Business Standard

Policies covering mental ailments may cost 5-10% more PRIYADARSH­INI MAJI

The cost mark-up will be higher in case of policies that cover outpatient treatment

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The Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai), in a recent circular, notified insurers to make provisions for the treatment of mental illnesses, with immediate effect. The notificati­on says that the rules have to be followed, according to the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017.

It has further clarified that the treatment of mental illnesses should be on the same basis as the treatment of physical illnesses. According to the

World Health Organizati­on, depression will be a leading cause of morbidity in the world by 2020. It is estimated that about 150 million people in India currently suffer from some form of mental disorder.

Mental illnesses can be of various kinds, like mood disorders, obsessive- compulsive disorder, stress-related conditions, behavioura­l disorders due to substance abuse, etc. “All the existing indemnity policies cover different forms of physical ailments. They cover pre- and post-hospitalis­ation treatment and offer wellness benefits. But with this move, policyhold­ers will be able to avail insurance cover for mental illnesses, which will increase the ambit of coverage in the same policy that they have,” says Ashish Mehrotra, managing director & chief executive officer (CEO), Max Bupa health insurance.

Most health insurance policies currently treat mental illnesses as exclusion. A few health insurers cover certain mental illnesses under OPD (outpatient department) coverage. For instance, Max Bupa offers inbuilt OPD under its GoActive cover, which can be availed for psychiatri­c consultati­ons on a cashless basis. According to insurance brokers, the current products in the market covering certain mental illnesses under OPD are more in the nature of wellness benefits.

Insurers will have to make changes to their current policies. Says Shreeraj Deshpande, head of health insurance, Future Generali India Insurance: “Insurers may come out with specific products covering mental illnesses or revise their existing products to include coverage for treatment of mental illnesses.”

One issue insurers will face in re-pricing their products is lack of data. “This is a new area that insurers will enter. The data will have to be analysed from available sources to work out the premiums for covering mental illness treatment on only hospitalis­ation basis, and on hospitalis­ation plus OPD basis,” says Deshpande.

Only covering hospitalis­ation will not suffice. Patients suffering from mental ailments need OPD treatment, like psychiatri­c counsellin­g, as well.

“Insurance companies should come out with group as well as retail policies that include OPD cover. They should not limit themselves to hospitalis­ation cover only,” says Prawal Kalita, director-benefit solutions, JLT Independen­t Insurance Brokers.

Hospitalis­ation is a less frequent event in case of mental illnesses. “Though it is too early to predict, we expect that premiums of hospital is at ion only policies will increase to the tune of 5-10 per cent for covering mental illnesses,” says Rahul Agarwal, CEO, Ideal Insurance.

Adds Kapil Mehta, cofounder and managing director, Secure Now Insurance Broker: “Under mental illnesses, more

claims are likely to arise in the OPD segment. If a policy already has the OPD component, then the re-pricing is not likely to be very high. But if an OPD component is introduced, then the pricing will go up more significan­tly. A policy that gives OPD cover is priced higher than a non- OPD policy by 0.6- 0.8 times.” In other words, a policy that introduces an OPD cover of ~10,000 will cost ~6,000-8,000 more.

As for exclusions, experts say that insurers may find it difficult to cover some mental ailments, while excluding others. “Only things like drug overdose during treatment are likely to be excluded,” says Kalita.

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