enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Long Term Care Benefit Plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Term_Care_Benefit_Plan

    The benefit payments are then made directly to the health care facility on a monthly basis. [8] If the insured person dies before the benefit period is over, the remaining benefit account is paid to the family or beneficiary as a final expense payment. [9] [3] When the benefit is spent down, the person is still eligible for Medicaid.

  3. 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.

  4. 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 ...

  5. 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.

  6. Thanatology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanatology

    The individual level is primarily covered by psychology, the study of individual minds. However, to overlook social psychology would be a serious omission. Avoiding (or, in some cases, seeking) death is an important human motive; the fear of death affects many individuals' actions. That fear can be either reinforced or assuaged by social culture.

  7. 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 ...

  8. Promoting Healthy Choices: Information vs. Convenience - HuffPost

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2012-12-21-promoting...

    2 Abstract Although recent legislation has been enacted to require fast-food restaurants to display calorie information on menus, the consequences of posting such information remain unclear. We address the effects of providing information and test the efficacy of an alternative approach that makes ordering healthier foods slightly more convenient.

  9. Internal Revenue Code section 79 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_Revenue_Code...

    Contributions to a Section 79 plan are tax-deductible, though for owner(s), and 2% or more shareholders, contributions are deductible only if paid by, and from, a C Corporation. A Section 79 benefit program may allow the following benefits. The ability to purchase permanent life insurance with corporate dollars