Are you a senior citizen and have lost
all hope of buying a regular health insurance policy? Well, if you are still
under 65 years of age, you wouldn't be too old to get one some time from now.
The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) has asked general
insurance companies to keep at least 65 years as the maximum entry age for a
health insurance policy.
The present problem: Across the 16 insurers that offer health
insurance policies in India ,
there are many choices. However, once you are over 50 years, your options get
limited -- most insurers do not offer fresh covers beyond this threshold. (see
Entry Age Limits).
Also, you will have to undergo some self-funded medical tests -- the older
you are, the stricter the tests get. Even after this, you may not get a cover
on the ground of you being medically unfit. If you are fit, there may not be a
policy for your age group. In that case, you will have to opt for the
especially designed senior citizens' policy.
Senior citizens' plans: Here's a list of standalone senior citizens'
health policies, the age band that they cover and the maximum sum insured they
offer. To facilitate a comparison among these, we give indicative premiums
assuming that the policy is for a 60-year-old with a sum insured of Rs 1 lakh
(Rs 100,000).
|
Insurance Policy |
Entry Age (yrs) |
Max. Sum Insured (Rs lakh) |
Annual Premium (Rs) |
|
Bajaj [ Images ] Allianz General
Insurance Silver Health |
46-70 |
5 |
5,736 |
|
Oriental
Insurance Hope |
No upper
limit |
5 |
4,500 |
|
National
Insurance Varistha Mediclaim |
60-80 |
1 |
4,180 |
|
Star
Health and Allied Insurance Senior Citizen Red Carpet |
60-69 |
2 |
5,000 |
IRDA's solution: The regulator aims at addressing all such problems.
No insurer will be able to refuse an older persom a cover or load him with
extra premium without giving a valid reason for doing so. "Such reasons
should stand the scrutiny of reasonableness and fairness," IRDA has said.
Important as it may be, the health insurance market is arbitrary at present.
For example, while some insurers reimburse the cost of medical tests to be
undergone by a customer above the age of 45 years, others don't, and some
others reimburse only part of it.
Beginning July 1, all insurers will have to reimburse 50 per cent of the cost
of tests if they agree to cover the customer after medical examination.
At the time of refiling their products with Irda or launching new ones,
general insurers will have to include these clauses in their policies.
Says Sanjay Datta, head (health insurance), ICICI Lombard General Insurance: "The sector
is heading towards more transparency and consistency. With the entry age being
extended to 65 years, customers would have greater flexibility in choosing a
plan and also since now disclosures are explained upfront, an insured would
know what's in stock for him."
The future problem:
Cross-subsidisation: Some insurers feel that the move could lead to
cross-subsidisation and a subsequent increase in the premium for younger
people.
Says Sreeraj Deshpande, head (underwriting), Bajaj Allianz General
Insurance: "We have a separate policy for senior citizens as they comprise
a different risk pool. Cross-subsidisation may be a natural fallout of
combining two risk pools -- that of senior citizens and younger people. To
compensate the risk associated with senior citizens, younger people may have to
shell out a little extra."
Senior citizens' policies were introduced keeping cross-subsidisation in
mind. These policies have a lower sum insured and greater premium and are,
therefore, self-sustainable. These policies also considered other needs of
senior citizens.
For example, Star Health and Allied Insurance Senior Citizen Red Carpet
policy offers to insure people in the age group of 60-69 years without a
medical test. It also covers pre-existing diseases right from the first year.
National Insurance's Varistha Mediclaim, too, mandates no medical tests,
gives no-claim benefits and includes pre-existing diseases after one claim-free
year.
However, while Senior Citizen Red Carpet gives a sum insured of up to Rs 2
lakh, Varistha Mediclaim offers a maximum sum insured of only Rs 1 lakh.
Medical reimbursement: The fact that the insurer will now have to
reimburse at least 50 per cent of costs of medical tests may also lead to a
hike in premiums.
Entry age limits: The insurance regulator has mandated that the
maximum entry age for a standard health insurance policy offered by general
insurers should be at least 65 years. Here's what general insurers offer at
present.
|
Insurer
|
Max. Entry Age (yrs)
|
|
Oriental
Insurance |
No limit |
|
New |
80 |
|
Reliance
General Insurance |
80 |
|
Star
Health and Allied Insurance |
80 |
|
IFFCO
Tokio General Insurance |
70 |
|
Cholamandalam
General Insurance |
65* |
|
ICICI |
60 |
|
Tata AIG
General Insurance |
60 |
|
Apollo DKV |
60 |
|
National
Insurance |
59 |
|
Bajaj
Allianz General Insurance |
55 |
|
HDFC Ergo General Insurance |
55 |
|
Universal
Sompo |
55 |
|
Royal
Sundaram General Insurance |
50* |
|
United |
50 |
*For dependant parents
Mixed reforms: The reforms process seems to be rolling. Earlier this
year, Irda had asked insurers to spell out renewal norms clearly to avoid any
ambiguity. Says Antony Jacob, CEO, Apollo DKV Insurance: "The proposed
changes will surely have a pricing implication. We will need to see it in
conjunction with Irda's circular on renewals."
However, general insurers are complaining. They say that the new guidelines
do not propose anything for life insurers, which have entered the health
insurance business in a big way.
Says Jacob: "Life, non-life and pure health insurers should follow
similar regulations when it comes to their health insurance portfolio since
they operate in a similar market."
Sources say, life insurers are excused as, barring a few exceptions, they
are long-term contracts and offer benefit policies like critical illness and
hospital cash.
It is expected that Irda will take cognisance of such disparity soon. For
you it is just a step up as the sector matures.
Deepti Bhaskaran, Outlook Money
Source: http://business.rediff.com/special/2009/jun/24/perfin-all-about-health-insurance-for-senior-citizens.htm