A long term care insurance denial can leave a family unsure what to do next. You may be trying to arrange safe care, manage medical appointments, understand the policy, and respond to the insurance company at the same time.
The denial may involve home care, assisted living, nursing home care, memory care, cognitive impairment, or help with daily activities. It may also involve a benefit reduction, delayed payment, underpayment, or termination of previously approved benefits.
The good news is that a denial does not always mean the claim is over. Many long term care insurance policies allow an appeal. The appeal should be handled carefully because it may become the most important opportunity to explain why benefits are owed and to submit the evidence needed to support the claim.
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 attorneys are also admitted in New Jersey.
First: Do not assume the denial is final
A denial letter can feel discouraging, especially when the need for care seems obvious to the family. But the insurer’s decision may be based on incomplete information, a narrow reading of the policy, a short assessment, or records that do not fully explain the insured person’s daily care needs.
Before deciding what to do, take time to understand exactly what the insurance company is saying. The reason for denial should guide the appeal strategy.
For example, an insurer may deny benefits because it claims the insured person does not need enough help with activities of daily living. Another denial may focus on whether cognitive impairment is severe enough to require supervision. Another may involve whether the home care provider, assisted living facility, or nursing home qualifies under the policy.
Each of those denials requires a different response.
The denial letter is one of the most important documents in the appeal. It usually explains the insurer’s stated reason for denial, the policy provisions relied on, and the deadline for submitting an appeal.
Families should save the denial letter and any envelopes, email notices, or claim communications that came with it. The deadline may run from the date of the letter, the date it was sent, or another date described in the policy or claim procedures.
Missing an appeal deadline can create serious problems. Even when the family is overwhelmed by care needs, the deadline should be addressed early.
Key information to look for includes:
A long term care appeal should be built around the policy. Families often receive claim forms and denial letters, but not always the full policy. The policy matters because it defines what benefits are available, when benefits begin, what care settings qualify, and what proof the insurer can require.
Important policy terms may include:
Do not rely only on a general understanding of what long term care insurance usually covers. The exact policy language should drive the appeal.
A strong appeal responds directly to the insurer’s stated reason. It should not simply repeat that the insured person is sick or needs care. It should explain why the denial is wrong under the policy and support that explanation with evidence.
Common denial reasons include:
Once the reason is clear, the appeal can be organized around the specific dispute.
Long term care denials often turn on a few recurring issues. Identifying the issue early can help the family gather the right proof.
Many policies provide benefits when the insured person needs help with a certain number of activities of daily living, often called ADLs. These usually include bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, and eating.
An appeal may need to explain not only whether the person can start an activity, but whether they can complete it safely, consistently, and without hands-on help, standby assistance, or cueing.
For example, bathing may involve more than turning on the shower. The person may need help getting in and out safely, washing effectively, remembering to bathe, avoiding falls, or managing confusion during the task.
Some policies provide benefits when a person has severe cognitive impairment and needs substantial supervision for safety. This may arise in cases involving dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, stroke, brain injury, or other conditions affecting memory, judgment, awareness, or decision-making.
A person may appear physically capable during a short assessment but still be unsafe alone. The appeal may need to explain real-world risks, such as medication errors, wandering, unsafe cooking, falls, confusion, poor judgment, or inability to respond in an emergency.
Some denials focus on where care is provided or who provides it. The insurer may claim that a home care agency, independent caregiver, assisted living facility, nursing home, or memory care setting does not qualify under the policy.
These disputes can be technical. The appeal may need to include licensing information, care plans, invoices, provider credentials, facility records, or other proof showing that the care meets the policy requirements.
Families sometimes want to submit an appeal quickly because the denial feels unfair. That reaction is understandable. But a short appeal that does not include the right evidence can make the process harder.
Helpful evidence may include:
The goal is to show how the insured person functions in daily life. A diagnosis may be important, but the appeal should also explain what care is needed, why it is needed, and how that need fits the policy requirements.
Long term care denials can feel personal because they affect a loved one’s safety and care. A family may understandably want to tell the insurer how unfair the denial feels.
That human context matters, but the appeal should still be evidence-focused. The insurer will usually evaluate whether the policy requirements are met. A persuasive appeal should connect the person’s medical condition, functional limitations, supervision needs, and care records to the policy language.
A strong appeal often includes both:
The appeal should be organized, specific, and easy for the insurer to follow. It should identify the policy terms, address the denial reason, and cite the evidence supporting benefit eligibility.
Depending on the case, an appeal may explain:
The appeal should also address any evidence the insurer ignored, misunderstood, or minimized.
Families often contact an attorney after trying to manage the appeal themselves. Sometimes that is workable. But legal help may be especially important when the denial involves significant unpaid benefits, a close appeal deadline, cognitive impairment, ADL disputes, home care disputes, facility disputes, or termination of previously approved benefits.
Early guidance can help identify what evidence is missing, how to respond to the insurer’s reasoning, and how to avoid submitting an appeal that does not fully address the issues.
You may want to speak with an attorney if:
Riemer Hess LLC helps families with select long term care insurance appeals in New York. Our work focuses on building a clear, well-supported appeal that addresses the insurer’s stated reasons and explains why benefits should be approved, reinstated, or paid.
Depending on the case, we may help by:
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. We bring that same practical, evidence-focused approach to select long term care insurance appeals.
The following example is for educational purposes only. Every claim depends on the policy language, medical evidence, care records, and insurer’s stated reason for denial.
A family may receive a denial for a parent with dementia because the insurer says the parent does not need enough help with activities of daily living. The denial may focus on a short assessment where the parent could answer basic questions, walk independently, and perform some tasks with prompting.
But the family’s daily experience may show a more serious safety problem. The parent may forget medications, leave the stove on, become confused at night, resist bathing, wander from home, or be unable to respond appropriately in an emergency. The family may have arranged home care because leaving the parent alone is no longer safe.
In that situation, the appeal may need to do more than submit a dementia diagnosis. It may need to explain the parent’s real-world supervision needs, safety risks, functional limitations, and need for care. Helpful evidence may include physician records, cognitive testing, caregiver notes, home care records, medication records, incident logs, and treating provider statements.
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.
Save the denial letter and identify the appeal deadline. Then review the insurer’s stated reason for denial and obtain the policy. The appeal should be based on the policy language and the evidence needed to address the insurer’s reasoning.
Not necessarily. Many policies allow an appeal. A denial may be challenged if the insurer relied on incomplete information, misunderstood the care needs, applied the policy too narrowly, or failed to consider important evidence.
Helpful evidence may include medical records, cognitive testing, home care records, caregiver notes, facility records, medication records, fall history, safety incident documentation, treating provider statements, and family or caregiver statements. The best evidence depends on the policy and the denial reason.
Yes, depending on the policy. Some policies provide benefits when cognitive impairment creates a need for substantial supervision. The appeal should explain the person’s real-world safety risks and supervision needs, not only the diagnosis.
The appeal should explain what help is needed, how often it is needed, and why the person cannot safely or consistently complete the activity without assistance, standby support, or cueing. The appeal should connect those limitations to the policy’s ADL requirements.
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, reduced, underpaid, or terminated, Riemer Hess LLC may be able to help.
When you contact us, it is helpful to have:
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 denial in New York, contact us today at (212) 297-0700 or click the button below for a consultation on your case.