Insurance company refuses to cover Auckland mum with rare illness

 

Here is a great article which points out why getting good financial advice is important, so that you have the right cover for what you require it for. We listen to find out what you want the cover for, before coming back to you with recommendations.

Trauma insurance is a great cover to have, (We have had some amazing claims stories) but it is specific to a list of conditions (these vary dramatically depending on whether it is a bank product or one through Insure NZ). We will also look at other options that would have covered Selina in the situation below. We can mix and match cover, so that it will cover as much as we can for your particular budget.

Three months ago Selina Linton fell out of bed, unable to move her legs. She barely remembers the following weeks spent intensive care; doctors can’t say exactly when, or to what extent, she will recover.

The Auckland woman was struck by Guillain-Barre Syndrome — a mysterious, debilitating illness that attacks the nervous system. The 54-year-old dental assistant remains in a rehab centre, in nappies, unable to walk.

Her husband Nathan Linton, 53, said he was shattered to learn the trauma insurance policy they had been putting money into for over two decades didn’t cover Guillain-Barre. It wouldn’t pay out for what the family deemed an “incredibly traumatic” experience.

The Lintons’ discovery is not unusual. Trauma insurance, also known as crisis or critical illness insurance, is a broad term for a highly specific type of coverage. It pays a lump sum to be used any way the insured chooses.

Selina’s medical bills were covered by the state, so Nathan said the money would have gone into modifying their Titirangi home for the wheelchair his wife was likely to return with. He said the family were also “getting kicked” through being one income down.

Nathan said he hoped others might temper their expectations of trauma coverage after his family’s experience: “we’d have done better putting the money in a jar by the bed”, he said. Ideally, he wanted Guillain-Barre put on insurance companies’ trauma tick list.

A spokesman for AMP, the Lintons’ insurance provider for over two decades, said trauma policies didn’t cover Guillain–Barré Syndrome for several reasons, including because only 40 to 80 New Zealanders got it each year.

“Insurers can’t cover every eventuality – if they did premiums would go up and cover would not be accessible or affordable,” he said.

Guillain-Barre sufferers who permanently lose their ability to “perform key tasks independently” could, however, get a pay out through trauma insurance, he said. Selina was not eligible as doctors believed she would eventually recover.

Karen Stevens of the Insurance and Financial Services Ombudsman (IFSO) said she had many clients who, like the Lintons, felt misled by their trauma policy.

“Trauma in everyday language means something unexpected that happens to you and plays havoc with your life — but if it’s not specifically mentioned in your policy, it won’t be covered,” she said.

“We recently had a woman come in who had suffered fairly horrific injuries from giving birth to a baby, for example, which left her incapacitated. She said it was the most traumatic thing that could have happened to her, but since birth wasn’t mentioned in her policy there was nothing we could do.”

Stevens said disgruntled heart attack victims approached the IFSO “constantly”. While trauma policies typically include heart attacks, they only pay out if certain events play out.

Since being in hospital Selina has had pneumonia, a tracheotomy — doctors cut a hole in her windpipe to get air to her lungs — a flooded lung, and excruciating nerve pain. Her husband said her “good brain inside a very sick body” — which until recently could not speak — and the ever-fuzzy prognosis of Guillain-Barre had taken psychological tolls too.

She could barely keep her eyelids up at 4 o’clock in the afternoon last Tuesday, in a wheelchair at her Point Chevalier rehabilitation clinic. She held her husband and their 22-year-old daughter Lucy’s hands, and cried.

“Now I should be finishing work for the day and going home to cook dinner with my family,” she said. She missed the Titirangi trees, her dog, and “catching up with the girls”.

Nathan promised to get their wheelchair-unfriendly house ready for her “somehow”, to hasten her homecoming.

“We’ll suck it up,” he said. “But we thought we were responsible, taking out that insurance policy so that if something like this happened, we’d be able to look after each other comfortably.”

WHAT IS GUILLAIN-BARRE? 

– It is a collection of symptoms, rather than a single disease.

– They include rapidly progressive weakness, sometimes resulting in complete paralysis.

– Recovery typically takes three to six months, though two-thirds never fully recover and it can be fatal.

– It frequently follows another health problem such as food poisoning, flu, childbirth or surgery.

– Two cases were triggered by the campylobacter outbreak from contaminated drinking water in Hawke’s Bay last year.

If you have any concerns about your insurance cover and wish to have a free no obligation chat, please call on 09 551 3500 or click here

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Call for NZ to rethink bowel screening

New Zealand needs to rethink its exorbitantly expensive second-rate bowel screening programme based on research from the UK.

That’s the view of Associate Professor Brian Cox from the University of Otago who says UK research proves flexible sigmoidoscopy screening is better than the faecal occult blood (FOBT) New Zealand is planning to use.

During a sigmoidoscopy exam, a thin, flexible tube, or sigmoidoscope, is inserted into the rectum, while a FOBT detects very small amounts of blood in a bowel motion before they become visible to the naked eye.

The results of a UK trial of flexible sigmoidoscopy published in The Lancet confirmed the reduced bowel cancer incidence and mortality persists for at least 17 years after the flexible sigmoidoscopy test. The benefit is very likely to persist for the rest of a person’s life, Professor Cox says.

He says a 15-minute sigmoidoscopy is by far the most cost-effective strategy for reducing bowel cancer in New Zealand and it could be performed by GPs.

“This is the most cancer-preventing 15 minutes anyone could ever undertake.”

A flexible sigmoidoscopy screening test once when aged 55-64 years reduces lifelong risk of bowel cancer by 35 per cent and mortality from bowel cancer by 41 per cent.

Professor Cox says the earlier results of the UK trial at 11 years of follow-up were published in 2010 but were not deemed sufficient by the Ministry of Health to guide the development of bowel screening policy in New Zealand and only a pilot study of two-yearly FOBT screening was pursued.

The evidence from the UK trial clearly indicates the need to completely rethink the approach to bowel screening in New Zealand before an exorbitantly expensive second-rate FOBT programme is instituted, he says.

A national flexible sigmoidoscopy programme could begin within 12 months covering the entire country.

About 3,000 New Zealanders are diagnosed with bowel cancer each year, and it’s the second most common cause of cancer death.

Budget 2016 invests $39.3 million for national bowel screening, starting with Hutt Valley and Wairarapa DHBs in 2017.

Source

Diabetes – How much do you know?

Diabetes is a disease where your body cannot control its blood sugar levels properly – either because your body doesn’t make enough (or any) insulin, or because your cells have become resistant to insulin.

Insulin is a chemical produced in the pancreas. It helps your body process sugars.

  • If blood sugar levels aren’t kept under control, diabetes can be life-threatening.
  • Diabetes can lead to other health conditions, including kidney failure, eye disease, foot ulceration and a higher risk of heart disease.
  • Keeping your blood sugar at a safe level means you’re less likely to have other health problems.

There’s no cure for diabetes, but there are things you can do to stay well. Support from your friends, whānau and health care providers can help

Heart and diabetes checks

Diabetes is our largest and fastest growing health issue we face in New Zealand. Diabetes is closely linked with heart disease (also known as cardiovascular disease or CVD), and together they are responsible for the deaths of more New Zealanders each year than cigarettes are. Many of these deaths are preventable.

The More Heart and Diabetes Checks Health Target has been established to help save these lives – aiming to have regular heart and diabetes checks for at least 90 percent of those at risk of developing these conditions. Find out more about heart and diabetes checks.

How common is diabetes?

There are over 240,000 people in New Zealand who have been diagnosed with diabetes (mostly type 2). It is thought there are another 100,000 people who have it but don’t know.

  • Diabetes is most common amongMāori and Pacific Islanders. They’re three times as likely to get it as other New Zealanders.
  • South Asian people are also more likely to develop diabetes.
  • The number of people with both types of diabetes is rising – especially obesity-related type 2 diabetes.

Type 1 diabetes

Type 1 diabetes is when your body has stopped producing insulin. People with type 1 diabetes need to inject insulin to live.

  • Type 1 diabetes is usually diagnosed in children.
  • Type 1 diabetes is less common than type 2 diabetes.

Type 2 diabetes

Type 2 diabetes is when your cells have become insulin resistant or your body doesn’t produce enough insulin to keep you healthy.

  • Type 2 diabetes usually develops in adults but it is becoming more common in children.
  • Type 2 diabetes is the only type of diabetes linked with obesity.

Diabetes in pregnancy

Pregnant women can also develop diabetes. This is known as gestational diabetes (or ‘diabetes in pregnancy’). It usually goes away when the baby is born.

But the problem is more widespread than that, and it appears to be worsening.

In fact, advocacy group the International Diabetes Federation has estimated that by 2040 the number of adults with diabetes globally will rise about 55 per cent to reach 642 million.

And there’s no room for complacency, with the federation stating that the condition kills one person worldwide every six seconds.

However, diabetes can often be effectively managed, even prevented.

While access to quality medical care plays a large role, so too does public awareness of diabetes, and to test your knowledge, we’ve developed a quiz.

Answer the 10 questions below as true or false, then check the answers to see how you fared.

Afterwards, you may also like to complete or update your Wellness Assessment to learn about your diabetes risk and potential ways of addressing it.

For more information and individual advice, consult an appropriate health professional.

 

What’s your diabetes knowledge?

Indicate whether the following statements are true or false.

  1. Glucose is found in blood only.
  2. Insulin is a hormone normally released into the blood after eating.
  3. Type 1 diabetes is a lifestyle disease.
  4. In type 2 diabetes, the body may stop responding to insulin properly.
  5. Being overweight does not increase the risk of type 2 diabetes.
  6. You can develop type 2 diabetes without experiencing obvious symptoms.
  7. Type 2 diabetes increases the risk of cardiovascular disease.
  8. People with diabetes should avoid sugary food and drink.
  9. Type 2 diabetes always requires medication.
  10. Gestational diabetes goes away after pregnancy.

Click Here For Answers

Source 1, Source 2

Disability insurance myths to stop believing

 

 

 

Disability insurance can be a life saver. Here’s how it works

Disability insurance can be a tricky topic. And if you’re not reading the fine print, you could be relying on inaccurate myths when making the key decision of deciding how much you’ll need. We’ve picked some myths that we think are most prevalent and need the most clarity.

  1. MYTH: I do not need disability insurance; the chances of something happening to me are very low.

 FACT: The chances of getting disabled are much higher than chances of getting into a car accident or having your house burned down. In NZ, in 2013, 24% of the population was identified as being disabled (1.1 million). The biggest cause of impairment was disease or illness (42%). I am sure you have home insurance. What is the justification for not having disability insurance?

  1. MYTH: My insurance at work covers me should something happen to me.

FACT: It depends on what protection is in place. If your employer has a group scheme in place, you need to make sure that the cover has either Income Protection cover or Total & Permanent Disability at the least. Some companies may offer Life Cover only or in most cases or in most cases, the only cover will be Medical Insurance.

  1. MYTH: ACC will pay if I am fully disabled.

FACT: it is important to remember that ACC will only pay if it is related to accident. If you are fully disabled due to an illness, you will not get any compensation from ACC. I am always surprised at how many people think that ACC will pay them due to an illness!

  1. MYTH: The more disability policies you have the better—should something happen to you because you will be able to cash out all of them.

FACT: Your disability policies are linked to your Income, Mortgage or Household Expenses. This means that the value you can get from all of them is capped and will not provide you with a luxury existence. Usually, you will be covered for a certain percentage of your income, such as 55% to 75% or whatever your mortgage repayment may be.

  1. MYTH: If I have a group disability insurance policy at work, I do not need an individual disability policy.

FACT: Although it is a great protection mechanism, you need to understand its exact conditions, what the coverage provides and the percent of your salary it covers. Nevertheless, you need to remember that if you lose or change your job, you will not be protected (some companies do allow the policy to be taken with them, but usually pricing is more expensive and there may be rules that need to meet before this is allowed) —that’s where individual disability insurance kicks in. It is also important to remember that usually personal income protection policies are better than those offered by the company.

  1. MYTH: Disability insurance works similarly to life insurance—once you are disabled, you will get a lump sum.

FACT: Disability insurance is different from life insurance. It does not pay a one-time lump sum but offers regular payments while you are disabled, substituting your income or a part of it depending on the policy you have. The only disability insurance that does pay a lump sum is Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) – this in New Zealand is classed as disability insurance but works very differently to Income/Mortgage protection.

  1. MYTH: If I become disabled, my disability payments start immediately.

FACT: Many disability contracts have a stand down period which you can choose, these can vary from 2 weeks to 104 weeks. The longer the wait period the cheaper the premium, but usually when we look at personal cover will look at how long you could survive financially before needing income.

As you can see, there are many different types of disability products that could be suitable for you and also many variations. What we would recommend is that you get advice from a specialist like us at insure New Zealand. We are happy to have a free no obligation discussion.

Please feel free to contact us on 09 551 3500 or email info@Insurenz.co.nz.

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