My first experience with Healthcare in China
by YANN │on FEBRUARY, 17│ 2016
A decade ago after moving out to
Shanghai I started looking for International Health
insurance
for myself.
After receiving a quotation I stumbled upon
the notion of “Deductible”. I thought to myself “what a
strange concept, French Insurers usually offer cover from 1st
Euro, who needs deductibles? “.
Then I started working as
an Insurance Broker. While I was getting more knowledgeable
with barbarian terms such as “deductible”, “co-pay” or
“coinsurance” I had the opportunity to test Chiropractic
skills in Shanghai due to joint pain. The initial experience
was very pleasant; the US Chiropractor I had been
recommended was highly skilled. Few minutes later, the
bill came to me as a tornado; it was roughly 4 times the
price I would have paid in France. Not being covered by
my Health Insurance for this I declined the gracious offer for
the next upcoming 15 sessions.
I then began to recall
my previous initial thought about deductibles and more
generally Healthcare cost sharing.
I realized that my
initial “who needs deductible?” thought had not initially
been comparing apples to apples. Indeed, I was starting to
discover the vast cost discrepancy between China and my
previous Healthcare experience in Europe. Indeed, a number
of International Health Insurance plans have been built on
the notion of cover from the 1st Euro with
sublimits. One of the most stealth example of sublimit
is the cover limit you find for Private room in case of an
Hospitalisation. This usually comes as a late surprise to
some foreigners to find Expat facilities with a Healthy
Price Tag over $600 per day for the cost of the private room
during an Hospitalisation. In case the Insurance plan does
not cover a cost of this magnitude, the end result is
regularly the same; the patient is transferred to a less
expensive a local medical facility where doctors may speak
local language only.
As a medical insurance consultant, the advice I regularly give to expats looking for International Health Coverage in places such as China or Hong Kong, is to emphasize strong Inpatient cover rather than complete package with weak hospitalization cover.