Disability Insurance Glossary
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A
B
C
D
E
F
G
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I
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M
N
O
P
Q
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X
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Z
A
Accident:
An unforeseen and unintended event.
Accidental
Death Benefit: Benefit payable if death results from an
accident.
Accumulation
Period: A period of consecutive months that begins on
the first day of disability and during which the elimination
period must be satisfied.
Annualization of Waived
Premium: If the policy anniversary falls during the
period that premiums are being waived, an entire year's premium
will be waived regardless of the premium payment mode used by
the insured.
Application:
A form on which the company requests information from the
prospective insured (applicant) upon which the home office
underwriters decide whether or not to issue the policy. It then
becomes part of the contract when the policy is issued.
Association
Coverage: Group insurance issued to an association
rather than to the employees of a business or members of a
union.
Automatic
Increase Rider: An optional benefit which provides
automatic increases each year, despite changes in health, income
or occupation.
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B
Benefit
Period: The longest period of time for which benefits
are payable for continuous disability.
Business
Overhead Expenses: The usual expenses required to
maintain an office or run a business.
Buy-Sell
Agreement: An agreement made by the owners of a
business to purchase the share of a disabled or deceased owner.
The value of each owner's share of the business and the exact
terms of the buying and selling process are established before
death or the onset of a disability.
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C
Capital Sum
Benefit: The benefit that will be provided when the
insured suffers complete loss of a hand or foot, severed through
or above the wrist or ankle, or loss of the entire sight in one
eye, and survives it for 30 days.
Conditional Receipt: A receipt given for
premium payment accompanying an application for insurance. If
the application is approved as applied for, the coverage is
effective as of the date of prepayment or the date on which the
last of the underwriting requirements, such as medical
examination, has been fulfilled.
Consumer
Price Index: The Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers as published by the Federal Department of Labor. That
index shows the rate of change in the cost of living in the
United States.
Conversion
Privilege: The right given to an insured person to
change insurance without evidence of medical insurability,
usually to an individual policy, upon termination of coverage
under a group contract.
Cost of
living Rider: An optional benefit which provides for
increases in the disability benefit during periods of
disability.
Cross-Purchase Arrangement: An arrangement between two
or more business owners that in the event of an owner's death or
disability, the remaining owner or owners will purchase the
business interest of the deceased or disabled owner.
Cumulative
Benefit: In an overhead expense policy, the monthly
benefit times the number of months the insured has been disabled
after the elimination period.
Current
Expenses: An insured's expenses in each month while
residually disabled.
Current
Income: All income which an insured received on a cash
basis in each month while residually disabled.
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D
Disability:
An individual's physical or mental inability to perform the
major duties of his or her occupation because of sickness or
injury.
Disability
Insurance: A form of health insurance which provides
periodic payments when the insured is unable to work as a result
of sickness or injury.
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E
Earned
Income: Gross salary, wages, commissions, fees, etc.,
derived from active employment. This does not include investment
income, rents, or amounts received from annuities or insurance
policies.
Elimination
Period: The consecutive number of days for which no
benefits are payable at the start of a claim. An insured must be
disabled all of those days.
Entity
Arrangement: An arrangement between the business entity
and the business owners that in the event of an owner's death or
disability, the business entity will purchase the business
interest of the diseased or disabled owner.
Exclusions:
Certain conditions and causes which are not covered by the
policy. These are listed in the policy.
Expenses:
The regular business expenses which an insured may deduct from
gross earned income for federal tax purposes.
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F
Future
Increase Option: An optional benefit which allows the
insured to purchase additional coverage up to a stated age,
regardless of health, as long as his or her income warrants the
increase.
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G
Group
Insurance: A policy covering the employees of a
business or members of a union.
Guaranteed
Renewable: A type of insurance which cannot be
cancelled or altered by the insurance company as long as the
insured continues to pay premiums on time. However, the premium
may be increased for classes of insureds.
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I
Income:
Gross earned income, less business expenses, but before any
other deductions. Income includes salaries, wages, fees,
commissions, bonuses, business profits or other payments for
personal services. It does not include unearned income from
savings, investments, or real property.
Indexing:
A provision which increases the insured's pre-disability
earnings every year according to a given formula, so residual
disability benefits will not lose purchasing power because of
inflation.
Injury:
Accidental bodily injury that occurs while a policy is in force.
Installments: A series of payments at regular intervals
over a period of time.
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K
Key
Employee: An owner or a highly skilled employee whose
efforts are directly responsible for some measure of
profitability to the firm.
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L
Level
Premium: A premium which remains the same up through
the insured's age 65.
Lifetime
Disability Benefit: A benefit that is payable for the
lifetime of the insured if continuously and totally disabled
before a specified age (i.e., 45 or 55).
Loss of
Income: The difference between an insured's prior
income and current income. In better policies, if the loss of
income is more than 75% of prior income, the loss is deemed to
be 100% for purposes of the Residual Disability Rider.
Loss Payee:
The individual or entity named to receive all benefits.
Lump Sum:
A single payment of benefits, with no further payments due.
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M
Monthly
Indemnity: The amount the insurer will pay for each
month of total disability.
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N
Noncancellable (Noncan): A policy which cannot be
cancelled or altered by the insurance company as long as the
insured continues to pay premiums on time, and whose premium
will not increase up through the insured's age 65.
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O
Occupation:
An insured's regular occupation or profession at the time of
becoming disabled.
Optional
Benefit: An additional benefit offered by the insurance
company to certain occupational classes which may be included in
a policy at the applicant's request, for an additional premium.
Overinsured:
Receiving a larger income through benefits while disabled than
income earned while working.
Owner:
As named in the policy schedule page, the owner's rights
include, but are not limited to, the right to renew the policy
and to request any change in benefits.
Own
Occupation (Own Occ): A definition of disability which
states that as long as the insured is unable to perform the
duties of his or her regular occupation (or occupations, if more
than one) at the time of disability, the insured will be
considered eligible to receive the full benefit under the
policy.
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P
Partial
Disability: An insured's physical inability to perform
some, but not all, of the duties of his or her regular
occupation due to sickness or injury.
Participation Limit: The total amount of coverage which
will be allowed by a company from all carriers.
Physician:
A legally qualified physician other than the insured, who is not
a loss payee or owner under the policy.
Policy:
All material which constitutes the contract of insurance.
Policy Term:
The effective period of the policy, usually the period for which
premiums are paid.
Pre-Disability Earnings: The earnings level of the
insured prior to the onset of disability.
Pre-Existing
Condition: An injury, illness, or physical condition
which existed prior to the issue of the disability policy.
Presumptive
Disability: The presumption that the insured is totally
disabled, even if still at work, if sickness or injury results
in the total and complete loss of sight in both eyes, hearing in
both ears, power of speech, or use of any two limbs. The
elimination period is waived from the date of the loss and total
disability benefits are payable while such loss continues until
the end of the benefit period.
Prior
Expenses: An insured's average monthly expenses for the
same tax year on which his or her prior income is based for
purposes of the residual disability rider.
Prior
Income: The insured's average monthly income for the
tax year with the highest earnings in the three years just prior
to the date on which he or she became disabled.
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Q
Qualified
Sick Pay Plan: A formal (written and communicated) plan
to continue the salary of certain employees in the event they
become disabled. Also know as Salary Continuation Plan.
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R
Recovery
Disability Rider: A rider which provides reduced
benefits when and insured returns to work following a
compensable period of total disability.
Recurrent
Periods of Disability: In some policies, recurrent
periods of disability from the same cause or causes will be
considered one continuous period of disability unless each
period is separated by a recovery of six months or more.
Rehabilitation Benefit: A benefit paid to help meet
some of the costs an insured may incur by enrolling in a
rehabilitation program for the purpose of returning to his or
her occupation.
Residual
Disability: In better policies, a disability that
causes an insured's income to fall more than 20% below its
pre-disability level. Some companies include a loss of time
requirement or the inability to perform some duties of the
insured's regular occupation.
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S
Sickness:
A sickness or disease, including a pregnancy, which is first
diagnosed and treated while the policy is in force.
Social
Insurance
Substitute Rider: A rider which pays a benefit if the
insured is disabled under the policy and not receiving social
insurance benefits.
State
Disability Benefit
Insurance Laws: Laws enacted in California, Hawaii, New
Jersey, New York and Rhode Island which provide the payment of
benefits for the non-job-related sickness or injury.
Stock
Redemption
Arrangement: An "entity" type arrangement under a
buy-sell agreement in a corporation. See "Entity Arrangement."
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T
Total
Disability: The physical or mental inability to perform
the major duties of one's occupation because of sickness or
injury.
Transplant
Donor Benefit: In some policies, the provision that the
insured will be considered disabled as a result of sickness if
he or she is totally disabled because of the transplant of a
body part to another person.
Trigger
Date: The date on which the buyout obligation becomes
contractually effective under the terms of the buy-sell
agreement.
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W
Waiting
Period: See "Elimination Period."
Waiver of
Elimination Period: In some policies, the elimination
period will be waived if an insured becomes disabled within five
years after the end of a period of disability which lasted
longer than six months and for which benefits were paid.
Waiver of
Premium: In some policies, a provision which relieves
the insured of having to make premium payments after he or she
has been disabled for 90 days, or the elimination period, if
shorter. In addition, premiums paid during those 90 days are
refunded and premiums due during the 90 days after recovery are
waived.
Worker's
Compensation: Benefits paid to a worker to compensate
for losses caused by a work-related injury or illness.
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