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Life insurance policies for adults are typically
taken for granted as a sound way to provide financial security for a family. However,
most parents don’t think about providing insurance coverage for their children.
There several reasons for this, including the difficulty parents have thinking
about tragedy striking a child.
Unfortunately, the reality is that parents do have to deal
with serious injuries to their children. These tragedies force families to confront
the emotional and financial costs of long term medical health problems,
increases in educational expenses and perhaps the requirement for a parent to
stay at home to provide short or long term care for the child. While having
specialized life insurances won't provide additional protection to your
children, it can remove some of the financial stress that serious injury or
illness can present.
Children's insurance is only available to a parent who
has his or her own life policy. Children's insurance is then added as an
additional option. There are several different options for benefit coverage for
the child. The minimum amount is approximately twenty thousand dollars and the
maximum is approximately fifty thousand dollars. The adult is able to select
the benefit level for each child, which can be adjusted at policy anniversary
dates up to the maximum level. Children can be insured under this type of
coverage until they reach the anniversary date of the policy after they reach
the age of 21. Applications for this type of insurance are possible when the
child is over two and under seventeen years of age.
Children's insurance is similar in many ways to the basic
life
insurances offered to adults. It provides coverage for both death and
illness or serious injury. However, it does differ in some ways. Since children
are more at risk for certain illnesses such as meningitis and encephalitis,
these illnesses are covered under the policy. In addition, head trauma is usually
included as a cover that isn't included in the same type of adult policy.
Like adult policies, the children's life insurance policy
will also cover long term serious disabilities and injuries. These include
paraplegia, quadriplegia, and paralysis as well as the loss of two limbs. While
these are not life threatening conditions, they will require the parents to
modify the home, perhaps purchase a different type of vehicle for
transportation as well as provide opportunities for the child to experience
different types of life experiences. Having the additional financial support
from the life insurance policy will enable you to provide these things for your
child without financial hardship.
As with all types of life insurances, children's
insurance does have some specific exclusion from coverage. Policies will exclude
from cover congenital conditions that were present from birth. There are other
exclusions to children's policies that can be reviewed and discussed prior to purchase.
Taking the time to research options and discuss them with your partner is key
for such an important decision. An insurance agent can also provide information
on the specific aspects of the cover and how it can protect your family
financially.
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