by Ed Hinerman | Oct 9, 2013 | bipolar, bipolar disorder, compliance, decline, insurance, life insurance, life insurance approval
Life insurance underwriters have a one word answer to applicants who have been prescribed medicine, or recommended to take a test and not taken it. That word is decline. In a nutshell it comes under the heading of non compliant with treatment. I’m guilty of it...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 13, 2013 | application process, approval, decline, diabetes, insurance, life insurance, mortality risk
Not too long ago I went off on American General for using the CRL laboratories smart score system as justification for declining a client. Since then I have been on somewhat of a quest searching for just what the smart score is and more precisely how it is supposed to...
by Ed Hinerman | Apr 5, 2013 | Alcohol Treatment Life Insurance, application process, approval, budget, compliance, decline, impaired risk life insurance, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance
Because of the nature of impaired risk life insurance, many of my clients start out just hoping for an approval (usually after several declines), but they soon find out that approval isn’t my end game. I don’t just want declines turned into approvals. I...
by Ed Hinerman | Jul 26, 2012 | decline, insurance, life insurance, Medical Information Bureau
I am currently working with a life insurance client who has yet to give me his real last name because he is so concerned that information he provided me just to shop his case will end up in MIB and ruin forever his reputation and chances of getting a fair shake at...
by Ed Hinerman | Jul 16, 2012 | diabetes, impaired risk life insurance, insurance, life insurance, Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes
I feel like one of those people who puts tacks in a map every time they visit another state. I am literally sticking pins in the type 1 diabetes life insurance approval map and the number of areas where we are getting approvals is growing every few weeks. As covered...
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 5, 2012 | diabetes, impaired risk life insurance, insurance, life insurance, Type 1 diabetes
It’s what we’re all looking for, right? The path of least resistance. I know whenever I can I would prefer to do as little as possible and, really, honestly, I would kind of like instant gratification. Hey it leaves more time for the fun stuff. Getting...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 16, 2012 | Anxiety, bipolar, bipolar disorder, business life insurance, decline, Depression, insurance, life insurance, physicians life insurance
If it isn’t crystal clear by now, it should be. People applying for life insurance with a current or past history of well controlled depression, anxiety, ADD, ADHD, bipolar disorder and other mood disorders are being abusively rated or declined by most life...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 14, 2012 | cancer, insurance, life insurance, over 50 life insurance, prostate cancer, PSA
The dreaded elevated PSA! Life insurance underwriters treat a PSA out of the normal 0-4.0 range or a PSA that is higher than your last PSA with the life insurance equivalent of shutting all the hatches on a sinking ship. Even though there are no less than half a dozen...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 1, 2011 | blood pressure, bypass surgery, cancer, insurance, life insurance
Allow me one more time to bemoan the good old days when US Financial Life Insurance was still roaming the earth. They doled out good news in life insurance underwriting in their short life span than any other company around. It was called clinical underwriting. Just...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 8, 2011 | heart disease, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance, term insurance
Most people are familiar with the standard rate classes for life insurance. From the very best they usually go something like preferred plus, preferred, standard plus, standard. Different companies may call them something different, or only have three standard classes...
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 8, 2011 | grace period, insurance, life insurance
I had a client who, by his wife’s own admission, was a bit of an airhead when it came to things like paying bills on time. When we put life insurance in force on the two of them he insisted that the bill should come to him. His annual bill came due June 1, 2009...
by Ed Hinerman | May 11, 2011 | Anxiety, bipolar, bipolar disorder, Depression, insurance, life insurance
When you consider the opposite of stable is unstable it makes it easier to understand why life insurance underwriting uses stability as a benchmark for approval and rates for all mood disorder underwriting. Whether it is depression, anxiety or bipolar disorder life...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 8, 2011 | Anxiety, bipolar, bipolar disorder, insurance, life insurance
I was involved in an exchange on the Bipolar Disorder Forum of eHealthforum several months ago. A person had been declined for life insurance and wanted to know if that was just the reality of bipolar disorder or if someone knew how to navigate what was turning out to...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 31, 2011 | decline, insurance, life insurance
Not a day goes by that I don’t read some “how to” life insurance article that claims that being declined for life insurance is right up there with getting kicked out of the country club. You will just never be OK again! You will be black balled....
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 5, 2011 | decline, insurance, life insurance
I’ve always said that a life insurance decline is really not a bad place to start. Obviously it’s more fun to get approved at the best rate the first time around, but most of my clients come to me because they have health issues. They call or email because...
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