An important little story about travel insurance.

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Globalti

Legendary Member
We have just returned home five days late after our son aged 13 crashed while skiing and compressed a vertebra. I thought you might be interested in reading about our experience with our travel insurance brokers.

We took out a one year travel policy with winter sports cover for around £46 with Essential Travel. When the accident happened they were excellent; on the ball, professional, as quick as can be expected and well set up to communicate in French with the hospital and guarantee cover for the 20% of the cost (1350 Euros a day) not covered by our EHIC card. We were in twice-daily contact with their call centre in the UK, the staff were sympathetic, bright, well-spoken and experienced. The pace only slowed once our dossier had been passed to their travel agents for the travelling home arrangements.

By contrast we met two injured skiers in the hospital whose insurance brokers had call centres outside the UK; one young lad who had been stuck for two days longer than us with only a broken arm and collarbone and whose call centre was in Portugal and another man who had been stuck for NINE days and was hugely depressed and frustrated - his insurer was American Express and their call centre in India. He told us AMEX insurance were garbage and he would never use them again.

The moral of the story is: always check the whereabouts of your travel insurer's call centre before signing.

A couple of other points: don't EVER travel outside the UK without insurance, they are wise to the various scams and will check your identity very carefully before they put you "on cover".

If skiing a carte neige simplifies things but is not vital if you have proper insurance and don't use it as a substitute as it won't get you repatriated.

If you have an accident, expect every step of the process to take 24 hours; things just don't move any faster than that.

Gti Junior is now wearing a super back brace and expected to make a full recovery.
 

Nigeyy

Legendary Member
Since I live in the States and have to deal with Health Insurance companies (sigh, about on par with car salespeople, cable tv companies and the devil in my book) this advice is well worth taking heed of.
 

ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
Ouch - that explains your trip in an ambulance! I'm glad that your lad is going to be okay Gti.

I've had arguments before now over travel insurance. I'm the cautious type and want to be covered for these sorts of emergencies but I know people who seem to think that insurance is an unnecessary luxury.
 

Chris Norton

Well-Known Member
Location
Boston, Lincs
I had my appendix removed whilst on holiday in spain. Would never leave the uk without decent travel insurance and actually like having it for my uk hols too. Once you've used it you'd never not have it.
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
Glad to hear junior will be ok.

I totally agree with being fully covered. I ride bikes and motorbikes abroad and my insurance is part of the budget when I am planning holidays. It is worth its weight in gold as far as I am concerned.

Steve
 

GarminDave

Regular
I find insurance a minefield, I used to think that paying more got better service but my experience tells me different. I've found you are never really sure how good your particular insurance is until you have cause to claim on it. These forums are a very good place to get unbiased reports. I am cynical and believe the claims departments are indoctrinated to respond with "Sorry but your policy does not cover for that particular incident", mind I am old!

Thanks for the report and of course the sound advice that we all need to be covered whilst travelling or be very rich!

Later

Dave
 

CopperBrompton

Bicycle: a means of transport between cake-stops
Location
London
The Amex story is very strange because the Amex Travel Insurance call-centre is in the UK.

A friend had a major motorcycle accident (air ambulance from accident to hospital, coma, brain injury, surgery, air ambulance transfer back to the UK) all handled by Amex with complete ease.
 
OP
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Globalti

Globalti

Legendary Member
That is indeed strange. Last night I was having dinner here in Jo'burg with my agent who travels extensively and he told me the very same as the man at our hospital - AMEX travel insurance are shunned here because their call centre is in India!

Could it be that there is an Indian call centre for the routine stuff and a UK centre for the serious stuff? Would they even be Amex's own call centres or somebody who they contract for the service? We were surprised to find that our own Essential Travel is owned by Thomas Cook.
 

CopperBrompton

Bicycle: a means of transport between cake-stops
Location
London
I don't think that's it as I needed to call them once myself for a rather minor issue (wallet stolen on the way home from France, so needed to sort out a cash advance) and to do that I called a UK number and spoke to someone with a British accent. Not to say they couldn't have been in India, but if so it was completely transparent.
 

grove06

New Member
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Since I live in the States and have to deal with Health Insurance companies
 
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