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[L320]Life Insurance Without Physical
by Sarah Martin, Sar

After the war it became clear that life insurance service to the wage earners of the United States and Canada was the central theme of Metropolitan history. It determined the character of the company’s development as has no other single factor and its imprint is clearly marked upon the pattern of the Metropolitan’s activities. It explains the development of the Industrial Department, which continued to be a very effective medium for meeting the insurance needs of this group. The Metropolitan was not the first company in this country to write industrial insurance.

The honor rightly belongs to the Prudential Insurance Company of America whose operations as the Prudential Friendly Society antedated those of the Metropolitan by four years. It is true, however, that the Metropolitan began to serve the wage earners of this country a full decade before the launching of its industrial business in 1879. Within the first years of its founding, the company underwrote the low cost life insurance of a workingmen’s organization which received premiums weekly from its members and transmitted them quarterly to the Company. Thus the Metropolitan from its inception devoted special attention to working people, and has retained this as a primary and absorbing interest throughout the years.()

Industrial life insurance has been variously defined. It is essentially life insurance for the great majority of people who make up the industrial or wage earning population. It took form and direction as our mighty cities grew and as more and more people became wage earners. They had probably more need for life insurance than the better circumstanced groups, but they could buy it only in small amounts and could pay for it only out of wages usually received weekly. Experience has indicated that the families, for whom industrial insurance has been designed, generally did not find it convenient to remit the small premiums directly to the company, or found the cost of that method out of all proportion.

It was essential that someone receive the premiums each week at their homes. Here, then, is the essence of weekly premium industrial life insurance: insurance in relatively small amounts on the lives of working men and their families, paid for out of wages, to agents who personally receive the premiums weekly. Such insurance has the same objectives as ordinary insurance, but in more modest degree; and both forms are based on the same scientific principles of level premium and reserve.

In view of the pressing need of life insurance, especially no medical exam life insurance, by working people, it is surprising that this branch of the business developed so late in our insurance history. It was inaugurated in America, as we have pointed out, in 1875, by the Prudential of Newark. Workingmen, not sought by the insurance companies, at first attempted to meet their needs through cooperative assessment societies. Unfortunately, these societies suffered from the defects inherent in the assessment plan of operation, and they failed, as the assessment plan has generally failed, both in England and in America.

Following the Civil War, feeble attempts were made by one company or another to furnish insurance to wage earners, but they did not succeed, either because of the unsoundness of their plans or because they did not recognize the necessity of receiving the premiums at the homes of the insured. The fact is that Industrial insurance did not take hold in America until the Prudential, the John Hancock, and the Metropolitan launched it, following the essentials of procedure—actuarial, managerial, and administrative—which the Prudential of London had worked out during more than 20 years of operation.


Not so long ago, applying for a sizable term life insurance policy meant the invasion of a physical exam. You might have gotten off with just having a medic collect some body fluids and weigh you, or you might have had to go to the doctor for a full physical. This took a lot of time because exams had to be scheduled, and then it took even more time because the insurance company had to wait to get the report from an examiner or doctor's office. Sometimes the whole process could take weeks or months.

However, insurers know that their business is very competitive these days, and they also know that a lot of the people they would like as customers are very busy people. Busy people, or just people who want to protect their privacy, may very well choose a policy that does not require a physical if that option is available for them. People today just want to make an application, pay the bill, and have their life insurance in hand. They do not want to go through a complex application, and then have to endure an invasive medical exam.

The internet, with online life insurance offers, has made the market for no med life even larger. For awhile, a person could qualify for a smaller term policy with no physical, and some very small whole life insurance policies were available. But now I have seen offers for policies of up to $400,000 without any sort of physical in some cases. The requirements to issue a policy usually depend upon a couple of things. The age of the applicant makes a difference, and so does the size of the policy.

So a 35 year old should be able to find large amounts of coverage without many requirements, but a 55 year old man may have to accept a smaller amount if they want to skip the exam. Applicants that are past retirement age will certainly need to present some sort of medical proof that they are healthy for a large policy, but smaller policies are still available to people of almost any age or health status. In fact simplified issue and guaranteed issued policies have been designed just for seniors, and they have been designed to be issued without much time or trouble.

Now the applicant will still have to fill out an application. For policies that ask health questions, some insurers may add additional requirements depending upon the answers to those questions. They may ask for a doctor's statement or some sort of para-med exam, depending upon the answers to the questions on the application, but they usually do not.

And do not think that a no medical examl life insurance policy is an excuse to mislead an insurance company about your health status. If a person does not answer the questions to the best of their ability, then the insurance company can deny benefits if they find out. And believe me, even without an exam, insurance companies are very good at finding out things like that when hundreds of thousands of dollars are at stake.
Article Source : Pg. 234

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Both Sarah Martin & are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Sarah Martin has sinced written about articles on various topics from Wine and Spirits, Acne Treatment and Finances. Sarah Martin is a freelance marketing writer based out of San Diego, CA. She specializes in finance, business, and low cost life insurance. For
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