by Ed Hinerman | Jul 12, 2023 | diabetes, insurance, life insurance
It’s been 10 years since I wrote this post. A lot has changed in how life insurance companies view gestational diabetes. Some worse and some in the right direction. I hope bringing this up to date will be helpful. All the best. What’s The Fuss Over...
by Ed Hinerman | Jul 26, 2016 | angioplasty, approval, attending physician statement, bypass surgery, clinical underwriting, coronary artery disease (CAD), family history, heart attack, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
Coming off a post just a few days ago where I beat the compliance drum into a lather because that is what life insurance underwriters want to see, I turn around and shop a case where all of the underwriters fly in the very face of what they said and what I repeated. I...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 23, 2014 | family history, life insurance, life insurance approval, prostate cancer, PSA
I’m working with a former Selectquote life insurance client. He applied through them and his application was postponed due to a PSA (prostate specific antigen) on his life insurance exam labs of 4.67, below 4 being normal. The company wanted the proposed insured...
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 25, 2013 | Active Duty Military Life Insurance, application process, family history, insurance, insurance quotes, life insurance, life insurance approval, Met Life, military
Me pass up an opportunity to question a life insurance company stance at the very core of its’ self proclaimed heart? Not on your life or over my dead body. USAA and MetLife are the self proclaimed most patriotic life insurance companies in the country. They...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 21, 2012 | application process, approval, insurance, insurance quotes, life insurance, term insurance
So, what happens if the approved life insurance application isn’t at the same rate you were quoted? This happens a lot when you use agents that don’t shop cases before they choose the right company. Less frequently it happens when new information comes up...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 21, 2010 | cancer, life insurance, smoking
I was reading an article on MSN Health yesterday about how to talk to your doctor. It struck me that the same things would hold true for how to talk to a life insurance (or health insurance) agent. It also reminded me of previous posts where I’ve talked about...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 1, 2010 | family history, insurance, life insurance
There is almost always an audible let down (sometimes mixed with some expletives) when I ask about family history of heart disease, cancer and diabetes. The typical response goes something like, “How can they hold that against me when my Dad was an overweight,...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 13, 2010 | diabetes, insurance, life insurance, Type 1 diabetes
I’ve often talked about mortality risk being the basis for life insurance underwriting, but looking back I’ve never really explained what that means in the context of a “normal” lifespan. We all hear that Americans are living longer than ever,...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 24, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, term insurance, universal life, whole life
I know over the past few years thanks in part to Dave Ramsey and also in part to a reality check in the economy, I’ve had to take a new look at my budget several times. The days of paying more than we need to really are over. The same thought process...
by Ed Hinerman | Jul 9, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, pilot, private pilots, Prudential
Pru rolled out a 16 page release on their new and improved underwriting guidelines in a number of areas. This comes on the heels of a much ballyhooed rate decrease that didn’t do squat for anyone under 50. Nevertheless there may be some morsels in here that will...
by Ed Hinerman | Jun 7, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, mortality, mortality risk
A lot of people understand why and know that a standard rate approval is coming on life insurance and are happy to get it. On the other side of the coin are those that receive a standard rate approval and are taken aback by it, taking offense to not receiving a better...
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 | Apr 21, 2010 | family history, insurance, life insurance
Most of the time we don’t mind being historically linked to our parents, that is until that link pops up in the life insurance underwriting category of family history. With just a few exceptions the family history question on most life insurance applications...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 5, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, mortality, mortality risk
If there is a common thread through the whole life insurance application/underwriting experience, it’s that those applying tend to underplay their mortality while feeling like underwriters really overplay the whole mortality thing. Life insurance pricing and...
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...
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