by Ed Hinerman | Mar 6, 2020 | coronary artery disease (CAD), heart attack, heart disease, life insurance
Can I Get Life Insurance With A Heart Condition Or Heart Disease If you haven’t personally experienced the trauma of a heart attack or being told that you have a life changing heart condition, like me, I’m sure you know someone who’s had one of those...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 22, 2011 | insurance, life insurance, mortality
Young, healthy, immortal. Sure, you’ve talked about life insurance and you know it really doesn’t cost much at all, but you’re a guy. Men, especially young men, absolutely hate talking about real life. And in real life stuff happens. I know when...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 30, 2010 | insurance, life insurance
You have to understand that life insurance agents don’t get paid unless they deliver an approved policy and the policy is paid and put into force. So the lies (incorrect answers) that clients in answer to life insurance application questions generally impact us...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 29, 2010 | bipolar, bipolar disorder, bypass surgery, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
The term high risk gets thrown around in the life insurance world probably way more than it should. The truth is that with the exception of truly high risk companies like Lloyds of London, life insurance companies would “prefer not to participate” in a...
by Ed Hinerman | May 25, 2010 | blood pressure, high blood pressure, hypertension, insurance, life insurance
I had a screening not too long ago of my carotid artery for any blockage. They also checked the aorta for any sign of aortic aneurysms, and my blood pressure was measured on both arms and both legs to check for any indication of peripheral vascular disease or...
by Ed Hinerman | May 18, 2010 | diabetes, heart attack, insurance, life insurance
I know I’ve beat this drum before, but there is a real propensity in the life insurance business for agents to be so protective of a potential sale that they will actually tell a customer they are uninsurable, rather than admit they are the wrong agent for the...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 19, 2010 | heart attack, insurance, life insurance
Long gone are the days of US Financial Life Insurance and their clinical underwriting that gave so many clients competitive rates, rates they really deserved, within 6 months of an angioplasty or bypass surgery. While those are tough shoes to fill, other companies...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 2, 2010 | cholesterol, conversion, insurance, life insurance
Of course that questions begs another question. Has common sense ever been a standard of life insurance underwriting? The real answer is yes. Absolutely yes. Before the big changes that came with the shrinking number of reinsurance companies and before we were...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 19, 2010 | heart attack, insurance, life insurance
I know for me that I consider daylight savings time to be a personal attack on my well being, and now there are studies to back it up. There has always been an acknowledged link between sleep deprivation and heart attacks, so it really wasn’t rocket science when...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 15, 2010 | bypass surgery, insurance, life insurance
No, I’m not getting into pet insurance, but I would like to talk about the lack of curiosity people have about their own health. From the simplest of things Americans start out with failing grades, possibly because it’s not taught in schools or possibly...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 5, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, private pilots, Sleep apnea
There is a tendency for people to just hold on to life insurance once it is in force, even when opportunities to improve on the rate or the term length come up. Most often this happens when their isn’t a servicing agent around to find the better deals and...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 4, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, Sleep apnea
We’ve leaned on Prudential for quite some time for the best underwriting on sleep apnea. Now ING Reliastar has decided they want a piece of that risk pool also. Generally most companies will underwrite mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea in the standard to...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 1, 2010 | family history, heart attack, insurance, life insurance
Family history is one of those issues that just isn’t much fun to explain and frankly, from a life insurance underwriting standpoint, is a little hard to make a mortality risk case for more often than not. Now I’ll give the actuaries the benefit of the...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 18, 2010 | Biggest Loser, insurance, life insurance, obesity
The NBC reality show Biggest Loser has kicked off another season and another chance to drive home to our country just how out of control obesity is and, well, how much work it takes to overcome it once you’ve lost control. I haven’t watched the show since...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 16, 2010 | heart attack, insurance, life insurance
Part of the life insurance business is helping clients understand that companies weigh the mortality risk of each client, and the higher the risk, the higher the premium. I’m often asked by, say, someone who has experienced a heart attack, why the insurance...
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