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Steve Moses is a Sage

June 23, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

My friend and colleague, Steve Moses, of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform beautifully describes why sales of long-term care insurance (LTCi) continue to languish. It’s impossible to explain it better than Steve can, so I’ve re-published his blog, with permission, below. I want to encourage readers to visit The Center for Long-Term Care Reform site.

LTC BULLET:  LTC MIXED MESSAGES

LTC Comment:  Happy first day of summer!

Today we’ll examine four seemingly unrelated issues and show how they fit together like pieces in a puzzle.

Issue #1:  Medicaid planning lives.  Despite the welfare program’s diminishing financial prospects and dismal reputation for poor access and quality, Medicaid planners continue to hawk Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPT).  Example:

6/19/11, “Protecting Your Future: Address all the issues in estate planning,” by Bonnie Kraham Times Herald-Record:  “[Clients] might . . . wish to change from a revocable trust to a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) because they were unable or unwilling to obtain long-term care insurance and the time has come to protect their assets from nursing home costs.”

Issue #2:  Maintenance of effort (MOE) prevails.  Federal law does not allow state Medicaid programs to constrict loose LTC eligibility rules without penalty.  Background:

6/17/11, “Medicaid Mandate Targeted in Debt Talks, but Savings Are Questionable,” by John Reichard, CQ Today:  “As talks intensify over reducing the nation’s debt, there is a real chance that negotiators could end up eliminating a 2009 rule requiring states to maintain current levels of Medicaid eligibility.”

Issue #3:  Reverse mortgages retrench.  The two biggest banks issuing reverse mortgages have left the business.  News:

6/17/11, “2 Big Banks Exit Reverse Mortgage Business,” by Tara Siegel Bernard, New York Times:  “Wells Fargo, the largest provider, said on Thursday that it was leaving the business, following the departure in February of Bank of America, the second-largest lender. With the two biggest players gone – together, they accounted for 43 percent of the business, according to Reverse Market Insight – prospective borrowers may find it more difficult to access the mortgages. . . . ‘We are not allowed, as an originator, to decline anyone,’ added Mr. Codel of Wells Fargo. We ‘worked closely with HUD to find an alternative solution and we were unable to find one with them, which led to this outcome.’   . . .  MetLife, the third-largest provider of reverse mortgages, declined to comment on its business.”  (Emphasis added)

Issue #4:  LTC insurance lags.  Despite the obvious risk and cost of long-term care, most people don’t plan for it or purchase private LTC insurance.  I don’t think any readers of these LTC Bullets would need further evidence of that point.

So, what’s the connection between MAPT, MOE, RMs, and LTCI?

The problem of LTC financing isn’t complicated.  Medicaid and Medicare co-opted LTC financing in 1965 by making nursing home care basically free and easy to obtain.  That crowded out both a private home care industry and LTC insurance to pay for it resulting in the system’s “institutional bias” and Medicaid dependency.  Desensitized to the financial risk, consumers didn’t worry about LTC, ended up in welfare nursing homes by default, and in time, bankrupted the provider system and its primary payers, Medicaid and Medicare. 

The government tried to help us and this is what we got.  Easy access to Medicaid for LTC after the insurable event occurs (Medicaid planning).  Crazy federal rules that prevent states from closing Medicaid loopholes and stopping the abuse (maintenance of effort).  Up to $750,000 of home equity exempted from Medicaid spend down and regulations that undercut home equity conversion in other ways (reverse mortgage industry setbacks).  A public in denial about LTC risk right when the cost is about to explode off the charts (LTCI doldrums).

So, what’s to be done?  Two possibilities. 

The preferred approach:  Fix the problem through responsible public policy by removing the causes.  Get rid of the maintenance of effort restriction so states can target scarce Medicaid funds to those who need them most.  Eliminate or radically reduce Medicaid’s home equity exemption so people will see the real risk and cost of LTC.  Do these things and both the reverse mortgage and LTC insurance industries will take off, creating jobs and generating tax revenues, even as Medicaid LTC costs plummet and more people have better access to a wider continuum of higher quality, privately financed long-term care.

What’s the other possibility?  Continue to ignore these realities, let the current system fall apart, watch a lot of people (especially the poor) get hurt, and end up in the same place anyway:  with a radically reduced LTC safety net, with savings and home equity used to fund most routine long-term care, and with the public finally worried about LTC risk and buying private LTC insurance in droves.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: Center for Long-Term Care Reform, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, LTCi, Medicaid, Medicaid Planning, Steve Moses

Partnership Smartnership

June 15, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

Many of my colleagues are on the LTC (Long-term Care) Partnership bandwagon, to the extent that they almost worship these policies or at least place undue emphasis on their value.

Here’s a typical article touting the alleged magic of LTC Partnership plans.  (Go Articles.com, submitted on June 7, 2011 by Shevon Miller)

And here’s the email I sent to its author:

“Only one glaring problem with this. No one in their right mind would willingly elect to receive Medicaid-paid long-term care. Would you? I bet your own LTCi (Long-term Care Insurance) policy has a longer benefit period and is designed to avoid Medicaid.

Partnership plans are best suited for low-income earner policies sold in the workplace. They are inappropriate for the typical middle-class or affluent individual LTCi purchaser.”

Most, if not all, LTCi sales are based on dignity, options and choices, which owning LTCi provides. Medicaid-paid care provides none of this. Medicaid-paid LTC is currently abysmal in quality and under constant threat of budget cuts. What will happen when Boomers start wanting to access Medicaid-paid care in droves? This will not look pretty. It is a scene my clients and I will avoid by using our properly designed LTCi policies, with longer benefit periods.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: LTC Partnership Plans, Medicaid

Ron, another great column!

June 2, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

Thanks to my friend and colleague, Ron Hagelman, for another great column, featured in the May 2011 edition of Broker’s World.

Ron, a noted national long-term care insurance (LTCi) expert, is as concerned about the public’s denial of possible LTC needs as I am. He sees the same things I do and is just as frustrated. His sense of humor is better than mine, however.

Here’s Ron’s piece, called “Faulty Wiring”.  It uses the analogy of faulty wiring to describe the public’s disconnect when it comes to responsible long-term care planning.

I saw my hairdresser today. She’s a cancer survivor who’s insurable. Last month she told me she was squeezed and could not afford LTCi: no way, no how. Today she told me she would be gone three weeks. She’s traveling to Italy. She can afford Italy, but not  $100/month for LTCi premiums. This type of denial is what Ron and I face daily. We are both highly concerned because we’ve seen how well things turn out for people who need care and own LTCi. We see how sad the situation often is for people who don’t own LTCi.

Filed Under: Cash Type Long-Term Care Insurance, Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: Broker World Magazine, Long Term Care insurance, LTCi, Ron Hagelman

Health Care Reform Could Hit Nursing Homes Hard

May 31, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

In his May 16, 2011 article titled, Nursing Homes Seek Exemptions from Health Law“, New York Times reporter Robert Pear draws attention to the bleak outlook for Medicaid-paid long-term care (LTC).

Currently, Medicaid covers about two-thirds of nursing home residents.  Since many Boomers will soon need long-term care services in a giant bulge, the result will be a “Silver Tsunami.”  Unfortunately, very few Boomers have planned for this eventuality.

States set Medicaid rates, and many states, facing severe budget problems, have already reduced payments for nursing homes, which are also facing severe budget problems.

And now a further threat for this beleaguered system. Starting in 2014,  health-care reform will require employers with 50 or more full-time employees to offer affordable coverage or risk paying a penalty. For a mid-size nursing home, that penalty could easily exceed $200,000 a year.  Faced with increasing budget shortfalls, nursing home executives are urging Congress and the Obama administration to spare them from the penalties.

25% of nursing home workers do not own health insurance. These employees are often on the lowest end of the wage scale.

The future is not looking too rosy for nursing homes and the frail, defenseless people they serve.

With minor exceptions, Medicaid pays for long-term care only in certain nursing homes. I believe many seniors who are currently receiving LTC in these nursing homes could experience a higher quality of life in assisted living facilities, but they simply cannot afford this type of care. Why?  Because they failed to have a conversation about LTC planning while they were insurable and able to buy affordable LTCi.  So they face the bleak reality of spending their final years in Medicaid-paid nursing homes.

Since the vast majority of Boomers have not planned for their LTC, what  quality of care will be available to them when the Silver Tsumani overwhelms the available, underfunded nursing homes?  Will Medicaid funding be adequate to provide the increased demand for LTC?

In view of this bleak future they are facing, the most baffling question is: why do Boomers continue to avoid having a conversation about responsible LTC planning?

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC, Medicaid Planning Tagged With: Health Care Reform, Medicaid, Silver Tsunami

Media Getting it Right

May 10, 2011 by Honey Leave a Comment

In the 20+ years I’ve been working with long-term care insurance (LTCi), I’ve been waiting patiently for the media to stop slamming LTCi so that the public could be better informed. Could it be that the media is finally getting it straight about how essential LTCi is?  When I see accurate, factual articles with no trace of foul, negative spin,  I am heartened!

Thank you to Constance Gustke of www.CNBC.com for taking the time research and honor her profession as a journalist. Here’s her article, titled, “Long-Term Care Comes of Age”.  There is no emotional spin in this article because it is written by a good journalist. It contains a lot of solid, useful facts and  information. I encourage all of my readers to read Ms. Gustke’s piece and forward it to those you care about, who still avoid conversing about responsible long-term care planning.

What Ms. Gustke is doing correctly, and what an embarrassing number of her peers don’t, is relate information factually, with no tinge of emotion.

The contrast between Ms. Gustke’s example of good journalism and junk, shoddy journalism is very obvious when you compare this piece to the one I commented on by Katy Read in the Star Tribune, April 13, 2011.  Click here for my blog about this piece.

Ms. Read has her facts correct, but why was she compelled to frame LTCi negatively? The first paragraph of this piece states LTCi is expensive. She mentions LTCi’s expensiveness an additional time in her short piece. Why? To sell press? Short deadline? I have no idea. I do know that this is very harmful to the readers Ms. Read seeks to inform. The negative spin of this article is possibly just the excuse her readers need to continue their procrastination of responsible long-term care planning.

It’s also incorrect information. The truth is that LTCi is an absolute bargain when you factor in how probable it is that any of us will need care, along with the often catastrophic costs of care. Ms. Read alludes to this, but I think most readers will miss this information due to being more absorbed by her negative spin.

Filed Under: Helpful Information About LTC, Information About LTC Tagged With: CNBC, Constance Gustke, Katy Read, Long Term Care insurance, LTC Insurance, Star Tribune

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

Email: honey@honeyleveen.com

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