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  2. Post-traumatic growth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-traumatic_growth

    Traditional psychology's equivalent to thriving is resilience, which is reaching the previous level of functioning before a trauma, stressor, or challenge. The difference between resilience and thriving is the recovery point – thriving goes above and beyond resilience , and involves finding benefits within challenges.

  3. Risk compensation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_compensation

    Risk homeostasis is a controversial hypothesis, initially proposed in 1982 by Gerald J. S. Wilde, a professor at Queen's University in Canada, which suggests that people maximise their benefit by comparing the expected costs and benefits of safer and riskier behaviour and which introduced the idea of the target level of risk.

  4. Long Term Care Benefit Plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Term_Care_Benefit_Plan

    [9] [3] When the benefit is spent down, the person is still eligible for Medicaid. [5] [4] All benefit accounts reserve either five percent of the death benefit or $5,000 (whichever is less) to provide a funeral benefit payment to the account's beneficiary. [3] These Benefit Plans can be funded through companies such as Life Care Funding [10 ...

  5. Universal life insurance - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/universal-life-insurance...

    Level death benefit: The death benefit remains consistent, similar to whole life insurance. Increasing death benefit: The benefit grows along with the cash value, although premiums are typically ...

  6. Near-death studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-death_studies

    Near-death studies is a field of psychology and psychiatry [1] that studies the physiology, phenomenology and after-effects of the near-death experience (NDE). The field was originally associated with a distinct group of North American researchers that followed up on the initial work of Raymond Moody, and who later established the International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS) and ...

  7. Death anxiety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_anxiety

    Death anxiety is anxiety caused by thoughts of one's own death, and is also known as thanatophobia (fear of death). [1] This anxiety can significantly impact various aspects of a person's life. [ 2 ] Death anxiety is different from necrophobia , which refers to an irrational or disproportionate fear of dead bodies or of anything associated with ...

  8. Loss aversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_aversion

    [1] [2] It should not be confused with risk aversion, which describes the rational behavior of valuing an uncertain outcome at less than its expected value. When defined in terms of the pseudo-utility function as in cumulative prospect theory (CPT), the left-hand of the function increases much more steeply than gains, thus being more "painful ...

  9. Terminal illness insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_Illness_Insurance

    Terminal illness insurance (known as accelerated death benefit in North America) pays out a capital sum if the policyholder is diagnosed with a terminal illness from which the policyholder is expected to die within 12 months of diagnosis by a physician who specializes in that illness or condition. The payout is still valid even if the insured ...