Long Term Care Insurance Expert | Honey Leveen | Houston, TX

Helping you make informed LTC decisions

 
Request a Free, No-Obligation LTCi Quote
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • WHY LTCi
  • LTCi FAQs
  • PROCESS
  • TESTIMONIALS
  • ARTICLES
  • MEDIA
  • RESOURCES
  • VLOG
  • BLOG

Income Inequality Is Here

February 5, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

ErosionFor years, the press has done faulty reporting on long-term care insurance (LTCi) and the public has been in deep denial of the need for it. Now we have a new enemy of responsible long-term care planning: income inequality.

A story in the February 3, 2104 New York Times titled, “The Middle Class is Steadily Eroding. Just ask the Business World” caught my eye. It also confirms my observations.

The article says there is no doubt our middle class is eroding, in a pretty dramatic way.

“In 2012, the top 5 percent of earners were responsible for 38 percent of domestic consumption, up from 28 percent in 1995. About 90 percent of the overall increase in inflation-adjusted income was generated by the top 20 percent of households in terms of income.”

“Investors have taken notice of the shrinking middle. Shares of Sears and J. C. Penney have fallen more than 50 percent since the end of 2009, even as upper-end stores like Nordstrom and bargain-basement chains like Dollar Tree and Family Dollar Stores have more than doubled in value over the same period.”

“Foot traffic at midtier, casual dining properties like Red Lobster and Olive Garden has dropped in every quarter but one since 2005, according to John Glass, a restaurant industry analyst at Morgan Stanley.”

“With diners paying an average tab of $16.50 a person at Olive Garden, Mr. Glass said, “The customers are middle class. They’re not rich. They’re not poor.” With income growth stagnant and prices for necessities like health care and education on the rise, he said, “They are cutting back.” On the other hand, at the Capital Grille, an upscale Darden chain where the average check per person is about $71, spending is up by an average of 5 percent annually over the last three years.”

Click here for another blog I did about income inequality.

Where am I going with this? Why am I reporting on this in a long-term care insurance blog?

Rationally, when finances are tight, insurance is actually more necessary than ever. Yet soaring income inequality  evokes fear. When fear strikes, people panic. Business logic is inhibited.

I commonly see people who are suffering the effects of income inequality continue to spend money. It’s usually on “stuff”. A good many people can still afford long-term care insurance (LTCi) because we can get LTCi premiums to be very reasonable. But seeing their costs go up, their incomes remain flat and their jobs in possible jeopardy impedes people from doing the only sane, considerate, dignified thing, which is to buy reasonably priced long-term care insurance.

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, I'll Just Self-Insure, Information About LTC, New York Times Tagged With: Darden, income inequity, J.C. Penney, Morgan Stanley, New York Times

Knocking on Heaven’s Door, a “Must Read”

January 30, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Knocking On Heavens DoorI recently finished “Knocking on Heaven’s Door”. I recommend this book to anyone who is not afraid of the truth. It had a huge effect on me. This book was recommended to me, and I have in turn recommended it to many, and have bought copies as gifts for a few friends.

Knocking on Heaven’s Door is about how we deal with death in the United States. It also an intimate, intensely personal memoir. It quotes facts and figures that are irrefutable and impeccably researched.

Here is the link to it on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Knocking-Heavens-Door-Better-Death/dp/1451641974/

There are only 3 reviews of this book that are not 4 or 5 stars. Most reviewers give it 5 stars, as do I.

Here is just one review of many:

“This is a book so honest, so insightful and so achingly beautiful that its poetic essence transcends even the anguished story that it tells. Katy Butler’s perceptive intellect has probed deeply, and seen into the many troubling aspects of our nation’s inability to deal with the reality of dying in the 21st century: emotional, spiritual, medical, financial, social, historical and even political. And yet, though such valuable insights are presented with a journalist’s clear eye, they are so skillfully woven into the narrative of her beloved parents’ deaths that every sentence seems to come from the very wellspring of the human spirit that is in her. This elegiac volume is required reading for every American adult; it has about it a sense of the universal.” ~ Dr. Sherwin B. Nuland, author of How We Die: Reflections of Life’s Final Chapter

Here’s another:

“This is the most important book you and I can read. It is not just about dying, it is about life, our political and medical system, and how to face and address the profound ethical and personal issues that we encounter as we care for those facing dying and death. You will not be able to put this book down. Its tenderness, beauty, and heart-breaking honesty matches the stunning data on dying in the West. A splendid and compassionate endeavor.” ~ Joan Halifax, PhD, Founding Abbot, Upaya Institute/Zen Center and Director, Project on Being with Dying: Cultivating Compassion and Fearlessness in the Presence of Death

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Death, Honey Leveen, Katy Butler, Knocking on Heaven's Door, www.honeyleveen.com

Obamacare Doesn’t Cover Long-Term Care

January 21, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

I thank the Motley Fool. Again, they have demonstrated that they have keen insight into the cost and odds of needing long-term care. They go above and beyond most other finance advisors by urging their readers to prepare responsibly for possibly needing expensive long-term care.

In their January 18, 2014 column they (almost stridently) report that The Affordable Care Act (AKA Obamacare) does not pay for long-term care.  They offer a two-minute video warning the public about the risk of needing expensive long-term care and not being prepared, especially later in life.

Dan Caplinger (featured in the video) is correct; long-term care insurance (LTCi)  has become more expensive and the LTCi marketplace has contracted over these past few years. But reasonably priced LTCi policies are still available, the key to finding such policies is to not put off buying one.

People often complain to me that LTCi is expensive. It’s not. What’s expensive (financially, emotionally, physically)  is needing long-term care for anything but a short period of time and not owning LTCi.

If long-term care is needed, LTCi policy holders normally collect back every dollar of premium they spent over the years in six months or less.

For other blogs I’ve done on the pervasiveness and irrational state of denial when it comes to reasonable, responsible long-term care planning, click here: /?s=denial

Filed Under: Denial, Helpful Information About LTC Tagged With: Affordable Care Act, Dan Caplinger, Honey Leveen, Long Term Care insurance, long-term care, Motley Fool, Obamacare, www.honeyleveen.com

Mainstream Media Ignores the Elephant in the Room Again

January 13, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Retiree BoomI was momentarily excited when I read the following headline, “The World Braces for Retirement Crisis” on an AP article published December 30, 2013. I optimistically expected a story that would at the very least mention the possibility that catastrophic medical and long-term care costs would be part of the coming retirement crisis. No such luck.

Once again, I was disappointed (but not entirely surprised). The article only reported on shrinking, no longer existing retirement and pension plans that will force people to have to work longer. It didn’t make even a tiny, tangential connection between shrinking pensions, longer work lives, and how much these factors will exacerbate the existing high odds and costs of needing long-term care.

As I have reported in this blog time and time again, mainstream media usually fails to address this 5,000 pound elephant in the room: the impending Silver Tsunami of Baby Boomers in first-world countries throughout the globe, who will have long-term care expenses that they are pitifully unprepared for (see the italicized footnote below).

It’s very frustrating. The public tries at every opportunity to deny the compelling, high odds they might need long-term care. Mainstream media too often aids and abets these efforts, as this article does.

 “Congressional Budget Office, 11/07   [https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/11-13-lt-health.pdf]  *Total spending on health care would rise from 16% of gross domestic product today to consume nearly half of the GDP in 75 years.   * Federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid would rise from 4% of GDP today to 19% in 2082.   This new study shows significantly higher federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid under current law than other official projections do, which typically assume that spending grows much more slowly in the future than it has in the past. Although projections by CBO and by the Medicare trustees track each other relatively closely for the next two or three decades, by the end of 75 years, Medicare spending under CBO’s projections is about 50% higher. The study concludes that, without changes in federal law, federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid is on a path that cannot be sustained.”  Source:  Galen Institute, “Health Policy Matters” e-newsletter (11/16/7).  Find in sources at:  CBO on Health Spending Outlook 1107. URL: https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/11-13-lt-health.pdf

Filed Under: Associated Press, Elephant in the Room, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Associated Press, Congressional Budget Office, Honey Leveen, long-term care, Silver Tsu, www.honeyleveen.com

I Am Scared about the Fate of Nursing Homes

January 6, 2014 by Honey Leveen Leave a Comment

Friends CampaignIt’s the end of the year, and I’m pelted with solicitations to donate to various charities. I feel bad enough having to make the visceral decision to toss most of the requests into the trash, even though I support just about all of the soliciting charities. I feel especially bad about the fate of one charity in particular: Seven Acres.

I gave a larger than average end-of-year donation to Seven Acres, the Jewish nursing home here in Houston. It has a reputation of being top notch. When I call Seven Acres top notch, I mean that only in relative terms. It is as top notch as possible for a Medicaid-accepting, money-losing nursing facility. I have heard from friends with loved ones at Seven Acres that there are too few caregivers so loved ones often wait a long time for help to come. Seven Acres staff strongly encourages families to hire their own, privately paid, additional caregiver.

Here are just a few of the blogs I’ve done on the unsustainable state of long-term care (LTC) finance in the US: /?s=nursing+home. Because Medicaid pays less than it actually costs to provide care, most facilities run in the red. This causes them to cut corners on the quantity and therefore, the quality of care they can provide.

In its annual solicitation letter, Seven Acres states that in 2013, it “provided over $8 million in charitable care to over 85% of its resident population who rely solely on inadequate Medicaid funding.”

I feel bad knowing that my donation is a drop in the bucket and will not help with Seven Acres’ over all financial problems. Increased demand will cause Seven Acres to continue to run in the red, in what may be a downward spiral. My donation will have no effect on making the changes, and reform, that will be necessary to preserve Medicaid-paid long-term care for our most vulnerable citizens. It will also have no effect on making political changes that are necessary to gain control over our country’s out-of-control Medicaid expenses.

The moral: take charge of your own future dignity and choices with a reasonably priced LTC insurance policy.

Filed Under: I'll Just Self-Insure, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: long-term care insurancd, Medicaid

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • …
  • 70
  • Next Page »

Contact Me

Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Videos go here.

From My Blog

Podcast Illuminates LTC Need

Thanks to my long-time friend, client, beloved former radio personality, actress, author, passionate … [Read More...]

LTCI is Magical at Time of Need!

This is an actual, unsolicted, very meaningful, touching cleint testimonial, just recieved. I pasted … [Read More...]

Testimonials

Open Quotation Mark"Honey - Whenever I need a clarification regarding our “LTC” you are “Johnny on the spot” responding in a very prompt manner, reassuring me, informing me in a concise way, patient with me as I massage the understanding in my own words. Your knowledge is current and expressed with confidence, offered in your conscientious and upbeat personality. Quotation Mark ClosedIt is a pleasure to work with you. Thank you for your expertise." ~ Nancy Damon, Houston, TX
Read more

Thanks for visiting my site! I like hearing from you!

Here’s how to reach me:

Honey Leveen, LUTCF, CLTC, LTCP
“The Queen, by Self-Proclamation, of Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCi)”
404 Royal Bonnet
Ft. Myers, FL 33908

Phone: 713-988-4671
Fax: 281-829-7177

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

©Honey Leveen, Queen of Long-Term Care Insurance 2011-2015 ~ All Rights Reserved ~ Customization of Genesis Framework by Weborization