by Ed Hinerman | Feb 26, 2023 | insurance, life insurance, pilot, private pilots, student pilot
Wouldn’t that be nice? Kind of like the Progressive commercials where every kind of insurance is in a separate box. “Here’s your perfect private pilot life insurance. Will that be all today?” Does Your Life Insurance Agent Really Understand...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 22, 2015 | Alcohol Treatment Life Insurance, approval, bipolar disorder, death benefit, Drug Treatment Life Insurance, insurance, life insurance, life insurance claim, life insurance underwriting, physicians life insurance
Abuse of prescription drugs has been a growing problem for a few decades now and life insurance underwriters have tried to balance their reaction of this abuse with alcohol abuse and illegal drug abuse. For the most part the underwriting mirrors that of other...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 29, 2014 | application process, approval, coronary artery disease (CAD), decline, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance, life insurance approval, over 50 life insurance, Type 1 diabetes
There is absolutely nothing wrong with being approved for life insurance at a standard rate class or higher, unless you qualify for a better rate class through another company. There are a large number of companies that don’t even offer multiple rate classes....
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 2, 2012 | basal cell carcinoma, breast cancer, cancer, insurance, life insurance, life insurance approval, melanoma, prostate cancer, squamous cell carcinoma
OK. I made it up just to get your attention. No, seriously. Companies are just blowing me away with the offers and approvals they are giving on low stage and grade cancers. In this case I have a company approving a policy at preferred 3 months after a melanoma was...
by Ed Hinerman | Jul 12, 2012 | Biggest Loser, Fat March, insurance, life insurance, life insurance approval, mortality, mortality risk, obesity
There are several ways to deal with an out of control weight problem from a health standpoint, but from a life insurance point of view it’s pretty clear cut. If you are morbidly obese the best case is that you will have to pay more than the average person for...
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 | Apr 7, 2011 | breast cancer, cancer, insurance, life insurance
Whenever we talk about breast cancer life insurance the real meat of the discussion revolves around stage and grade. Just like the five year survival rate, life insurance for breast cancer survivors is a far better deal with an early stage and low grade. We know that...
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 | Nov 5, 2010 | flight instructor, life insurance, private pilots
Not too long ago I outlined several private aviation life insurance underwriting changes that Prudential had made, almost all of them in favor of the pilots. Included in those changes was underwriting for private pilots of experimental or home built aircraft without a...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 29, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, private pilots
Buying life insurance can be so easy today that it’s just crazy compared to 30 years ago. If you’re healthy and don’t have any dangerous hobbies you can quickly and easily get the family protection you need from one of the big on line agencies, a...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 3, 2010 | bait and switch, insurance, life insurance
Having run across bait and switch situations often during my years in life insurance, and having just run head on into again today, I thought I would share a few thoughts starting with an analogy. Have you ever wondered what a fish must go through when they’re...
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 29, 2010 | Anxiety, Depression, insurance, life insurance
I don’t know what some life insurance companies are thinking when they rate a policy because someone was on or is on an anti depressant or anti anxiety medication due to something completely situational like a divorce, the loss of a job or a death in the family....
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 4, 2010 | blood pressure, cholesterol, insurance, life insurance
That’s a life insurance question that’s easy to quantify in numbers. At age 57 if I wanted $500,000 of 20 year term insurance and I qualified for the best rate class, preferred plus, I could expect to pay $1840 annually, about $161 a month. If for some...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 14, 2010 | Anxiety, insurance, life insurance
USAA is one of the biggest insurance companies in the country. Their ratings are enviable and their reputation is impeccable, except for one large chink in their armor. They stink at underwriting. Like a lot of large auto and homeowners insurance companies, USAA makes...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 10, 2009 | insurance, life insurance, Sleep apnea
Of course the reason snoring is a life insurance underwriting issue is because someone may put a pillow over your head and hold it there until the noise stops. Seriously though, if that snoring is driven by sleep apnea, depending on the company you may get a brief...
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