Business Standard

Debate rages over Covid’s status as ‘pre-existing condition’

- SUBRATA PANDA

Some insurers are of the opinion that Covid-19 cannot be treated as a preexistin­g condition while issuing policies to customers who might have had the infection but subsequent­ly recovered from it. Still others said the underwriti­ng practices will change, given it is still an evolving situation in terms of complicati­ons and side-effects.

Experts have said it will depend on each insurer and their underwriti­ng standards whether they want to treat Covid and the complicati­ons arising from it as a pre-existing condition.

Anything that increases the risk for insurers will call for either a repricing or refusal. This is the principle of underwriti­ng. If research proves that Covid results in anything permanent, it will fall under the pre-existing category, cautioned experts.

But not all Covid patients behave in the same manner. Some show mild symptoms and recover after a brief quarantine. Still others suffer from serious ailments requiring invasive/noninvasiv­e ventilatio­n. There are studies to convey that Covid can have long-term pulmonary and vascular complicati­ons.

A pre-existing condition generally means a health condition a person is facing prior to purchasing a policy. According to the insurance regulator, pre-existing disease is any condition, ailment, and injury diagnosed by the doctor and for which medical advice or treatment was provided or recommende­d by the doctor within a time span of 48 months (two years) before the effective date of the health insurance policy issued by the health insurance company.

Bhabatosh Mishra, director– underwriti­ng, products & claims, Max Bupa Health Insurance, said, “As far as our company is concerned, we do not consider Covid as a pre-existing condition. Covid is an infectious disease caused by a virus. Because we are witnessing short-term complicati­ons in patients recovering from Covid, we will impose a cooling-off period of 90 days before we issue a policy. This gives us better knowledge of the disease while underwriti­ng the policy.”

“Covid is still continuing to be a disease of uncertaint­y. We cannot factor in huge premium for covering people who have had Covid. At the same time, we cannot blindly give them cover. We are trying to give pre-existing disease (PED) exclusion to those with high morbidity. This PED exclusion depends on policy rituals which may vary between six months and four years,” said Dr S Prakash, managing director and chief executive officer, Star Health and Allied Insurance. He said for Covid patients who had mild symptoms, there is a 14-day cool-off before they can be issued any health policy. Many insurers have decided to impose a cooling-off period before they issue a policy to a customer with Covid.

A senior insurance executive said, “I do not think it will be explicitly treated as a pre-existing illness across the industry. It may be case-by-case.” Let’s say, somebody has liver damage. It can be due to various reasons, one of which may be Covid. At the time of policy issuance, if somebody discloses he has liver damage, it will be treated as a pre-existing issue. But, Covid per se doesn’t become a preexistin­g issue, he explained.

The chief executive of a private insurance company said if Covid results in permanent lung damage, it will be treated differentl­y. The insurer may choose to increase the premium. If a company’s underwriti­ng guidelines do not permit it to cover such risks, it may choose not to cover it. The principle of exclusion is related to what is reversible and what is not.

Said Amit Chhabra, business head– health at Policybaza­ar, “Covid is not a pre-existing disease, according to the current definition, but there is a coolingoff period. However, some insurers do introduce an exclusion in some rare cases.” Since the onset of the pandemic, insurers have covered the disease and paid claims to policyhold­ers. The industry and the regulator came up with short-term products designed specifical­ly for Covid, so that people without comprehens­ive health product are at least covered against the virus.

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