U.S. regulators inch toward pet-insurance rules as Sir Purrs A Lot ails
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[March 29, 2021] By
Suzanne Barlyn
(Reuters) - U.S. insurance regulators are
close to creating a legal standard for pet insurance that would address
long-standing consumer complaints that insurers rarely pay up when their
furry friends are not well.
A National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) committee is
scheduled to meet on Friday to discuss fine-print provisions about
several controversial issues. Among them: determining whether a pet's
condition is "pre-existing" and how long customers must wait after
buying coverage to file claims.
The committee is preparing for NAIC's national meeting in April, where
regulators from all 50 states will congregate to discuss top-of-mind
issues. The committee is getting closer to presenting the "model" pet
insurance law to those regulators to approve. Then, state legislatures
can decide whether to adopt the proposed law or create their own
versions.
It is an important development at a time when the pet insurance market
is poised to grow.
The pandemic led many Americans to adopt or purchase pets for
companionship during extended lockdowns. Dog inquiries on Petfinder, an
online pet directory, rose 36% for the year ended January 31, a
spokeswoman said.
Less than 3% of U.S. pets are insured, compared to 20% in some European
markets, according to IBISWorld. The research firm expects pet-insurance
earnings to swell from $1.6 billion last year to $2.4 billion in 2025.
Policies are similar to human health coverage, with annual premiums and
deductibles. Rates are typically based on animals' ages and care levels.
Pricier policies tend to have broader protections.
However, customers who buy insurance are often stunned by rejected
claims, facing unexpected restrictions, or companies take aggressive
stances about what should be covered.
For instance, Philadelphia-based consultant Chris Arlene pays Embrace
Pet Insurance $45 a month to cover his dog, Chance. When Chance
swallowed a stuffed animal last year, requiring hospitalization, Embrace
initially denied the $1,100 claim, citing a "pre-existing condition" for
eating objects.
"I was so emotionally distraught," said Arlene.
He appealed the decision, providing additional information that
convinced Embrace to pay, a spokeswoman said.
Experiences like Arlene's are so common that California adopted
consumer-protection laws about pet insurance beginning in 2014, and has
since reinforced the rules. A pending bill would require insurers to
include spaying and neutering in standard coverage.
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Doctor of Veterinarian
Medicine Dr. Jeff Gerlesits calms Lilly, a Golden Retriever who
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U.S. insurance regulation is a state-by-state patchwork rather than a
federally-managed process. That means NAIC's proposal can be influential for
states that have been less proactive than California, whose laws provided a
mold.
NAIC's move is especially important, consumer advocates said, as new entrants
have flooded into the United States, hoping to get a piece of the growing
pet-insurance pie.
Familiar insurance brands like Nationwide and MetLife Inc offer coverage,
sometimes through employee-sponsored benefits programs. Trupanion and PetPlan
have become big players, while Lemonade Inc entered the market last year.
European insurer Bought By Many just launched ManyPets in Illinois on Thursday.
"You have to read the policy carefully," said Robert Hunter, insurance director
for the Consumer Federation of America. "I've never been a big fan despite
having owned dozens of dogs."
Hunter and others cautioned that NAIC's suggestions will not be a panacea for
customers expecting pet insurers to cover bills for dogs, cats, ferrets and
iguanas who need medical help.
NAIC began working on the idea in 2016, and there is no guarantee states will
embrace its proposal quickly, or at all. And insurers may fight claims even with
tougher rules.
Pet insurers simply want customers to understand what they are buying, the North
American Pet Health Insurance Association said in a March regulatory update. The
industry group says a model law could "provide consistency" but wants a version
that allows insurers to "remain competitive."
For Gregory Allen, a restaurant worker in Baltimore, the changes may come too
late.
Allen got a cat last year after losing his job due to government-imposed
business shutdowns. The cat, Sir Purrs A Lot, soon began showing signs of an
"excessive grooming" disorder, which can cause sores and infections.
Despite buying insurance, Allen has paid out of pocket for Sir Purrs A Lot's vet
visits, first because of a two-week waiting period for coverage and then because
his insurer deemed the cat's illness a pre-existing condition.
"My former therapist said that getting a pet would be really good for my mental
health," Allen said. "But with him being as sick as he is and having to deal
with insurance, it's like the opposite of that."
(Reporting by Suzanne Barlyn; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Nick Zieminski)
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