Here
are the main reasons for rejection you must watch out for in your own insurance
We
buy insurance expecting claims to be paid and feel bitter when that does not
happen. In an ideal world, insurers would communicate terms in easy-to-follow
language; buyers would take the time to read about what they are buying;
documents to file a claim would be simple; and helpful customer service
executives would ask for bank details to transfer the claim payment. Nothing is
farther from reality.
Claim
rejection is high and until there is a better grievance handling system, we
would do well to understand why. Watch out for the main reasons for rejection in
your own insurances.
Health
insurance claims are denied because hospitalisation was due to a pre-existing
disease not disclosed. The fact that a disease is pre-existing gets found out
from the doctor's case history. When insurers smell a rat, they ask for the
daily hospital and surgical notes as well. These, almost always, bring out the
truth because the patient's medical background is captured accurately for all
the medical staff to refer to. The diseases that are hidden most often are
hypertension (good medication can prevent this from being diagnosed), diabetes
(medicine comes to the rescue again), internal cysts and neurological diseases
such as epilepsy. When a claim is rejected patients get indignant but, often,
the subterfuge was deliberate. Where insurers go overboard is in their zeal to
classify everything as pre-existing. There are situations where an innocuous
comment by the doctor, for example, in listing out a possible differential
diagnosis such as "diabetic ?" has resulted in rejection. In many
cases the root cause of hospitalisation is subjective. For example, was the
sharp drop in haemoglobin because of pre-existing piles or newly-discovered
ulcers? Once the insurer takes a position on this, generally in its own favour,
it is hard to convince it otherwise. Life insurance and overseas travel claims
are also rejected primarily due to non-disclosure of pre-existing medical
problems.
In
motor insurance, claims are often rejected because of negligence. Did you leave
the keys in the car? Start the engine when it was flooded? Drove with an
expired license? Were you drinking and driving? Insurers look for signs of
negligence in police or medico-legal reports. Your description of the accident
needs to be consistent to the insurer, surveyor, investigator and anyone else
who calls. Another reason for rejections is that the vehicle is in commercial
use but the insurance is for personal.
Home
insurance claims don't get paid because of specific exclusions relating to
normal wear and tear, seepage and short circuits. Fires caused by short
circuits, wall damage due to seepage are common rejections. The other issue in
home insurance is that they are incorrectly placed. For example a basement,
which is a material risk for insurers, is not declared. Or the fact that the
house has been unoccupied is not mentioned. Or that there is commercial
activity such as paying guests or small offices being run on the premises are
not described. A problem recently encountered is that the person who bought the
insurance does not have an insurable interest in the home. For example, a
tenant buys building insurance or the facilities management company in a
high-rise buys home insurance rather than the home owners themselves.
Burglary
claims are rejected because the buyer didn't inform the insurer that the house
would be unoccupied for an extended period of time. The second most common
issue is that insurance covers burglary, as in a forced break-in, but not
theft, which is an inside job. Many claims go unreported as it is undisclosed
cash or gold that is filched. Severe underinsurance, when the value of goods is
understated to keep premiums low, also results in rejection.
Marine
insurance covers goods in transit, when you relocate or send material
elsewhere. These claims are rejected because standard insurance covers
accidents whereas claims often relate to pilferage or damages without an
accident. Recently, someone was transferring a valuable figurine in a truck. En
route the statue disintegrated. The claim was rejected because there was no
evidence of an accident. The customer's vivid make-believe portrayal of how the
truck driver had to swerve to avoid a collision struck no chord.
Professionals
such as doctors, chartered accountants and architects often buy liability
insurances to cover negligence related litigation. The number of claims filed
in these liability insurances is still low and it will be interesting to see
how often claims get paid in the future. The contracts are stringent and there
will be ample opportunity to reject claims. The key here is to describe the
scale and nature of your business accurately in the proposal form.
Small
businesses buy insurance to cover losses to computers and phones. These claims
are denied mainly because the damage was caused by negligence. Laptops are most
prone to such denials. Generally, laptops get spoilt due to rough handling,
which is not claimable.
Most
of us buy insurances with a single-minded focus on price. Claim rejections can
be prevented if we had a single-minded focus on product features instead, such
as mediclaim with low waiting periods, home insurance with an accurate
description of structure and contents, marine insurance that covers all-risks
rather than just accidents. These cost more but make the insurance meaningful.
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