Archive for May, 2010

Benefits Scheduled Pet Insurance & UCR

There are two basic types of pet health care coverage that you will be given a quote for:

  1. – Benefit Scheduled Method
  2. - Usual, Customary and Reasonable (UCR)

It is important to understand the difference between the two.


BENEFIT SCHEDULED METHOD

This type of coverage is based on pre-set payment amounts for specific conditions and medical treatments.   The advantages of this type of coverage are:


1. Full disclosure

You will be given a full menu of items covered and exactly how much the insurance will pay out for each item.  For example if your cat got mangled in a fight with a dog and incurred open wounds  needing anesthesia, surgery and medication as well as an overnight at the Pet Clinic ICU, your coverage might like something like this:


surgery                        $400
anesthesia                   $200

ICU                             $  50 (per night – to a maximum number of nights)

Medication                  $200

Total                            $750

Note: amounts are completely fictitious and in no way an indication of actual figures that an insurance company may use in their quote).

If your cat did have such an incidence, and the costs added up to $1000 you would not be reimbursed the additional $250

2. Cheaper Premiums

Limited payouts may mean cheaper premiums.  If affordability is a major factor this type of insurance may be an attractive alternative.


3. Does Not Vary Location to Location

While this may appear to be an attractive feature, in some parts of the country pet health care may be far more expensive than in others.  Think major cities such as New York and Los Angeles, the vet fees in these cities would be higher than at Small Town USA.  Particularly important to note if you travel with your pets.


4. Not Indexed to Inflation

The good thing about this is that your premiums do not increase, the bad thing is that with inflation the actual cost of pet health care goes up, but the reimbursable amount stays the same.  Frequent updates with this type of insurance are a must or you might end up holding the short end of the stick.


Usual, Customary and Reasonable (UCR).

UCR or Usual Customary and Reasonable is the more traditional insurance method, simply you (your pet) incurs the expense and you submit it for full reimbursement.

This is still not a carte blanche, it is not unlimited coverage so be sure to check what your coverage actually covers.  The amounts that can be claimed vary place to place, depending on the cost of veterinary services.  Also, if you have claims, the premiums are likely to increase.


No matter which option you choose, do be sure to do your research thoroughly.  When you receive a quote it is a good idea to go over every item with the insurance company so that you understand exactly what it means.   A surprise bill that your insurance company only partially covers is enough to put your stress levels into overdrive, but an emergency with no coverage can be a very sad story.

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Pet Insurance Covers Unexpected Health Problems

We love our pets and want the best for them. They give us joy, love, loyalty, companionship, care and protection. Yet, when unexpected emergencies arise, such as an open wound caused when your dog had a not so friendly tussle with another dog, most of us are poorly prepared to deal with situation at hand.


Consider Connie.


Connie had a lifelong friend – Cleopatra, or Cleo for short


Cleo was a beautiful shepherd dog.  At just three years of age she was just out of puppyhood but you’d never know it.  The way she poked her nose into everything, alert to the slightest movement that signaled play, always eager to chase the ball or play frisbee.  Cleo’s favorite however was going for a nice long walk with Connie on the trails in the forest just behind where they lived.


One day after Connie and Cleo got back from their walk, Cleo lapped up a whole bowl of water and as was typical, pranced around the kitchen a bit.  Suddenly something was not right.  Connie couldn’t quite figure it out at first, then she realized that Cleo was in pain.  What to do?


Connie was beside herself.  She realized that Cleo was suffering from stomach torsion.


They say that life is like a bunch of grapes – one bunch after another and when you get one bunch with one sour grape, well the rest of the grapes in that bunch are going to be sour as well.  It seems that Connie had plucked a sour bunch of grapes as first one misfortune and then another befell her in a very short time span.  The worst was that she was completely broke.  Literally not a penny to her name.  While she was going through this agony, she watched poor Cleo die in her arms.


Connie never got over it.  One never does.


Torsion is serious and swift and even if Connie had been able to get Cleo to the vet there is no guarantee that a different story would have been written.  What tore at Connie’s heart, and still does till today, is that she simply had no money.  She told me how only a few weeks ago she had a conversation with a neighbor who had just bought pet health insurance for her dogs.  She wonders if had she not taken so much time going over in her mind whom to call for financial help, or just threw Cleo in the car and raced off to the pet clinic, if the outcome might have been different.


“You know,  she tells me


If only I had had the means, a pet insurance.  I just never thought anything so serious would happen to my Cleo.  I just did not think about it!  She was only three years old!”


More pet owners are realizing the importance of taking out pet insurance.  In North America only 3% of pets are insured vs 20% in the UK.  Annual premiums are less costly than an unscheduled visit to the vet, or worse yet, the early loss of your loved pet.


If you are the type of person who doesn’t want to have to choose between going into debt or putting  your pet down, pet insurance is for you.

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