Both new sales and in-force premiums showed dramatic growth.
U.S. sales of critical illness insurance
climbed 37% in 2017, to $652 million, according to new insurer survey results
from Gen Re.
The Stamford, Connecticut-based reinsurer
found that in-force premium revenue increased 45%, to $1.6 billion.
Sales of coverage through group plans, and
through individual policies purchased at the worksite rose 21%, to $554
million.
Sales of individual critical illness insurance
policies grew much more rapidly: to about $98 million in 2017, from $19 million
in 2016.
Gen Re analysts have based those figures on a
survey of 75 carriers with an interest in the critical illness insurance market,
including 51 current active issuers and 24 insurers that are either developing
critical illness insurance products or thinking about developing a critical
illness insurance product.
What is critical
illness insurance?
A critical illness insurance policy is an
arrangement that pays cash to the coverage holder when the individual insured
develops a specific condition, such as a heart attack or a stroke.
The drafters of the Affordable Care
Act included a provision that exempts supplemental health insurance
products from the ACA underwriting and benefits rules that apply to major
medical insurance policies.
The drafters of the laws and regulations that
govern health savings accounts (HSAs) have established rules that let holders
of HSA-compatible high-deductible major medical coverage use critical illness
insurance.
How do Gen Re numbers
compare with LIMRA’s numbers?
LIMRA released results of its own survey of
critical illness insurance issuers in July.
The 47 issuers that participated in the LIMRA
survey reported generating $627 million in sales through voluntary benefits and
worksite marketing programs in 2017, up 15% from the 2016 total
Why has the critical
illness insurance market been such a hot market?
Traditionally, consumer groups and patient
advocacy groups argued that consumers should have rich benefits designed with
an emphasis on encouraging wellness, not collections of multiple policies.
Today, however, many consumers seeing buying
critical illness insurance and other supplemental health insurance products as
a strategy for coping with high major medical plan deductibles and coinsurance
requirements.
Health insurers see offering critical illness
coverage as a way to participate in a health-related insurance market
without taking on the kind of risk of underwriting risk and regulatory risk now
associated with the major medical market.
Allison Bell, ThinkAdvisor's insurance editor,
previously was LifeHealthPro's health insurance editor. She has a bachelor's
degree in economics from Washington University in St. Louis and a master's
degree in journalism from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern
University. She can be reached at abell@alm.com or on Twitter at
@Think_Allison.
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