Long term care insurance is supposed to help pay for care when a person can no longer safely manage daily needs on their own. These benefits may help cover home care, assisted living, nursing home care, memory care, adult day care, or other needed support.
When an insurance company denies, delays, limits, or terminates benefits, families are often left trying to manage two problems at once: arranging safe care and figuring out how to respond.
That can feel overwhelming. You may be dealing with medical appointments, care schedules, safety concerns, financial pressure, and changing family roles. The appeal process can add stress at a time when clear guidance matters.
Riemer Hess LLC helps families with select long term care insurance appeals in New York. We assist when benefits have been denied, delayed, reduced, terminated, or underpaid.
Our work focuses on building a clear, well-supported appeal. That may involve reviewing the policy, identifying the insurer’s stated reasons, organizing medical and care evidence, and explaining how the insured person’s condition affects daily functioning and safety.
Our broader practice centers on long term disability and individual disability insurance claims. That background gives us extensive experience with medical evidence, policy interpretation, insurer claim review, and appeal strategy. Our attorneys are also admitted in New Jersey.
Long term care insurance is different from long term disability insurance.
Long term disability insurance generally replaces part of a person’s income when they cannot work because of illness or injury. Long term care insurance generally helps pay for care when a person needs assistance with daily activities or supervision due to cognitive impairment.
Depending on the policy, long term care insurance may help cover:
Every policy is different. Some policies provide broad home care benefits. Others impose strict requirements about who can provide care, where care must occur, what type of facility qualifies, and what documentation must support the claim.
That is why the policy language matters.
Many long term care policies provide benefits when the insured person needs help with a certain number of “activities of daily living,” often called ADLs.
These may include:
Some policies also provide benefits when a person has a severe cognitive impairment and needs substantial supervision for safety. This may arise in cases involving Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, Parkinson’s disease, stroke, brain injury, or other conditions affecting memory, judgment, awareness, or decision-making.
A long term care claim usually needs more than a diagnosis. The insurance company often wants proof of how the condition affects the person’s daily functioning, safety, and need for care.
For example, a person with dementia may be physically able to walk, eat, or dress with limited help, but still need supervision because they forget medications, leave appliances on, wander, fall, become confused, or cannot respond safely in an emergency.
Long term care claims can be denied even when the family believes the need for care is clear.
Common denial reasons include:
Sometimes the problem is not a formal denial, but delay. The insurer may keep asking for more forms, records, invoices, care notes, provider credentials, or updated assessments without clearly explaining what is still missing.
These issues can affect a family’s ability to pay for care, maintain safe staffing, or keep a loved one in the right care setting.
A denial letter can feel discouraging, but it does not always mean the claim is over.
The first step is to understand exactly why the insurer denied, limited, delayed, or terminated benefits. The denial letter should be reviewed together with the policy, claim file, medical records, care records, and appeal deadline.
Important questions often include:
A strong appeal should do more than say the insurer made the wrong decision. It should address the insurer’s reasoning directly, fill evidence gaps, and explain why the person meets the policy’s requirements.
The appeal process depends on the policy and the insurer’s procedures. In many cases, the process includes several steps.
We begin by reviewing the long term care insurance policy and the insurer’s denial, termination, delay, or benefit limitation letter.
This helps identify the rules the insurer is applying and the specific issues that need to be addressed.
For example, one policy may require help with at least two ADLs. Another may provide benefits based on cognitive impairment and the need for substantial supervision. Some policies have strict rules about what types of caregivers, agencies, facilities, or care plans qualify.
Next, we evaluate the evidence already submitted to the insurer. This may include medical records, care notes, assessment forms, provider statements, invoices, home care records, facility records, or family communications.
The goal is to determine what the insurer already had, what it overlooked, and what additional support may be needed.
After identifying the denial issues, we help develop the evidence needed for appeal.
This may include requesting updated records, organizing care documentation, identifying functional limitations, obtaining treating provider support, or preparing statements that explain daily care needs in practical terms.
The appeal should connect the evidence to the policy requirements. It is not enough to show that a person has a serious medical condition. The appeal should explain how that condition affects daily activities, supervision needs, safety, and care requirements.
We prepare a written appeal that addresses the insurer’s stated reasons and explains why benefits should be approved or reinstated.
The appeal may address issues such as:
The appeal should be clear, organized, and supported by the record.
After the appeal is submitted, the insurer reviews the file and issues a decision. During this stage, the insurer may request more information, schedule another assessment, or ask for updated care documentation.
We help clients understand these requests and respond appropriately.
If the appeal is approved, the next issues may involve benefit payment, reimbursement, ongoing proof requirements, or future reviews.
If the appeal is denied, the next steps depend on the policy, the facts, the claim history, and the available legal options.
The best evidence depends on the policy and the reason for denial. In many long term care appeals, helpful documentation may include:
The goal is to show the full picture.
For example, if the insurer says a person does not need help with bathing, the appeal may need to explain whether the person can safely get in and out of the shower, remember to bathe, avoid falls, wash effectively, and complete the task without hands-on help or cueing.
If the insurer says cognitive impairment is not severe enough, the appeal may need to explain real-world safety issues, not just test scores or diagnoses.
Cognitive impairment claims often require careful explanation.
A person with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, brain injury, or another cognitive condition may not look severely impaired during a short assessment. They may answer basic questions, walk independently, or perform some tasks with prompting.
But a brief assessment may not capture the daily safety risks.
The person may:
These issues can support a need for supervision even when some physical abilities remain intact.
A strong appeal should explain what happens in daily life, not just what the person could do during a short evaluation.
Many families prefer home care when it is safe and practical. Long term care policies may cover home care, but the requirements vary.
Some policies require care from a licensed agency. Others may allow independent caregivers only under certain conditions. Some require a written plan of care, physician certification, proof of caregiver qualifications, or detailed invoices.
Disputes may arise when the insurer claims:
Before appealing, it is important to understand exactly what the policy requires and what evidence would satisfy those requirements.
Some long term care policies cover facility care, but the definition of a covered facility can be technical.
The insurer may review whether the facility is licensed, provides required services, maintains appropriate staffing, or meets the policy’s definition of an assisted living facility, nursing home, or memory care facility.
A dispute may arise if the insurer says the facility does not qualify, even though the person is receiving meaningful care there.
In these cases, the appeal may need to include facility records, licensing information, care plans, invoices, provider notes, and an explanation of the services being provided.
Our role is to make the process clearer and better supported.
Depending on the case, we may help by:
We know these matters often involve more than paperwork. Families may be trying to protect a parent, spouse, or loved one while also managing costs, care schedules, and difficult decisions. We aim to provide clear guidance, practical strategy, and steady support throughout the appeal process.
You may want legal guidance if:
Early guidance can help families avoid submitting an appeal that is incomplete, poorly organized, or not focused on the insurer’s actual reasons for denial.
Riemer Hess assists with select long term care insurance appeals in New York. Our attorneys are also admitted in New Jersey.
Our firm’s core practice remains disability insurance claims. We handle long term care appeals where our insurance claim experience can help families address denied, delayed, terminated, limited, or underpaid benefits.
The following example is for educational purposes only. Every claim depends on the policy language, medical evidence, care records, and insurer’s stated reasons for denial.
A family may contact us after a long term care insurer denies benefits for a parent with dementia. The insurer may claim that the parent does not need enough help with activities of daily living to qualify for benefits. The denial letter may focus on a brief assessment showing that the parent could walk, answer basic questions, and perform some tasks during the evaluation.
But the family’s daily experience may tell a different story.
The parent may forget medications, leave the stove on, become confused at night, resist bathing, need cueing to eat, wander from home, or be unable to respond safely in an emergency. The family may have arranged home care because leaving the parent alone is no longer safe.
In that situation, an appeal may need to do more than submit a diagnosis of dementia. It may need to explain the parent’s real-world safety risks, supervision needs, cognitive impairment, and functional limitations. Helpful evidence may include physician records, cognitive testing, caregiver notes, home care records, medication records, incident logs, and statements from treating providers or family members.
A strong appeal connects that evidence to the policy’s requirements. It explains why the insured person qualifies for benefits and why the insurer’s denial did not account for the full picture.
A long term care insurance appeal is a request for the insurance company to reconsider a denial, termination, delay, underpayment, or benefit limitation. The appeal usually explains why the insured person meets the policy’s requirements and includes evidence supporting the need for care.
No. Long term disability insurance generally replaces part of a person’s income when they cannot work because of illness or injury. Long term care insurance generally helps pay for care when a person needs help with daily activities or supervision due to cognitive impairment.
Insurers may deny claims because they believe the person does not need enough help with activities of daily living, does not meet the policy’s cognitive impairment standard, is receiving care from a provider that does not qualify, or is receiving care in a setting the policy does not cover. Some denials also result from incomplete documentation.
Activities of daily living, often called ADLs, are basic self-care tasks. These often include bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, and eating. Many long term care policies require proof that the insured person needs help with a certain number of ADLs before benefits become payable.
Yes, depending on the policy. Some policies provide benefits when a person has a severe cognitive impairment and needs substantial supervision for safety. This may apply in cases involving dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, brain injury, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, or other conditions affecting memory, judgment, awareness, or decision-making.
Helpful evidence may include medical records, cognitive testing, home care records, caregiver notes, facility records, medication records, fall history, safety incident documentation, therapy records, treating provider statements, and family or caregiver statements. The best evidence depends on the policy and the insurer’s reason for denial.
Review the denial letter carefully and note the appeal deadline. The denial letter should be compared against the policy language and the evidence already submitted. Before appealing, it is important to understand the insurer’s reason for denial and what additional evidence may help address that reason.
Some families handle appeals on their own. However, legal guidance may be helpful when the claim involves a denial, termination of previously approved benefits, cognitive impairment, ADL disputes, home care disputes, facility disputes, or a significant amount of unpaid benefits. An incomplete appeal can make the process harder.
Yes, insurers sometimes terminate benefits after an earlier approval. This may happen after a reassessment, records review, or request for updated proof. A termination should be reviewed carefully, especially if the insured person’s condition has not improved or the insurer ignored important evidence.
Riemer Hess handles select long term care insurance appeals in New York. Our attorneys are also admitted in New Jersey. If you are unsure whether we can assist, you can contact us to discuss the policy, denial letter, and location of the claim.
If a long term care insurance claim has been denied, delayed, limited, underpaid, or terminated, Riemer Hess LLC may be able to help.
We handle select long term care insurance appeals in New York. Our attorneys are also admitted in New Jersey. Our firm’s core practice remains disability insurance claims, and we bring that same evidence-focused approach to select long term care insurance appeals.
When you contact us, it is helpful to have:
Any assessments completed by the insurance company
During an initial consultation, we can discuss what happened, what the insurer is saying, what deadlines may apply, and whether Riemer Hess may be able to assist with the appeal.
To speak with Riemer Hess LLC about a long term care insurance appeal, contact us today at (212) 297-0700 or click the button below for a consultation on your case.