What features of long-term care policies should I focus on? There are various questions and issues to keep in mind when choosing a long-term care policy. Where may care occur? The best policies pay for care in a nursing home, assisted living
facility, or at home. Benefits are typically expressed in daily
amounts, with a lifetime maximum. Some policies pay half as much
per day for at-home care as for nursing home care. Others pay the
same amount, or have a "pool of benefits" that can be
tapped as needed. The policy should state the various conditions that must be met. The inability to perform two or three specific "activities of daily living" without help. These include bathing, dressing, eating, toileting and "transferring" or being able to move from place to place or between a bed and a chair. Cognitive impairment. Most policies cover stroke and Alzheimer’s and Parkinson's disease, but other forms of mental incapacity may be excluded. Medical necessity, or certification by a doctor that long-term care is necessary.
Most policies have a “waiting period” or "elimination" period. This is a period that begins when you first need long-term care and lasts as long as the policy provides. During the waiting period, the policy will not pay benefits. If you recover before the waiting period ends, the policy doesn’t pay for expenses you incur during the waiting period. The policy pays only for expenses that occur after the waiting period is over, if you continue to need care. In general, the longer the waiting period, the lower the premium for the long-term care policy. A benefit period may range from two years to lifetime. You can
keep premiums down by electing coverage for three to four years—longer
than the average nursing home stay—instead of lifetime.
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