The failure to disclose information, especially medical
information, is the most common reason why an insurer will
reject a claim on a life or critical illness policy. To help
underline some issues, we want to tell you a true story - but
we've concealed the policyholders' name and a few other aspects
to preserve anonymity.
Mrs A was fighting a secondary infection following surgery to
remove cancerous lymph nodes in her groin when she received
further bad news. Her critical illness insurer was refusing to
pay out the £200,000 she was expecting. To understand why and
the issues involved it's useful to understand how the events
unfolded.
* In June 2001, Mrs A visited her GP after discovering a patch
of flaky skin on her back. Mrs A thought it was eczema. During a
brief consultation, her GP thought that it should be looked and
recommended a referral to a dermatologist. But soon afterwards
the flaky skin healed and Mrs A cancelled the appointment with
the dermatologist. Apparently her GP did not express any major
concern and some years later admitted that Mrs AP was in all
likelihood unaware of the urgency of the referral.
* Nine weeks later a sales representative from Standard Life
made a routine visit to Mrs A at her home. As Mrs A was now
alone with a young family, the representative reviewed Mrs A's
life insurance cover and suggested that she should also have a
£200,000 Critical Illness policy. Mrs A thought that sounded a
very good idea and willingly agreed there and then.
The sales representative produced the form and went through it,
question by question, writing down Mrs A's answers for her. When
it came to the question asking Mrs A to disclose all occasions
her GP had recommended referrals for tests or treatments, Mrs A
asked the sales representative what Standard was asking for. Mrs
A alleges that the representative replied that Standard only
needed details of appointments that related to serious
conditions. Mrs A did not believe that her referral for what she
thought had been eczema, fell into that category - so she did
not mention it. She then signed the form honestly believing that
she had disclosed everything Standard Life had required.
Standard subsequently accepted her application and issued the
£200,000 Critical Illness Insurance policy.
* Two years later Mrs A was found to have skin cancer. Major
surgery rapidly followed to remove the cancer. As her critical
illness policy included cover for her cancer, Mrs A then made
what she thought was a valid claim.
* Standard Life subsequently rejected her claim on the basis of
"reckless non-disclosure" - the insurers' jargon for Mrs A's
failure to disclose her cancelled appointment with the
dermatologist.
The Issues
The events that followed showed that Mrs A's application should
have included her referral to the dermatologist. So why didn't
she disclose the information?
It seems that two aspects conspired to create the situation:
Standard Life's sales representative told Mrs A that the
question on the application form asking for "all occasions her
GP had referred her for tests or treatments" as only relating to
serious conditions. That interpretation was fundamentally wrong.
The question asked for ALL OCCASIONS. These questions are worded
carefully and ALL means ALL - it is not asking the applicant to
make a personal judgement as to whether the grounds for the
referral were serious or not. The representative was clearly
wrong.
Secondly, the GP did not apparently convey to Mrs A the
potential seriousness of her flaky skin and her referral to the
dermatologist. If, when the insurance application was being
completed, Mrs A was unaware that her condition was potentially
serious and the representative said the referral question only
related to serious conditions, Mrs A can hardly be held
responsible for not disclosing that information.
In our view, and on the basis of the information provided to us,
Mrs A is not to blame. Standard Life's representative made the
vital error. He gave incorrect guidance on what the question at
the heart of the dispute, was asking for. In our view Standard
Life should pay out.
The lessons to be learnt
Always very carefully read each question on an insurance
application form - and answer the question FULLY and ACCURATELY.
Do not be tempted to be economical with the truth. If you do
omit something they ask for, the insurance company can
rightfully claim that you mislead them by omission. Never be
tempted to omit some information in order to qualify for a
cheaper premium. You might get a cheaper premium, but that's a
false economy if a subsequent claim is rejected.
We hope Mrs A will get her payout as she was mislead by
circumstances beyond her control. We believe she acted honestly.
She deserves her payout and our best wishes.
However, those applicants who deliberately withhold information
from their insurer or who provide misleading information, do
not.
Postscript : Reports show that Standard Life refuse 5% of all
Critical Illness claims due to non-disclosure. Some other
insurers have much higher figures - Legal & General reject 16%
and Friends Provident reject 15%. The insurance industry is
trying to improve this situation by the ways they seek
information from applicants and by the way the penalties for
no-disclosure are explained.
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