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Looking for advice on this.
I booked a holiday several months ago and took out travel insurance. My wife and I have several medical issues which were all fully declared and accepted by the insurance company.
Two questions asked were .
1. Any joint replacements
2. Anyone on waiting list for future operations.
With reference to q1, my wife had undergone a toe operation to replace worn out cartilage (arthritis) around 18 months earlier, so I answered yes to this.
With reference to q2 I answered no as at the time there were no future operations planned.
These answers were accepted by the insurance company.
Unfortunately the previous operation wasn't very successful, and after a visit to outpatients last week, the surgeon offered my wife another operation to insert a different type of joint. She agreed to this and has therefore been put on the waiting list for a future operation expected to be in about three months time.
As the holiday is next week, I perused the insurance documents to check everything was in order and noticed the clause that any changes to medical conditions must be notified, so I called the insurance company and advised them that the answer to q2 had now changed. I was advised that any claim relating to the toe condition would now not be covered.
I would say that the likelihood of any such claims would be pretty much zero as I can't imagine anything happening to my wife's toe which would require any treatment prior to her proposed operation.
However it seems strange to me that the insurance company can effectively change the policy in respect of a medical condition which pre existed and was accepted at the time of purchase.
I know every policy is different, but in general, would an insurance company have the right to do this? It seems to they are changing what is in effect a contractual document. As I understand it, a travel policy is meant to cover the holiday and also anything occurring prior to the holiday. |
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