| Medical insurance for your pet |
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For example, here's a sampling of the anomalies Urbanhound.com found when it compared companies' policies, asking if they would cover a Labrador retriever's $2,500 hip replacement at the Animal Medical Center in Manhattan:
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Compared companies' policies: |
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Filing reimbursement claims also falls on the pet owner's shoulders. According to Stephens, this method cuts down on over-utilization and fraud.
"Most of our claims are in the several hundred dollar
range, which consumers can put on their credit card. We try to reimburse
within a week," he says.
"But the back-and-forth paperwork and faxes I found way too frustrating and time-consuming," she says. "It was a pain filling out the forms, which needed to be signed by the vet and almost always were bounced back, delaying reimbursement."
The final straw came when she submitted a $145 bill in May 2001 but didn't receive her check until September. She dropped the coverage.
Never buy a policy from a company not licensed in your state. Without this protection, the company could go under and leave you holding the bag for outstanding treatments and unused premiums.
Finally, understand that pet insurance revolves around emotion. The truth is, a policy won't always save your pet's life.
Warren knows it's ultimately a numbers game: Say the bill amounts to $3,000 with a 20-percent co-pay. You're still on the hook for $600, and statistically euthanasia becomes an option for most owners at the $474 mark.
"It's still possible for that pet owner to put the dog down, even with insurance," he adds.
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