|
August
2002 Health Insurance Underwriter (N.A.H.U)
25 Questions to ask before
and after your client files a disability claim
by Arthur L. Fries, RHU
DI Consultant/Negotiator/Expert Witness
Newport Beach, CA
Acting as your
own advisor can be economically devastating in today’s disability
claim environment. Just as your clients would seek the advice
of an attorney on a legal issue or the advice of an accountant
on a tax issue, they should seek competent advice when faced
with the prospect of a disability claim. An experienced
disability claim consultant with a successful history of
selling disability insurance and providing advice on DI
claims can help answer difficult questions and help your
client prepare to communicate effectively with insurance
companies. These are questions that your clients may not
be prepared to answer, yet each addresses an important facet
of a DI claim.
- Are you
a danger to yourself and to those you give advice to
by continuing to work?
- Must you
first be totally disabled for 30, 60 or 90 days or more
before you can file a partial (residual) disability
claim?
- Can you
continue your practice or business in some way even
when you go on claim?
- Is it better
to sell your practice or business before or after the
effective date of your claim?
- Should you
build up your business or practice before you sell it?
- If you sell
your business or practice and go on a total disability
claim, can you come into the office? If so, what can
you do in a work scenario?
- What is
the best way to transition from a partial/residual claim
to a total disability claim?
- What are
considered to be your substantial and material duties?
- What is
considered your occupation?
- When will
an insurance company say that you have dual occupations?
- What does
it mean when your policy says you are totally disabled
if you can’t perform the substantial and material duties
of your occupation and are not working in any other
occupation? Does this working have a different effect
before age 65 as compared to after?
- What would
you do if the insurance company asked you to photocopy
every page of your office appointment book for the 12
months prior to your disability and the three months
after?
- If the insurance
company asked you to submit photocopies of every page
of your personal and corporate tax returns for the five
years before the disability, would you consider the
request reasonable? Would your answer be different if
you had a total disability instead of a partial disability?
- If an insurance
company field investigator came to your home of office
and asked you to sign a statement he or she had prepared,
how would you handle it?
- If the insurance
company asked that its doctor examine you in the form
of an independent medical evaluation, how would you
prepare the examiner and yourself for the exam?
- How would
you respond if the insurance company asked you take
a functional capacity evaluation given by its physical
therapist?
- If your
claim had been approved, how would you respond if the
insurance company asked you to complete a monthly progress
report and have your physician complete an attending
physician statement every month? Are there ways to reduce
the paperwork and still give the insurance company information
it needs?
- How do you
handle your social life (sports, entertainment, ect.)
after you go on a total disability claim?
- How do you
interpret policy contractual language such as pre-existing
conditions, fraudulent misstatements, prudent man clauses,
incontestability, rehab presumption of disability, etc.?
- How do you
communicate with the insurance company if it offers
to buy back your policy and give you a lump sum of money
in lieu of paying you a monthly benefit?
- When does
an insurance company perform video surveillance, for
how many days and for how long?
- Are economic
or licensing issues considered by an insurance company?
- How do you
know when the insurance company has made a mistake?
How do you bring it to their attention?
- Do state
insurance departments "swing any weight" in
getting your claims paid?
- If the claim
is terminated, what are your options?
Do You Want
to Get Involved in Handling DI Claims?
The foregoing
are just some of the questions that your clients will
have to deal with if they go on a partial or total disability
claim. For the following reasons, you may want to think
twice about being involved in a disability claim:
There are many
forms to complete – initially and on an ongoing basis.
In addition, many of the questions you and your client
will be required to answer demand a very thorough understanding
of the subject matter. The importance of answering the
questions correctly cannot be overstated.
There is always
the potential liability of giving advice in an area that
may be "over your head."
Many hours
of work are usually required. Helping with the initial
claim form is only Round One.
Becoming involved
in DI claims distracts you from the selling activities
from which you earn your compensation. Once your client’s
claim is approved, you no longer receive a renewal commission.
You may be
giving simplified advice when your clients need major-league
advice.
Not understanding
the meaning of words as they apply to a DI contract can
also cause you to prejudice your client’s rights. For
example, what’s the real meaning of "pre-existing
condition?" Does the wording "fraudulent misstatement"
change the above? Does the state in which the insured
resides have a "statue of fraud"? Does such
a statue have any bearing on the claim?
Finally, and
most important, do you know how to show your clients how
to maintain dignity, self-respect and credibility in their
relationship with an insurance company?
A disability
claim consultant may be the best investment your clients
can make in successfully and effectively submitting their
disability claim.
A longtime
NAHU member, Arthur Fries, RHU, is an independent life
and health broker and disability claim consultant in Newport
Beach, CA. Formerly a producer in sales of DI to attorneys
and physicians, Art no longer actively sells insurance
and now focuses on providing claims consulting. He can
be reached at (800) 567-1911. For information about selecting
and interviewing a DI consultant, visit www.afries.com.
_____________________________________________________________
Arthur
L. Fries,
RHU,
is an independent life/health broker and a disability
claim consultant based in Newport Beach, CA. He can be
contacted at (800) 567-1911
or via www.afries.com.
Back
to Top
|