by Ed Hinerman | Nov 26, 2012 | Anxiety, bipolar disorder, Depression, gastric bypass, insurance, life insurance, life insurance approval, mortality, mortality risk, obesity
Let me start out by saying that traditional life insurance underwriting doesn’t reward treatment of health issues. That is as in DOES NOT reward. There are still life insurance companies out there that will whack a client like a golf ball for taking medication...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 31, 2012 | blood pressure, cholesterol, HDL, high blood pressure, insurance, life insurance
A few years back I fought a bloody battle with an underwriter from ING over what today still stands as the most illogical piece of underwriting I have ever run in to. Not that the two events are in any way related, but I won the battleĀ and then watched company after...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 13, 2012 | application process, insurance, insurance quotes, life insurance, life insurance approval
Now we’re rolling. Just because I’ve used two posts getting to the actual life insurance application and life insurance exam is not indicative of how long the process takes. Again, as promised, at the end of this series I will give a breakdown of the...
by Ed Hinerman | Jan 19, 2012 | Anxiety, bipolar disorder, cholesterol, Depression, high blood pressure, insurance, life insurance
As I come to grips with the fact that I am going to have to switch from Windows XP to Windows 7 and from Outlook Express to Outlook, I am a bit stressed. To bring you up to speed on the kind of stress I am going through, I wrote this post this morning. Because I am...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 12, 2011 | blood pressure, cholesterol, insurance, life insurance
It’s been a long time since most insurance made any kind of fuss over being treated for cholesterol. As long as it was well controlled you could count on best rate class approvals. Now companies have jumped on the cholesterol ratio band wagon and are allowing...
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 | 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 11, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, obesity
An often discussed life insurance risk factor in this forum is obesity. There is not shortage of evidence that carrying too much load is hard on your body, taking blame for everything from diabetes to cancer. This is plenty of reason for underwriters to take build...
by Ed Hinerman | Apr 20, 2010 | bipolar, bipolar disorder, insurance, life insurance
I was just doing a double check on underwriting results today and decided to compare how we’ve done in placing policies with clients who have bipolar disorder versus those who have a history of an eating disorder. Now remember we’re talking about life...
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...
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 | Feb 1, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, private pilots
As noted last week a major A+ rated life insurance company has broken into uncharted waters by offering preferred plus (best rate class) rates for private pilots that are not instrument rated. And that’s just the tip of the good news iceberg. It gets even better...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 16, 2009 | blood pressure, high blood pressure, insurance, life insurance
In Job 12:11 it says “Does not the ear test words, as the palate tastes its food?” When a life insurance agent gives you a quote that you know sounds a little too good, do you question it or set yourself up for disappointment by choosing to believe...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 14, 2009 | cholesterol, insurance, life insurance
Ahh, the less than perfect approval on your life insurance application. The temptation to take your bat and ball and go home and never play again. The desire to get back back at the company by not purchasing life insurance and not providing protection for your family....
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