Consumers warned not to cut back on health cover
December 1, 2009 by admin
Filed under News, News-Insurance
Consumers in the UK are being warned about cutting back on their health insurance cover in order to save money, with one financial advisor claiming that the benefits of having health cover are too great to simply view this as something that can be cut back on. Read more
Tags: return, health insurance, heart, health cover, comparison sites online, health insurance options, critical illnessPossession insurance more common than life insurance
November 14, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Insurance
More Britons insure their possessions than their own life, according to recent research from Legal & General.
A full 66 per cent of those surveyed said they had house insurance, but just 41 per cent said that they had taken out life insurance, the survey found.
Additionally, while 22 per cent of respondents reported having insurance for their mobile phones, 17 per cent had critical illness cover.
Bonnie Burns, Legal & General’s protection product marketing director said: “The nation’s priorities seem misguided, with people more worried about losing their mobile than about how they would cope financially if they had a critical illness.
“We all know that it is difficult to face up to our own mortality, but when insuring possessions is prioritised above insuring lives, then something has to be done.”
In 2005-06, a total of 212 workers were killed in accidents, according to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents.
Critical illness payouts grow
March 27, 2007 by admin
Filed under News, News-Insurance
The number of critical illness claims that were rejected by a leading insurer fell dramatically between 2006 and 2007.
Legal & General has revealed that the rejection rate for critical illness claims was down 19 per cent on the previous year, something the firm says is good for consumers and the industry as a whole.
The reasons behind the falling rejection rate are varied but Legal & General believes that a number of key factors have had the largest impact.
Tele-medical interviewing, which sees a nurse or underwriter speaking to the customer about their medical history, is said to have gone a long way to reducing the number of claims which are thrown out for non-disclosure.
Figures for 2006 show that claims declined for non-disclosure fell by 15 per cent, with the insurance firm paying out £92.1 million in critical illness claims in that time.
“We didn’t go into the business of critical illness to reject claims and so our latest experience is good for customers and good for the industry as a whole,” said Russell Whitworth from Legal & General. “It shows that people can have confidence in critical illness cover.
“Our claims figures demonstrate that the time and effort that we have invested in our underwriting systems to reduce non-disclosure and improve the clarity of policy definitions is paying off.”
Critical illness insurance is designed to help people financially if they are struck down with a life-changing illness or disability.


