|
If
You Couldn't Work,
Could You Maintain Your Lifestyle?
If
you work for a living, your lifestyle depends on your ability to
earn an income. Which means your standard of living could be seriously
threatened if you couldn't work.
Will
Social Security and other government benefits protect your financial
well-being? Don't count on it.
The
fact is, social insurance programs are built on exceedingly strict
definitions of disability. And on lengthy service requirements.
The
bottom line? You may be ill-prepared for the financial hardships
a lengthy illness of injury can bring. For as Robert Hunder, president
of the National Insurance Consumer Organization warns, "Disability
insurance is the only kind of insurance people have too little of."
It Can Happen to You
Every
19 seconds someone is injured in an auto accident.
Every
17 seconds someone is injured at work.
Every
4 seconds someone is injured in some kind of accident.
In
fact, disability from either injury or illness is a far greater
threat than most people realize.
- For
example, for a 32-year old, a serious disability (three months
or longer) is 6 1/2 times more likely than death.
- Only
3% of mortgage foreclosures are caused by death, 48% are caused
by disability.
Just How
Likely is Disability?
Likely enough
to make it worth worrying about. Consider these statistics:

Those
are your chances of suffering a disabling illness or injury, based
on the experience of companies selling disability income insurance.
The other part of the picture is the potential length of a long
term disability.
Once
a disability reaches long-term status - that is, once you've been
laid up for 90 days or longer - it could very well last several
years.

To
put those numbers in perspective, let's compare the likelihood of
a disabling illness or injury with a risk you've probably already
dealt with - the chances of dying prematurely.
Throughout
your career, the possibility of suffering a long-term disability
is several times greater than the possibility of death.

The
Financial Realities of a
Long-Term Disability.
First
Reality: The most likely scenario duing a long-term disability
is rising expenses - medical and other bills related to the disability
itself - and falling income - because you can't work. Unfortunately,
rising expenses plus falling income equals trouble.

Second
Reality: Most people don't realize just how valuable their ability
to earn an income is over an extended period of time:

It's
really true that your health is your wealth.
Click
here to Return to the Home Page.
|