L&G expands Critical Illness Cover

Legal & General has today announced changes to its Critical Illness Cover to incorporate the Association of British Insurers' Statement of Best Practice 2014.

Related topics:  Protection
Rozi Jones
14th December 2015
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The insurer has further enhanced its Critical Illness Cover by adding a new illness, Spinal Stroke, to its definitions and by improving its Motor Neurone Disease cover so it now exceeds the ABI definition.
 
This change increases the total number of illnesses covered to 42 – 17 of which are ABI+. A number of illnesses have also received minor definition wording changes, to bring them in line with the latest ABI Statement of Best Practice.
 
To support these changes, Legal & General has improved its interactive online tool, AnatoME, to provide advisers with useful facts about the different illnesses that their policies cover. This update was introduced to make it easier for advisers to review the illness definitions Legal & General offer, thereby helping them to suggest the most appropriate product to their clients.

Mark Holweger, Managing Director, Partnerships, Legal & General Insurance said:

“As the UK’s No 1 CIC provider, we paid over £161m in CIC claims for 2014, which is 16% of the ABI total 2014 CIC claims paid by all insurers.
 
“We believe the changes being introduced as a result of the latest ABI Statement of Best Practice will help bring greater clarity in some areas and make it easier for advisers and their customers, to fully understand our latest critical illness product and the cover it provides.
 
“We’re proud to be adding Motor Neurone Disease to our 17 ABI+ definitions and Spinal Stroke as a new illness to increase our critical illness cover to 42 full payment definitions, so we can now pay even more claims and help more customers get some financial help when they need it most.

These improvements, will increase the other reasons customers can claim alongside the top 4 reasons, where last year over 85% of our claims were for cancer, stroke, heart attack and multiple sclerosis, totalling £130 million of the £161 million paid in claims to our customers.”

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