Catastrophic Medical Care - peace of mind
Critical Illness Coverage
Canadians are concerned with the future of the health care system. They worry that more of the health care cost will shift to the disabled and their families. Critical illness insurance provides a hassle-free way to provide liquidity to meet the financial needs during a medical crises.
Why is Critical Illness Insurance Necessary?
- disability insurance replaces income but is insufficient for the added burden of medical expenses
- group health coverage has restrictive limitations and maximums
- social medical care is eroding and can not be relied on
- personal and retirement savings have intended purposes other than medical expenses
- long term care insurance is too restrictive and inflexible
- most critical illness victims make a full recovery after a lengthy, expensive treatment period
Canadian Statistics
- heart attacks, cancers and strokes are the 3 most common diseases of the 90's
- 1 in 2 will contract heart disease
- 1 in 2 heart attack victims are under age 65
- 1 in 4 currently suffer from cardiovascular disease
- 70% of open heart surgery operations each year are coronary bypasses
- 1 in 4 will suffer kidney failure
- 1 in 20 run the risk of having a stroke before age 70
- 1 in 500 people will suffer from multiple sclerosis
- 1 in 3 will develop some form of life threatening cancer
- 1 in 4 will contract cancer or heart disease before they retire
- 2/3 of the cost of cancer treatment is not covered by provincial medical plans
- 30% of cancer victims are completely cured
- 75% of stroke victims survive the initial occurrence
- 95% of heart attach victims survive the initial occurrence
Conditions That Could Be Covered
- Cancer (life-threatening)
- Heart Attack (myocardial infarction)
- Stroke (cerebrovascular incident)
- Coronary Artery By-pass Surgery
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Kidney Failure (end stage renal disease)
- Major Organ Transplant (recipient of heart, lung, liver, pancreas, kidney or bone marrow transplant)
- Paralysis (2 or more limbs)
- Deafness (total & permanent)
- Blindness (total & permanent)
- Parkinson’s Disease
- Alzheimer’s Disease
- Motor Neurone Disease
- Permanent Total Disability
- Severe Burns
- etc.
How Critical Illness Insurance Works
- select an amount of coverage from $50,000 to $300,000
- provide medical evidence of good health
- authorize payroll deductions for as long as you want the coverage
- claim the full amount of insurance if you survive a covered event by 30 days
(paralysis has a 90 day assessment period in the event of an accident, otherwise paralysis has a 180 day assessment period;
paralysis resulting from intentional self-inflicted injuries is excluded)
- convert to an individual policy when you leave the group
Taxation
- claim payments are received tax-free
- employee contributions are not tax-deductible
- employer contributions are taxable income to employees
- in some provinces, provincial sales tax (PST) must be paid on premiums
What To Look For In Critical Illness Coverage
- clear definitions (medical terminology)
- no restrictions at time of claim (no HIV exclusion)
- comprehensive scope of coverage
- short elimination period (30 days)
- lump sum benefit payment
- liberal underwriting
Group Critical Illness Coverage
As insurers are gaining experience with this new product, they are broadening the definitions and reducing prices. The first Canadian plans covered less than 10 events, and now cover 16 events. Critical Illness insurers in the United Kingdom now cover 27 events and insurers in Malaysia cover 36 events. We can expect a few new events to be added annually. A group policy can be improved annually to attract new participants and retain existing members. If you buy individual coverage, the only way to benefit from product improvements is to apply for a new policy every time a coverage enhancement becomes available.
Group plans are designed to allow members to purchase (not be sold) coverage in a manner that reduces the distribution costs (commissions) and administration (premium collection) costs. Ideally, members would be able to continue their coverage on a direct billing basis even after they no longer belong to the group.
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