Pick the right health insurance plan

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The Covid-19 pandemic has made people realise that we must be prepared to deal with medical emergencies. While having a good health insurance policy may seem simple, there are a few intricacies involved in finding a good plan. Here are some key factors that one should look at when buying a good comprehensive health cover for yourself and your family.

 

Check sub-limits

Sub-limit is a cap put by an insurer on medical treatment, doctor consultation fee, ambulance charges, and hospital room rent. Sub-limit means that if you incur charges on say medical treatment beyond these caps, the policyholder will have to bear the expense. However, many health insurance policies come with no sub limit. Choose one such plan, despite a little higher premium.

Co-payment clause

Co-payment clause means that you are agreeing to pay a certain percentage of the claimed amount. Suppose your policy has a co-payment of five per cent, it means you are agreeing to pay five per cent of the total claimed amount while the remaining 95 per cent will be paid by the insurer. It is always better to go for a policy with a no co-payment clause.

Waiting period

Before you buy a health policy, you must also look at the waiting period. Say, someone buys a health policy without checking the specific waiting period related to specific diseases. Within a month, that person is diagnosed with uterine fibroids but, she can’t claim for hospitalisation as her policy has a two years waiting period for the disease.Normally, there are two widely prevalent waiting periods across all the policies. One, a normal waiting period of one month when you buy a new health insurance policy. For the Covid-19 coverage the waiting period is 15 days. Two, pre-existing illness waiting period which varies across insurers and policies(two to four years).

Network hospitals

In order to avail cashless treatment during any emergency, one must check the insurance provider’s hospital network. At a network hospital, your insurer and the hospital together will take care of the expenses related to the treatment. You will enter the picture only when the hospitalisation expense will shoot up beyond your sum insured limit.

Claim settlement ratio

To ensure that there is minimal probability of your claim getting rejected, one should look at the claim settlement ratio of the insurer. This ratio shows how many claims have been settled/rejected by the company. You can also check the time taken to settle claims.

OPD cover

One must know that a regular health insurance policy does not cover you for OPD expenses like doctor’s consultation fees, different tests and X-rays, though these expenses can cost a considerable amount. So, it is important to buy a health cover that provides coverage for OPD expenses. An OPD cover assists the insured to claim expenses incurred other than on hospitalisation. Under OPD cover of your policy, you can claim expenses without a waiting period and make multiple claims within the same year until the limit is completely exhausted.

The writer is Head, Health Insurance, policybazaar.com

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New health insurance guidelines and what they mean for you

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In the recent past, insurance regulator IRDAI came out with standardised, customer-friendly guidelines for health insurance policies. These changes are implemented from October 1, 2020 and are largely expected to benefit the policyholders. Here’s more :

 

Definition of pre-existing diseases

One of the important amendments is the change in the definition of pre-existing diseases (PED) in health policies. This is because the old version had ambiguity in terms of what constitutes a pre-existing disease. Also, all conditions for which the person had signs/symptoms in the 48 months before taking the policy were considered PED.

IRDAI has changed this definition and has offered more clarity. As per the new definition, pre-existing disease means any condition, ailment, injury or illness that has been diagnosed by a physician/doctor within 48 months prior to the effective date of the policy issued by the insurer or its reinstatement; Or for which medical advice or treatment was recommended by, or received from, a physician within 48 months prior to the effective date of the policy or its reinstatement.

Changes in proportionate deductions

Liability of a health insurer is limited to the extent specified in the policy, and these are termed as sub-limits. The sub-limits are applicable mostly in cases such as room rent for hospitalisation, ICU, OPD (out-patient department) and ambulance cover. So, if you exceed the limit prescribed, the extra amount has to be paid from your pocket. That is, based on the type of room you occupy at the hospital, the cost of associate medical expenses also changes.

Higher room cost would mean the cost of associate medical expenses will also be higher. For instance, due to an emergency, assume someone is hospitalised in a room with a rent of ₹6,000 per day (while it a ₹4,000 a day limit in his policy). This increase of ₹2,000 in room rent will be applicable proportionately on associate medical expenses as well, such as doctor’s fees and nursing charges (in the ratio of room rent eligible to actual room rent). So, if the proportionate increase in medical expenses works out to ₹80,000 and the total hospital bill works out to ₹3 lakh, then the insurer will settle ₹2.2 lakh.

So to standardise the claim settlement in health policies, the regulator has established that associate medical expenses – the cost of pharmacy, consumables, implants, medical devices and diagnostics – cannot be subject to the proportionate clause. Insurers are not allowed to apply proportional deductions on ICU charges as well.

On claims

Health policies, sometimes, get rejected on the grounds of non-disclosure of medical issues (by mistake) even though the policyholders would have paid the premium for an extended period. This is because, during the issuance of a policy, many are not aware of certain pre-existing conditions, on the grounds of which the insurers reject claims later. Therefore, the regulator has ruled that health insurers cannot contest claims, citing non-disclosure, by clients who have continued with their policies for eight years. That is, after the expiry of moratorium period (the period of eight years during which the policyholders have continuously renewed their policy) no health claim shall be contestable, except for proven fraud and permanent exclusions specified in the policy contract. Policies would, however, be subject to all limits, sub-limits, co-payments, and deductibles based on the policy contract.

Other major changes

Generally, people with serious illnesses such as Alzheimer’s and epilepsy were not given coverage at all under a health policy previously. Insurers now have to provide individuals with such diseases, coverage for at least other diseases (specifying pre-existing conditions such as Alzheimer’s and epilepsy as permanent exclusions).

Also, the scope of coverage of health insurance policy is widened to provide cover for various illness including behaviour and neuro development disorders, genetic diseases and disorders and cover for puberty and menopause-related disorder. This was previously not covered by all insurers. Modern treatments too will be covered by a health policy including deep brain simulation, oral chemotherapy, robotic surgeries and stem cell therapy.

Waiting period (time period an insured has to wait before the insurer provides coverages) related to a specific disease has been standardised as well. While the standard waiting period is for 30 days, the disease-specific waiting period varies with each insurer, usually 2-4 years; for older policies, it went to over four years as well. The regulator has said that disease-specific waiting period cannot exceed four years. Similarly, the waiting period for lifestyle-related illnesses such as hypertension, diabetes and cardiac conditions cannot exceed 90 days.

Now, policyholders can pay their health insurance premiums in instalment in addition to lump-sum payments. Another change is that insurers have been advised to allow claim settlement for telemedicine consultation.

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