Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program (FLTCIP)
The Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program,
authorized by Public Law 106-265, the Long Term Care Security
Act of 2000, covers services that individuals may need because
they are unable to care for themselves due to a chronic mental
or physical condition. Included are services such as nursing home
care, home health care, assisted living facilities, adult day
care and personal/homemaker care. The coverage is provided by
LTC Partners, LLC, a partnership of the John Hancock and Metropolitan
Life insurance companies under contract with the Office of Personnel
Management.
Coverage is voluntary and enrollees pay the
entire cost of the premiums; there is no government contribution. The FLTCIP is “guaranteed renewable”—it
cannot be canceled as long as you pay your premiums for reasons of age,
change in health or any other reason, including leaving the eligible
enrollment group.
Eligibility
Individuals eligible to apply for this insurance
coverage are:
- Federal employees and members
of the uniformed services. This includes employees of the
U.S. Postal Service and Tennessee Valley Authority, but does
not include employees of the District of Columbia government.
For federal and postal employees in general, if you are in
a position eligible for Federal Employees Health Benefits
program coverage, you are eligible for FLTCIP (whether enrolled
in FEHB or not—the key is eligibility).
- Federal annuitants, surviving spouses
of deceased federal or postal employees or annuitants who
are receiving a federal survivor annuity, individuals receiving
compensation from the Department of Labor who are separated
from the federal service, members or former members of the
uniformed services entitled to retired or retainer pay, and
retired military reservists at the time they qualify for an
annuity (also known as gray area reservists). Retired employees
of the D.C. government are not included.
- Current spouses of employees and annuitants
(including surviving spouses of members and retired members
of the uniformed services who are receiving a survivor annuity).
- Adult children (at least 18 years old,
including natural children, adopted children and stepchildren)
of living employees and annuitants. Foster children are not
eligible.
- Parents, parents-in-law, and stepparents
of living employees (but those of annuitants are not eligible).
There is no upper age limit for who can apply
for this insurance but there is a minimum age; you must be at
least 18 years old at the time you submit your application.
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Enrollment
Eligible individuals may enroll at any time;
it is not necessary to wait for an open enrollment period. An
early enrollment period was offered March 25 - May 15, 2002, with
an open season running July 1 - December 31, 2002. Dates of subsequent
open seasons are yet to be determined, although they will not
be held on an annual basis. During the 2002 early enrollment and
open season periods, active employees and their spouses were subject
only to abbreviated underwriting.
Newly hired employees and their spouses have
60 days to enroll and use abbreviated underwriting. Afterward,
they must use full underwriting.
All other enrollments are subject to full underwriting.
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Underwriting
“Abbreviated” underwriting applies
to newly hired employees and their spouses and also applied to all active employees
and their spouses during the initial 2002 open season. (Note: It is still to be determined
whether abbreviated underwriting would apply to current employees during any future
open seasons or whether they will have to undergo full underwriting.)
The abbreviated underwriting application has
seven health-related questions designed to determine who may be
immediately eligible for benefits, or eligible for benefits within
a short period of time. Spouses of active employees eligible for
abbreviated underwriting also are subject only to abbreviated
underwriting, although they must answer two additional questions
regarding their mobility and any need for help with everyday tasks.
All other applicants are subject to “full”
underwriting at all times. This means that they must answer numerous
health-related and lifestyle-related questions in addition to
questions asked of active employees and their spouses qualifying
for abbreviated underwriting.
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Benefit Choices
Enrollees can choose a maximum benefit, the
length of the policy, the type of inflation protection and the
waiting period before benefits begin. They also can choose between
comprehensive coverage and coverage for only facility-based care.
The program offers four standardized packages known as Facilities
100, Comprehensive 100, Comprehensive 150 and Comprehensive 150+.
However, enrollees may tailor their coverage as they see fit.
Also, you may change coverage levels after you are first insured.
Benefit Amount—The
maximum daily benefit can range from $50 to $300 a day in a multiple of
$25; weekly benefit amounts also can be elected.
Length of Policy—The
length of policy can be three years, five years or lifetime coverage.
If you select a three-year or five-year policy, that length and
the maximum weekly benefit you chose determine a “pool of
money.” The insurance will pay benefits until your pool
of money is exhausted, a process that may take longer than the
length of the policy. For example, a $700 weekly benefit and a
three-year policy would produce $109,200 ($700 x 52 weeks x 3
years) for covered services. When the pool is gone, your insurance
ends.
A lifetime benefit has a limitless pool of
money.
Inflation Protection—Two
inflation protection features are available. Under Automatic Compound Inflation Protection,
your benefit would automatically increase by 5 percent every year, regardless of actual
inflation. Your premiums would remain level for life, even as your weekly benefit
increases.
Under the Future Purchase Option, every two
years you would have the option to increase your benefits based
on a medical inflation index. Your premiums would increase as
your benefit increases; they further would be based on the age
at that election, not the age at which you first took out the
policy. If you decline more than two FPO offers, you can still
apply for future inflation increases but would have to show satisfactory
evidence of insurability.
You can switch from the Future Purchase Option
to the Automatic Compound Inflation Protection option without
proof of good health at the time of a Future Purchase Option notification
if you have not declined more than two notifications in the past
and are not eligible for benefits at that time. Premiums for those
who make this change will be based on age at that time and premiums
already paid in, not on the standard rate tables for new enrollees.
Waiting Period—Enrollees
also can choose the waiting period—also called an elimination
period or deductible—which is the number of days of covered
care that you (or other insurance coverage you may have) must
pay for before the insurance begins to pay. The choice is either
90 days or 30 days.
Types of Coverage—Two
basic types of coverage are available. A Facilities-only Plan covers care in assisted
living facilities, nursing homes and inpatient hospice care. It also provides benefits
for respite services in a facility. It does not cover home care.
A Comprehensive Plan covers everything a facilities-only
plan covers plus care at home (formal or informal care), in adult
day care centers, hospice care at home and respite services at
home.
Changing Coverage Levels—You
can request a decrease in your coverage at any time. You can decrease
to anything that is available under the program, and your premiums
(which will be based on your age at time of original enrollment)
will also decrease. For example, if you have the five-year benefit
period, you can decrease to a three-year benefit period. But you
could not decrease to a two-year benefit period, because such
a benefit period is not available under the program. You do not
have to undergo new underwriting in order to decrease your coverage.
However, you don’t get paid-up benefits.
At any time, you also may request an increase
in your coverage by contacting LTC Partners. To receive approval
of a request for an increase outside of an open season, you must
provide, at your expense, evidence of your good health that is
satisfactory to LTC Partners. The amount of an increase is subject
to what's then available under the program. If you request and
LTC Partners approves an increase in your daily benefit amount
(not counting an increase due to your inflation protection option),
your additional premium will be based on your age and the premium
rates in effect at the time the increase takes effect. Other coverage
increases you request that LTC Partners approves will cause your
entire premium to be based on your age and the premium rates in
effect at the time the increase takes effect.
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For More Information about
FLTCI, purchase the current edition of the Federal Employees
Almanac. You can also visit the official FLTCI
Web site here.
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