Denise Ho Shi Yi got scammed by insurance company...many other too, she said...

earthquake

Stupidman
Loyal
Joined
Aug 20, 2022
Messages
19,398
Points
113
https://www.straitstimes.com/opinio...T4Ngzbwgl2Ov2L5FmjvAgRaeic3Xmvp3i0zrUbtPRvpHY

Forum: Insurance claims denied because minor conditions not disclosed

PUBLISHEDJUL 17, 2021, 1:00 AM SGT
FACEBOOKTWITTER
Last October, I purchased a life protection policy and upgraded my hospitalisation plan to include coverage at private hospitals.

In February, I was diagnosed with stage two breast cancer. With affirmation from my financial adviser, I pursued treatment at a private practice. I began treatment and submitted my claims for my critical illness payout as well as my upgraded hospital plan's coverage.

This hospitalisation coverage entitled me to claim 100 per cent of my pre-hospitalisation bills on top of the full sum assured from the life protection policy.

Throughout, I held on to the assurance that my policy would ease my burdens, as my income was affected by my sickness.

Five months later, the insurer rejected these claims, citing failure in disclosing my vertigo and asthma. These ailments occurred one or two years before I bought the policy, during separate one-time visits to the family clinic for dizziness and cough.

I was not formally diagnosed, and I did not think these were conditions worth disclosing as there were no specialist referrals and the clinics deemed further examinations unnecessary.


Hence, the insurer's reasoning baffled me.


How could these two incidents alter my outcome? The insurer also took five months to process my claims instead of one to three months.

I asked other insurers, who said such claims should take only up to a month to help clients in times of urgent need.

I was left stranded with a whopping $100,000 in medical bills with an additional $150,000 potentially pending.

After speaking to others, I realised there were many others who have fallen between the cracks and were denied adequate care by their insurer.

Mismanagement of information can result in painful impacts on people's lives, and my wish is that we start valuing lives for what they are.

Denise Ho Shi Yi
 
Insurance is to cheap, when no issues they collect money got issues they find excused to avoid paying, insurance should chk all tell customers whether they can buy the insurance
 
Only those ugly lao cheebyes get scammed. The chio ones only scam ppl, never tio scammed.
 
Cancer has nothing to do with asthma or vertigo.
When buying insurance. They normally request for your existing medical condition before approving.
In this case, they are using non disclosure as a excuse to reject the claim.
No point taking insurers to court as costs maybe as high as the treatment. Justice favours the rich and powerful.
Consumer groups should look into this and collectively can take on insurance companies as individuals cannot.
 
Which insurance company is this ? so warn to others to avoid.
She pursued the treatment from a private practice (maybe very costly)
Now the insurance company tries to dig as much into her profile to deny her claims
IF she have go through the public hospital route for treatment, will the situation be different ?
 
Back
Top