This is the third post in our series bringing you some of the great conversations from our June Protection Forum. In this section, our attendees talked about how Covid has impacted claims and Income Protection products.
We’re only just now starting to see a small number of longer Covid-related claims, and we’ve partnered with a firm that specialises in post-viral support to help people return to work.
It would be interesting to see if there’s a change in claims as more people have a more sedentary lifestyle. Cancer is one of our top CI and IP claims and we have seen a drop of those claims this year.
Covid has caused an NHS backlog that’s probably resulting in lots of illnesses not being diagnosed at an early stage.
Andy Walton:
And I was just thinking, could it be that the impact is all around not so much Covid itself, but the consequences of Covid? I was reading yesterday that there’s over 400,000 people now on the NHS waiting lists that have been waiting more than 52 weeks for routine treatment. So we need that storing up so that the problem down the line– because you imagine if then people aren’t going into the NHS for regular check-ups, I mean, we were making the point earlier about prevention better than cure. And are we actually in the next 12, 18 months going to see more of a flood of people coming through that should have been checked for all sorts of things that haven’t been checked?
And certainly, you know, we’ve got an increase in problems because, as I say, these things weren’t prevented. I don’t know if that is a bit of a time bomb that’s building up. I don’t know what people think to that, especially the insurers. I’m sure you’re potentially watching that as something that could come down the line.
I’m not aware of a change in Vitality’s Income Protection policy details.
Andy Philo:
I think just onto Andy’s point is that we feel very much that prevention is better than cure. So being more active, you’re less likely to be prone to illness, disease conditions, etc.. So, for us, that is sort of our driving… it’s all about the shared value model that we promote. In terms of sort of long-Covid, I mean, we haven’t seen a massive increase in claims as a result of Covid as yet. You know, we are watching closely in terms of the longer-term impacts on long-Covid in particular and the impact that might have on our claims experience. But at the moment, we’re within our sort of expectation, our tolerance, I guess, really, of what we projected, which is probably not too dissimilar to a lot of the other insurers.
We’re not looking at, as far as I’m aware of, there might be others within the company that are looking into at the moment about varying the type of income protection and the claim process for people that are working from home. I’m sure there’ll be a balance of people working at home and also being in the office. I think a lot of employers are going to want people back as quickly as they can be anyway. So I’m not really sure how much that will develop. But from a Vitality point of view, we’re not, as far as I’m aware at least, aware of change in any of the income protection policy details.
We need to re-think IP: 73% of employees currently have fluctuating incomes, it’s no longer just those who are self-employed.
If someone has multiple lines of work and is making an IP claim we tend to look on an individual basis.
There’s a lot of demand for PMI at the moment. A big driver is the need for faster diagnosis. I wonder if there could be a hybrid product between IP and PMI.





