by Ed Hinerman | Dec 19, 2008 | cancer, cigar smokers, diabetes, heart disease, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance, smoking, Type 2 diabetes
One of the biggest life insurance rate hits is for those who smoke. There is some logic to that given the link between cigarette smoking and cancer and heart disease, but are the underwriters throwing apples and oranges in the same basket and assuming they all taste...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 16, 2008 | cancer, cholesterol, Depression, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
The long standing argument about how much cholesterol is the right amount rages on. For one of my clients it rages on a front that we rarely see. This person has a total cholesterol level of 87. It has been drilled in to most of us that the other end of the spectrum,...
by Ed Hinerman | Dec 14, 2008 | blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack, heart disease, high blood pressure, hypertension, insurance, life insurance, obesity, stroke, Type 2 diabetes
Today would be no exception to my rule that men really don’t see a world that has consequences until they are old enough that they see the consequences happening to others their own age, or even to themselves. I spent part of yesterday evening in the emergency...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 20, 2008 | diabetes, heart disease, insurance, life insurance, term insurance, Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes
We’ve been hitting them out of the park on type 2 diabetes underwriting for quite some time, but that pot at the end of the rainbow, fair underwriting for type 1 diabetes, that we never have been able to get to is finally coming within reach. Given certain...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 19, 2008 | cancer, diabetes, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
Impaired risk, an industry term that refers to life insurance on people with significant health issues, cancer, diabetes, heart disease and such, is an area that we have focused on for some time. While the masses and the giant internet agencies flock to the healthiest...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 15, 2008 | Anxiety, bipolar disorder, blood pressure, cholesterol, Depression, diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, insurance, life insurance, obesity
Over the years we have offered discussion on how to get the best possible life insurance rates even though your health is less than perfect. The truth is that with perfect health and family history you can probably find good rates at any number of sources and how to...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 11, 2008 | cholesterol, heart attack, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
A study released this week by Astra Zeneca, makers of the cholesterol lowering drug, Crestor has turned a few heads in both the pro and the con aisle. In a nutshell the study claims that the use of Crestor, or more generically statins, can decrease the risk of heart...
by Ed Hinerman | Nov 10, 2008 | Alcohol Treatment Life Insurance, cancer, cholesterol, diabetes, Drug Treatment Life Insurance, foreign travel, heart attack, heart disease, obesity
They’re the rates you see advertised all the time and they are definitely the rates that everyone would like to be paying for their life insurance coverage. But do you qualify? First let’s dispel with a few old myths. Your age and the amount of insurance...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 31, 2008 | angioplasty, bypass surgery, cholesterol, diabetes, heart attack, heart disease, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance
For as long as there has been life insurance and heart attacks there has been misinformation about the impact of the event on future ability to obtain the insurance. Two of the most common myths are that 1. If you’ve had a heart attack then you are simply toast...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 31, 2008 | decline, diabetes, heart disease, obesity, Type 2 diabetes
Type 2 diabetes is one of those anomalies, like obesity (which happens to be the leading cause), where there seems to be an aversion to calling it what it is, an epidemic. It reminds me a bit of the economic situation in our country and the aversion to using the word...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 7, 2008 | blood pressure, cancer, decline, diabetes, Fat March, heart disease, high blood pressure, Independent agent, insurance, Juvenile life insurance, life insurance, obesity, stroke, term insurance, universal life
If you talk to most life insurance applicants who fall into the obese or morbidly obese categories according the their BMI, they have usually been told that they aren’t insurable or that the prices are so high as to render uninsurable because they can’t...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 29, 2008 | cancer, cholesterol, diabetes, heart disease, insurance, life insurance
This is mostly a rhetorical life insurance quiz for guys. There are no guarantees that you will be approved for life insurance at all, although most are. And there certainly aren’t any guarantees that you be approved at the rate class you applied for. All of us,...
by Ed Hinerman | Sep 9, 2008 | blood pressure, cancer, diabetes, gastric bypass, heart disease, high blood pressure, insurance, life insurance, liver functions, obesity, stroke
Remember the good old days when livers were done in by drinking too much? Cirrhosis of the liver can eventually lead to liver failure or liver cancer, kind of a no win situation unless you have a spare hidden in the closet. Now studies show that obesity can lead to a...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 27, 2008 | arrythmia, cancer, decline, diabetes, heart disease, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance
I feel like a myth buster today. I was speaking with a woman today who made it very clear that she didn’t want to apply for life insurance if there was a chance she would be declined. Here reason is that life insurance applications ask if you’ve ever been...
by Ed Hinerman | Aug 20, 2008 | blood pressure, cancer, cholesterol, diabetes, heart attack, heart disease, high blood pressure, Independent agent, insurance, life insurance, obesity
Virtually all life insurance companies take your immediate family health history into consideration at some level. They don’t all view it the same and they certainly don’t all treat it the same, but it is in their guidelines and they seldom waiver. This...
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