…or how I really cocked things up. A cautionary tale that may prevent anyone considering life insurance from making the same mistake that I did.
Last night over dinner the conversation came round to life insurance. I have a policy with Aviva. It’s needed to protect LOML in case of my demise to clear the mortgage and have money to get men in to finish the house ready for sale. I do have a policy with Aviva but with a heavy loading on the premiums because the doctor, during the insurance medical, heard a mild heart murmur and very faint carotid bruit? Emphasis on 'mild' and 'very faint'.
In an attempt to get a lower premium I recently applied to Scottish Widows. The quote came through yesterday. Premium even more than the current policy. And it’s all to do with ‘heart murmur’ and ‘carotid brut’ being on my medical record.
I now realise (hindsight) that the scale or magnitude of either murmur or bruit, as far as underwriters are concerned, are pretty much irrelevant, because the qualification ‘mild’ and 'very faint' have no impact on reducing the hefty premium loading. It is all to do with those two words ( murmur and bruit) being on your GP medical record.
But at the time of the Aviva medical, my GP…my NHS records…nor I had any knowledge of either murmur or bruit. Nothing. Nada. So had this remained the status quo, going along to Scottish Widows may well have had a completely different result. More than likely, in fact, because it was a simple at-home nurse checkup with Scottish Widows. Not a stethoscope in sight. Scottish Widows would have had no knowledge of murmur or bruit. No loading therefore. Premium much less than the Aviva one. Result.
But I didn’t keep quiet, did I ? My error way back then was in thinking that I could provide Aviva with reassurance, based on tests and scans, that the murmur and bruit were very, very minor and so get the loading reduced. It’s the ‘problem solver’ in me. The inner-engineer. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. To get these scans, you go to your GP and you’re then stuffed as those two words then appear on your medical record in perpetuity. There to give any other life assurance company the heebie-jeebies. I should simply have said and done nothing. Simply applied to another life insurance company and chose one without a doctor's medical.
It was a very expensive mistake.
Ain’t hindsight wonderful.
Last night over dinner the conversation came round to life insurance. I have a policy with Aviva. It’s needed to protect LOML in case of my demise to clear the mortgage and have money to get men in to finish the house ready for sale. I do have a policy with Aviva but with a heavy loading on the premiums because the doctor, during the insurance medical, heard a mild heart murmur and very faint carotid bruit? Emphasis on 'mild' and 'very faint'.
In an attempt to get a lower premium I recently applied to Scottish Widows. The quote came through yesterday. Premium even more than the current policy. And it’s all to do with ‘heart murmur’ and ‘carotid brut’ being on my medical record.
I now realise (hindsight) that the scale or magnitude of either murmur or bruit, as far as underwriters are concerned, are pretty much irrelevant, because the qualification ‘mild’ and 'very faint' have no impact on reducing the hefty premium loading. It is all to do with those two words ( murmur and bruit) being on your GP medical record.
But at the time of the Aviva medical, my GP…my NHS records…nor I had any knowledge of either murmur or bruit. Nothing. Nada. So had this remained the status quo, going along to Scottish Widows may well have had a completely different result. More than likely, in fact, because it was a simple at-home nurse checkup with Scottish Widows. Not a stethoscope in sight. Scottish Widows would have had no knowledge of murmur or bruit. No loading therefore. Premium much less than the Aviva one. Result.
But I didn’t keep quiet, did I ? My error way back then was in thinking that I could provide Aviva with reassurance, based on tests and scans, that the murmur and bruit were very, very minor and so get the loading reduced. It’s the ‘problem solver’ in me. The inner-engineer. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. To get these scans, you go to your GP and you’re then stuffed as those two words then appear on your medical record in perpetuity. There to give any other life assurance company the heebie-jeebies. I should simply have said and done nothing. Simply applied to another life insurance company and chose one without a doctor's medical.
It was a very expensive mistake.
Ain’t hindsight wonderful.
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