Income Protection Journal Podcast
Most attorneys who buy disability coverage believe own occupation guarantees their benefit the day they can no longer practice law. It is an umbrella term with tiers, and the version inside a group plan, or an individual policy bought without the right rider, pays very differently. Which tier an attorney owns decides whether the disability claim pays in full or drops to a fraction the moment it is filed. Ethan Abramowitz has watched that decision play out from both sides of the table. He spent nearly four years defending insurance carriers at Kirwan, Spellacy and Danner before joining Mark F. Seltzer and Associates, a national practice representing highly skilled professionals in private and group disability matters, where for more than 13 years he has represented physicians, dentists and attorneys whose claims were denied or stalled. Admitted in Florida, Pennsylvania and California, he meets these professionals years after the policy is signed, at the moment the carrier says no. I brought him onto the Income Protection Journal Podcast to work the story backward, from the denied claim to the contract language that caused it. Own-Occupation Coverage Separates an Attorney's Full Benefit From a Modified Trap The phrase attorneys think they understand is the phrase that fails them most often. True own occupation, sometimes called regular occupation, pays the full monthly benefit when a sickness or injury stops you from practicing law, even if you go earn a living doing something else. A modified own-occupation definition pays only while you are not working at all. Step back into any paid work and the claim collapses into a partial or residual analysis, the reduced benefit paid when you can still work but earn less. Own occupation, it's an umbrella term, and underneath that, there's different tiers of coverage. Ethan Abramowitz, a disability insurance attorney with Mark F. Seltzer and Associates for more than 13 years He watched the difference cost one physician most of her income. An OB/GYN in her late 30s developed rheumatoid arthritis, lost her clinical career and accepted a medical directorship with the residency program she had trained in. Because her individual policy carried a modified own-occupation definition rather than a true one, her earnings from the new role were offset against her benefit. The monthly check fell from $15,000 to two or three thousand. A true own-occupation policy would have paid the full $15,000 alongside her new salary with no offset. Attorneys assume this is a doctor's problem because a surgeon's disability looks obvious. It is not. Abramowitz has represented lawyers with Parkinson's disease, traumatic brain injuries and visual impairments who could no longer tolerate the physical and cognitive load of the work, the ability to sit for 10 or 12 hours, read voluminous records and hold a trial schedule together. When a lawyer with that kind of condition wants to teach or consult instead, only a true own-occupation definition lets the benefit and the new income coexist. If I can't be a lawyer, but I could go teach at a law school as an adjunct professor, I can do that and earn a living and do something I'm passionate about. Without the true own-occupation definition, I can't do that without having an offset. Ethan Abramowitz, who represents policyholders in disputed disability claims Group Long-Term Disability Converts an Attorney's Own-Occupation Term After 24 Months The group plan a firm provides is where most attorneys assume they are covered, and it is where the definitions quietly turn against them. An individual policy weighs the material and substantial duties of the occupation as you actually perform it, examining your billing records and your day-to-day work. A group long-term disability plan leans on a national-economy standard drawn from reference works like the Dictionary of Occupational Titles and O*NET, generalized rubrics that ask what a lawyer does, not what you do. The costlier problem sits deeper in the contract. Most employer plans limit own-occupation protection to the first 24 months, then shift the standard to any gainful occupation. When the policy does not spell out a replacement-income formula, that phrase defaults to the Social Security definition of disability. I always joke that if you can be a barista at Starbucks, no disrespect to them. Ethan Abramowitz, a former insurance-defense litigator who spent nearly four years defending insurance carriers Then the carrier can argue you are not disabled. A greeter's wage clears the bar. Group plans answer to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a federal statute that tilts the burden toward the carrier and forces a denied claimant through an internal appeal before any courtroom is available. Covered monthly earnings compound the shortfall. Many group plans count only base salary and exclude bonus, incentive and production pay. Abramowitz described an orthopedic surgeon earning about $800,000 who returned to work at half time. His individual policies paid a 50 percent partial benefit. His group plan, measuring only base compensation, required a 60 percent loss of total earnings before it paid anything, so it paid nothing. Attorneys on a modest salary and a large bonus face the same arithmetic. Four Attorney Disability Policy Features That Decide the Claim Asked which single feature he would refuse to give up on a policy of his own, Abramowitz did not hesitate. The true own-occupation definition comes first, followed by residual disability, a future increase option and a cost-of-living adjustment. Roughly 60 to 70 percent of his cases involve some component of partial disability, and only about 10 percent of disability claims trace to an accident, so the provisions that pay while you are working less matter far more than most buyers expect. Attorneys rate among the most favorable occupation classes for pricing, alongside architects, accountants and engineers. When I build individual own-occupation coverage for attorneys, I treat that pricing advantage as a reason to add the strong features rather than to buy the cheapest contract, because the group plan the firm owns can be cut or canceled at any renewal and does not follow you when you leave. Abramowitz put the same point on a billboard. No attorney should sign a disability policy until they have read the fine print. Ethan Abramowitz, who has represented physicians, dentists and attorneys in denied disability claims for more than a decade The same math decides it for solo practitioners and firm partners, the attorneys with no group plan behind them at all. On the r/personalfinance forum, a self-employed single parent asked whether an own-occupation policy is worth the higher premium, and whether a benefit that runs to age 65 makes sense. Abramowitz did not hedge. Absolutely. If you're self-employed and you're a single parent or a single income household, you're the breadwinner. You need to protect your income. Ethan Abramowitz, who has litigated insurance disputes from both the defense and policyholder side for more than 15 years The full conversation, including his account of a surgeon who kept operating with tremors because he could not afford to stop, and the elimination-period and pre-existing-condition traps that decide a claim before it is filed, is on the Income Protection Journal Podcast. What stays with me is that the outcome of a claim is usually written years earlier, on the day the policy is bought. Editor's note: I refer clients to Ethan Abramowitz when a disability claim is disputed, and some of the professionals he represents hold coverage I placed. Neither of us pays the other for referrals, and he received no compensation for this interview.
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