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Veterinarian Disability Insurance
When you teach your patients’ owners the basics of preventative
medicine—good nutrition, hygiene and the importance of appropriate
vaccinations and preventative medications—you’re helping
them avoid future problems for their animals.
But have you prepared as well for your own future—in particular,
your financial future? What if, for example, you suddenly become
disabled—through an accident…an injury…or an
illness—and are unable to work? Are you fully prepared for
such a scenario?
Unfortunately, no matter how young
or careful you are, it can happen
to you.
It's not safe to rely solely on a group policy your
practice may have purchased. While group long term disability
insurance is often relatively inexpensive and easy to administer,
it can also fall short just when you need it most—leaving
you in for some unpleasant surprises when it’s too late
to correct the situation. Protect your financial security by purchasing
individual disability
insurance now.
Want To Be Better Prepared? Consider The Following:
Learning to speak the lingo:
The right disability insurance policy can help you keep your household
going, even if you suffer a long-term disability. But before you
go shopping for a disability income policy, you need to know what
features to look for—and the language the insurance industry
uses to describe them. The following terms are part of the language
describing high-quality policies, and are what you should look
for to get coverage you can count on:
• Non-cancellable: To avoid the possibility
of losing your coverage just when you need it most, choose a policy
that’s non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable to age 65 or 67—with
premiums also guaranteed until age 65 or 67. With group or association
group coverage, you run the risk of being dropped and left unprotected
at a time in your life when, due to your age or to a change in
your medical condition, it would be very difficult to qualify
for coverage from another provider.
• Conditionally renewable for life: Although
premiums may increase after age 65 or 67, your policy should be Guaranteed
renewable for life, as long as you are at work full time.
• Own-occupation:
Own-occupation coverage defines "totally
disabled" -- and therefore
eligible for benefits -- as being unable
to perform the material and substantial
duties of your own occupation even
if you are
working in a different occupation.
As a highly skilled professional who
has invested so much in education and
training, you want to make sure you
have genuine own-occupation coverage…so
that even if you can teach, for example,
in your field—but cannot
practice veterinary medicine—you
are still eligible for benefits. Group
coverage is rarely true own-occupation
coverage.
• Residual Disability
coverage: Through
a rider, a good individual
disability insurance plan can provide
you with
protection against the income loss
you may suffer as
a result of partial (residual) disability—even
if you have never suffered a period
of total disability. This kind of residual
coverage is not available with most
group plans.
• A choice of Riders: Riders
offer optional additional coverage such as annual Future Increase
Options, Automatic Increase and Cost of Living Adjustments, or
COLA.”
Call 888-513-2300
Protecting your practice, as well as yourself
As a veterinarian, you must also protect the source of your income:
the practice you’ve worked so hard to establish and grow.
Special policies, available from the same disability insurance
providers who offer high-quality individual coverage, offer your
practice protection while you recover from an extended illness
or accident.
To help meet the expenses of running the office while you are
disabled, consider a separate type of disability insurance coverage
known as Overhead Expense or OE. Benefits reimburse
your practice for expenses such as rent for your office, electricity,
heat, telephone and utilities, as well as interest on business
debts and lease payments on furniture and equipment.
Overhead expense insurance specifically designed for professionals
pays some additional costs not included in regular business overhead
expense policies—including the salaries of employees except
those who are members of your profession. In a veterinary practice,
for example, salaries for the receptionist and nurse would be
covered, but not the salary of your veterinarian partner or employee.
However, high-quality professional overhead policies will cover
at least part of the salary of a professional temporary replacement
for you, such as a veterinarian retained to fill in during your
extended illness or accident.
In addition...
Veterinarians who are partners in a group practice will want to
consider a policy known as a Disability Buy-Out or DBO. In much
the same way that life insurance benefits can be set aside to
fund a buy-out by the remaining partner (or partners) if one partner
dies, Disability Buy-Out is designed to fund the healthy partners’
purchase of the disabled partner’s share of the business.
With the proper agreement in place before disability occurs, hard
feelings and the conflicts of interest that result from a partner’s
disability can be avoided. Furthermore, in combination with the
disabled partner’s individual Disability Income coverage
and OE, a DBO policy can allow the business to continue to generate
an income for the healthy partner—while the disabled partner
is supported by the benefits from his or her individual DI policy,
and any continuing share of the business expenses is reimbursed
by his or her OE policy.
The fact is, as part of your overall planning, you owe it to
yourself to look into protection for the one thing that makes
all the other planning possible: your ability to earn an income.
Call 888-513-2300
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