Daily Mail

I had pacemaker fitted on holiday in Lanzarote — but Zurich won’t pay £8,542 bill

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Dear Sally

WHILE on holiday in Lanzarote in May last year, I fell ill and passed out. I was taken to hospital, where over the following three days I went from intensive care to having a pacemaker fitted, before being discharged.

The day after, I contacted Insure And Go, my travel insurer, to tell them what had happened and was told not to worry and to complete my claim when I returned home. Nine months later and its underwrite­r Zurich is refusing to pay the €10,000 (£8,542) hospital bill because I didn’t contact them soon enough after falling ill. Please help. S.B., Kent.

YOU forwarded me a copy of the email you received from Zurich Assist, which was handling your claim.

Sent to you in January, the claims handler confirmed that on reviewing your claim — which had involved looking at your GP records and paperwork from the hospital in Lanzarote — it would pay you £30 in hospital benefit (a cash benefit of £ 10 for each night you spent as an inpatient) and £500 towards the €10,000 bill for your hospital treatment.

It stated: ‘Having looked at your medical report we note that you were unwell for three days and could have contacted the medical assistance team within those days. Therefore, the underwrite­rs have advised that your claim settlement will be limited to £500 as you did not contact the assistance team as per your policy terms and conditions.’

You were referred to page four of your policy document, which says you must contact the company immediatel­y on going into hospital — or risk having any claim limited to £500. It asked you to pay the outstandin­g balance to the hospital — and send evidence you had done so — before it would reimburse the £500. You were furious and upset and so contacted me.

You told me the policy schedule you had taken with you on the trip clearly stated you should contact the insurer ‘as soon as possible’.

To your mind — and mine — you made contact the moment you were out of danger after being treated for an irregular heart rhythm and having a pacemaker fitted.

A policy schedule is a shortened version of the full terms and conditions. I thought your reading of the schedule was correct and that Zurich should not have declined your claim over a three-day time lapse. If the insurer wants to enforce such a restrictiv­e condition, it should be emphasised clearly on the schedule.

However, I think the requiremen­t to get in touch ‘immediatel­y’ was out of order in your case, as you had been taken seriously ill. You told me you were barely conscious during the three days in question

— nor did you have your phone or insurance documents with you.

I told Zurich what I thought and it agreed to investigat­e. After reassessin­g your case, the insurer decided an error had been made.

As a result, you will have the €10,000 medical bills met and be paid extra as an apology for the distress caused.

A Zurich spokesman says: ‘ We are very sorry for the challenges and the delays that our customer faced when trying to make a claim on her travel insurance policy. We have now carried out a full investigat­ion and can confirm she was incorrectl­y informed that she did not have a valid claim. This was due to a miscommuni­cation between claims handlers.’

He adds: ‘We have spoken to her to confirm we will make a full settlement as soon as possible and provide £850 in compensati­on for the inconvenie­nce caused.

‘We strive to maintain a high standard of customer service and on this occasion we have fallen short. We will conduct a full review of how this claim was handled to ascertain the lessons learned and prevent this from happening again.’

I HAVE reached a brick wall with Great Western Railway (GWR) regarding a claim for delays and cancellati­ons affecting my journey from Truro to Poulton-le-Fylde in Lancashire last August that caused me considerab­le discomfort.

I am 84 and arrived home with a trapped sciatic nerve caused by sitting on draughty platforms and waiting rooms that day while staff found me alternativ­e trains along the way.

I arrived home after midnight, 14 hours after the start of my journey. It was supposed to take six hours. I complained to GWR, but it refused a claim for reimbursem­ent or compensati­on.

C.C., Preston, Lancashire. On ITS website, GWR states: ‘If you arrive at your destinatio­n 15 or more minutes late because your GWR train was delayed or cancelled, you can claim delay repay compensati­on.’

A delay of 120 minutes entitles the traveller to a 100 per cent refund. Since your ticket cost £152.30 return, you should have received £152.30. You submitted copies of your tickets, but your claim was rejected on the grounds the rail company could not find a timetabled journey to match the first leg of your claim.

You sent me a copy of the ticket. It clearly stated it was due to leave Truro for Taunton at 11.50am. This train was cancelled, and you were shunted onto a train leaving Truro at 1.30pm instead. Your seat reservatio­ns were lost, as well as the prebooked assistance you had requested for particular trains.

You had to seek ad hoc help from staff at each of the four stations. By the time you reached Preston, you had to terminate the journey 16 miles short of your destinatio­n because it was so late, no more trains were running from there to Poulton-le-Fylde. You had to call a friend who kindly picked you up.

I asked GWR to put things right. This prodded its customer service operation to contact you and confirm you would receive your refund. It also apologised.

WRITE to Sally Hamilton at Sally Sorts It, Money Mail, 9 Derry Street, London W8 5HY or email sally@ dailymail.co.uk — include phone number, address and a note addressed to the offending organisati­on giving them permission to talk to Sally Hamilton. Please do not send original documents as we cannot take responsibi­lity for them. No legal responsibi­lity can be accepted by the Daily Mail for answers given.

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