Long Term Care Insurance companies are exiting? According to recent news as reported in the Wall Street Journal “Is this the end of Long-Term -Care” it appears that Prudential is following a long list of premier insurers who have left the state of NY – MetLife, Guardian, Unum, Travelers, Unum and AIG.
According to the article “Prudential Vice President Malcolm Cheung says the company decided to stop selling long-term-care coverage to individuals because of the uncertainty surrounding future claims and persistently low interest rates. The insurer plans to continue offering group long-term-care coverage through employers.”
It’s hard for insurance company actuaries to accurately project how many people will need long-term care and the cost of that the care. Most insurers allow a little wiggle room in their risk calculations by preserving the right to raise premiums for entire classes of beneficiaries, rather than just individual policyholders. But clearly that wiggle room is too constricting.
Long-term care (LTC) insurance is a benefit that seems ripe for the needs of today’s workforce. Yet, when employers offer staff members the chance to purchase long-term care coverage through the workplace — generally as a voluntary benefit which the employee pays for entirely — the participation tends to be low. One study contracted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that, while purchase rates varied considerably among the group of surveyed employers, 40 percent saw participation rates below two percent. Overall, employee participation rates are below 10 percent, according to a study published by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI).
Even though, with a voluntary benefit employees pay the premiums, there are advantages to purchasing LTC through the workplace. The larger the group, the greater the purchasing power, therefore premiums are usually lower. Underwriting may be less stringent. Information comes to the employee, who does not have to take the time to seek out information. Enrollment will be easy and payment convenient through payroll deduction. Given these advantages, why don’t more employees opt to enroll when offered the chance?
An AARP survey concludes that one reason for low participation may be misconceptions among Americans about long-term care needs, costs and services. According to this survey, “Americans age 45-plus know less about long-term care than they think they do.” Some specifics from the survey indicate a sobering lack of knowledge about issues involving long-term care:
Clearly, more work needs to be done to educate individuals about the issues involving long-term care. Employers that make LTC coverage available agree with this assessment. The study from the Department of Health and Human Services cited above reveals that employers found educating employees about the LTC benefit to be very important, but also very challenging. When asked what they would have improved about their LTC offering, most named education and communication during the initial offering period.
Looking back at the employee misconceptions about LTC, overcoming them indicates several key communications components:
The EBRI study cites surveys showing that communication is the most important determinant of participation in a long-term care program; one survey found that 38 percent of employers making LTC coverage available wished, in retrospect, that they had communicated the plan more effectively. Thus, when contemplating an LTC offering — or when looking at an existing program — realize that employee education and communication will play a key role in the success of the program.