Older Long-Term Care Insurance Policy Does Not Cover Alzheimer’s Facility, Court Rules

Look over your policy to make sure that it covers every type of long term care. Jeanne purchased long term care in 1992 and in 2009 developed Alzheimer’s and had to be moved to a nursing home. Her care was not covered by her insurance because the nursing home she stayed at was not considered a nursing home.

The point of buying long-term care insurance is so you don’t have to worry how to pay for a nursing home (or other types of long-term care). But be careful to check your policy because it may not cover every type of long-term care facility.

Jeanne Crutchfield purchased a long-term care insurance policy in 1992 that provided coverage if she needed care in a nursing home. In 2009, Ms. Crutchfield was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and became a patient at Barton House, a facility specifically designed for Alzheimer’s patients. Barton House provided 24-hour care to patients, with nurses on duty during the day and on call at night. Ms. Crutchfield requested benefit payments from the insurance company for her care, but the company denied her request because Barton House was not a “nursing home” as the insurance policy defined it. Ms. Crutchfield’s policy defined a nursing home as a facility that has planned programs or policies that are periodically reviewed by a doctor, and Barton House did not meet this definition.

Ms. Crutchfield sued the insurer, but the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky has ruled against her, finding that the insurance policy was unambiguous about what was covered. The court noted that even though this type of Alzheimer’s facility was unanticipated in 1992 when Ms. Crutchfield bought her policy — and that this type of facility would likely be covered under more recent policies — Ms. Crutchfield should not have had a reasonable expectation that her policy would cover the facility. Crutchfield v. Transamerica Occidental Life Insurance Co. (W.D. Ky., No. 3:10-CV-777-H, Sept. 19, 2012)…Continue Reading

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Social Security Cuts Would Hurt African Americans

The proposed cuts to Social Security would hit African Americans the hardest. As a result, black organizations are voicing their concerns in upcoming debates.

By Hazel Trice Edney, Trice Edney News Wire Editor-in-Chief: African-Americans across the nation would be hit hardest if Congressional Republicans have their way in slashing Social Security as an affront to President Obama’s recommended 2012 budget.

Therefore, Black organizations and constituents must assert their voices in current and upcoming debates, according to a report released by the Joint Center on Political and Economic Studies.

“African-Americans benefit significantly from the Social Security program—as retirees, as disabled workers or their dependents, and as survivors of deceased workers. Although Black Americans are more likely than White Americans to receive disability and survivor benefits and less likely to receive retirement benefits, their return from taxes paid into the Social Security system exceeds that of Whites,” says the report titled “African-Americans and Social Security: A Primer”.

The report, written by Dr. Wilhelmina A. Leigh of the Joint Center, continues: “In addition, older African-Americans are… continue reading

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