Monday, September 3, 2007

More for less



The government insurance agent (medical) sent a mail about the annual premium due from us.

It was with two options. With a little over a thousand Rupees extra (27 USD) in the premium from us, the cover for the kids is being upped to Rupees 100000 (2460 USD) from half that amount last year. Also from Rupees 100000, the two of us (husband and wife) and in fact all of us can now have up to Rupees 100000 medical cover.

That is a nice feeling. Not that we plan to use it. But medical insurance is an umbrella that assures you that you can access good medical care, hospitalization or treatment without getting debt ridden.

So, we are happy to avail of the floater option as they call it because for a little more from our side we get a larger cover if the need should ever arise.

But here is to you all, signing off with wishes for a long and healthy life!

PS. Have you taken a medical insurance yet? New India Assurance Co Ltd., Tata AIG, ICICI, and many other players in the market, what are you waiting for?

And if you reside out side India, somewhere in Europe, Australia, Africa or the USA, remember, we all need insurance of all kinds.

The recent floods in England should be a reminder of a case in time. So run for cover (of the right kind), will you?!

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Having a Medical Insurance pays


My daughter had to be hospitalized after her viral fever went out of hand. That was five years ago.

I had taken a sabbatical from work and my husband was supporting a family of old parents with expenses on the higher side, our two school going kids and my back-to-college sojourn. So naturally, finances were running low.

He tided over the crisis somehow. But the kid was treated in the best hospital in our district, my husband did bear a big dent in his pocket on account of the medical bills. With no insurance to fall back on, he had to bear it all by himself.

But that was a lesson to him. He learned that one cannot take health for granted and a medical insurance cover is the safety blanket to cushion you from rude shocks of the monetary kind. It also ensures timely and proper/recommended treatment.

So he quickly approached a few medical insurance agents. Before ICICI could spring an offer to him, their regular savings bank customer and investor, a government insurance company of decades of standing made the kill.

For three years almost we paid the insurance premium without any usage. We even earned a no-claims bonus.

Then suddenly the boy came down with a bad case of fever and dehydration. Emergency hospitalization followed and I only told the medical team at the hospital that we have an insurance. Hours after admission I submitted the photocopy of papers that my agent faxed me.

The insurance guys went out of the way to help. I call it out-of-the-way as I was afraid they would not bother. Thankfully, it was done without a hiccup and after a week's stay we left the hospital with no dues on us and yet poorer by not a penny as the Insurance guys had paid the bill.

More medical mishaps were on the way. My eyesight had begun playing truant with me. An ophthalmologist gave me a shocking verdict.

"You have cataract."

I must have jumped out of my skin, almost. The doctor tried to reassure me that it is not such a rare condition and surely treatable. A few newborn babies too have the condition. It is after all nothing but the opacity of the lens...etc.

Surgery is the only cure at advanced stages. Once I fell down at twilight hours and was almost run over by on-coming traffic on Delhi's Ring Road. I knew it was time to think of surgery.

But it was my precious eye! I could not trust it to any doctor down the lane. It had to be the best one whose previous success stories were before me.

So I zeroed down on Centre For Sight in Delhi. But the package they spoke of threw me out of gear.

Rs 30,000/-! Goddamn it, that's almost 732 USD, a small sum for someone in the USA but in India, that is a TV Correspondent's average take-home salary! I wavered, but damn it, it was my eye that I was talking about.

With trepidation, we called our insurance agent.

Surprise!!!

With no ifs, buts or any corners cut, the amount was sanctioned in full and presto! After a week, I walked out of surgery with an intra ocular lens fitted inside the operated eye and no bill to shed tears on.

That's why, I am glad we did not take for granted that accidents, hospitalization and health setbacks cannot happen to us.

Have you had any bad or good experiences with insurance agents? I would love to feature them here. So people, do write your comments and check out the insurance ads that I have here to let you chose.