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Can You Prepare for the Unexpected in Life?

Can You Prepare for the Unexpected in Life

It often takes a dramatic event, like an accident or illness, to wake us up to the importance of planning for the future. A recent article, “Are you prepared for a life-changing event?” from the Chattanooga Times Free Press, begins with a letter from a reader who experienced a bad car accident. At age 55, he had no plan for long-term care and questioned what he needed to do to protect himself and his family.

Step one in planning to protect the family is to have term, universal, or whole life insurance. Depending upon your financial situation, you likely need personal life insurance in addition to what you receive through employment.

Long-term care is missing from many people’s plans. The best time to purchase a long-term care insurance policy is during your thirties or forties when you are likely in relatively good health. This is usually not the time that people are thinking about long term care, unfortunately. The younger you are, the less costly they will be. Ensure that any policy includes at-home care and care provided in a nursing or other skilled care facility.

You may end up purchasing a life/annuity insurance policy with a provision for long-term care coverage. Since there are fewer and fewer life insurance companies selling long-term care coverage, this may be your best option.

Planning for the future also means having an estate plan prepared by an experienced estate planning attorney. You’ll need a power of attorney for you and your spouse, so you can manage their personal affairs if they are too sick or injured to do so themselves. This is not automatically granted because you are married, so don’t overlook it. If no one is a POA and something happens, you may end up having your affairs managed by someone the court has appointed instead of a loved one.

You’ll also need to have a medical power of attorney, sometimes called a health care power of attorney, so you and your spouse can act on each other’s behalf if you are incapacitated. Being someone’s married spouse used to be enough for this, but not in today’s highly regulated (and litigious) environment.

A living will is tough to contemplate. However, it is a blessing for those you love. This document is used to state your wishes if you should become incapacitated. Do you want to be kept alive by artificial means? In what situations would you want to be resuscitated? Your estate planning attorney can explain the different options to consider.

Your last will and testament is used to distribute property in the event of your death. These documents are state-specific, so you’ll want to work with an attorney in your jurisdiction. They can be combined with trusts to help minimize federal and state estate taxes and control how assets are distributed.

Speak with an experienced estate planning attorney to clarify your wishes and prepare you for the future, in the short and long term.

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