Understanding Children’s Critical Illness Insurance

Having a child with a critical illness can take both an emotional and financial toll. Having a critical illness policy for your child can give you the peace of mind that if your child becomes seriously ill, you’d have the financial resources to care for them.

What You Need to Know

What is Child Critical Illness Insurance

Critical Illness insurance provides a lump-sum payment to the policy owner in the event that the insured person on the policy is diagnosed with one of the critical illnesses covered by the policy.  This usually includes life-threatening cancer, stroke, acquired brain injury, major organ failure, and a number of other conditions. However, a child policy covers 5 childhood illnesses as well.  This include:

Child Critical Illness Insurance can either be bought as a stand-alone product or as a rider on another insurance policy.  Children can be insured on these types of policies between the age of 30 days and 17 years old.

Benefits

There are a variety of benefits to having a critical illness policy on your child, the biggest being the financial relief it provides if you need to make a claim.

Case Study

John and Jane’s son, Sam, was recently diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.  While his blood sugars are getting under control, it is not uncommon for Sam to stay in the hospital for up to a week at a time.   Jane has been forced to take unpaid time off of work as they have to travel nearly 2 hours to their nearest children hospital for appointments and she stays with Sam when he has overnight stays.  Sometimes they have multiple appointments in a week and find it easier to stay at a hotel for next day appointments.  This also means they are eating out for every meal.  It is not uncommon for John and Jane to spend upwards of $1,000 a week just for travelling expenses.

The good news is that John and Jane purchased a $50,000 Critical Illness policy for Sam when he was an infant.  They were able to make a claim on the policy and received a lump-sum payment of $50,000.  Jane doesn’t have to worry about taking time off of work and paying for travelling and overnight expenses.  This family rests assured that they can afford to give Sam the best care possible without draining their savings and retirement accounts.

The Bottom Line

Talk to me about either adding your child to your own Critical Illness policy or purchasing them on their own. 

Jennifer

 

 

 

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