Underwriting is essentially the acceptance of risk in return for payment. In long term care insurance, this happens once an applicant becomes a policyholder, paying the insurance company to accept the risk that may require them to pay out claims on the applicant’s behalf. A lot of people often wonder what the application process and the underwriting process for long-term care insurance are about and how all of it works. I’ll discuss all of that in this article. Why is it that underwriting is necessary? The answer to this question has to do with how insurance functions.

Think of this kind of insurance as a pool of money into which different parties and events have made deposits. These funds can then be used to pay for the financial losses of individual depositors who have had to make a claim due to unforeseen circumstances. In the case of long-term continuous care, the funds could be used to pay for custodial care for the individual policyholders who may have developed a need for this type of care.

The primary objective of underwriting is to spread the risk among the pool of policyholders as equitably as possible in a manner that is also profitable for the insurance company. The premiums in which each of the policyholder needs to pay are directly affected by how much money the insurance holder expects to have to pay out for claims. This means that the insurance company has to manage the risk that it will have to pay money out of that central pool of funds. The more they have to pay out, the higher the cost of the insurance for everyone. Risk management, once again for those who are not familiar, involves analyzing the potential risks for each of the applicant (and the associated costs of those risks) in order to set premium rates for policyholders and mitigate the potential financial losses for the insurer.

How are long-term care insurance premiums calculated? To manage the payout risk, each insurance holder gets underwriting techniques to make sure that applicants with high-risk medical histories are not allowed into the insurance pool, which would thereby drive up the cost for everyone else. Obviously, while the risk involved is taken by the insurer directly informs the premium rates that policyholders must pay, there are different levels of risk which are reflected the different premium rates. This is actually how a long term care insurance company determines the premium rate that you will pay, in which I will further explain in a future article.  What underwriting procedures are employed? The first step of underwriting that all carriers use is the application form where the applicant lists his or her relevant history of personal health and authorizes the insurance company to examine their medical records.

Often the carrier will schedule a phone health interview that lasts for about fifteen to twenty minutes. One of the main purposes of this telephone call is to assure the carrier that the applicant should not have any cognitive problems that would become evident in the way the phone conversation is conducted.  After this, the carrier will then request a copy of the medical records from the applicant’s primary care physician to verify that person;s overall health. Once the applicant has been treated by a specialist for any serious illness in recent years, a copy of those medical records may be requested as well.  This is then where the whole process can sometimes bog down for a few weeks if the doctor’s office does not process the record request quickly. However, once the carrier receives the medical records, a final underwriting decision usually follows very quickly.