A New Tool to Calculate Long-Term Care Needs

Health-care crises can destroy retirement plans, yet advisors and clients often avoid discussing long-term care (LTC) insurance. Part of the reason – aside from a natural reluctance to contemplate such tragedies – is the lack of data needed to evaluate the LTC risk. That data deficiency can now be overcome, thanks to a pioneering product that provides customized projections for clients.

Discussions about long-term care in the financial press typically highlight a few statistics but fall short of providing the type of comprehensive information advisors need to discuss the topic with clients. Actuary Jack Paul has developed a new product that illustrates probabilities of needing various levels of long-term care and projects the associated costs. I'll present an example using this modeling. Those wishing to learn more about Paul’s PDRP Plus system can visit his website. His customized modeling includes projections of costs for LTC, prescription drugs and other health care. The model can also produce full financial plans, but in this article I'll concentrate on LTC.

The example

Modeling LTC costs requires a large number of assumptions and quite a bit of data, including information about client health status. PDRP Plus is much more complex than most financial planning models, but it efficiently gathers the needed pieces of information.

This example is based on a couple, both age 65, with average health and no chronic conditions, making them insurable for LTC at standard rates. Life expectancies, reflecting their particular health status, are 18.1 years for the husband and 23.5 for the wife. To make the example relevant for advisors, I'll assume more upscale LTC, if needed, than for average Americans – private room costs for nursing home care and more reliance on paid care than on family members. The care costs assumptions are national averages from the Met Life Long-Term Care Survey – $248 per day for nursing home, $3,789 per month for assisted living and $21 per hour for a home health aide. Care costs are assumed to grow at 4% annually, which is faster than general inflation.

Those assumptions feed into the PDRP Plusmodel, which uses Monte Carlo simulations to move individuals between healthy and less healthy conditions that require varying levels of care. Paul developed the probabilities of those transitions from Society of Actuaries studies and government-related sources.

Putting these inputs together and running 30,000 simulations produces the following distribution of LTC costs:

Projected LTC costs

Present values @ 4%

65-year-old couple

Average

$184,249

Percentiles

25.00%

$22,823

50.00%

$93,661

75.00%

$231,656

90.00%

$492,429

95.00%

$707,866

99.00%

$1,215,685

Source: PDRP Plus