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NewsHealth Insurance Premium Increases Hit Older Australians Hardest
Health Insurance Premium Increases Hit Older Australians Hardest

Health Insurance Premium Increases Hit Older Australians Hardest

Melbourne University's Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia project surveyed about 17,000 people about their lives each year and confirmed what our member have been telling us for years: massive premium increases are hitting older people hardest of all.

Australian households are spending about 20 per cent more on health insurance than they were in the mid-naughties and the cost has increased most for older couples.

The growth in premium prices is even larger but the economist leading the 13-year study believes households are switching to cheaper policies with less coverage as the price hikes dwarf income growth.

It has found 61 per cent of households had health insurance in 2014, up from 54 per cent in 2005, likely influenced by government policy that has encouraged Australians to get insured.

Factoring in inflation, households were spending $2237 annually on health insurance in 2014, up from $1869 in 2006, an increase of about 20 per cent, or $368.

Elderly couples were most likely to be insured (71 per cent) and they were also the group who experienced the steepest increase in health insurance costs, rising 31 per cent in eight years. The mean household spend on health insurance for elderly couples increased by $640 between 2006 and 2014, or $80 each year.

The report's author Roger Wilkins said "We know that elderly people tend to go for the higher levels of cover and perhaps the cost of those types of policies have risen more than the basic levels of cover. The increase for other households might have been even greater if they were staying in the same policies."

He's referring to government data, which shows an increase in the price of premiums from 2009 to 2014 of 15.5 per cent, compared to the HILDA respondents saying that they were actually paying about 11.6 per cent more.

Consumers Health Forum chief executive Leanne Wells said the study confirmed "the steady rise in above inflation health insurance for the past decade",  highlighting a need for reform.

She said  "Many households have been forced to shrink their cover because of rising premiums which has led to the growth in junk policies leaving people with cover that is not really worth the still-considerable expense."

Dr Rachel David, CEO of Private Healthcare Australia, which represents most of the health insurance industry, said insurers were searching for ways to reduce cost but while inputs like the price of medical devices continue to escalate, so too would premiums.

Originally posted on .

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Health Insurance Premium Increases Hit Older Australians Hardest

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Garry
Garry from NSW commented:

I have been in the HCF since I started work 50 years ago .always on the highest cover .We are worried that if we lower the policy we wont be covered by growing hospital and doctors costs .After I leave work I will have to reduce the cover unable to pay for it.This worries me in retirement 

Geoff
Geoff from NSW commented:

I have being paying private health insurance (Medibank) since I was 19 years old, and have rarely had to make a claim. Now I am heading into my sixties I do not expect to have to pay higher premiums just because I am older. I feel health insurance companies should recognise this loyalty and reward their customers, (a) who are long term customers, (b) who can produce proof they keep themselves healthy (in my case I attend the gym regularly) and (c) who make minimal claims, to name a few. I know for a fact that Medibank have NO loyalty to their customers. I do not know why I remain loyal to them, and I am thinking of changing to a 'not for profit' insurance company. 

bruce
bruce from NSW commented:

I have hospital cover but cant afford to use it, the gap is that significant that I am on public hospital waiting lists, so whats the point in paying it? 

Someone
Someone from TAS commented:

Sigh!!! My husband has vascular disease! At 50 he had a stroke. We have always had private health insurance, never thinking we would need to use it for anything other than extra cover, ie, dental. We are both now retired, living a very simple life and still trying to commit to private health insurance. Our insurance company now charges the excess for day surgery! Yet another hit in the pocket. We have never burdened the public hospital system, but now we are looking down the barrel of that! Very upset at having no control of where we are heading, even though we have always looked after ourselves. :( 

robert
robert from NSW commented:

insurance premiums have had an increasing effect in the people 60 over! I I recently rang my former health insurer requesting a list of specialists that deal in the no-gap policy in regard to a back complaint that may require an operation. they advised me to obtain a list from there website . I did so and rang each specialist that was on their list.. Not one of them listed on the website offered the no-gap fee situation. A COMPLETE FARCE! IfI MY SAY SO! I am no longer insured with that organisation, a company I have been insured with for over (35) years! with only one minor claim for a day in hospital in that period. absolutely dejected person ! 

Elizabeth
Elizabeth from QLD commented:

My insurance went up almost 11%. We were led to believe that it would be about 5%. Trying to get just the basics tailored to your own personal situation is difficult. Even getting rid of the obvious ones such as pregnancy still makes it expensive. You are still stuck with "bundles" containing products you will never use such as alternative medicine and acupuncture. Tried to claim expensive pharmaceuticals and failed by 70 cents. Is this a pharmaceutical and health insurance arrangement? Not happy! 

Martin
Martin from NSW commented:

I have been retired now for 10 years and having suffered a heart attack some 12 years ago my wife though in good health as I have been since recovery, we thought it necessary to remain in private health cover. However as we are both on aged pension .if these increases in costs of same cover continue we will have to consider withdrawing our cover . I feel if more and more pensioners withdraw it puts more burden on public health, but we may have no more option as pensions Don,t keep up with ever increasing utensil costs 

Jean
Jean from QLD commented:

Why don't the Health Insurance Companies give some sort of rebate based on what you use Annually - I am insured and only use some basic extras not hospital but feel as I get older I made need Hospital - but I am paying around $3000 per annum and really not getting too much back for that and I am not on the Top Top cover - I switched Health Insurances when Medibank charged me an extra 17% one year and I hadn't used one thing in that year 

anthony
anthony from VIC commented:

Once again older Australians are shouldering a disproportionate share of the costs associated with medical (health insurance)we are subsidizing the public system for those who choose not to insure.There should be a national government system based on a percentage of income such as superannuation. twall Melbourne 

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