Southern Cross responds to accusations it dropped a $60k benefit without informing customers or advisers

Southern Cross has refuted a Good Returns article where advisers complained about not being informed about Southern Cross dropping a $60,000 a year benefit for non-surgical hospitalisations.

Southern Cross removed the non-surgical hospitalisation benefit as part of the Society’s benefit review in 2020, and Southern Cross’ head of customer strategy and experience, Nic Johnson has said that “Members were communicated with at the time of the benefit change.”

Johnson said that Southern Cross advisers were informed of the changes at the time via a virtual meeting, and that the company’s adviser gateway portal to manage their customers’ policies had information on the changes also.
Johnson said

“The original intention of the non-surgical hospitalisation benefit was as a 'catch-all' for eligible healthcare services that required in-hospital medical treatment. Based on a 2019 review of our claims data, which showed that the benefit was not widely utilised, it was assessed that this benefit was no longer fit-for-purpose.”

“The majority of medical (or hospitalisation) claims at the time were already covered under existing benefits, such as the surgical procedures, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and diagnostic tests/imaging benefits.”

We have commented on the change here

Quality Product Research are in the process of conducting a review of the score for the feature, giving Southern Cross time to respond with more details of equivalent benefits being present in other parts of the medical insurance. We will raise the results of the review with our Southern Research Advisory Board next month – and update research subscribers immediately.

More daily news:

Katrina Shanks writes about whether cryptocurrencies are a safe investment

Rob Hennin talks about why he loves working in the insurance sector

Southern Cross funds the ‘Under One Umbrella’ report on mental health and addictions

nib publishes their top five medical claims for July

KiwiSaver topped the $100 billion mark in the June quarter

ASB publish their 2023 Climate Report

Previous
Previous

Report that gives an overview of the New Zealand insurance market published

Next
Next

Legal and regulatory update for the life and health insurance sector