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Disclaimer• The following information is being presented on the
understanding that it is for information purposes only. Neither Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada nor the presenter has been engaged for the purpose of providing legal, accounting, taxation or other professional advice.
• No one should act upon the examples/information without a thorough examination of the legal/tax situation with their own professional advisors.
Agenda• An inconvenient truth – Today’s health
care realities• The industry’s response – Basics of
Critical Illness and Long Term Care Insurance
• Why you need a plan – A rational approach to quantifying the risk
• Talking to clients - Making an emotional connection to the need
Health care costing “an arm and a leg”• For the last ten years,
health care spending has outpaced both inflation and population growth
• 30% of health care spending ($44 billion in 2006) is funded privately (via insurance and out-of-pocket)
Health care spending to reach $148 billion this year, Canadian Institute for Health Information, Media Release, December 5, 2006.
Health care costing “an arm and a leg”• Government home care
spending reached $3.4 billion in 2003/04, an average annual increase of over 9% from 1994/95
• Even so, 65% of adults who needed help with eating, bathing or dressing did not receive government-subsidized home care
Public-Sector Expenditures and Utilization of Home Care Services in Canada: Exploring the Data, Canadian Institute for Health Information, March 2007.Kathryn Wilkins. "Government-subsidized home care" in Health Reports, Vol. 17, No. 4, October 2006, Statistics Canada. Based on 2003 statistics.
“Ont. bill covers anti-psychotics in nursing homes” Canadian Press, April 11, 2007“Nursing homes with high antipsychotic prescribing rates more likely to dispense drugs to residents who don’t need them”, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Media Release, April 09, 2007
Care concerns• Widespread use of anti-psychotic
drugs in nursing homes• Some facilities dispensing the
drugs much more often than others, sometimes without identifying obvious need for them
• Serious adverse events associated with use of anti-psychotics (risk of falls, hip fracture, parkinsonism, death)
Medical advances and increased costs
“Understanding Health Care Cost Drivers and Escalators”, The Conference Board of Canada, March 2004
• Increased prices for newer drugs
• Technological change likely accounts for 25% of health expenditure growth in Canada
Our bottoms are on the line• 3 in 5 Canadian adults
are overweight or obese• More than 1 in 4
Canadian children are overweight or obese
Health Reports, Statistics Canada, Vol. 17, No. 3, August 2006
Cancer incidence• 39% of Canadian women and
44% of Canadian men are expected to develop cancer in their lifetimes
• 30% of new cancer cases will occur in young and middle-aged adults.
• Cancer incidence is rising in young adults ages 20 - 29 and females up to age 39.
• About 1300 Canadian children develop cancer each year
Canadian Cancer Society, National Cancer Institute of Canada: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2007
Cancer incidence ratesAges 0-64
Source: National Cancer Institute- Cases per 100,000- Age-adjusted
190
200
210
220
230
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
Survival rates improving• Mortality rates have declined for
all cancers combined and for most types of cancer in both sexes since 1994 (exceptions are lung cancer in females and liver cancer in males)
• Five year survival rate for breast cancer is 86%
• Five year survival rate for prostate cancer is 92%
Canadian Cancer Society, National Cancer Institute of Canada: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2007
5-year cancer survival rates
45%
50%
55%
60%
65%
70%
1974-76
1977-79
1980-82
1983-85
1986-88
1989-91
1992-94
1995-2001
Source: National Institutes of Health
Mortality rates – heart diseases
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1950
1970
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
Male, ages 45-54 Male, ages 55-64
Female, ages 45-54 Female, ages 55-64
Source: National Cancer Institute - deaths per 100,000
Who will need care?• At age 65, the lifetime
probability of developing either a need for help with two or more activities of daily living for at least 90 days or a cognitive impairment is 44% for males and 72% for females
Cohen, Marc A., Maurice Weinrobe, Jessica Miller, and Anne Ingoldsby. "Becoming Disabled After Age 65: The Expected Lifetime Costs of Independent Living," AARP (American Association for Retired Persons) Public Policy Institute, 2005.
Who needs care?
• 7.4% of Canadians age 65 and over live in institutions
• 31.6% of Canadians age 85 and over live in institutions
• For those who live in private dwellings (not institutions):• 8.7% of men and 12.7% of women age 65 and
over receive personal care• 30.5% of men and 38.5% of women age 85 and
over receive personal care
A Portrait of Seniors in Canada: 2006. Statistics Canada
Proportion of individuals age 65+
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
1986 1996 2006 2016 2026 2036
Over the last 30 years, the proportion of individuals age 65 and over increased by 23%. Over the next 30 years, it’s expected to increase by 85%.
Life expectancy
55
65
75
85
1920-22
1930-32
1940-42
1950-52
1960-62
1970-72
1980-82
1990-92
Male Female
Source: Statistics Canada
A shift in risk
Current age
Inci
denc
e ra
te
Critical illness in males
Death in females
Critical illness in females
Death in males
Incidence of death vs. critical illness
before age 75
Source: Munich Reinsurance Co., 2003
Source of financial risk
Before Today
Dying Surviving
Risk
Solution
Life InsuranceCritical Illness
& LTC Insurance
Critical illness insurance• Provides a tax free lump sum benefit upon
diagnosis of a covered condition• 30 day survival period• Used at the client’s discretion • Optional ‘cost-recovery’ benefits: return of
premium on cancellation/expiry; return of premium on death
Critical Illness Insurance
Definition• No specific provisions in the Income Tax Act• Critical illness insurance is NOT Life or Disability
insurance• Can be illness or accident insurance – CRA
technical interpretation (2003-0026385)
CII – Individual Ownership
Premiums• Are not tax deductible• Are considered to be personal in nature• Will not give rise to a credit for medical expensesBenefits• Received are non-taxableReturn of Premiums• Non-taxable, both during lifetime and at death
CII – Corporate Ownership• Employee as benefit payee - Premium is taxable
benefit for employee, employer deduct premium, benefits non-taxable for employee
• Shareholder as benefit payee – may not deduct premium
• Company as benefit payee – premium is capital expenditure not a current expense, no deduction
Key Fact: CII benefits will not give rise to a credit to the capital dividend account
Standard Critical Illness OfferingFeature Options
Plan types • T10, T20, T65, T75, T100
# of illnesses • Range from 3 to 25+
Partial payouts • Usually 3-4 illnesses• 10% to 25% of base, typically to a max. of $50,000
Child Plans • Either as a rider or stand alone• Additional child hood illnesses
Return of Premium • At death (attachment)• Expiry, and cancellation (attachment). value is guaranteed
Convertibility • T10 can convert to T75 or T100
Return of Premium
ROP $39,150
Base Premium
Alternative
Investment $18,624
40, MNS, $150,000, end of 15 years
5%
$1,788ROPC
Premium $822
Benefit
$150,000
+
13.5%
Note: Based on Sun T75, with ROPC at 15 years. Base premium includes annual ROPD premium of $106.50. Interest rate calculations done on beginning of period basis.
Guaranteed
Target Market
All that qualify!
“Primary market”Ages 30-55
Ages 2-65
• Business owners / Professionals• Families / Singles• Mortgage protection• Women
• Business owners / Professionals• Families / Singles / Children• Mortgage protection• Women
SLF placement rates, 2006
Placed77.5%
Declined/ postponed
11%
Not proceeded w ith*11.5%
*Not proceeded with includes: incomplete medicals, offers not accepted by the client, no reply, and clients choosing not to proceed with the application.
2005 Industry placement rates ranged from 60% to 76%. Source: Munich Re’s Critical Illness Survey 2006
Claims Since Inception - % Paid
Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery
4%
Multiple Sclerosis2%
Cancer70%
Heart Attack14%
Others5%
Stroke5%
Munich Re’s Critical Illness Survey, 2006
Long term care insurance• Provides a tax free benefit if you are unable to take
care of yourself (need another person to help you perform two or more activities of daily living – e.g. bathing, dressing or require continual supervision due to mental deterioration)
Product details: three plan styles• Reimbursement: reimburse expenses for eligible
services* received on a given day, up to a pre-determined maximum
• Indemnity: pay a pre-determined daily benefit if the insured person receives any eligible service(s)* on that day (even if the service(s) cost more or less than the pre-determined daily benefit amount)
• Income: provide an income when the insured person requires care, without requiring a plan of care or proof of service
*An individual plan of care is created for each claimant. The plan specifies the types and frequency (hours per day, days per week) of eligible services.
Customized plan design• Benefit type(s) - comprehensive benefit, facility care
benefit• Benefit amount - from $150 - $2000 per week with or
without inflation protection• Benefit duration - 100, 150, 250, or unlimited weeks)• Waiting period - 30 day, 90 day (option of 0 day for facility
care if both benefit types selected)• Optional return of premium on death benefit• Payment period:
– Longer of 20 years or to age 55– Lifetime
Primary question to determine whether someone is eligible to claim:
Is the person dependent on another person for care?
Two ways to be considered ‘physically dependent’
1. Needs continual supervision by another person for protection from threats to their physical health and safety as the result of deterioration in mental ability from an organic brain disorder*
*Organic brain disorders cause physical changes in the brain – Alzheimer’s, other forms of senile dementia, and brain injuries (from accidents or from strokes) are examples of organic brain disorders
2. Always needs substantial physical assistance or stand-by assistance* from another person to safely and completely perform 2 or more of the “activities of daily living” – with or without the aid of assistive devices
Two ways to be considered ‘physically dependent’
*Stand-by assistance means the other person must be within arms reach of the insured person each time the relevant activity of daily living is performed
Activities of daily living• Bathing – washing oneself in a bathtub or shower
(including getting in and out of the bathtub or shower) or by sponge bath
• Dressing – putting on, taking off, fastening and unfastening clothing and medically necessary braces or artificial limbs
• Feeding – ability to get food into the body through the mouth or by a feeding tube
Activities of daily living• Toileting – getting to and from and on and off the
toilet and performing associated personal hygiene• Transferring – moving into or out of a bed, chair or
wheelchair• Continence – ability to control both bowel and
bladder functions, or maintain a reasonable level of personal hygiene (including caring for catheter or colostomy bag)
Use of assistive devices• An assistive device is a device or tool that assists users in
accomplishing day-to-day tasks• Home renovations (significant removal or replacement of
any part of an existing residence) are not assistive devices• Examples of assistive devices to aid with bathing and
dressing (most often, these are the first two activities of daily living that are lost):
– grab bar, bath stool, hand-held shower head, long-handled brush, long-handled shoe horn, sock puller
Use of assistive devices• If insured person can independently use an assistive
device to safely and completely perform an activity of daily living, then she/he is not dependent on another person for that activity
• If insured person uses an assistive device but also remains dependent on another person, she/he is still considered dependent for that activity
• No specific income tax laws for long term care insurance
• The following information is what we believe based on current tax laws and current CRA interpretation
Tax treatment
Can premiums be used when calculating the medical expense tax credit?
• Only if the plan qualifies as a private health services plan (PHSP)
• Income- and indemnity-style long term care insurance plans do not qualify as PHSPs
• Reimbursement-style long term care insurance plans may or may not qualify as PHSPs
Tax treatment – individual ownership
Tax treatment – individual ownership
Are benefits taxable?
• Cash benefits from income- or indemnity-style long term care insurance plans should not be taxed
• Reimbursements made from LTCI plans are not are not taxed
Tax treatment – individual ownership
Are actual medical expenses eligible for the medical expense tax credit?
• With income- and indemnity-style plans, actual medical expenses may still be used when calculating the medical expense tax credit
• With reimbursement-style plans, only expenses that are not reimbursed are eligible
Placement rate and target market
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
<30 31-39
40-44
45-49
50-54
55-59
60-64
65-69
70-74
75+
Age
Pla
cem
ent
rate
(p
oli
cies
) Target Market
Source: Sun Life
Cost of care• Facility care:
– Waiting lists can be long (one or two years)– Is this where you want to live?
• Retirement homes:– Accommodation can cost over $5,000 a month– Personal care services may be in addition
• Home care:– Depends on level of care required– Example:
• 2 hours nursing care 3 days / week at $40 / hour• 2 hours personal care 7 days / week at $20 / hour• 3 hours homemaking 4 days / week at $20 / hour
Total = $3,293 / month
The bottom line for your client
$0
$200,000
$400,000
$600,000
$800,000
$1,000,000
$1,200,000
0 2 4 6 8 10 Years
• Today’s care cost: $3,293/month• Monthly cost of care starting in 25 years (2% inflation):
$5,403• Taking lost interest of 7% into account, 5-year care
need would cost over $400,000• 10-year care need would cost over $1 million
Sample lost wealth trailersdue to long term care withdrawals
Average assets under management $100,000
Number of clients 100
Per cent of clients withdrawing each year 3.5%
Average number of years withdrawing 2.5
Average monthly withdrawal $3,293
Inflation rate 2.0%
Investment return 7.0%
Average trailer rate 0.375%
Amount of lost trail $583,018
Percentage of trail lost 31%
Total difference had lost trail been invested $896,751
Asset or ‘stop loss’ protection with critical illness insurance
• Do you have an asset protection strategy for your investments?
• A personal financial health credit line?*• Have you been shown a way to protect your financial
health if you were diagnosed with cancer, a heart attack or stroke?*
* Alphonso Franco 2005 MDRT Speech
Asset protection with critical illness insurance
$2,505,673
40 yrs 45 yrs 50 yrs 55 yrs 60 yrs 65
$2,108,273
B) Invest yearly $50,000 *Less CI yearly Premium $ 7,930 Net Yearly Investment $42,070
*Sun Critical Illness Plan Level T75 – $500,000, AIB/ROPD/ROPC/E – 15 years
In 13 yrs $500,000 is required to cover expenses incurredDue to a Critical Illness
$1,468,566
Plus $198,250
ROP
A) Invest $50,000 yearlyAssume 5% annually
Stop Loss Protection Needs Analysis and Data Entry
Actual Age Smoking Status
Name of Client: 40 m no
Annual Income: $80,000
3.0%
Return of Premium C/E: 15
Registered assets Non-Registered assets
Starting balance: $125,000 $35,000
Annual deposit: $5,000 $0
Years of deposit: 25
Growth rate: 6.00% 6.00%
Tax Rate: 45.00%
CI Need
Illness at age: 55
No of Months Inc needed: 6
Health care: $15,000
Home care: $2,000
Health Care Inflation Rate: 6.0%
Need Calculated: $ 104,000
Gender
Salary Increase:
Impact of Illness
0
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
40 45 45.1 50 55 60 65
Age
Asset
Valu
e
No w/d
$50k w/d
$100k w/d
$150k w/d
1,000,000
831,000
670,000
505,000
Assumptions: • $160,000 in assets at age 40• $5,000 annual contribution• withdrawal at age 45 due to illness
FACT: • 85% of CI claims have occurred in the first 5 yearsSource: Munich Re’s Critical Illness Survey 2006
Portfolio Adjustment
Rate to Meet Original $1,000,000 Goal
Withdrawal New Yield % Increase
$ (50,000.00) 7.2% 18%
$(100,000.00) 8.5% 39%
$(150,000.00) 10.3% 69%
Original plan assumed 6.1% rate of return to meet retirement target of $1,000,000 at age 65.
The Reality…• Each day in Canada, more
than: – 400 are diagnosed with
cancer– 190 have heart attacks– 140 suffer strokes
Daily averages derived from the following sources:Canadian Cancer Society, 2006 (http://www.cancer.ca/ccs/internet/standard/0,2283,3172_14423__langId-en,00.html)Heart and Stroke Foundation, 2001Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Annual Report 2004Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada, 2006
• Do you know someone who has had…?
• Did they plan it? • Did the illness result in
emotional or financial strain on the household or business?
• Would extra cash have helped?
Talking to clients about critical illness insurance: questions you should ask
“Her husband is still not working. John lost his job in downsizing not long before Amy got pregnant and was diagnosed with cancer. Since then, it’s been difficult to concentrate on the job hunt…”
Talking to clients about long term care insurance: what to ask
• What do you want to have happen when you can no longer take care of yourself?
• What quality of care do you want to receive?
• Where do you want to receive care? • How will your family cope, financially and
emotionally, with care-giving?• Do you want to use your savings and
investments for care?
Public awareness Advisor training Cost Need Underwriting Standardized Definitions
Top 6 Industry Challenges