Business Standard

Corona insurance of up to ~5 lakh will be offered from June 15

- SUBRATA PANDA & NAMRATA ACHARYA

Insurance companies are working on a standardis­ed insurance product for Covid-19, with the sum assured ranging from ~1-5 lakh.

This follows the insistence of the regulator, and directions issued by the General Insurance Council (GI Council) — the apex body of non-life insurers. The product needs to be offered mandatoril­y from June 15, and insurers are given time till June 4 to come up with recommenda­tions, said people aware of the developmen­t. In view of the disparity in claims, the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai) has asked the GI Council for a standard cover.

Though the council is yet to submit its views, industry sources say insurers are proposing the cover for people in the age group of 18-65. Unlike other health policies that mostly cover hospitalis­ation expenses alone, the specialise­d cover is likely to include the cost of treatment during quarantine and payment of cash for incidental expenses.

“The standard cover for Covid-19 can have two add-on covers — quarantine cover, and hospital daily cash. If the insured person is quarantine­d due to diagnosis or suspected infection of Covid-19, the company will pay 1 per cent of the sum assured per day, subject to a maximum of ~3,000,” said the draft guidelines reviewed by Business Standard.

Similarly, the company will pay 0.5 per cent of the sum assured per day for every completed 24 hours of hospitalis­ation, on positive diagnosis of the disease. Factors such as isolation of patients in hotels are normally not covered under normal policies. But, with Covid demanding such line of preventive measures, Irdai has called for inclusion of such clauses in the standard Covid product, said a public sector insurance executive.

Room, boarding, and nursing expenses will be capped at ~5,000 a day and intensive care unit expenses at ~10,000, while ambulance charges will have a maximum limit of ~2,000 per incidence of hospitalis­ation. A GI Council official said: “The regulator wants to give more clarity to policyhold­ers, hence a standard product helps in clearly spelling out what is covered, and the conditions under which the ailment is covered.”

The product may remain in force for a year or two, and have some added features that will make it more attractive, while being cheaper than other health policies, as it will be covering Covid-19 only. In spite of being a standard product, insurers will be free to price it according to their underwriti­ng understand­s. “If we have to popularise the policy, the premium has to be low. This will be one of the options given to policyhold­ers,

Insurers have been given time till June 4 to come up with recommenda­tions

Industry sources say insurers are proposing the cover for people in the age group of 18-65

Room, boarding, and nursing expenses will be capped at ~5,000 a day

ICU expenses at ~10,000; while ambulance charges will have a maximum limit of ~2,000 per incidence of hospitalis­ation

The product may remain in force for a year or two

especially to those who do not have a health cover, as there are high chances of catching the virus now. Compared to other policies, the premium for the standard health policy will be less,” added the GI Council official.

Insurers are seeing a gradual decline in the average claim payout for Covid treatment. Initially, when claims started trickling in, the average claim size ranged from ~2-3 lakh. However, it has reduced to ~1.5 lakh now. Despite the decline, many private hospitals are charging high rates because of no standardis­ation. Insurers have been calling for standardis­ation in rates when it comes to Covid treatment. In the absence of any health regulator, the ball lies in the Centre’s court.

As of May 29, non-life insurers got 6,900 claims on account of Covid-19. Of this, 3,300 worth ~32 crore are settled, said people in the know. “Many hospitals are taking advantage of the situation and overbillin­g patients. Insurance firms are required to pay this bill. Further, as directed by the ministry, insurers cannot refuse these claims,” said the head of a general insurance firm.

Many insurers have come out with specialise­d Covid products. Standardis­ation will help bring more parity in existing products too. “There are separate Covid products that insurance providers have come up with. This, however, is an effort to bring a standard product for policyhold­ers to get a clear sense of what is covered and what is not,” said Sanjay Datta of ICICI Lombard.

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COVER CHARGES

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