Tips for buying private medical cover
How to make sure you get the most out of your private medical insurance.
Understand the basics
Before you decide whether a modular product is for you, it helps to get a handle on comprehensive medical cover and what it means. This cover is expensive, but covers a wide variety of conditions.
A comprehensive policy should pay for a private consultation, diagnostic tests (such as X-rays and blood tests) and treatment and surgery in a private hospital. It should also pay for related outpatient treatment, if needed. Comprehensive insurance also has extra "hotel benefits" – for example, a private room in hospital. But private medical insurance won't pay for emergency treatment, although follow-up treatment may be done privately. Likewise, policies won't pay for "chronic" ongoing conditions, such as asthma or multiple sclerosis, nor will they cover routine medical care needed during pregnancy, childbirth or infertility treatment. Terminal conditions, cosmetic surgery and any previous conditions will also not be covered.
What is important to you?
To cut the cost of medical cover, ask yourself why you want it. If you are worried about waiting lists for routine operations, choose a policy that will allow you to jump the NHS queue. But if it is long-term expensive therapies for cancer that you think may be denied under the NHS, then you will need something more open-ended.
Raise the excess
One way of making medical cover cheaper is to pay a higher excess. Most insurers will require a £50 payment, but those opting for a higher excess can reduce costs significantly.
Consider self pay
Growing numbers of people are opting to pay for their own treatment for one-off problems. Around 250,000 people use this "self-pay" option each year. The cost of many routine operations can be less than paying premiums for 10 years. A knee replacement, for example, should cost about £4,000, while even a heart bypass usually costs less than £15,000. Of course, this isn't an option for long-term cancer treatment or other ongoing problems.
Take the six-week option Many health insurance companies offer a six-week option, but will only pay out if you have to wait more than six weeks for treatment on the NHS. This can cut premiums by up to a third.
SOURCE: Tips for buying private medical cover - Telegraph
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