These individuals are more likely to lapse on long-term-care insurance

If circumstances are such that an investor can no longer afford premium payments, the last thing they should do is do away with the contract, according to one expert.
MAY 05, 2015
Cognitively impaired individuals are more likely to allow a long-term-care insurance policy to lapse even though they're more likely to need long-term care in the future, according to a new study conducted by the Center of Retirement Research at Boston College. Further, less wealthy households allow their LTC policies to lapse more frequently, due in part to inability to continue paying insurance premiums. The study, “Why Do People Lapse Their Long-Term Care Insurance?” found that individuals in the 75th percentile of cognitive impairment are 3.4 percentage points more likely to lapse their policy — meaning they fail to pay their premiums and forfeit benefits — than those in the 25th percentile. At the same time, the risk of care use jumps 4.7 percentage points for those in the 75th percentile. “The people lapsing are exactly the ones who ought to be holding onto their policy,” said Anthony Webb, senior research economist at CRR and co-author of the report. The authors used data from the most recent health and retirement study conducted every two years by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research for their analysis. Data cover the period from 2002 to 2012, and long-term care includes both nursing home and home health care. It's limited to individuals age 65 or over in 2002 who held LTC insurance at that time. Safeguards against so-called “unintentional” lapsing of an LTC contract typically include overdue billing notices sent to the insured as well as another individual such as a relative or financial adviser. There were 4.8 million individual LTC policies in force representing $10 billion in premiums, as of the end of 2014, according to Limra's LTC insurance survey. The survey represents about 90% of the LTCI market. CRR's report also indicates household wealth and income as a determinant of lapsing an LTC contract. Households in the 75th percentile in terms of income are 4.2 percentage points more likely to lapse than those in the 25th percentile; it's 2.7 points when comparing household wealth, respectively. If circumstances are such that an investor can no longer afford premium payments, the last thing they should do is do away with the contract, especially if they have been paying premiums for more than five years, according to Gregory L. Olsen, a financial adviser and partner at Lenox Advisors. Restructuring benefits to get a lower premium is often a better alternative, he said. Policies Mr. Olsen sold 10 years ago were often more competitive than contracts that can be purchased today — they had flourishes such as lifetime benefits, or the allowance to pay off premiums in 10 years — so trying to reinstate coverage after a lapse would likely be more expensive or come with a loss of benefits, according to Mr. Olsen. “We are vigilant with these because we know policies that are offered today simply do not have the cost benefit,” Mr. Olsen said. However, LTC policies as a group lapse the least out of the insurance products Lenox Advisors sells, Mr. Olsen added. According to the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, lapse rates flat-line at around 1% per year for those over age 60, although they're around 5% for 50-year-olds. “If you make it to 65, 70, this is the last coverage you drop,” said Jesse Slome, AALTCI's executive director. Interestingly, CRR's research seems to run contrary to this, because it shows fairly high levels of lapsing from age 65 onward — approximately one-third will lapse prior to death, Mr. Webb said.

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