Life Insurance Notes
Life Insurance Notes
Life Insurance Notes
Chapter – 1
LIFE & HEALTH INSURANCE
Insurance Definition:
It is a system whereby contributions are received from the insuring public and pool of money
is created from where the claims are paid to a few unfortunate persons who died during the
insurance period.
Life Assured:
A person on whose life assurance policy has been issued is called life assured.
Assurance Contract:
This is an agreement between the person proposing for insurance and the life insurer. The
contract is complete when the following three conditions are fulfilled;
• Proposal form is submitted.
• It is accepted
• Premium is paid.
It is not necessary that for completion of the contract any written form of agreement is
required. The contract is complete and enforceable at law immediately the above three
conditions are met.
Mortality Ratios:
Rate of deaths per year of the persons within the same age group are called mortality ratios.
Mortality ratios are basic themes for life insurance. All plans of insurance are based on
mortality ratios.
Mortgagee:
Mortgagee is a person whose property has been mortgaged.
Mortgager:
Mortgager is a person who mortgages the property for advancing a certain amount of loan to
the mortgagee. These terms are used for the persons who are involved in advancing and
receiving loan against the security of a tangible property.
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Life insurance policy is considered as good as a tangible property for the purposes of loan
transactions.
Actuary:
Actuary is a person who calculates the mortality ratios and life insurance premium rates
based on actual experiences of very wide and larger data with total professional background.
Law in Pakistan requires every life insurance company to have an appointed actuary. The
appointed actuary is responsible for submitting certain statistical reports directly to the SECP
(Security Exchange Commission of Pakistan) ¸which is regulatory body to monitor the
solvency of the insurance companies. Unlike any other employee and officer of the company
the services of an appointed actuary can not be terminated without prior intimation of reasons
to the SECP.
Assignments:
When life assured transfers the rights and liabilities under a policy to another person in a
lawful manner it is called assignment.
Insurable Interest:
Insurable interest means somebody’s pecuniary stake or interest in the subject matter of
insurance. As far as life assurance is concerned, a person has an unlimited insurable interest
in his/her life or in the life of his/her spouse. However, the sum assured which is the amount
of assurance is regulated and determined by the average yearly income of the person on
whose life the policy is being taken.
Proximate Cause:
A cause or happening that sets in motion a chain of events which brings about a result
without intervention of a new and independent cause.
Indemnity:
To place the insured in the same financial status which he or she was enjoying prior to the
happening of the event which causes loss? Normally life insurance contracts are not purely
contracts of indemnity.
Utmost good faith means that both parties to the insurance i.e. insured and insurer are
required to disclose the complete information about the facts which may influence the
decision of each party for entering or issuing the insurance contract.
Each party places a total reliance from the statements made by the other party. The
prospective insured is required by the insurer to answer specific questions put to him/her in
entering to extract material information necessary for the consideration of insurance proposal
by the underwriter. Any concealment of material facts or misstatement shall cause the
contract to be made violable by the insurers.
Proposer:
Proposer is the person who puts forward a proposal for insurance on his/her life or on the life
of another person.
Life Proposed:
Life proposed is a person on whose life the policy is proposed to be issued
Material Information:
Material information means the information about the facts of insurance which may influence
the decision of either party to give or take insurance. For example, if an insurer or any
functionary of insurer gives false information to the prospective insured which induces
him/her to take out the insurance policy, the insured will be entitled to make the contract
void, and claim the refund of amounts paid along with appropriate damages, if any to the tune
the court may deem fit. Similarly, if the prospective insured misstates his/her health or
financial position, the insurer would be entitled to deny any claim whatsoever made under the
policy.
Offer:
When a person fills in a proposal form designed by an insurer and submits that form to the
insurer for underwriting consideration, that form constitutes an offer from he proposer for
insurance.
Counter Offer:
The offer made by the proposer through the proposal form is evaluated and judged by the
insurer’s underwriter’s vis-à-vis its underwriting parameters. If the offer does not fit into
those parameters, the underwriters have two options;
• To apply special terms such as increased rate of premium or reduction in sum
assured and term of the policy or both.
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Acceptance:
If the original offer falls into the standard parameters of underwriting, the underwriters
accept the proposal as it is, which is called simple acceptance. If the policy is issued after
acceptance of the counter offer then it is called acceptance with loading.
Consideration
Consideration is an insurance term for the amount of premium which the insured has to pay
to the insurer as per agreed terms.
Natural Premium:
The premiums for life assurance are collected and charged according to the age of the life
assured. Higher the age higher the premium. Insurers maintain a pool of fund in which the
insuring public contributes equitably. The younger people have to pay lesser rate of premium
as compared to the older people. With the progress in age of a person year by year, he/she
becomes nearer and nearer to death. The system of natural premiums is very complicated and
as such it is very difficult for the insurers and insuring public alike to receive or pay the
premiums on increased rates every year. To overcome this difficulty the actuaries have
developed, on scientific basis, the system of level premium.
The level premium means that when a person takes out a policy say for 20 years’ term, he/she
will pay the same amount of premium every year which has been calculated on average basis.
Actuarial Principles:
Actuarial principles include the following factors in determining the rate of premium;
• Expenses of the office
• Margin of profit of the insurance company.
• Provision for commission to the insurance agents of the insurance company
• The study of trends in the rate of mortality.
• The expected investment income of the insurance company.
Economic Principles:
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• The life insurance plays a vital but invisible role in the overall economy of a
country especially in the social sector where there is no financial support for the
widows and orphans on the government level.
• It reduces the mental tension of an individual caused by the future financial
worries like old-age or well-being of the family.
• It ensures for the continued education of the children.
• It also reduces financial stress in case the breadwinner of the family has hire-
purchased any property or goods like house, motor car or any household goods.
Legal Principles:
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Chapter – 2
LIFE ASSURANCE CONTRACTS
CLASSIFICATIONS
In This Chapter:
Term insurance
Whole life insurance
Endowment insurance
TERM INSURANCE
It is a type of contract in which sum assured is payable only on death of the life assured
within the term of insurance. There is no maturity value and surrender and loan facilities
available.
ENDOWMENT INSURANCE
This is a type of life insurance whereby a specific term is selected and premiums are payable
throughout that term or earlier death. If the life assured survives that term the sum assured
along with accrued bonuses is paid as maturity value. This class of insurance carries
surrender and loan values provided the policy has been enforced for at least two consecutive
years.
2) Anticipated Endowment
In this plan the insurance is issued for a term which is usually dividable by three periods i.e.
12 year, 15 years and 18 years. At the end of 1/3rd period and 2/3rd period sum assured is paid
proportionately. Companies give second option whereby the sum assured is paid as 1/4 th at
the end of the first broken term and another 1/4 th at the end of 2nd broken term and remaining
50% of the sum-assured along with accrued bonuses is paid at the end of full term of the
assurance. In case of earlier death the full sum assured along with bonuses is payable. If the
death occurs within the first broken period the full sum assured will be paid. After the 1st
broken period when the assured has already received a portion of the sum assured even then
the full sum assured along with accrued bonuses shall be payable and so will be the case
where second installment had also been received by the assured.
Simple
In simple joint life assurance the sum assured is payable if both partners survive to the end of
the term of the policy or on earlier death of anyone of the partners to the contract.
Jeevan Sathi
In Jeevan Sathi plan the maturity benefits are similar to joint life simple policy but in case of
death of anyone partner full sum assured without bonuses are paid to the surviving partner.
The subsequent premiums ceased to be paid and the policy continues till maturity date or
earlier death of the second partner whereby sum assured along with accrued bonuses shall
become payable.
4) Progressive Endowment
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In this type of assurance the policy holder is given an option to increase the sum-assured
without giving health requirement after a certain period say five years. However, premium
will increase accordingly.
5) Children Endowment
Child endowment policy can be issued independently on the life of the child or jointly with
the parents.
In child independent policy the premium is paid by the parent and similar is the case with
joint with the parent policy.
The sum assured is payable along with accrued bonuses on completion of term of the policy
that is maturity date or on earlier death of the child. In case of child joint life policy an
annuity also becomes payable at an agreed date of sum assured for the remaining term of the
policy in case of death of the parent.
gradually as the loan amount reduces by payment of loan installments. As the sum insured
reduces so is the case with premium and at the end of the term both amounts are zero.
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Chapter - 3(A)
Riders or Supplementary Contracts
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Chapter – 3 (B)
Life Assurance Contracts
The Proposer
The Proposer (Applicant) who subsequently becomes the insured if the proposal is accepted
by the insurer Proposer can’t’ always be the life insured.
The Insured
The Proposer and the life proposed is not always the same person. For example a policy is
being taken out by a parent on the life his/her child, the parent will be the Proposer and the
child life proposed.
This process starts with the completion of the proposal form containing a number of
questions designed to have complete information about the health condition and financial
status of propose.
PROPOSAL FORM
The proposal form consists of 3 important portions as under;
A. Personal statement: This contains the information about the;
Name
Father’s Name
Date of birth
Disease the proposer may have suffered,
Details of accidents, if any
Treatment details,
Vaccination details
Employment details
Land ownership
Family history with ages of family members, if any
Family member died with dates and cause of death and other details etc.
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B. Declaration: Declaration is signed by the proposer to the effect that the statements
made by him/her are true to every effect and he/she has not concealed any material
information while answering the relevant questions. The proposer also declares that if
any concealment is found after issuance of the policy, the insurer may make the contract
void and forfeit the premiums paid by the proposer. The proposer also authorizes the
insurer to contact any doctor or hospital from where he may have taken the treatment
and obtain the treatment record.
AGENT’S REPORT
The agent is said to be the 1st Underwriter of the consumer. He has to report to the insurer
about his knowledge of the proposer’s health, his monthly income and the value of his assets
and agent also reports the period for which proposer is known to him.
After the proposal form, there are 3 steps:
Offer
Acceptance
Consideration
Counter offer
A. Offer: The proposal/applicant form constitutes an offer for getting insurance from the
insurer by the proposer.
D. Counter offer: If that proposal does not fall in the parameter of underwriting, the
underwriter will make a counter offer to the Proposer.
This counter offer is made in writing by the insurer to the proposer. The proposer may accept
this counter offer or may not. If he accepts he will sign this counter offer as a token of his
acceptance and pay the premium i.e. consideration to complete the contract. In both situations
after payment of consideration the contract will be completed.
Decline
In declined cases the underwriter finds extraordinary abnormalities in the life proposed health
conditions or in his/her occupation or financial status. Therefore, he will decline the offer
treating it as uninsurable. However, certain insurance companies in the world including
Pakistan insure such declined lives on special terms under their non-decline nature schemes.
One such scheme for example is that if the insured person dies within the 1st year of insurance
no claim what so ever is payable and if insured dies within 2nd year of the policy the 2nd year
premium will only be refunded. However, if death occurs due to an accident during these two
years the full claim will be payable whether the death occurs by accident or true sickness,
meaning thereby that both the deaths whether through accident or material cause shall be
covered. The insured will have to pay an extra premium every year.
TYPES OF PREMIUMS
A. Natural Premium
Life insurance companies basically charge the premium at a rate as applicable to different
ages as the age of person increases so the chances of his death increase accordingly. The
older people have to pay the premium at the rate greater than the younger people. This system
is called the system of payment of natural premium. Example is;
AGE PREMIUM @ Rs.1000/-
an extra amount in the early years and a lesser amount in the later years. In this system
insurance companies develop their reserves in the early years which are used to offset the
claims tendency in later years.
C. Medical Extra
If the person is already suffering from any disease, he must have to pay extra premium.
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CHAPTER - 4
LIFE INSURANCE PROPOSALS
1. Loading
In technical terms the premium charged under extra mortality as medical extra or
occupational extra is called loading. This means that the ordinary rate of premium has been
loaded or increased by the rate applicable to extra mortality.
2. Policy Document
Policy document is an evidence of contract. The policy document is issued after the contract.
It has four parts as under:
Preamble clause: this clause identifies the parties to the contract and sets forth the rights and
liabilities of the parties. It also refers to the fund to which the policy pertains.
Schedule: in schedule all the necessary particulars of the insurance are mentioned. These
particulars include;
Policy number.
Sum assured
Plan of insurance (Table & Term).
Date of commencement of policy or risk.
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Date of maturity.
Name and address of the assured.
Name of guardian (if nominee is minor)
Amount of premium.
Mode of payment (monthly, quarterly, half yearly or annually).
ANF option (Automatic non-forfeiture).
Reference to endorsements, if any.
3. Revival:
A policy can be revived by payment of outstanding premiums and fulfillment of necessary
health requirements. Companies usually place restrictions that a policy remaining lapsed for
more than 5 years shall not be revived.
4. Paid-Up Value
If a policy has been enforced for at least two consecutive years by payment of premium, it
can be made paid-up for a reduced sum-assured. No further premiums will be payable and the
reduced sum assured shall become payable either on maturity or earlier death.
Example is.
Sum assured Rs. 1, 00,000
Term 20 years
Paid premium 3 years
Paid up value = 1, 00, 00 x 3 = 15,000
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5. Surrender Value
The policy shall acquire a surrender value, after it has been enforced by payment of premium
for at least two consecutive years. While calculating the surrender value following payments
are not taken into consideration;
First Year Premium (FYP)
Premium of any supplementary contract.
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6. Loan Value
The policy holder can obtain a loan against the policy up to an amount equal to the 80% of
surrender value of the policy, which is repayable in easy installments along with an interest as
prescribed by the company from time to time.
9. Evidence Of Age:
This condition states no benefits under this policy what so ever, shall be paid until and unless
the age of the life assured is got admitted on the basis of a valid documentary evidence.
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CHAPTER - 5
CLAIMS
Injury Claims
Maturity Claims
Surrender Claims
Death Claims
A. Surrender claims:
When a policy acquires a surrender value the policy holder can get its cash value payment by
surrendering him original policy document. Surrender value or cash value is calculated
according to the surrender value factors developed by the actuaries of the concerned
insurance company. However, while calculating the surrender value following types of
payment are excluded:
Premium for any supplementary contract
Premium for any occupational extra or medical extra
Premium for 1st year
For obtaining the surrender value payments, the policy holder have to apply in writing to the
insurance company and have to sign a pre-receipt discharge voucher which contains the
amount of cash value, bank account number of the policy holder and name and address of the
branch of the bank. The discharge voucher has to be got witnessed.
After completion of these requirements and submission thereof along with the original policy
document, the company makes the payment of the amount of surrender value.
After payment of surrender value no claim what so ever lies against the insurance company.
As per Zakat and Usher Ordinance, 1980, Zakat has to be deducted at prescribed rate from
the surrender value and deposited with the Government treasury. The policy holder who does
not want to get the Zakat deducted will have to submit a Zakat declaration affidavit.
B. Maturity claims
A maturity claim becomes payable after completion of term of the policy. Maturity value is
calculated by adding accrued bonuses to the sum-assured. For obtaining payment of the
maturity value the policyholder has to submit the following documents;
Pre-receipt discharge voucher
Attested copy of NIC
Original policy document
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C. Injury claims
Policies which carry AIB rider are eligible for claims under this heading. If a policy holder
receives accidental injuries, he can claim an indemnity as per schedule given in the
endorsement of AIB contract. This schedule may differ from company to company. However
an example could be as follows;
• Loss of both eyes (indemnity is full sum assured)
• Loss of one eye and one limb (full sum assured)
• Loss of one eye (half of the sum assured will be paid)
• Loss of one limb (half of the sum assured will be paid)
• Loss of thumb and index finger (1/4th of the sum assured will be paid)
• For other in juries by which the insured is totally and temporarily disable to
perform any duties for wage or profit (Rs. 5/- per thousand of sum assured per
week)
• If the insured is partially disabled, he will receive 1/4th of the weekly
disability.
When a policy holder receives disability payment under both the previous headings for 52
weeks continuously and he still disabled the payment will be switched to an annuity which
equals to 10% of the sum assured.
The period during which the annuity is being paid the subsequent premiums under the policy
following due in that period shall be waived and policy will continue as enforced. If the
annuity is paid for 10 years which is the maximum period all the subsequent premiums will
also be waived.
D. Death claims:
Death claims fall under these two sub-divisions;
Early death claims
Non-early death claims
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CHAPTER - 7
GROUP LIFE INSURANCE
As the name denotes group life insurance caters for the needs of a group of people working
together or having he same kind of profession. It is a sort of term insurance. No surrender,
loan or maturity values are available there under.
Recent trends:
There has been rapid growth in him transaction of group insurance for the last one decade.
About 45% of life insurance business in Pakistan is now been transacted under the group life
portfolio. The insurance companies have evolved new plans and types of group insurance
coverage. A market of group life insurance is very competitive and the insurance companies
have to win the group life insurance business on the basis of their efficient services and
competitive rates. For this purpose they have made and are continuing to make substantial
modifications in heir plans and designs of the policy. Rather the companies have adopted a
flexible approach whereby they could make decisions according to nature of each group
individually.
Basic Principles:
The group insurance contract is between the employer and the insurer for the benefit of the
employees. This means that the parties to the contract are employer and the insurer. The
employee is only the beneficiary. The claim is to be paid by the insured heirs. This is called a
master contract. Although an employee is not the party to the contract, the insurers do issue
certificate of group insurance to individual employee. That certificate is a proof of insurance
on the basis of which he heirs of the deceased employee can claim he sum insured. In group
insurance contracts an element of anti-selection is not there (i.e. person takes insurance by
concealing his illness) because in most of group insurance contracts proposal forms are not
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used. The sum insured for each employee or class of employee is always selected by the
employer. The employer is the policyholder not the employee. The premium is always paid
by the policy holder.
Size of the group: When the group insurance was started a minimum number of
members of the group were hundred. However as the competition grew this number has
been reduced to 10 now a days. There is no limitation on maximum number of group
membership. The underwriters view the smaller groups with more underwriting attention
and would like to ask for evidence of insurability from each member.
Flow of members:
Those groups in which older members retire and younger members are inducted on a
prescribed basis are called stable groups from the underwriting point of view because the age
distribution is stable. The groups where there are excessive changes are not generally like by
the underwriters. There are certain groups whose job on average is hazardous therefore; such
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groups are insured on extra mortality while some groups like workers of coal mines etc. are
not at all insurable.
Risk classification:
Ordinary groups/standard: These groups are insured by charging usual ordinary
premium as applicable to the standard lives.
Sub-standard groups: The groups are those whose members are involved in
hazardous and risky profession and are accordingly charged with an occupational
extra premium.
Declined groups: The groups which are not insurable fall into this category.
For both these categories a group member to be covered must be actively at work.
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CHAPTER - 8
PREMIUM AND ADMINISTRATION
The group insurance premium is calculated basically according to a group morbidity (which
shows the rate of injuries in accidents) and mortality but those are not followed strictly
because the experience of each individual group differs as such it is a major factor in
determining the group insurance premium for a particular group. The other factors involved
are the age of the every member of the group and wage of the every member of group. Thus a
group insurance premium is calculated taking into account group mortality/morbidity tables,
past claims experience of that group and average ages and wages of the group. In case of a
new group, the experience of similar groups is considered.
The group insurance like other kinds of insurance is regulated by the Insurance Ordinance,
2000 in Pakistan. As compared to individual life insurance the group insurance rates are
cheaper. As we have already seen the group insurance contract is between the employer and
the insurer, as such it is the employer who has the right to choose the amount of sum assured
for each individual member or class of members. The employee can not himself/herself
determine the sum assured.
POLICY PROVISIONS
Group Insurance Certificate: One policy document is issued as an evidence of the
contract of group insurance between the employer and the insurer. However, insurers
do issue group insurance certificate to each individual member of the group. Such a
certificate contains brief particular of the insurance like date of commencement, date
of expiry, sum assured and name of the nominee etc.
Grace period: A grace period to pay the premium is allowed after the due date. The
period differs from insurer to insurer and contract to contract. However, generally 31
days are allowed after the premium has become due.
Nominee: In group life insurance the name of nominee is not mentioned in the policy
document. It is recorded separately in the records of the insurer and stated in the
certificate.
Age admission: Age of each and every member of the group must be declared by the
employer and admitted so by the insurer.
Incontestability: Although group insurance contracts are usually issued for a period
of 1` year, there is a provision to renew them every year in such a case any
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misstatements made in the proposal form by the employer shall not be contestable in
any court of law unless a ground of fraudulent intention is proved.
Profit commission: Most of the group life insurance contracts contain a provision of
profit commission which means that if that group shows a profit then a percentage of
that profit shall be paid back to the employer by the insurer. Such a percentage varies
from 70% to 90%. However, if the group shows a loss that has to be borne by the
insurer.
Conversion into ordinary life: Some of the group insurance policies contain a
provision and if any group member leaves that group then he has a right to convert
that policy into individual life insurance by paying the difference of premium.
Claims settlement: The claims under group life insurance policy are paid in respect of
deceased/injured (if the accident coverage is obtained) in favor of the employer. It is
the employer who then has to pay that claim to the heirs of the deceased or to the
injured person.
The factors influencing the group insurance premium rate are as under:
Group mortality and morbidity tables
Past experience of the group or of similar groups
Age of every member of group
Wage/sum assured for every member
Sex of the group members (2 years relaxation is given to females)
Larger group discount. If group is larger than average a premium rate discount is
given
The rate will be calculated afresh every year. For certain typical groups where the
correct number of members is not ascertainable some companies provide a blanket
cover. An example of such group could be the persons getting loan from financial
institutions.
Settlement option: The claims under this policy shall normally be settled in lump
sum. However, in certain policies an option is given to the nominee to receive the
amount of claim in installments along with the accruing profit
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CHAPTER – 9
HEALTH INSURANCE
BENEFITS:
Hospital charges:
The benefit payable for hospital room and board is typically limited to a maximum benefit
amount per day. Some hospital-surgical expense policies provide a higher maximum benefit
amount per day for room and board charges when he insured must be confined in an intensive
care or a cardiac care unit, since these charges are considerably higher than the charge for
regular daily hospital room and board. In addition, most policies specify a maximum number
of days for which the room and board benefit will be payable during each period of hospital
confinement. A separate hospital expense benefit is payable to cover miscellaneous hospital
charges, such as X-ray and laboratory fees, medicines, and the use of an operating room.
Hospital-surgical expense policies usually specify maximum benefit amount payable for all
such hospital services. This amount is often set at a multiple of the maximum room and board
benefit amount.
insurer reserves the right to determine the maximum benefit payable for surgeon’s fee for any
operation not listed on the schedule. In some cases, each procedure is assigned a specified
number of benefit units, and the policy describes the benefit amount payable for each unit.
Extended-care services:
The extended-care benefit of a hospital-surgical expense policy covers room and board
charges, up to a specified maximum amount, when the insured is confined in an extended-
care facility, such as a nursing or convalescent home. The benefit is designed to encourage
the use of extended-care facilities by patients who need professional care while recovering
from illnesses or surgery but who do not need he full services of a hospital. The insured’s
confinement in an extended-care facility must begin within a specified number of days after a
hospital stay for the same cause in order for the benefit to be payable. The policy specifies the
maximum number of days and the maximum benefit for each day of confinement.
Deductible amounts:
Some hospital-surgical expense policies specify that, before any benefits become payable
under the policy, the insured must pay a portion of the eligible medical expenses incurred.
The portion that the insured must pay before the insurance company will make any benefit
payments is called the deductible amount, commonly shortened to the deductible. The
deductible is applied throughout the life of the policy on the basis of a specified deductible
period. The most commonly specified deductible period is one year, in which case the
deductible is often called a calendar year deductible and applies to any eligible medical
expenses incurred by the insured during any one calendar year.
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Exclusions:
Any medical expenses not described in a hospital=surgical expense policy as eligible medical
expenses are not covered under the policy. Thus, most such policies do not cover medical
expenses incurred through (1) purchasing medicines and drugs, unless those medicines are
given during a hospital stay or while obtaining outpatient surgery, (2)employing private-duty
nurses, and (3) obtaining routine dental treatments, oral surgery, eye examinations, and
corrective lenses, unless such expenses are incurred as the result of an accidental injury. In
addition medical expenses that result from any of the following are usually excluded from
coverage under hospital-surgical expense policies;
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CHAPTER – 10
MAJOR MEDICAL COVERAGE
Although the benefit amounts available under hospital-surgical policies are high enough to
cover the medical expenses caused by most illnesses and injuries, these benefit amounts may
be insufficient to cover medical expenses that result from major illnesses or injuries requiring
expensive or long-term care. Major medical coverage was designed to meet the need for
economic protection in such cases.
Coverage:
Major medical coverage, which provides substantial benefits for both hospital expenses and
outpatient expenses, is subject to fewer limitations than in hospital-surgical expense
coverage. Major medical coverage provides benefits for the same types of medical expenses
that are covered by hospital-surgical expense policies. In addition, major medical coverage
provides for expenses that may not be covered under basic hospital-surgical plans, including
the costs incurred for:
Receiving outpatient treatment
Employing private-duty nurses renting or purchasing treatment equipment and
medical supplies
Purchasing prescribed medicines
Expense participation:
Both comprehensive and supplemental major medical policies usually specify that the insured
must share in the payment of the medical expenses incurred. Sharing in the cost of such
medical expenses is called expense participation. Expense participation encourages an
insured to keep medical expenses to a minimum and, consequently, enables the health
insurance provider to keep the costs of the coverage to a lower level and well. The two
expense participation methods most commonly used are deductibles and coinsurance.
Deductibles:
The manner in which a deductible is applied in major medical policies depends on whether
the policy is a comprehensive major medical policy or a supplemental major medical policy.
The deductible included in most comprehensive major medical policies functions in the same
manner as does the deductible found in hospital-surgical expense policies; the insured must
pay a specified flat amount before any policy benefits are payable.
Supplemental major medical policies usually include a corridor deductible. The corridor
deductible is an amount that the insured must pay.
Co-insurance:
Most major medical policies require that the insured pay a specified percentage of all the
eligible medical expenses, in excess of the deductible, which he or she incurs as a result of a
sickness or injury. This method of expense participation is called coinsurance, or percentage
participation.
Exclusions:
Although major medical policies provide benefits for several types of medical expenses not
covered by hospital-surgical expense policies, major medical policies do contain some of the
same exclusions that are found in hospital-surgical expense plans. Specifically, major
medical policies contain the same exclusions that are found in hospital-surgical policies
regarding cosmetic surgery, self inflicted injuries, injuries received while in military service
or as the result of war, and treatments received free of charge or for which benefits are paid
by another organization. In addition, major medical coverage usually does not include
benefits for dental treatments and vision care.
Types of coverage:
Hospital Confinement Coverage:
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The coverage provided under hospital confinement policies, which are often called hospital
indemnity policies, consists of a predetermined flat benefit amount for each day an insured is
hospitalized. The amount of the daily benefit is specified in the policy and does not vary
according to the amount of medical expenses the insured incur.
Vision care coverage provides the insured with benefits for expenses incurred obtaining eye
examinations and corrective lenses. Most policies that provide such coverage specify that one
routine examination of the insured per year will be covered. The maximum amount that will
be paid in benefits for eyeglass lenses and for frames is also specified; if the insured
purchases contract lenses instead of eyeglasses, the maximum benefit amount is usually equal
to the amount that would have been paid for lenses and for frames.
training, or experience. In addition, this definition of total disability usually specified that
whenever he insured is working in any gainful occupation, the insured is not considered to be
totally disabled.
Some companies have further liberalized the definition of total disability included in
disability income policies that are issued to members of certain professional occupations.
According to this definition, an insured is totally disabled if the insured is unable to perform
the essential duties of his/her own previous occupation.
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