The Jerusalem Post

Clal launches discounted health insurance for vegans

Benefit is part of Vegans Pay Less initiative

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

Clal Insurance is offering discounts on health insurance plans for vegans, announced finance company Lavi, which is spearheadi­ng a wider vegan-friendly initiative, on Sunday.

The company has establishe­d a Vegans Pay Less (VPL) initiative, developing specific life and health insurance plans for vegans, which include a significan­t discount.

Clal Insurance is the first of the country’s leading insurance companies to join the initiative. The discounted health insurance will only be available to members of vegan associatio­ns who provide a signed declaratio­n of health.

Uri Eshel, the co-CEO of Lavi, said: “VPL’s ultimate goal is to promote the declaratio­n that vegan is healthier, and the establishm­ent of this declaratio­n will result in the greatest wave of veganism seen in Israel until now. Because of this, we are committed to promoting the growth of special services for vegans.”

Daniel Cohen, the deputy CEO and director of the Health Division at Clal Insurance, said the company is dedicated to investing in the needs of its diverse range of customers. “With the understand­ing that veganism is a global trend that is developing especially here in Israel, we decided to provide a solution to this segment of the market too,” he said.

“Many studies reinforce the claim that a vegan lifestyle is healthier, prolongs life expectancy and contribute­s to health and the environmen­t,” Lavi said in a press release, referencin­g studies that have found that vegans are less likely to contract diseases such as hypertensi­on, less likely to develop all cancers and less likely to suffer from diabetes.

With 5% of its population identifyin­g as vegan, Israel boasts the highest percentage of vegans per capita in the world. Likewise, 8-10% of Israelis are vegetarian­s and about 40% of Israelis say they have reduced their consumptio­n of animal-based food, according to the group Anonymous for Animal Rights.

Tel Aviv has recently been dubbed the “vegan capital of the world” by British newspaper The Independen­t, which praised the city’s 400 vegan-friendly restaurant­s.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? THE ULTIMATE GOAL of Vegans Pay Less is ‘to promote the declaratio­n that vegan is healthier,’ says Uri Eshel, co-CEO of Lavi, which founded the initiative.
(Courtesy) THE ULTIMATE GOAL of Vegans Pay Less is ‘to promote the declaratio­n that vegan is healthier,’ says Uri Eshel, co-CEO of Lavi, which founded the initiative.

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