Thursday, January 1, 2015

There are Many Life Insurance Options in Estate and Financial Planning

Estate planning will always involve consideration of life insurance.  Life insurance can, among other objectives, create liquidity to pay estate taxes and settlement expenses, replace lost income for spouses and dependents, and protect an estate against loss. There are two main types of insurance: term and permanent. These two main alternatives differ on how long there is coverage and whether or not the policy includes a cash value.

Term Life Insurance

Term life insurance is the simplest, and probably the most common type of insurance. The purchase of insurance is for a set number of years, and the policy owner has coverage only for those years. In general, premiums remain level for the term. If the insured dies during the term, the beneficiaries receive a death benefit. Once the term ends, however, coverage ends. Some policies are "guaranteed renewable,"  meaning the owner can renew the policy for another term without having another medical exam, but premiums typically  increase. Some term policies also allow you to convert a term policy into permanent insurance.

Term insurance is usually purchased to cover a short- to medium-term need, such as a mortgage or a dependent's education costs.  Level term insurance keeps the premiums and death benefit the same over the policy term,  but there are other options. If the need for insurance will decrease over time, deceasing term insurance offers a reducing death benefit  over the term. Most consumers encounter these when buying a home or car, to ensure payment of the debt at death.  Conversely, if your need for insurance will increase over time, you can purchase increasing term insurance in which your premiums and death benefit rise over the term.

Permanent Life Insurance 

There are many different types of permanent life insurance (also called cash value insurance), but the four main types are whole life, universal life, variable life, and universal variable life. All permanent life insurance policies provide coverage for life (or for as long as you pay premiums). The other feature of permanent insurance is that in addition to paying a death benefit, the policy builds a cash value, which can be used as collateral for a loan or withdrawn from the account. A portion of the premium payments goes into a separate cash account that grows over time. Loans or withdrawals reduce the death benefit, but offer liquidity option in estate and financial planning. Many of these policies offer the option to add the cash value to the death benefit upon the death of the insuredfor an additional cost.  Each types of permanent life insurance has its own specific features and variations:

  • Whole life insurance. With whole life insurance, the owner pays a set premium and receive a set death benefit. In addition, the cash value is guaranteed. Whole life insurance is a good option if an owner  is seeking stable premium payments, cash value, and a death benefit.
  • Universal life insurance. Universal life insurance offers flexible premiums, cash value, and death benefit. The main feature of universal life insurance is the ability to use accumulated cash value to pay premiums. A policy may lapse, however, if the cash value does not grow sufficiently to support premium payments. Universal life also offers the option to change the death benefit, although, depending upon the policy, the insured may have to go through the underwriting process again. Universal life insurance is a good option if an owner is worried about the ability to pay premiums in the future and wants the ability to change premiums and  death benefit amounts as circumstances change.
  • Variable life insurance. Variable life insurance offers the ability to invest cash value. The premium payments are usually  level, but an owner can direct the cash value payments into subaccounts that are similar to mutual funds. The cash value and  death benefit will vary depending on the performance of the accounts, although some policies may contain a guaranteed minimum for each. Variable life insurance is appropriate if an owner is using the policy as an investment and wants to control investment options. Variable life is better for younger buyers who can afford to take more risks.
  • Variable universal life insurance. As the name suggests, variable universal life insurance combines the flexible premiums of universal life insurance with the investment choices of variable life insurance. There is no guaranteed minimum cash value, but most policies have a minimum guaranteed death benefit provided the premiums are paid for a set number of years. Like universal life insurance, the owner may be able to change the death benefit, but again the insured might have to go through the underwriting process again. Variable universal life insurance is a good option for young purchasers who want an investment option and flexibility with premium payments.

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Autism Patients Share Common Pattern Of Brain Inflammation

From Sarah Klein, Senior Editor, Health and Fitness, for the Huffington Post;
While science has yet to pinpoint the exact cause of autism, a new study reveals that the brains of people with the disorder share a common pattern of inflammation from an overactive immune response. 
Johns Hopkins and University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers analyzed data from autopsied brains of 72 people, 32 of whom had autism. In the brains of people with autism, they found genes for inflammation permanently activated in certain cells. The study, published in the online journal Nature Communications on Dec. 10, is the largest so far of gene expression in autism. 
"There are many different ways of getting autism, but we found that they all have the same downstream effect," Dan Arking, Ph.D., an associate professor in the McKusick-Nathans Institute for Genetic Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine said in a statement. "What we don't know is whether this immune response is making things better in the short term and worse in the long term." 
Inflammation is not likely a root cause of autism, but a consequence of a gene mutation, Arking stressed. To better understand inflammation's effects, researchers will want to find out whether treating it makes autism symptoms any better, he said.
Go here to read the rest of the article.  

Friday, December 19, 2014

Nursing Home Worker Faces Homicide Charges in Violent Death of Resident

An alleged physical altercation between a New York nursing home aide and a resident has reportedly resulted in the resident's death.  Cherrylee Young, 41, now faces negligent homicide charges and is scheduled to appear before a grand jury.  According to authorities the physical altercation caused the resident to fall and fatally impale himself on part of a table. 

According to the New York Timesthe fight broke at the 46-bed University Nursing Home in the Bronx on December 8th, allegedly after 77-year-old Frank Mercado repeatedly set off his bed alarm.  Workers reportedly found Young and Mercado on the floor, with Young repeatedly punching the resident.

The Medical Examiner determined that a table was knocked over during the altercation, and a rod attached to the table  tore the resident's rectum, causing fatal internal bleeding. According to the Daily News, Police claimed that it took hours for nursing home staff to notice Mercado's deteriorating health and send him to the hospital.

Young, arrested Dec. 9, appeared Monday in Bronx Criminal Court, claiming that Mercado attacked her and that she acted in self-defense. She agreed to testify before a grand jury, but said she will plead not guilty if indicted for negligent homicide. The charges could change depending on the grand jury's findings, according to Bronx Assistant District Attorney Nancy Borko.

University Nursing Home released a statement expressing “profound regret” over the incident, and offering condolences to the family of Mercado, a four-year resident.  "The University Nursing Home, which has a five-star rating from Medicare.gov and an exemplary healthcare history, is assisting the NYPD and the medical examiner in their investigation of this matter," the statement read. 

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Advocates Seek Better Notification for Those Nearing Medicare Eligibility

Forty-four organizations, including the Medicare Rights Center, urged the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor and the Social Security Administration to implement a system for notifying individuals approaching Medicare eligibility to inform them of their rights and obligation as they near enrollment.

The organizations asked that the agencies to ensure that all individuals nearing Medicare eligibility receive timely and complete notice about Medicare enrollment. According to the letter, such a system will ensure that fewer people new to the Medicare program are saddled with higher health care costs or go without needed health care services due to gaps in coverage and late enrollment penalties resulting from missing enrollment windows.

In particular, the letter suggests the following:

  • Provide notice about nearing Medicare eligibility to all individuals turning age 65;
  • Ensure that notices include key messages about coordination of benefits and delaying enrollment;
  • Carefully engage other messengers, including health plans, employers and states;
  • Strengthen notice for those who are auto-enrolled into Medicare; and
  • Develop notices and educational materials in additional languages and alternate formats.
The Medicare Rights Center is a national, nonprofit consumer service organization that works to ensure access to affordable health care for older adults and people with disabilities through counseling and advocacy, educational programs and public policy initiatives.  Click here to read the letter.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

A Holiday Gift from an ABLE Congress!

Sara Wolff (center) calling on Congress to allow disabled
 Americans to save and still receive benefits like
 Social Security Disability Insurance payments and Medicaid
The following is a reprint from the blog of Michael Morris, the Executive Director of the National Disability Institute (NDI) in Washington:
Last night, the U.S. Senate overwhelmingly passed (76-16) the Achieving Better Life Experience (ABLE) Act. The bill now goes to President Obama for signing into law. Not since the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990 has Congress moved forward with a change in public policy as important and unprecedented as ABLE. The ABLE Act represents the first time there is clear recognition and sensitivity to the extra costs of living with a disability for children and adults with significant disabilities and their families. Every day, all across America, parents raising a child with a disability are confronted with costs not covered by insurance and various public assistance or benefits. The costs are as varied as modifying a home to be more accessible to using adaptive equipment and assistive technology that enhances learning, mobility, hearing and the ability to use a computer, all which improve quality of life experience. 
For adults with significant disabilities, extra costs can also include additional hours of personal assistance support to get out of bed, help with cooking and other daily living needs, as well as accessible transportation, housing and employment supports. 
The ABLE Act responds to these significant daily and weekly out-of-pocket expenses by creating, for the first time, a tax-advantaged savings account (an ABLE account). This account would cover the extra costs of living with a significant disability without adversely affecting continued eligibility for government benefits such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Medicaid (health care). 
No piece of legislation before this Congress had more cosponsors – 380 House Members and 74 Senators – or received more bipartisan support across both the Democratic and Republican parties. ABLE is, above all, about fairness. Families raising children with significant disabilities do not want a handout and public assistance that comes with a life sentence in poverty. The disability community wants a hand up so they can be included in the economic mainstream as productive and valued members of inclusive workplaces and communities. ABLE offers, for some individuals and families (eligibility is limited to age of onset of disability by 26 years of age), an opportunity to plan for the future by setting aside up to $100,000 for expenses that may accrue over a lifetime, without the interest being taxed when the funds are removed. For some five million plus individuals and families who are likely to establish an ABLE account in the future, it is truly an early holiday present.

Thank you to Congress for passing the ABLE Act and improving the financial security of millions of Americans with significant disabilities and their families.
The National Disability Institute is a national not for profit corporation that is dedicated to "changing thinking and behavior that advance the financial stability and economic strength of persons with disabilities across the country.  Leveraging public and private resources, NDI is uniquely and singularly focused on promoting REAL ECONOMIC IMPACT for persons across the full spectrum of disabilities."  NDI's Real Economic Impact Blog is just one part of that mission.

Let us all join in the growing chorus of voices thanking Congress for this holiday gift.  You can read more about the ABLE Act here.  This blog will later carry a final description of the law as signed by the President.

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