MUTUAL FUNDS and Personal Finance

Insurance medical exams may not be as certain as death and taxes, but they're not far behind. You'll probably take one when you apply for nongroup life insurance.

You might also have to take an exam if you want nongroup disability, health or long-term care insurance.

Just because such exams are common, don't take them lightly. If you flunk the test, you could be denied vital coverage.

Even if you pass, which most people do, your results affect your risk rating. A better rating means cheaper premiums.

Some basic steps can help. Take life insurance. Many of its rules apply to other types of coverage as well.

Life insurers typically put applicants into one of four broad categories. "These categories are based on the risk you'll die soon," said Dr. Craig Davidson, assistant vice president and senior medical director at the Hartford.

People in the best health are "preferred" risks. The next category is "standard."

Below standard, applicants are rated by the severity of their health problems. These substandard categories are called tables.

If you're slightly below standard, you're in Table 1. If you have a slightly higher risk of dying early than people in Table 1, you're in Table 2. Some companies go up to Table 10.

Someone with diabetes might be put in Table 2 for determining premium payments. Someone who has had a heart attack may be in Table 4. With a shorter life expectancy, he can expect higher premiums.

Some people won't be offered insurance at all, at any price.

"About 18% of our applicants are rated or declined," Davidson said.

The other 82% are preferred or standard risks. More people pay preferred rates than standard rates. The difference can be substantial.

Premium Prices

Suppose a 50-year-old male wants to buy $500,000 of life insurance. He chooses term life, which charges relatively low premiums and accumulates no cash value.

He wants a policy that will stay in effect for 10 years.

If he is a nonsmoker who is a preferred risk, he might pay $750 a year for that coverage. (Anyone who smokes will pay much more for life insurance.)

If this nonsmoking 50-year-old is a standard risk, he may pay nearly $1,300 a year for the same amount of insurance.

He'll pay much more if he's rated. With some hypertension or cholesterol issues, he could be classed in Table 2 and be charged $1,900 a year.

Obviously, the best way to hold down your costs is to watch your health regularly. Stop smoking if you're a smoker. See your doctor and follow suggested treatment if you have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, excess weight or other cardiovascular risks.

You can do other things at the last minute to get a better grade on an insurance test. If you're on the borderline, these actions might push you into a lower-cost category:

• Eat carefully. Davidson suggests not eating for at least eight hours before a physical exam. That can keep blood sugar and triglycerides down.

For a day or two before your test, avoid steaks and other fatty food.

• Watch what you drink. Limit your consumption of alcoholic beverages before the physical.

Minimize your intake of caffeinated drinks such as coffee, tea and cola. Alcohol and caffeine can raise your blood pressure. Even juice might hurt your result.

Water and more water might help, can't hurt.

• Schedule your test smartly. Let's say your exam is set for late afternoon. You run out of a heated business meeting to make the appointment. The stress might send your pulse and blood pressure sky high.

Taking a physical early in the morning probably is better. After a night's sleep and before you go to work, your stress level may be low.

• Exercise care. Keeping in shape is a good long-term strategy. But a strenuous workout before your exam can be a bad idea.

"Playing squash or running five miles before a physical can affect tests of liver function," Davidson said. That might put you into a lower health class than you deserve.

South Florida Sun-Sentinel Personal Finance Column

Aug. 2--Before she was Dawn Summers on Buffy the Vampire Slayer or Georgina Sparks on Gossip Girl, Michelle Trachtenberg was Harriet M. Welsch in Harriet the Spy. And before Harriet the Spy was a 1996 film, it was a not just one of the greatest books ever written, but the kind of book that, if you read and loved it in your childhood, immediately bonds you to others who did, too, to the point that you sort of lose respect for any woman who did not devour the novel a minimum of seven times.

Published in 1964 by Louise Fitzhugh, who died a decade later of a brain aneurysm at age 46, Harriet the Spy is about a stubborn, smart, decidedly unfeminine adolescent girl who lives in a Manhattan townhouse and is generally ignored by her parents. She has a close if unconventional relationship with her nanny, Ole Golly (played, somewhat incongruously in our opinion, in the movie by Rosie O'Donnell), and spends the vast majority of her time spying on neighbors, classmates and complete strangers. Lessons are eventually learned, but not in some goopy, melodramatic manner; Fitzhugh's writing is as fiercely intelligent as Harriet herself. At least, that's how it was in the book. Frankly, we've never seen the movie. That would be sacrilege. But that's just us.

Personal Finance: Are there benefits in insuring children?

The question of insuring children is a loaded one. The death of a child is an unimaginable tragedy, one of parents' worst nightmares and something no one would want to even contemplate.
Understandably, many people find the idea of insuring their children to be somewhat distasteful - or downright offensive. But purchasing a permanent life insurance policy for your child today could give them a financial head start tomorrow.

A financial advantage

There are two very good reasons to consider insuring your child, for their own benefit. The first is financial: the earlier you purchase life insurance, the less it costs. No matter what kind of policy you purchase, life insurance costs more the older you are. However, with a permanent life insurance policy, you can lock in a premium price when you first purchase the policy. If you purchase a policy for your child at a young age, that affordable premium is locked in and will not go up throughout the course of your child's life, as long as the policy is kept in force. That can be an enormous financial advantage to your child as they go through life.

In addition, the earlier you purchase permanent life insurance, the longer the cash value has to grow tax-deferred. Over the years, that can make a huge difference in the amount of cash value that can accumulate. And down the road, that cash value can be borrowed against if necessary-for instance, to buy a house, pay for college tuition or help supplement retirement income. That's why having a cash value accumulating for a long time can be a financial advantage to your child, in the future.

The gift of insurability

However, the most compelling reason to purchase life insurance for your child while he or she is young is the fact that doing so can ensure their insurability later in life. We all pray that our children lead healthy lives. But, realistically, so much can happen to make them uninsurable or only insurable at a high cost - even their chosen profession. A juvenile life insurance policy can help protect them when they are young, and allow for greater protection as they grow older. Many policies come with riders that allow your child to purchase additional insurance at various points in their life. By insuring your child while they are young, you can help make sure they can provide financial protection for their own family later on in their life.

Should tragedy strike

Even in the event of an unthinkable tragedy, the proceeds of a child's life insurance policy could make a difference in so many ways. That money could be used to keep your child's memory alive. For instance, you can give to a charity or create a memorial fund in your child's name.

The death benefit can also help you deal with some of real financial ramifications of such a tragedy, such as medical or funeral costs. It would be devastating enough to lose a child, without having to also struggle to cover medical bills and final expenses, which can run in the thousands of dollars. The policy death benefit could also allow you to grieve properly. Many companies will give parents a week off with pay when a child dies, but how many people would be ready to go back to work one week after losing their child? The death benefit could allow you to take the time you need to grieve without having to worry about your income during that time.

A gift for a lifetime

Purchasing life insurance for your children should not come instead of purchasing life insurance for yourself and your spouse, or saving for your retirement. However, if you have the funds, purchasing an insurance policy for your children could help ensure they are protected, and also help them and their future families down the line. Rather than being something offensive to even think about, buying life insurance for your children could end up being one of the greatest gifts you'll ever give them.