Sunday, September 21, 2014

After Surgery, Surprise $117,000 Medical Bill From Doctor He Didn’t Know - NYTimes.com

After Surgery, Surprise $117,000 Medical Bill From Doctor He Didn't Know - NYTimes.com

After Surgery, Surprise $117,000 Medical Bill From Doctor He Didn't Know

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Peter Drier was billed by an assistant surgeon he did not know was on his case.

Before his three-hour neck surgery for herniated disks in December, Peter Drier, 37, signed a pile of consent forms. A bank technology manager who had researched his insurance coverage, Mr. Drier was prepared when the bills started arriving: $56,000 from Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan, $4,300 from the anesthesiologist and even $133,000 from his orthopedist, who he knew would accept a fraction of that fee.

He was blindsided, though, by a bill of about $117,000 from an "assistant surgeon," a Queens-based neurosurgeon whom Mr. Drier did not recall meeting.

"I thought I understood the risks," Mr. Drier, who lives in New York City, said later. "But this was just so wrong — I had no choice and no negotiating power."

In operating rooms and on hospital wards across the country, physicians and other health providers typically help one another in patient care. But in an increasingly common practice that some medical experts call drive-by doctoring, assistants, consultants and other hospital employees are charging patients or their insurers hefty fees. They may be called in when the need for them is questionable. And patients usually do not realize they have been involved or are charging until the bill arrives.

The practice increases revenue for physicians and other health care workers at a time when insurers are cutting down reimbursement for many services. The surprise charges can be especially significant because, as in Mr. Drier's case, they may involve out-of-network providers who bill 20 to 40 times the usual local rates and often collect the full amount, or a substantial portion.

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Peter Drier, a bank technology manager in New York City, was blindsided after neck surgery by a $117,000 bill from a doctor he did not recall meeting. Credit Joshua Bright for The New York Times

"The notion is you can make end runs around price controls by increasing the number of things you do and bill for," said Dr. Darshak Sanghavi, a health policy expert at the Brookings Institution until recently. This contributes to the nation's $2.8 trillion in annual health costs.

Insurers, saying the surprise charges have proliferated, have filed lawsuits challenging them. In recent years, unexpected out-of-network charges have become the top complaint to the New York State agency that regulates insurance companies. Multiple state health insurance commissioners have tried to limit patients' liability, but lobbying by the health care industry sometimes stymies their efforts.

"This has gotten really bad, and it's wrong," said James J. Donelon, the Republican insurance commissioner of Louisiana. "But when you try to address it as a policy maker, you run into a hornet's nest of financial interests."

In Mr. Drier's case, the primary surgeon, Dr. Nathaniel L. Tindel, had said he would accept a negotiated fee determined through Mr. Drier's insurance company, which ended up being about $6,200. (Mr. Drier had to pay $3,000 of that to meet his deductible.) But the assistant, Dr. Harrison T. Mu, was out of network and sent the $117,000 bill. Insurance experts say surgeons and assistants sometimes share proceeds from operations, but Dr. Tindel's office says he and Dr. Mu do not. Dr. Mu's office did not respond to requests for comment.

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The phenomenon can take many forms. In some instances, a patient may be lying on a gurney in the emergency room or in a hospital bed, unaware that all of the people in white coats or scrubs who turn up at the bedside will charge for their services. At times, a fully trained physician is called in when a resident or a nurse, who would not charge, would have sufficed. Services that were once included in the daily hospital rate are now often provided by contractors, and even many emergency rooms are staffed by out-of-network physicians who bill separately.

Patricia Kaufman's bills after a recent back operation at a Long Island hospital were rife with such charges, said her husband, Alan, who spent days sorting them out. Two plastic surgeons billed more than $250,000 to sew up the incision, a task done by a resident during previous operations for Ms. Kaufman's chronic neurological condition.

In the days after the operation, "a parade of doctors came by saying, 'How are you,' and they could be out of network or in network," Mr. Kaufman said. "And then you get their bills. Who called them? Who are they?"

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Patricia Kaufman, at home in Highland Park, N.J., with her husband, Alan, was charged $250,000 by two plastic surgeons who sewed up an incision after her back surgery. Credit Matt Rainey for The New York Times

Doctors' offices often pursue patients for payment. Ms. Kaufman's insurer paid about $10,000 to the plastic surgeons, who then sent a bill for the remainder. The couple, of Highland Park, N.J., refused to pay.

When insurers intervene in a particular case, they say they have limited ability to fight back. Insurance examiners "are not in the room on the day of surgery to see the second surgeon walk into the room or why they were needed," said Clare Krusing, a spokeswoman for America's Health Insurance Plans, an industry group. And current laws do not require hospitals that join an insurance network to provide in-network doctors, labs or X-rays, for example.

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Out-of-Network Rates Drive Unexpected Medical Costs

When out-of-network physicians perform hospital procedures, hefty charges can be added to medical bills. Insurers often pay the full amount or large portions, which provides an incentive for doctors to include out-of-network colleagues.

Muscle and skin graft

Gallbladder removal

Breast lesion removal

Potential

out-of-network doctor bill

Average paid to in-network doctors

So sometimes insurers just pay — to protect their customers, they say — which encourages the practice. When Mr. Drier complained to his insurer, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, that he should not have to pay the out-of-network assistant surgeon, Anthem agreed it was not his responsibility. Instead, the company cut a check to Dr. Mu for $116,862, the full amount.

Unexpected Fees

When Mr. Drier agreed to surgery in December, he was not in a good position to bargain or shop around. Several weeks earlier, he had woken up to excruciating pain in his upper back and numbness and weakness in two fingers of his left hand, which persisted. A scan showed that one of the disks that normally serve as cushions between vertebrae was herniated and pushing on a nerve. With a busy job and social life, he was living on painkillers.

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Peter Drier

"There was a chapter on here's why you would need surgery for certain people, and mine was that case."

Publish Date September 20, 2014.

The rate of spinal surgery in the United States is about twice that in Europe and Canada, and five times that in Britain, said Dr. Richard A. Deyo of Oregon Health and Science University, who studies international comparisons. Studies are limited but have generally concluded that after two years, patients who have surgery for disk problems do no better than those treated with painkillers and physical therapy — although the pain, which can be debilitating, resolves far more rapidly with surgery.

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The United States has more neurosurgeons per capita than almost any other developed country, and they compete with orthopedists for spinal surgery. At the same time, Medicare and private insurers have reduced payments to surgeons. The average base salary for neurosurgeons decreased to $590,000 in 2014 from $630,000 in 2010, according to Merritt Hawkins, a physician staffing firm.

To counter that trend, some spinal surgeons have turned to consultants — including a Long Island company called Business Dynamics RCM and a subsidiary, the Business of Spine — that offer advice on how to increase revenue through "innovative" coding, claim generation and collection services.

Some strategies used by surgeons, including billing large amounts for a second surgeon in the room or declaring an operation an emergency, raise serious questions. The indications for immediate spinal surgery, such as loss of bladder function or rapidly progressive paralysis, are rare. But insurers are more likely to reimburse a hospital or surgeon with whom they do not have a contract if a case is labeled an emergency.

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Mark Sullivan, 46, of New Jersey, went to an emergency room last year with excruciating lower back pain and leg weakness. He was in the operating room less than 24 hours later. "The surgeon stood at the foot of my bed and said, 'You need surgery; you won't walk out of the hospital,' " he recalled.

Mr. Sullivan's emergency admission made it easier for an out-of-network surgeon to perform the operation and bill $29,000. The insurer paid $9,500, and Mr. Sullivan paid about $580, as required by his plan. When the doctor's billing office pursued Mr. Sullivan for the balance of the bill and even threatened to turn his account over to collection, he agreed to file an appeal with his insurer for additional payment, but he refused to pay more himself.

A Last-Minute Surprise

Mr. Drier's concern about extra charges began even during his preoperative physical. The hospital sent his blood tests to an out-of-network lab and required him to have an echocardiogram (eventually billed for $950), even though he had no cardiac history. (The American Society of Echocardiography discourages such testing for patients with no known heart problems.)

His worries escalated as he lay prepped for the operating room on the morning of his surgery. A technician from a company called Intraoperative Monitoring Service L.L.C. asked him to sign a financial consent form, noting that the company did not accept Blue Cross Blue Shield plans, so he would be required to pay the bill himself. The monitoring had been ordered by his surgeon and is considered essential for the type of neurosurgery he was having, to make sure delicate nerves are not damaged as they are manipulated.

"I demanded to know the price, and when he said he didn't know, I made him call," Mr. Drier recalled. When the technician said it would be $500 plus an hourly rate, Mr. Drier negotiated it down to $300.

In the operating room, he underwent a procedure called spinal fusion, in which the surgeons removed two herniated disks that were impinging on nerves, and inserted some bone graft as well as plates and screws to stabilize the spine. On his hospital bill, Mr. Drier noted charges for three implants, a total of about $10,400, as well as for two surgical screws billed at $2,470 and $3,990 — expensive for hardware, he thought, but his insurer paid the full amount.

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The biggest surprise was the bill from Dr. Mu, the assistant surgeon. Fusions generally require a second trained pair of hands, but those can be provided by a resident or a neurosurgical nurse or physician assistant employed by the hospital, for whom there is no additional charge. The operative record for Mr. Drier's surgery states that no qualified resident was available.

Dr. Mu is the chief of neurosurgery at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in Queens, though he sometimes operates at other hospitals. According to a database that tracks hospital admissions in New York State, most operations he performs at Jamaica involve emergency surgery on Medicaid patients, often victims of trauma — a challenging but probably not very lucrative practice.

One insurer, Aetna, is in court with Dr. Mu's private-practice group, NeuroAxis Neurosurgical Associates of Kew Gardens, Queens. NeuroAxis sued to recover higher payments for its out-of-network assistant surgeons; Aetna says the practice's fees for those surgeons are excessive. J. Edward Neugebauer, chief litigation officer at Aetna, said the company had also sued an in-network neurosurgeon on Long Island who always called in an out-of-network partner to assist, resulting in huge charges. The surgeons shared a business address.

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Insurers have gone to court with NeuroAxis Neurosurgical Associates, a private practice in Queens, over what they call excessive fees for surgical assistants. Credit Uli Seit for The New York Times

Surgeons from other specialties also team up: After Gunther Steinberg of Portola Valley, Calif., had a needle biopsy of an eye lesion in 2010, he discovered that his insurer had paid about $10,000 to the eye surgeon who performed the outpatient procedure and $10,700 to a second ophthalmologist in the room.

"The idea of having an assistant in the O.R. has become an opportunity to make up for surgical fees that have been slashed," said Dr. Abeel A. Mangi, a professor of cardiac surgery at Yale, who said the practice had become commonplace. "There's now a whole cadre of people out there who do not have meaningful appointments as attending surgeons, so they do assistant work."

In Mr. Drier's case, each surgeon billed for each step of the procedure. Dr. Tindel billed $74,000 for removing two disks and an additional $50,000 for placing the hardware that stabilized Mr. Drier's spine. Dr. Mu billed $67,000 and $50,000 for those tasks.

If the surgery had been for a Medicare patient, the assistant would have been permitted to bill only 16 percent of the primary surgeon's fee. With current Medicare rates, that would have been about $800, less than 1 percent of what Dr. Mu was paid.

Visitors Who Bill

Unexpected fees are routinely generated outside the operating room as well. On the wards, a dermatologist may be called in to examine a rash and perform an expensive biopsy. The person in scrubs who walks a patient to a bathroom for the first time after hip surgery may turn out to be a physical therapist billing $400.

Mr. Sullivan, who had the emergency back surgery, discovered charges from more than 10 providers in the 48 hours after his operation. (The surgery involved simply trimming a herniated disk in his lower back.) He wrote to various doctors to dispute bills, saying, "I was admitted to Overlook Hospital from Nov. 26-27, 2013, and I have received numerous invoices for procedures that were never done, by physicians that never treated me."

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He was puzzled by $679 in occupational therapy charges involving the delivery of a device to help him put on his socks, which he never used. He was irate about charges from a group of hospital-based primary care physicians from Inpatient Medical Associates, who visited him briefly once a day and billed close to $1,000 in out-of-network costs.

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Mark Sullivan, 46, of New Jersey, received a hospital bill that included charges for occupational therapy, which he did not realize had occurred.

Healthy surgical patients typically do not need a general doctor; an anesthesiologist clears them for surgery. Mr. Sullivan noted that if he had needed an internist, he would have called his own, who is in his insurance network and whose office is just down the block.

Dr. Mangi, the Yale cardiac surgeon, said hospitals often encouraged extra visits for both billing and legal reasons. He said he was required to request a physical therapy consult before each discharge, for example, even if he felt there was no need.

"You can cut fees, but institutions find ways" to make the money back, he said. "There's been a mushrooming industry of mandatory consultants for services that neither doctors nor patients want."

A Possible Remedy

For months, Mr. Drier stewed over what to do with the $117,000 check Anthem Blue Cross had sent him to pass on to Dr. Mu, refusing to sign over a payment he considered "outrageous and immoral." He worried that such payments could drive up premiums at his employer.

In the past few years, some insurers have filed lawsuits and sought injunctions to prevent providers from going after their clients for payment of unexpected medical bills. Dr. Scott Breidbart, chief medical officer at Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield, part of the same parent company that covers Mr. Drier, said that it had not taken that route, but that in some situations it had refused to do further business with in-network surgeons who repeatedly called in out-of-network assistants.

A New York State law that will take effect in March — one of a few nationally — will offer some protection against many surprise charges and require more advance disclosure from doctors and hospitals on whether their services are covered by insurance. It states, for example, that patients are not responsible for unforeseen out-of-network charges beyond what they would have paid in-network. It directs insurers and hospitals to negotiate any further payment or enter mediation.

In many other countries, such as Australia — where, as in the United States, people often rely on private insurance — it is seen as a patient's right to be informed of out-of-pocket costs before hospitalization, said Mark Hall, a law professor at Wake Forest University.

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Peter Drier

"I couldn't beat the medical billing administrators that knew how to say the right things and never said anything wrong and knew the laws backwards."

Publish Date September 20, 2014.

Mr. Drier tried to negotiate with the surgeons to divvy up the $117,000 payment in a way he believed was more fair; he liked Dr. Tindel and felt he was being underpaid. Mr. Drier's idea, he wrote in an email, was to settle on "a reasonable fee for both the surgeon and assistant and return the rest of the check to the insurance company/employees" of his company.

But in July, he received a threatening letter from Dr. Mu's lawyer noting that he had failed to forward the $117,000 check. So he sent it along, with regret.

Readers' Perspectives

How you and others responded

Have you experienced surprise medical charges that you learned of only when you received a bill or an insurance statement? Please share your story.

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100 reader responses
  • My youngest child was born at 1PM. I received a bill for anesthesia for 8 hours which suggested that I had been receiving an epidural until 6 PM. The situation was resolved, but only because the explanation of benefits and insurance check came to me and not to the hospital.

  • "When insurers intervene in a particular case, they say they have limited ability to fight back." Baloney. ANYONE involved in your care must DOCUMENT in writing what they did and why it was necessary. If they don't, they have no legal right to expect payment. I used to do bill reviews for multiple insurance carriers. If a charge was questionable I asked for documentation for it (or, in the case of an "extra" doctor, them). If it could not be shown that the treatment, drug, instrument OR CONSULTANT was not medically necessary, the charge was denied.

  • Yes, it turned out that the doctors treating me in hospital were not really on the staff, they were contract workers not covered by my insurance. I am still trying to get the $7,000 bill lowered. Had I been informed I would have found a doctor who took my insurance and had hospital privileges. I have no idea how all the newly insured through ACA are coping with these kind of "surprises" if they haven't dealt with these companies before.

  • They charge me $7000 for cat exam and $ 22000 for test . in other time . emergency room $900 .doctor see me for thee minutes no test was performed and he is not recommended the right medicine . it is rip off by greedy doctors and hospital administration . whom they bankrupt the country and congress and law maker never act about that overcharge because the lobby



Stuart Don Levy

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Microsoft Boosts Payout 11% - Barron's

Microsoft Boosts Payout 11% - Barron's

Sizing Up Microsoft's Payout

Big tech companies sit on mountains of cash, and investors continue to clamor for a bigger chunk of it. The world's No. 1 software manufacturer, Microsoft had $86 billion in cash at last count. Founded in 1975, the company declared its first-ever dividend in January 2003 at the rate of eight cents a share and has disbursed a richer payout every year since.

This year will be no exception, but last Tuesday's 11% enhancement compared with an average of 21% in the past few years (Barrons.com, "Microsoft: Disappointment With Dividend Raise; Do Board Changes Presage More Debt?," Sept. 17). The new quarterly will be 31 cents a share (ticker: MSFT) versus 28 cents, which computes to an additional $989 million yearly for investors and an annual payout of $10.2 billion overall at the new rate. At this time last year, Microsoft announced a new, $40 million stock buyback.

A component of the Dow Jones industrials, Nasdaq-traded Microsoft shares, which are up 26% this year, set a new 52-week high of $47.19 on Friday. With the new dividend, the stock yields 2.64%. Among large-cap tech stocks, Cisco Systems (CSCO) sports the fattest yield, 3%. Intel (INTC) is close on Microsoft's heels, with a 2.57% yield. Apple 's (AAPL) 1.9% puts it in fourth place.

ON THURSDAY, one of the world's largest manufacturers of semiconductors, Texas Instruments (TXN), said it plans to hike its quarterly common dividend by 13% in October, to 34 cents a share from 30 cents, for a 2.8% yield. Investors would reap an additional $171 million annually. The action reflects the 84-year-old company's improved margins and earnings growth in recent quarters. Dividends have been paid without interruption since 1962 and have been sweetened for 11 years in a row. Stock repurchases have reduced the company's share count by 38% since the start of 2005. Texas Instruments trades on Nasdaq close to its 52-week high of $49.77.

SHOULD INVESTORS FOCUS more on dividend yield or dividend growth when searching for opportunities? BMO Capital Markets chief investment strategist Brian Belski and senior investment strategist Nicholas Roccanova in a Sept. 12 research report say dividend growth matters most: "We have found that dividend-growth strategies perform much better than yield strategies when interest rates are rising." In addition, the pair believes that "valuation and yield differentials also make a compelling case for dividend growth….Furthermore, dividend-growth strategies tend to be more cyclically exposed, which is an added benefit should economic conditions continue to improve as we expect in the coming months."

The report lists 21 stocks that BMO analysts currently rate Outperform and that fall into the top 20% of the Standard & Poor's 500 by highest one-year growth in dividends per share. Apple is on the list, as are Abbott Labs (ABT), Altera (ALTR), Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM), Cabot Oil (COG), Cummins (CMI), Danaher (DHR), EOG Resources (EOG), General Mills (GIS), Harley-Davidson (HOG), and Interpublic (IPG).

The other half of BMO's picks include Macy's (M), National Oilwell Varco (NOV), Omnicom (OMC), Regions Financial (RF), Schlumberger (SLB), SunTrust Banks (STI), Tyson Foods (TSN), Union Pacific (UNP), UnitedHealth (UNH), and Western Digital (WDC).

NOTEWORTHY: Citing "the continued strength and sustainability of our cash flow," Dow Jones industrials component McDonald's (MCD), the world's biggest fast-food restaurant chain, declared a 5% payout enrichment last Thursday. The new quarterly will be 85 cents a common share, versus 81 cents, for added annual dividends of $157 million. Yield: 3.6%. McDonald's has raised its payout at least once a year since paying its first one in 1976. The stock was recently quoted at $94 and change….One of the largest U.S. supermarket chains, Kroger (KR), lifted its quarterly common payout on Thursday by 12%, or $39 million yearly, to 18.5 cents a share from 16.5 cents. It was the 131-year-old Cincinnati company's eighth annual enrichment in a row. Yield: 1.4%. Kroger, which keeps posting strong sales and earnings growth, has returned more than $10 billion to investors via dividends and stock buybacks since reinstating payouts in 2006 at the rate of 6.5 cents a share. Kroger set a 52-week high of $52.77 on Friday. 

E-mail: shirley.lazo@barrons.com



Stuart Don Levy

Monday, September 8, 2014

There’s More to Estate Planning Than Just the Will - NYTimes.com

There's More to Estate Planning Than Just the Will - NYTimes.com

There's More to Estate Planning Than Just the Will

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It was with great difficulty that Erik A. Dewey, a writer from Tulsa, Okla., sorted through heaps of paper and online information after his father died at age 65, a week from retirement. Mr. Dewey decided to share what he learned by writing a book, available free online, on estate planning. Credit Christopher Smith for The New York Times

WILLS, health care directives, lists of passwords to online accounts. By now, most people know they should prepare these items — even if they haven't yet — and make them available to trusted family members before the unthinkable, yet inevitable, happens.

But the information family and friends will need when a loved one dies goes far beyond those much-talked-about documents, and having them can make the end of life just a little less painful for those who remain behind.

Consider the experience of John J. Scroggin, who runs a tax business and estate-planning firm in Atlanta. His father, who died in 2001, wanted to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington.

"I called Arlington and they told me I needed his DD 214 to bury him at the cemetery." Mr. Scroggin recalled. "I had never heard of a DD 214, but they told me if I could not find it, they would put him in cold storage for six months while they found it."

After a frantic search, "I found Dad's DD 214 as a bookmark in a book," he said. The Arlington burial took place. The lesson: Add military discharge papers to the documents you hand over to family members or trusted friends.

Maureen Nelson, of Walnut Creek, Calif., had a less satisfying outcome. "My mom died and told both my sister and I that she was a member of the Neptune Society, which cremates the deceased and scatters the ashes at sea," she said.

"We called to have them pick her up from the convalescent hospital where she died," she explained. "They came. But when they checked their records they couldn't find her name, so they left. My sister said my mom even showed her the paperwork. But she must not have sent it in." The lesson? If you've made your own burial arrangements, make sure you've shared the details.

The legal and emotional complexity of end-of-life planning went from theoretical to real for me recently when I began helping my 89-year-old father gather his documents. One of the many things I learned: He would like a funeral with military honors, having served in two wars. So Mr. Scroggin's advice had special resonance.

Tips on preparing for the end of life can fill a book — as Erik A. Dewey, a writer from Tulsa, Okla., knows firsthand. It was with great difficulty that he sorted through heaps of paper and online information after his father died at age 65, a week from retirement.

He decided to share what he had learned by writing "The Big Book of Everything."

His book, which is free online, has been downloaded about 1,000 times a month since it went up about five years ago, he said, and also includes data that people need to keep track of while they're alive, like school and employment history and previous addresses.

Preparing for your own death is "tedious and not very pleasant," acknowledged Mark Gavagan, who wrote the workbook, "12 Critical Things Your Family Needs to Know."

"But if something happened to your or a spouse, would your loved ones know what you have, where it is and what your wishes are?"

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While getting these items in order is more urgent for the elderly, all of us need to do it. Ask yourself if you can check off some of the most basic items.

WILL OR LIVING TRUST A will, of course, distributes your assets after you die. With a living trust, the  assets you have transferred to the trust (your home, bank accounts and stocks, for example) are administered for your benefit during your lifetime, and then transferred to your beneficiaries when you die.

Despite common advice that a living trust is better than a will because you don't need to go through probate — the court process that inventories and distributes a person's property after death — that's not necessarily true, said Sally Hurme, an elder law attorney with AARP.

"The benefits of trusts are overplayed and the disadvantages of probate are exaggerated," said Ms. Hurme, who is author of the forthcoming "ABA/AARP Checklist for My Family: A Guide to My History, Financial Plans and Final Wishes."

"There are certain circumstances when trusts are appropriate, such as if you have out-of-state real estate or a family business that will continue to be run," she said. Otherwise, she said, a will is fine. If you have any doubt, it's best to research it further or consult a lawyer.

If you decide to write up a will without a lawyer, using online forms, for example, be sure you do it right; a badly executed will can be worse than none at all. That's what Lisa Kinsman's sister found out after her husband was killed in a plane crash when he was 28.

"He had drawn up a will just before he left on the trip" that claimed his life, Ms. Kinsman, of Larchmont, N.Y., said, "but he had filled out some things incorrectly, so all his property would have ended up going to his sister instead of his wife." She had to go through a lengthy court process to get what would have gone to her without any will.

HEALTH CARE POWERS Both a living will and a durable health care power of attorney concern medical decisions, but there are some important differences.

A living will, also called an advance directive in some states, is usually limited to deathbed concerns. It enables you to declare your desire to not have life-prolonging measures used if there is no hope of recovery. A durable power of attorney for health care, on the other hand, covers all health care decisions, and lasts only as long as you are incapable of making decisions for yourself. You can, however, set out specific provisions in the power of attorney telling your agent how you would like them to act on your behalf.

POWER OF ATTORNEY This is granted to someone you trust who can take care of your finances. Unlike a regular power of attorney, a durable one means the person can act even if you become incapacitated. It can be the same person as the health care power of attorney but in the best of all worlds, it probably shouldn't be, as they require different skill sets, Ms. Hurme said.

"A health care proxy has got to be someone you can look in the eye and say, 'You've got to be willing to pull the plug in the face of opposition from other people,' " Mr. Gavagan said.

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But it's not enough to write these up and put them in a drawer, or even worse in a safe-deposit box where no one has access to them.

"They should be scattered as far and wide as possible — your spouse, your children and your doctors should have your directives," Ms. Hurme said. Her organization offers printable advance directive forms by state on its website. Caringinfo.org also provides information and forms.

Aside from the heavy-duty legal documents, here are some other recommendations from Mr. Dewey and other experts:

List passwords and logins for everything. This may be obvious, but it bears repeating. Margie Billian, a hairdresser in Rockville, Md., said of her father: "On his deathbed, he was giving me passwords and telling me where items were. This was not enough."

Ms. Billian's father's business was also audited by the Internal Revenue Service after his death, which is why it's vital to keep old tax documents for several years after someone has died.

Some things others have found helpful that aren't so obvious include a medical history, so children and grandchildren know if there is a history of allergies, for example, or diabetes.

Make sure you list what companies and services direct-debit from your bank accounts and credit cards so they don't continue after those accounts are closed. Mr. Scroggin said a client's children closed their father's bank account when he couldn't handle his own affairs. They didn't know an insurance policy worth over $1 million was kept active by direct debits from that account. It was terminated for nonpayment.

Don't forget the most mundane things, like how your house works: the alarm, the sprinkler system, the key to the shed out back. Look at your house as if you were renting it to strangers for the summer and needed to leave instructions, Mr. Gavagan said.

And finally, many people suggested, think about writing a letter or letters to those closest to you to be read after your death.

"If I had one more letter from my father," Mr. Dewey said, "It would have meant the world to me."



Stuart Don Levy