Activities
of Daily Living (ADLs):
Everyday functions and activities individuals usually do without
help. ADL functions include bathing, continence, dressing, eating,
toileting, and transferring. Many policies use the inability
to do a certain number of ADLs (such as 2 out of 6) to decide
when to pay benefits.
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Acute
Care: Care for illness
or injury that develops rapidly, has pronounced symptoms, and
is finite in length. An example is medical care for a short time
to cure a certain illness and/or condition.
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Alzheimer's
Disease: A progressive,
degenerative form of dementia that causes severe intellectual
deterioration.
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Aphasia: Loss of the ability to use or understand
language.
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Assessment: A determination of physical and/or mental
status by a health professional based on established medical
guidelines.
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Bed
Reservation Benefit:
A benefit that may or may not be included in a long term care
insurance plan that pays for reserving your bed in a care facility
should you need to be hospitalized during a covered stay.
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Benefit
Period: The length of
time that a policy can pay the benefit amount.
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Caregiver,
Primary: The key person
(usually a relative) overseeing and/or providing care for a person
who is incapacitated.
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Caregiver(s),
Secondary: Relatives
or others who assist part-time in giving care.
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Catastrophic
Illness: An illness that
causes sudden temporary or permanent change or significant disruption
to a person's normal lifestyle.
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Chronic
Care: Care for an illness
continuing over a protracted period of time or recurring frequently.
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Cognitive
Impairment: A deficiency
in a person's short or long term memory; orientation as to person,
place and time; deductive or abstract reasoning; or judgement
as it relates to safety awareness.
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Custodial
Care: Services that can
be given safely and reasonably by a trained or capable non-medical
person, designed mainly to assist with ADLs, such as bathing,
eating, dressing, and other routine activities.
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Daily
Benefit: The amount of
insurance benefit per day in a long term care policy a person
can choose to cover long term care expenses (typically between
$50 and $400 - selected by the applicant).
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Dementia: Deterioration of mental faculties due
to a disorder of the brain.
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Elimination
Period: A type of deductible;
the length of time the insured must pay for long term care services
before the insurance policy begins to pay benefits.
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Home
Health Care: At home
services for occupational, physical, respiratory, speech therapy,
or nursing care. Also typically included are medical, social
worker, home health aide, and homemaker services.
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Home
Modification: Physical
adaptations to a home that enable a person to stay and function
in that environment.
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Homemaker
Services: Services designed
to provide household support. They may include light housekeeping,
laundry, shopping, cooking, home management and similar services.
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Inflation
Protection: An optional
policy feature that is available for additional premiums that
provides for increases in benefit levels over time to help pay
for expected inflation in the costs of long term care services.
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Intermediate
Nursing Care: Assistance
needed for stable conditions that require daily, but not 24-hour,
nursing supervision. This care is initially ordered by a physician
and supervised by registered nurses. It is less specialized than
skilled nursing care, often involves more personal care, and
is generally needed for a longer period of time.
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Long
Term Care (LTC): Personal
care and other related services provided on an extended basis
to people who need help with activities of daily living or who
need supervision due to a severe cognitive impairment. It can
be provided at home, in a nursing home, assisted living facility,
or an adult day care center.
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Means
Test: Measures of income
and assets to determine eligibility for some government benefit
programs such as Medicaid.
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Medicaid: A means-tested medical and health welfare
program supported by federal, state and local funds, and administered
by each state to provide health care for eligible poverty level
individuals.
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Medicare: The federal program providing hospital
and medical insurance to people aged 65 or older and to certain
younger ill or disabled persons. Benefits for nursing home and
home health care services are limited.
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Medicare
Supplement ("Medigap") Insurance: A private insurance policy that supplements Medicare
benefits by covering co-payments and deductibles for medical
and hospital expenses. These policies do not provide coverage
for personal or custodial care other than incidental to receiving
skilled care.
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Monthly
Benefit: The amount of
insurance benefit per month in a long term care policy a person
can choose to cover long term care expenses (typically between
$1,500 and $12,000 - selected by the applicant).
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Nursing
Home: Generally a state
licensed facility that provides room and board and a planned,
continuous medical treatment program, including 24-hour-per-day
skilled nursing care, personal care, and custodial care.
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Plan
of Care: A written, individualized
plan prescribed by a physician or developed by other qualified
health care professionals that specifies the type and frequency
of long term care services required by the recipient of the care.
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Preferred
Health Discount: A discount
received from some insurance companies on policy premiums available
to applicants who are determined to be in very good health.
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Respite
Care: Long term care
services provided at home or in a facility to temporarily relieve
the family or friends who normally provide care for an impaired
individual.
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Skilled
Nursing Care: Nursing
and rehabilitative care that is performed by skilled medical
personnel, usually available 24-hours-a-day and ordered by a
physician under a treatment plan. It can be either in a facility
setting or at home. (Note: Medicare and Medicaid both have their
own definitions of "skilled nursing care" which do
not necessarily match those in long term care insurance policies.)
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Skilled Nursing
Facility (SNF): Generally
a state-licensed institutional setting that provides skilled
care by skilled medical personnel. This care is available 24-hours-a-day
and is ordered by a physician under a treatment plan.
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Spousal
Discount: A discount
received from some insurance companies on policy premiums applicable
if both spouses are eligible and apply for coverage
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Third-party
Notification: A process
that lets you name someone who the insurance company would notify
if your coverage is about to lapse due to a failure to pay premium.
The notice can go to a relative, friend, or professional such
as a lawyer or accountant, for example.
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Waiver
of Premium: A provision
in an insurance policy that can relieve the insured from having
to pay premiums while receiving benefits.
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