• Guest - w'd love to know what you think about the forum! Take the 2025 Survey »

Information re: Insurance Policies

doctorqwerty

Member
Messages
15
Having been recently diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, i have found the wealth of information on this site, and the discussion threads invaluable.

With this in mind, i would like to ask if anyone knows if, having now been diagnosed with diabetes, am i obliged to inform any company of this, that i have current insurance policies, or savings plans with?

If i dont, would it make my insurance invalid?
And also, does this apply to any new insurance, for whatever its purpose?

Most of us take these insurance policies out long before we join the Global Diabuddies Club.
 
Hi doctorqwerty,
For any existing insurance policies that you have:

Life Assurance - you don't need to tell them. They assessed the risk that you pose based on your health at the time you took out the policy, the premiums are set at that point and they can never be changed. If you later develop a critical illness then that is the risk they took when they agreed the insurance - their problem not yours!

Travel insurance - this is renewed each year and the insurer's risk is therefore re-assessed each year. Effectively every renewal is like starting a new policy all over again. So you need to advise them when you next renew. Many of the bigger companies have now decided not to insure diabetics - they will quote you for insurance but it provides no cover if you were to be taken ill on holiday with a diabetes related complication. But there are specialist insurance companies that do provide full cover for diabetics, and cheaper than the limited insurance that the bigger companies will offer you.

Car insurance - you need to advise your insurance company that you have been diagnosed as type-2. They generally won't increase your premium (get a different insurer if yours tries this), they generally just note their records and that is all. The danger of not telling them is that if you were to have to make a claim and they subsequently found that you are diabetic and hadn't informed them, then they could invalidate your insurance on the grounds that you have witheld information that could have influenced their decision to insure you. Like most insurers they will look for any and every possible way to get out of paying! Incidentally if you were to have an accident and your insurer cancels your policy, then technically you have been driving whilst uninsured and can be prosecuted - as if being in an accident wasn't bad enough!

DVLA - not an insurer but you do not need to inform them unless you have a PSV or HGV licence or are diagnosed as type-1.

Personal protection insurances (e.g. unemployment, payment protection, critical illness) are re-assessed each year at renewal just like travel insurance, so you will need to divulge any change in your health because this is critical to their decision whether to continue to insure you, and at what cost.

Buildings & contents insurance - your health has no implications for their risk so they are not interested in whether you are diabetic.

For any insurance you may need to take out in the future:

All types of insurance except buildings and contents will need to be told. Someone with diabetes is seen as having a higher mortality risk than a non-diabetic so unfortunately you will find the premiums a lot higher than for a non-diabetic (except for travel insurance where, by shopping around, I found that you can still get good value).

The good news is that if you follow the great advice on this forum in getting your blood sugar under control, and keeping it there, we can help you live forever!!! :lol:
 
Yeah just like Dennis said. I've just recently booked my travel insurance for my forth coming holiday. "That will be £17 for you and your wife sir for the two weeks". Then i told them i was type 1 diabetic and another £33.50 was lobbed on top.

Best Wishes !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
We have travel insurance through our bank account....and I think that you should notify them. I am Type 1, and have been for years, but even so, all they di was take a note, and that was it.
 
Re: Information re: Insurance - Help Wanted!

Hee hee - always had the bank Account cover since they invented it - as you say NP with having D as long as you tell em (think they may have asked me a few Q's on control etc which is fair enough)

So full of confidence, after I had my mental breakdown last January and was well on the way to control if not complete recovery (who knows what would happen IF ....) and having just returned from a few days on the Continent not having even thought about insurance - I suddenly thought ooer! - better tell em!

Eeek - they now surcharge me for both conditions! £66 thank you very much. So with high dudgeon I flounced off to get alternative quotes. After several days I had to go back cap in hand (and I'm an insurance broker so I probably tried more insurers than you've had hot dinners!) and paid the £66. Might have just trusted to my E111 had it just been Europe (though I prefer to know I've got full cover) - but not for the planned 3 weeks in Oz via Malaysia LOL

What frustrated me was the failure to ask questions eg is it controlled? - Yes. does it affect your diabetes? - not now cos I know what to do to a) avoid the stressor as far as poss and b) correct my BS correctly. Are you suicidal? - No, all that stopped the instant I actually got any treatment for it, x number of months ago.

Like diabetes used to be - we all get equal discrimination LOL

The VERY good news is there is currently in operation an exercise by a national charity (GIG) to design templates for 'all insurers' to use for various different Conditions not just Genitic ones, backed by the ABI and BUPA, Diabetes UK amonst others are involved but GIG are directly consulting certain individuals who they think may be able to assist with evidence/perception etc - and I'm very pleased to have been asked to take part leading on from observations I made to the Project Leader some months ago.

Amongst the sponsors of GIG are various drug companies whose names the diabetic community are very familiar with.

At this stage have no idea how long or how thorough this is going to be (it's started obviously and it's just over a month till I attend my first meeting) - but I have high hopes in view of the ABI's involvement in it. Even BUPA can't afford to pay for a long drawn-out investigation so the sooner we can cut to the chase, the better.

What I want is lots of evidence apart from my own experience of wrong questions, daft questions and no questions when they 'should have' asked something - either diabetes-related or not. Strict confidentially will be maintained throughout and to this end you may wish to PM or email me - save clagging the Forum up for starters apart from the confidentiality and also ensure I get any replies. Tell me it's a family member or a close friend - all I want is the bones of the perceived problem so:- Type of Insurance cover, Name of Insurer (preferable but not essential), and the issues you have with it.

I actually do spend more time on another forum so may not pick up responses quickly on the Forum itself. I'm asking exactly the same question there and no forum or individual will get any monetary profit from this - just all of us, potentially!
 
Back
Top