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Health Ins Claim Refused

2

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    Knee replacement January 2018, on what was once called the old VHI Plan C Options. I phoned to check cover before op, VHI said there would be a shortfall but to phone Beacon & try & negotiate with them, which I did. They went through the patter that it wasn't normally covered but that they would do so on this occasion. I don't know on what criteria they agreed to make the exception. Maybe if I started quickly needing another joint done they'd refuse to cover the shortfall. I think it is an operating theatre cost rather than bed cost, because the VHI mumbled something about the fact that "high tech hospitals are not fully covered for orthopaedic procedures", and I asked them what hospital they considered "non high tech", and Vincent's Private was one such, although most private hospitals in Dublin area are apparently considered "high tech".

    Had a major very big surgery in Beacon in 2016, a full colectomy with ileostomy, which they agreed to entirely cover at the outset. However I got a bill subsequently for ICU consultant fee, and VHI told me they weren't going to cover that, and in future I should phone them before agreeing to treatment in a private ICU. Now I was not very conscious at the time, needing resus etc, not in a position to take up a phone & negotiate etc. The bill I received was €8000, I firmly refused to pay it, and was let off. The consultant seems to have agreed to take less than what he wanted or else he negotiated a bit more than VHI were willing to pay him. My care required his close attention over 3 days.

    Things keep changing, so what applied to me above may not apply anymore, it is really difficult to keep abreast of things. You might take out cover, thinking it is suitable, then you get sick and undergo a procedure or get emergency treatment only to be told that what has happened you is no longer covered. I don't think folk realise just how unpredictable and precarious medical insurance cover is. Ideally you need to have a little savings pot of about €10K to cover these shortfalls should you be surprised. And one must bear in mind that any hospital admission, even for an apparently minor procedure, can unexpectedly incur complications which medical insurance doesn't quite cover. Sepsis can just set in out of the blue. There are too many changing variables to always ensure you have the right cover at the right time. You are playing against an ever moving goal-post.


    Thanks for your reply.

    according to the link below -

    https://www.justlanded.com/english/Ireland/Ireland-Guide/Health/Hospitals-Clinics



    Private and high-tech hospitals
    Irish hospitals can be generally grouped into 3 categories. Apart from public hospitals, which offer treatment for all Irish residents and EU-citizens, there are also private and high-tech hospitals. This categorization is important when you consider buying private health insurance, as the latter two are only covered by private insurance schemes. The group of private hospitals includes all private operated clinics except the Mater Private Hospital, the Blackrock Clinic and the Beacon Hospital. These three hospitals are referred to as high-tech hospitals and are only covered by the most expensive schemes of private insurance.


    But on the irish life link below, there is a different answer again.

    https://help.irishlifehealth.ie/hc/en-us/articles/360000480858-What-Is-a-High-Tech-Hospital-

    What Is a High-Tech Hospital?
    The Blackrock Clinic, the Mater Private and the Beacon Hospital are the only three high-tech hospitals in Ireland.

    These are private hospitals with specialised equipment and they treat complex conditions including cardiac, oncology (cancer) and orthopaedic conditions.

    On Level 1 plans* the high-tech hospitals are the Blackrock Clinic, the Mater Private and the Beacon Hospital, the Hermitage Clinic and the Galway Clinic.


    So, yes its made to be confusing on purpose.

    The ICU bill - that is a common trick done by all private hospitals.
    The patient is admitted to ICU after a procedure in order to charge the insurance a hefty fee that was not approved beforehand.

    The patient is usually not conscious and that's how they get away with it.

    They are admitted to ICU - even when it is not necessary in order to profit.

    Many times the patient is never aware of the bill when the insurance company settle this directly.

    Your last statement about the ever-moving goal post is just so spot on.

    There are over 300 plans on the market.

    The link below is very interesting stating the shortfalls on nearly every plan now - or €2000 euro co-payments necessary for any procedure.


    https://www.askaboutmoney.com/threads/20-shortfall-on-specified-orthopaedic-procedures.221673/


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    So basically, they are charging the same or more, making policies impossible for the ordinary person to understand/work through, and saying policies over less/saying higher excesses have to be paid.

    I find the two year wait for an elderly, long term customer astounding - someone who wasn't looking for an upgrade, who was just enquiring if a more suitable policy was available to them cos their husband had died.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Shazamm wrote: »
    Thanks for your reply.

    according to the link below -

    https://www.justlanded.com/english/Ireland/Ireland-Guide/Health/Hospitals-Clinics



    Private and high-tech hospitals
    Irish hospitals can be generally grouped into 3 categories. Apart from public hospitals, which offer treatment for all Irish residents and EU-citizens, there are also private and high-tech hospitals. This categorization is important when you consider buying private health insurance, as the latter two are only covered by private insurance schemes. The group of private hospitals includes all private operated clinics except the Mater Private Hospital, the Blackrock Clinic and the Beacon Hospital. These three hospitals are referred to as high-tech hospitals and are only covered by the most expensive schemes of private insurance.


    But on the irish life link below, there is a different answer again.

    https://help.irishlifehealth.ie/hc/en-us/articles/360000480858-What-Is-a-High-Tech-Hospital-

    What Is a High-Tech Hospital?
    The Blackrock Clinic, the Mater Private and the Beacon Hospital are the only three high-tech hospitals in Ireland.

    These are private hospitals with specialised equipment and they treat complex conditions including cardiac, oncology (cancer) and orthopaedic conditions.

    On Level 1 plans* the high-tech hospitals are the Blackrock Clinic, the Mater Private and the Beacon Hospital, the Hermitage Clinic and the Galway Clinic.


    So, yes its made to be confusing on purpose.

    The ICU bill - that is a common trick done by all private hospitals.
    The patient is admitted to ICU after a procedure in order to charge the insurance a hefty fee that was not approved beforehand.

    The patient is usually not conscious and that's how they get away with it.

    They are admitted to ICU - even when it is not necessary in order to profit.

    Many times the patient is never aware of the bill when the insurance company settle this directly.

    Your last statement about the ever-moving goal post is just so spot on.

    There are over 300 plans on the market.

    The link below is very interesting stating the shortfalls on nearly every plan now - or €2000 euro co-payments necessary for any procedure.


    https://www.askaboutmoney.com/threads/20-shortfall-on-specified-orthopaedic-procedures.221673/

    Just to be clear about the ICU admissions in my case, I was admitted for 24 hours post surgery as I had required 6 units of blood during surgery and had Hg of about 6, so was fairly unstable. When I was operated on there were an unexpectedly large number of inflammatory adhesions full of blood vessels (after years of inflammatory bowel disease) which took them by surprise, then within a day or do of being transferred to ward I suffered severe Afib following further blood loss, lung collapse had cardioversion, and had to be taken back to ICU for a further 48 hours, more transfusions etc. It was totally necessary if I was to survive. A severe post-op infection then further delayed discharge from hospital. I had practically all the potential complications that were explained could possibly happen.

    One can be unlucky. In a recent admission another person on ward took unexpectedly very bad in front of my eyes, and had to be put on a ventilator. These things can happen so quickly that co sent cannot be obtained. All I can say is that it seems to me that more truly adequate medical insurance will cost at least 5000, but I would still imagine shortfalls occur.

    I was virtually born into private health insurance in 1960s when there was only the semi-state operator, VHI, and no such thing as the specialised tech stuff there is now. People sometimes occupied hospital beds for a week after surgeries where they'd now be discharged one or two days later. Gallbladders had two week stays which are unheard of now unless somewhere goes wrong. Your insurance was to pay for bed occupancy time as much as anything else.

    Medicine is evolving rapidly, equipment needs to be paid for, of course Major surgeries are being done robotically, sometimes with 24 hour discharges, and it seems whether your operation uses such equipment or not your costs contribute to paying for it. Insurance has become r dry but as complex as the procedures, and probably more incomprehensible to be honest. We are ever more approaching USA type medicine costs. I am actually far more boggled by the insurance than the medical aspect, at least the former is a bit of fascinating science.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    So not only have you to decipher the various shortfalls etc for all types of ailments, but if you do have to be admitted for something, you have to then enquire what the costs would be should you hit complications, as you did. There are stats of risks to anything, so someone has to to be unlucky and hit additional problems. Asking people to do that when they are being admitted to ICU is nuts. What you'll find happening is people masking ailments, leaving too early so they don't rack up a bigger bill. Modelling the States as you said. It's very depressing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    So not only have you to decipher the various shortfalls etc for all types of ailments, but if you do have to be admitted for something, you have to then enquire what the costs would be should you hit complications, as you did. There are stats of risks to anything, so someone has to to be unlucky and hit additional problems. Asking people to do that when they are being admitted to ICU is nuts. What you'll find happening is people masking ailments, leaving too early so they don't rack up a bigger bill. Modelling the States as you said. It's very depressing.

    Great point.

    "to decipher the various shortfalls for all types of ailments" - when it is any ever-changing system and the information for the ailments is not freely available and can change at the drop of a hat.

    The health insurance authority has an email system and the latest news section which they share on Facebook.

    https://www.hia.ie/news/latest-news

    There are changes constantly - every month, to every package.

    It is impossible to follow

    For example - the policy I'm on changed mid-policy-year and has completely different rules now previous to the change.

    I'm only aware of it due to the hia link above and there is no information or contact from the insurance about the changes***

    They should share any changes to your policy and give you a chance to navigate things better but they don't.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I was looking at the new Mater Private "Day Hospital" centres in north and south suburbs, whereby you have all your tests on an outpatient basis without having to go within the hospital premises in the city, which to me sounds like a splendid kind of idea, and avoids unnecessary footfall in the hospital building. However I was told by somebody working there that it is not (yet anyway) covered by any form of medical insurance and is purely "self-pay", ie you pay the full cost yourself. Seems the insurance companies want you to occupy hospital beds, but then when you find yourself in one unnecessarily as per insurance company, you get the bill.

    Example I give here. In the midst of the complications (which spanned a couple of months) of that major surgery I had in 2016 and which landed me a few times as inpatient), the Beacon phoned me to tell me they had an overnight bed for a procedure and to come in to admissions that afternoon. I had had already undergone a couple of postoperative procures to drain a recurrent abscess, so I had my bag on the ready and obeyed instructions to turn up. Next morning I was told by consultant that he hadn't ordered me in overnight, and there must have been confusion. I got a big bill, which I refused to pay, and after trying it on, and my threatening to sue for their error at calling me in, they relented and withdrew the invoice. You have to stand up to them on these things, and it will not come against you,

    My general advice about private v public hospital treatment is that if you have a full emergency (chest pain, severe unfamiliar head pain, extreme abdominal pain that lasts over 15 hours at high level & especially if accompanied by vomiting, leg swelling with pain that appears like a clot, respiratory infection with severe breathlessness, very high temperature with rash, or signs of a stroke) go to a public hospital emergency department and avoid private facilities where attention may be delayed by phone triage or referral system & no paramedics to attend to you on your journey. If you want to speed up an orthopaedic procedure or one to remedy a painful/inconvenient but non life-threatening condition, by all means consider private; most of all private comes into its own when speeding up endoscopy procedures to detect potential cancer where an undue delay may be feared in the public system.

    It is worth remembering that a major public hospital has a wealth of expertise on hand when things go pear-shaped, and can provide timely interventions. When admitted to a private hospital one relies majorly on one's consultant for the care pathway. Often likes of gastroenteric surgeons in the hospitals have mini teams (similar to public hospitals) to step in and escalate care should things get complicated. I have have witnessed an incident in a private hospital where somebody unexpectedly took very seriously ill and needed ventilation. The patient's non-surgical consultant was asleep at home in bed at the time, and although nurses and one of two doctors on duty helped to keep patient resuscitated they could not be put on ventilation until the arrival of the elderly consultant to sign permission. I have heard consultants advise against having care in a private hospital if there is any kind of complicated scenario on the cards.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    What happens in that scenario, where the terms of the policy change mid policy? Would they refuse a claim I wonder, or honour it based on when you entered the policy?

    I am still waiting to receive the recordings of the calls we had with them, nor have I received the transcript of the online chat that I had with them, despite both being requested and being told the former was being sent to me about three weeks ago.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13 Nuna


    Firstly, if you look for the hospital benefits for both plans you should be able to see if they both cover private hospitals easily enough. If they both cover private hosptials then you could contact the billing department in the Hermitage and ask if the procedure would have been covered in full under the old plan. If the answer is yes than the 2 years waiting period is irrelevant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13 Nuna


    Firstly, if you look for the hospital benefits for both plans you should be able to see if they both cover private hospitals easily enough. If they both cover private hosptials then you could contact the billing department in the Hermitage and ask if the procedure would have been covered in full under the old plan. If the answer is yes than the 2 years waiting period is irrelevant.


  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    I was looking at the new Mater Private "Day Hospital" centres in north and south suburbs, whereby you have all your tests on an outpatient basis without having to go within the hospital premises in the city, which to me sounds like a splendid kind of idea, and avoids unnecessary footfall in the hospital building. However I was told by somebody working there that it is not (yet anyway) covered by any form of medical insurance and is purely "self-pay", ie you pay the full cost yourself. Seems the insurance companies want you to occupy hospital beds, but then when you find yourself in one unnecessarily as per insurance company, you get the bill.

    Example I give here. In the midst of the complications (which spanned a couple of months) of that major surgery I had in 2016 and which landed me a few times as inpatient), the Beacon phoned me to tell me they had an overnight bed for a procedure and to come in to admissions that afternoon. I had had already undergone a couple of postoperative procures to drain a recurrent abscess, so I had my bag on the ready and obeyed instructions to turn up. Next morning I was told by consultant that he hadn't ordered me in overnight, and there must have been confusion. I got a big bill, which I refused to pay, and after trying it on, and my threatening to sue for their error at calling me in, they relented and withdrew the invoice. You have to stand up to them on these things, and it will not come against you,

    My general advice about private v public hospital treatment is that if you have a full emergency (chest pain, severe unfamiliar head pain, extreme abdominal pain that lasts over 15 hours at high level & especially if accompanied by vomiting, leg swelling with pain that appears like a clot, respiratory infection with severe breathlessness, very high temperature with rash, or signs of a stroke) go to a public hospital emergency department and avoid private facilities where attention may be delayed by phone triage or referral system & no paramedics to attend to you on your journey. If you want to speed up an orthopaedic procedure or one to remedy a painful/inconvenient but non life-threatening condition, by all means consider private; most of all private comes into its own when speeding up endoscopy procedures to detect potential cancer where an undue delay may be feared in the public system.

    It is worth remembering that a major public hospital has a wealth of expertise on hand when things go pear-shaped, and can provide timely interventions. When admitted to a private hospital one relies majorly on one's consultant for the care pathway. Often likes of gastroenteric surgeons in the hospitals have mini teams (similar to public hospitals) to step in and escalate care should things get complicated. I have have witnessed an incident in a private hospital where somebody unexpectedly took very seriously ill and needed ventilation. The patient's non-surgical consultant was asleep at home in bed at the time, and although nurses and one of two doctors on duty helped to keep patient resuscitated they could not be put on ventilation until the arrival of the elderly consultant to sign permission. I have heard consultants advise against having care in a private hospital if there is any kind of complicated scenario on the cards.

    Great points.
    There is a debate over which consultants are actually better ....private or public.

    Private - are incentivised to operate and they'll be paid well.....versus public who have a limited budget and get paid either way.

    the two tier system does not work


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  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    What happens in that scenario, where the terms of the policy change mid policy? Would they refuse a claim I wonder, or honour it based on when you entered the policy?

    I am still waiting to receive the recordings of the calls we had with them, nor have I received the transcript of the online chat that I had with them, despite both being requested and being told the former was being sent to me about three weeks ago.

    It seems you have to know what you entitled otherwise you'd accept their refusal.

    Look at the articles again about the insurance companies turning down everything first and foremost in the irish times and only relenting when forced....eg ombudsman....legal etc.

    But the ombudsman is useless and only is for public systems.
    The financial ombudsman is for insurance and again seems hopeless.


    You will probably not receive the recordings as they want you to ....disappear and accept the scenario.

    They exercise this so you won't be able to appeal.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    The Hermitage originally told us to check with VHI to see if she was covered, so I am not sure they will be able to/want to tell me if the procedure was covered under the old scheme. VHI themselves told me her old policy didn't cover it. But did it not cover it under the policy as it stands right now (as a poster above said they regularly change schemes mid policy) or was it not covered under it ever? Which is something new I need to find out.

    Under GDPR regulations, they have to share those recordings with you if you request them. As they do the web chat.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The Hermitage originally told us to check with VHI to see if she was covered, so I am not sure they will be able to/want to tell me if the procedure was covered under the old scheme. VHI themselves told me her old policy didn't cover it. But did it not cover it under the policy as it stands right now (as a poster above said they regularly change schemes mid policy) or was it not covered under it ever? Which is something new I need to find out.

    Under GDPR regulations, they have to share those recordings with you if you request them. As they do the web chat.

    Will be very interested to know the outcome of this.


  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    The Hermitage originally told us to check with VHI to see if she was covered, so I am not sure they will be able to/want to tell me if the procedure was covered under the old scheme. VHI themselves told me her old policy didn't cover it. But did it not cover it under the policy as it stands right now (as a poster above said they regularly change schemes mid policy) or was it not covered under it ever? Which is something new I need to find out.

    Under GDPR regulations, they have to share those recordings with you if you request them. As they do the web chat.

    This is good to know.
    They're taking their time getting things together.

    One patient who received contrasting advice over the approval got the cover when the recordings were reviewed.

    she would have been refused flat out had she not been proven to have been told the wrong advice.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I always laugh at some of the advice given re health insurance by consumer experts on the radio etc. They will frequently tell us "seek the cover you want....don't go for stuff you won't need". Now, apart from pregnancy cover, this 60 year old woman cannot predict what stuff I might of might not need. It can be hard to predict what might go wrong with you, and what hospital service might best be suited to the ailment of your future. Whatever befalls me, I wanted very substantially covered as I might have run out of spare money to cover shortfalls and I got medical insurance in the first place so as I don't have to sell the house over my head.

    The experts often talk about private versus semi private rooms. This is a changing scene too, as private hospitals are mostly converting to fully private rooms, especially as a response to Covid. It is realised that room sharing is a very bad idea in a hospital setting for the sake of infection control. Indeed, if you do develop a transmissible infection you are normally transferred to a sole occupancy room, even in a public hospital. The days of when it was seen as a luxury or price large area disappearing, but of course our insurance will all go up to cover this.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    So there is little to report back progress wise. Last week I received the CD with the conversation I had with them in June. This was requested early December, and they said they were sending it out then. They also said they would send me the conversation my mother had with them three days before me in June, but the letter with the CD said they couldn't send me that without my mother's permission. This is the first I heard of that, it wasn't mentioned to me in Dec they would need her permission...plus, I am down as a named contact on her policy.

    Also, in December, they told me that a webchat I had with them (when I enquired with the operation code) they told me in December that that webchat stated their benefits line was busy, and if I wanted to hold or request a call back. The webchat detail they sent me in the letter with the CV doesn't state that. It says that I would need to call the benefits line to ask that. So what they told me in Dec is different to what I am reading.

    Yet, when I asked on webchat in December, if her old policy covered that operation code, they were able to answer me with a yes/no answer on the webchat...


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,363 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    They also said they would send me the conversation my mother had with them three days before me in June, but the letter with the CD said they couldn't send me that without my mother's permission. This is the first I heard of that, it wasn't mentioned to me in Dec they would need her permission...plus, I am down as a named contact on her policy.


    Customer service people are legal experts and it's in their nature to be helpful. I would expect when a compliance officer looked at it, he said no, which is correct. Even if you are named on the policy, you don't have a right to people's private conversations.


    Also, in December, they told me that a webchat I had with them (when I enquired with the operation code) they told me in December that that webchat stated their benefits line was busy, and if I wanted to hold or request a call back. The webchat detail they sent me in the letter with the CV doesn't state that. It says that I would need to call the benefits line to ask that. So what they told me in Dec is different to what I am reading.

    Yet, when I asked on webchat in December, if her old policy covered that operation code, they were able to answer me with a yes/no answer on the webchat...


    Can you remember this? If they told you that at the time, one would expect that you followed it up, since that was your objective at the time. So there should be more telephone conversations....


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    I understand the GDPR element, I guess my point is that when I asked in December for those call recordings, it wasn't mentioned then that my mother's permission would be needed. I was told then that both her and my conversation were being sent out. They even rang me back to get my postal address as she said she had them ready to send. We are now nearly five weeks after that exchange and only now am I being told they couldn't send me that.

    They said they called me back the next day, but I don't recall a missed call from them.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    If anyone is curious or in a similar situation, you can review cases that were brought to the Ombudsman here.

    https://www.fspo.ie/decisions/

    Just been highlighted to me so thought I would share it. I'm none the wiser having reviewed some of the cases here that were due to pre-existing conditions.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    If anyone is curious or in a similar situation, you can review cases that were brought to the Ombudsman here.

    https://www.fspo.ie/decisions/

    Just been highlighted to me so thought I would share it. I'm none the wiser having reviewed some of the cases here that were due to pre-existing conditions.

    The moral of the story is that if you are suffering symptoms don't expect it to be covered for years by a new insurance product. It's understandable as the purpose of insurance is to cover the unexpected. You just have to go public with your existing ailments.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    That's true...especially if you have recently obtained health insurance for the first time. Or changed providers. In this situation, she enquired if there was a more suitable policy for her given her new widowed status. At that time, she had no symptoms of anything for the ailment that subsequently arose, and she had no break in policy in the 55 years she was a customer.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    That's true...especially if you have recently obtained health insurance for the first time. Or changed providers. In this situation, she enquired if there was a more suitable policy for her given her new widowed status. At that time, she had no symptoms of anything for the ailment that subsequently arose, and she had no break in policy in the 55 years she was a customer.

    Absolutely woeful, and with the advice thrown out by Conor Pope on Ray Darcy one would think it was an easy enough matter to get the right insurance without paying over the odds. They are all trying to make as much out of us as possible, same with the motor insurers, and make every effort to conceal a policy that might save you money. It's almost a no-win situation.


  • Registered Users Posts: 102 ✭✭intothewest


    From what I have read of the Ombudsman appeal cases online, what is determined as 'pre-existing' is based on what the insurer's own Medical team deem as pre-existing. In some of the cases I read, they even stated over the phone when the insured were making enquiries as to what was deemed pre-existing, that they wouldn't be able to determine that until after a procedure, when all the medical notes could be reviewed. In some cases, there were very clear statements from GP's/doctors, stating dates etc and vouching for the patient that their condition was not pre-existing given their known history of the patient. Yet claims were still refused based on the insurers own medical teams take on the same notes (cos there would be no bias there!). A lot of people are genuinely walking around with conditions that will be discovered within 2/5/10 years of taking out policies. Or in my mothers case, they are saying it was there within six months of her changing policy, and therefore the 2 year wait applied.

    So, be careful if you:
    1. change policy
    2. change provider
    3. have a break in policy

    Because you are playing russian roulette that you won't need to use your insurance during the waiting period and/or that whatever you are unlucky enough to have is not deemed pre-existing so that you are covered, or a basic ailment (whatever that would be). Your best bet is that whatever you have is an emergency, or you can wait for the lengthy public list (which in post covid world, will probably be as long as a waiting period)!!


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,363 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    The moral of the story is that if you are suffering symptoms don't expect it to be covered for years by a new insurance product. It's understandable as the purpose of insurance is to cover the unexpected. You just have to go public with your existing ailments.

    It’s always easy to be wise in hindsight and as far as I can find there seems to be very little advice out there for Irish customer. Personally, I feel that once you reach fifty you need to be very careful about messing around with your health insurance. There are many holes you can fall down and even with the best will in the world most client facing staff don’t understand the consequences.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,376 ✭✭✭Shemale


    So they called me. The claim is still rejected. Mam rang them on June 22nd about the op. Policy changed July 1st.

    They said it was pre-existing, therefore the 2 year waiting period applied. I said she had only had the scan that week, so while the new policy discussed was in May, she wasn't aware of it, it wasn't on her radar. So I tried to argue that it wasn't pre-existing at the time of the policy upgrade enquiry - but they said that once there have been any signs/symptoms, even if you weren't aware of it, that it's deemed as pre-existing. They base it off the consultants notes.

    I called on 25.06 with the code, but they weren't able to tell me, they had to transfer me to another dept to confirm it but there was a wait, so they said they would call me back cos there was a wait and I must've been on work calls. They said they called back on 26.06, but I don't recall a missed call. Yet, when I enquired online the other day on webchat about the hosp code, they could tell me straight away.

    She said she will bring it to her manager, but I don't hold out much hope. She said the next step would be the Ombudsman, but I am sure they would be the same.

    Get your mam to put in a Data Protection request, she entitled to a copy of all information they hold about her on her policy, this would include call recordings, web chat transcripts and any notes ie if Hermitage were in contact. They can't charge more than about €6.50 for this

    I would also request details of their Professional Indemnity insurance, I think they should carry this. This gives them cover where their advice has caused a customer financial loss, if they recommended the switch and knew about the condition I think your mam could claim here. They would not want a claims on this as the premiums can go mad after a few claims and they might just agree to cover the cost of the procedure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,998 ✭✭✭Eggs For Dinner


    Shemale wrote: »
    Get your mam to put in a Data Protection request, she entitled to a copy of all information they hold about her on her policy, this would include call recordings, web chat transcripts and any notes ie if Hermitage were in contact. They can't charge more than about €6.50 for this

    I would also request details of their Professional Indemnity insurance, I think they should carry this. This gives them cover where their advice has caused a customer financial loss, if they recommended the switch and knew about the condition I think your mam could claim here. They would not want a claims on this as the premiums can go mad after a few claims and they might just agree to cover the cost of the procedure.

    You are not entitled to ask anything about their insurance arrangements. It has nothing to do with you what cover they hold. If you want to sue them, go ahead through the usual channels


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,376 ✭✭✭Shemale


    You are not entitled to ask anything about their insurance arrangements. It has nothing to do with you what cover they hold. If you want to sue them, go ahead through the usual channels

    Who said entitled? I said ask, they either give it and his mams solicitor can lodge a claim on the policy or they can realise it is cheaper to pay her claim if they ****ed up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,998 ✭✭✭Eggs For Dinner


    Shemale wrote: »
    Who said entitled? I said ask, they either give it and his mams solicitor can lodge a claim on the policy or they can realise it is cheaper to pay her claim if they ****ed up.

    You obviously have no idea how liability insurance works. Nobody can lodge a claim on a policy other than the policyholder. For instance, I can't just contact your house insurers seeking compensation for a fall in your house. I have to take an action against you first and you then pass the matter to your insurers to handle.


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,363 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    Shemale wrote: »
    Who said entitled? I said ask, they either give it and his mams solicitor can lodge a claim on the policy or they can realise it is cheaper to pay her claim if they ****ed up.


    Your a completely out of your depth. This is false and misleading and servers not useful purpose.


    Mod warning: Please stop.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 241 ✭✭Shazamm


    From what I have read of the Ombudsman appeal cases online, what is determined as 'pre-existing' is based on what the insurer's own Medical team deem as pre-existing. In some of the cases I read, they even stated over the phone when the insured were making enquiries as to what was deemed pre-existing, that they wouldn't be able to determine that until after a procedure, when all the medical notes could be reviewed. In some cases, there were very clear statements from GP's/doctors, stating dates etc and vouching for the patient that their condition was not pre-existing given their known history of the patient. Yet claims were still refused based on the insurers own medical teams take on the same notes (cos there would be no bias there!). A lot of people are genuinely walking around with conditions that will be discovered within 2/5/10 years of taking out policies. Or in my mothers case, they are saying it was there within six months of her changing policy, and therefore the 2 year wait applied.

    So, be careful if you:
    1. change policy
    2. change provider
    3. have a break in policy

    Because you are playing russian roulette that you won't need to use your insurance during the waiting period and/or that whatever you are unlucky enough to have is not deemed pre-existing so that you are covered, or a basic ailment (whatever that would be). Your best bet is that whatever you have is an emergency, or you can wait for the lengthy public list (which in post covid world, will probably be as long as a waiting period)!!

    has there been any update?


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