness Benefit Rider compare to other critical illness riders?

A

Ours is the only benefit with a predetermined benefit amount paid from a separate benefit pool, and that’s an important distinction.

Many companies offer critical illness riders that have no upfront charge, but there can be a significant cost at the time of claim:

  • by a reduction of the death benefit
  • and/or a reduction in the critical illness benefit.
  • The client could receive a lower critical illness benefit
  • and/or his beneficiaries can be left with a lower death benefit.

This makes it very difficult to pre-plan as the benefit isn’t known until claim time.

22
Q

What are the issue ages for the CIBR?

A

18-65, or issue age plus 5 years, whichever is greater

23
Q

Is backdating allowed?

A

Yes, up to 11 months - depending on state. But it is not allowed to save age.

24
Q

On what products is CIBR available?

A

AIUL 17 and PIUL 15. Available with both Death Benefit Options 1 and 2, as well as both CVAT and GPT tests for DOLI.

25
Q

What is the cost of the CIBR?

A

The cost of the rider varies by issue age, gender and risk class, and charges are not guaranteed.

It is guaranteed renewable and therefore subject to in-force rate increases based on a class of policyholders, subject to state approval.

26
Q

How is the CIBR underwritten?

A

It is underwritten separately with two classes: Standard and Standard Smoker, with ratings of 150%, 175%

27
Q

When does the CIBR expire?

A

The rider expires on the anniversary nearest attained age 65 or policy issue date plus 5 years, whichever is greater. Or, when exercised. The Rider may be terminated by the policy holder, but may not be reinstated.

28
Q
A