Costs of Long Term Care 2013 and Insurance Trends

Genworth, a leading provider of long-term care insurance, for the last 10 years has published a very informative cost of care survey, and a they released their 2013 report last week.   The report breaks down cost by state and within the state by location, so it’s a useful for comparing LTC costs if considering a retirement location.   The executive summary  shows LTC costs remain relatively stable for home health care, in the 1% range for 5 year compound annual growth, but for facility care: assisted living, nursing home, 5 year costs increased well over 4%.  The average cost of a private nursing home room is $83,930 a year.  The lower cost increase trajectory of home health care, currently averaging $17 to $18 an hour, is better news overall since 70% of Genworth’s first time claimants choose home health care.

Though costs for long-term care followed a fairly predicable upward pattern, traditional LTC insurance was roiled by market forces. Major headwinds exist.  Prudential exited market for covering individuals.  Other carriers increased premiums significantly on existing policy holders and made a series of revisions to current products with stricter underwriting.

Price and product restructuring in 2013 offers some hope to stabilize traditional LTC insurance going forward, but inherent flaws to that kind of insurance exist.  The most fundamental: policy premiums are subject to rate increases. I became licensed for to sell LTC insurance in 2003 in an era when it was a still selling point that the major carriers had never had a rate increase on existing customers. Significant rate increases have now occurred, so the obvious conclusion is that the premium instability undermines the trustworthiness of that coverage for retirement planning.

Alternatives

Life insurance, hybrid benefit plans, are a viable alternative to conventional LTC insurance.  Many life insurance products offer chronic care benefit riders that accelerates a portion of the death benefit out of the policy if the individual qualifies as needing assistance in 2 out of 6 activities of daily living or for cognitive impairment.  Some flaws to traditional LTC insurance are not contained in many plan options: guaranteed level premiums, indemnity benefits i.e. payment in cash, higher disbursement levels. Other plan riders, depending on the product or coverage structure, are not as advantageous: fixed benefit, a capped monthly benefit cap, uncertain fees and charges to accelerate the benefit, reimbursement type benefits.  Cost of the chronic care rider is either up front with the premium or back ended at time of election.  Despite some inherent limitations to chronic care riders, one main advantage is that one way or the other either the coverage delivers a benefit, either as a death benefit or living benefit, unlike traditional LTC insurance which may never be required.

For couples one option is to establish life insurance policies on each other with the death benefit as a contingent asset for LTC for the surviving spouse.  If used in conjunction with a life policy with chronic care benefit the policies would serve a dual purpose.  Since woman tend to live longer and require more often LTC, coverage on the husband could likely help in that direction.

Annuities offer another alternative.  Some annuities have long term care riders, or set up an annuity to commence a payout at a given age.

Traditional LTC insurance 

Every situation is different, and it never hurts to compare, so if considering a traditional LTC insurance plan with lower premiums, look to what is called a short and fat structuring of a plan.  Short meaning number of benefit years, as in 2 or 3 years.  Fat meaning a benefit amount to cover major care under a worst case scenario.  Since the average private nursing home is nearly $84,000 annually structure the monthly benefit, not as a daily benefit to avoid a daily cap, to be $7,000 a month.  Since costs for private care is experiencing 4% to 5% compound annual growth, opt for inflation protection at 4% or 5%.  Inflation protection has been an inherent strength to traditional LTC insurance, but higher levels like 5% compound have been targeted for higher premiums and higher policy rate increases, so starting with a higher base monthly benefit with a 3% inflation protection should be considered.

How much is enough?

One basic concept to long-term care insurance is to establish a pool of money to cover its potential cost.  It now costs, on average nationally and rounding off, $84,000 a year for private nursing home care, and the average stay in a nursing home is 2.5 years.  That comes to $210,000.   Is that enough?  To cover health care or assisted living would probably be less.  The average life expectancy for a person with dementia is 4.5 years. That comes to $378,000 currently for private nursing care.

Life insurance with living benefits to offset out of pocket expenses over age 65

Medicare doesn’t solve all health care problems over age 65 especially in the last 5 years of life.   From ScienceDaily:

They measured total out-of-pocket healthcare expenditures in the last five years of life, and looked at these costs as a percentage of total household assets. More than three quarters of households spent at least $10,000, with spending for all participants averaging $38,688 in the last five years of life. Even more shocking was the fact that a quarter of participants made an average contribution of $101,791, and the same number spent more than their total household assets on healthcare.

Dementia was the most costly.

One solution is to buy life insurance with chronic illness benefits which allows the policy’s to be used long term care, if needed.

Hybrid life insurance plans covering home health care

The Dayton Daily News has posted an article on the growth of home health care companies in Ohio.

“I think there’s been a real renewed interest in home care,” Thompson said. “I think people are looking for alternatives for care and again to remain in their homes I think [because of] the cost of moving into a facility, and they have to give up a lot to do that. I think independence is important to that population.”

Many life insurance plans at no extra upfront cost come with an accelerated benefit rider for chronic care.  Being unable to perform 2 out of 6 activities of daily living, like dressing or bathing, or cognitive impairment allows the policyholder to accelerate portions of their life insurance benefit for long term care.  The better plans allow an accelerated cash benefit.

These hybrid life and chronic care plans offer fixed premium, guaranteed for life.   They can be structured to build cash value and have an increasing benefit.  Once certified by a doctor as needing chronic care and a plan was devised that home health care was a suitable option, the accelerated benefit could pay for home health care services.  Any benefits not needed would pass on as a life insurance death benefit.

This kind of coverage is affordable and a very good solution for the associated costs of home health care.