The Global Cry — And Why India's Version is Louder

When nearly half of insured adults across the world pick "pay less out-of-pocket" as their number one demand, it tells us something fundamental: having insurance and being protected from health costs are not the same thing. The gap between what a policy promises and what it actually pays has become the defining frustration of modern healthcare.

In India, that gap is a chasm — and for adults over 60, it can be financially catastrophic at the very moment they are most medically vulnerable.

🇮🇳 India context: Unlike Western systems where insurance typically covers 70–90% of hospitalisation costs, Indian mediclaim policies routinely cover only a fraction of total out-of-pocket spending — particularly for major surgeries, organ procedures, ICU care, and specialist consultations.
62%
of total health spending in India is out-of-pocket (OOP) — one of the highest globally
55M+
Indians pushed into poverty annually due to catastrophic health expenditure
70%
of senior citizens in India have no health insurance at all (NSSO data)
30+
days average claim processing time for complex hospitalisation in India

During an Operation — Mediclaim is Often Not the Real Funder

Here is the hard truth that families discover only at the time of crisis: for major organ surgeries — kidney transplant, cardiac bypass, liver procedures — the mediclaim policy rarely covers the full cost, and often covers less than half.

The reasons are layered and deeply frustrating for seniors:

🇮🇳
What Actually Happens at the Time of Surgery in India
  • Sub-limits on room rent, ICU charges, and surgical fees mean the policy cap is hit quickly — leaving the family to fund the remainder immediately in cash
  • Cashless authorisation is often denied at the last minute, or given only partially, forcing the patient to pay upfront and then claim later
  • Pre-existing disease clauses (waiting periods of 2–4 years) exclude kidney disease, heart conditions, and diabetes — the very conditions most seniors have
  • Consumables, implants, stents, and high-cost medicines are excluded from most mid-range policies — these can add ₹2–8 lakh to a single surgery
  • Post-discharge care, physiotherapy, dialysis, and follow-up are typically not covered — and for organ patients, these continue for months or years
  • The real funder becomes the family — savings, property, loans, and children's contributions — not the insurance policy
For a senior in India, the insurance policy is often not a shield — it is a partial reimbursement, after a long wait, for a fraction of what was spent.

The Claim Process — A Marathon for Ageing Hands and Minds

Even when a claim is legitimate and the policy should pay, the process defeats seniors. The Indian insurance claims process was designed for working-age adults who can navigate digital portals, upload documents, respond to queries within deadlines, and follow up persistently.

⚠️ For seniors over 65: Online-only claim systems, short query response windows, technical document requirements, and lack of in-person support create a system that is practically inaccessible — even when the legal right to claim exists.
Claim Challenge What the Policy Says What Seniors Actually Face
Document submission Submit online within 15 days Requires scanning, portal login, file size limits — hard without tech help
Query response Respond to insurer queries promptly Queries arrive by email only; many seniors miss them; claim rejected
Hospital coordination Hospital submits cashless request Hospital TPA desk often unhelpful; patient family left to coordinate
Claim timeline Settle within 30 days (IRDAI norm) Complex claims take 60–180 days in practice, with multiple rounds of queries
Personal support Helpline and TPA available No dedicated senior case manager; only online chat or call centres
Settlement amount Claim as per policy schedule Deductions for sub-limits, non-covered items, depreciation — often 40–60% of bill paid

The Human Cost: Honest Conversations Nobody Has

Perhaps the most invisible wound is the loss of dignity in health conversations for ageing adults. When a senior needs to discuss their actual financial situation — how much money they have, what their family can afford, what they are willing to undergo — there is rarely a trusted, personalised person in the room.

The insurance company sends a form. The hospital billing desk asks for a deposit. The TPA (Third Party Administrator) sends an email. The doctor discusses the clinical plan. But nobody sits with the senior adult and asks: What do you want? What can you honestly afford? What are your real priorities?

🧓 For ageing adults, this matters enormously. The combination of a complex medical situation, a confusing insurance claim, a large financial gap, and no personal guidance creates an experience that is not just financially painful — it is emotionally isolating and deeply undignified.

What India's Seniors Actually Want Changed

If we were to run the same survey among insured adults over 60 in India, the results would likely be even more concentrated. Here is what senior patients consistently express in clinical conversations and caregiver feedback:

💸
Genuine OOP Cost Reduction — not just higher sum insured on paper
👤
A real person to talk to — not just a portal or chatbot
Faster cashless settlement — within 48 hours of admission
📋
No surprise exclusions — clear, plain-language policy explanation at purchase
🏠
Coverage for home care, dialysis, and post-surgery rehabilitation
🤝
Honesty about what is and is not covered — before crisis, not during

What Seniors and Families Can Do Right Now

While policy and systemic change is slow, there are steps that help immediately:

Practical Action Steps for Indian Seniors
  • Read your policy's sub-limits, exclusions, and waiting period clauses now — before you need it. Ask your insurer for a plain-language summary
  • Ask your insurer or TPA if they have a senior-specific or dedicated case manager — some insurers now offer this for premium policies
  • Keep all medical records, discharge summaries, and prescription files in one physical folder — this speeds up claim submission dramatically
  • For planned surgeries, get the cashless authorisation in writing before admission — not just a verbal assurance
  • Maintain a separate "health emergency fund" of at least ₹3–5 lakh liquid — mediclaim rarely covers everything, especially the first 48 hours
  • File complaints with IRDAI Grievance Cell (Bima Bharosa) if claims are unfairly delayed or rejected — regulators have strengthened senior protections since 2023
  • IRDAI's Bima Suggest portal allows you to compare senior-friendly policies — prioritise those with no sub-limits, no co-pay, and OPD coverage

The Bigger Picture — A System That Must Change

The 46% global figure telling us out-of-pocket costs are the top priority is a clear signal. In India, that signal should be louder still. The combination of one of the world's highest OOP ratios, a largely online and impersonal claims process, widespread pre-existing exclusions, and a rapidly ageing population is a collision course.

For 102 Not Out — for living to 102 in dignity and health — financial protection from medical costs is not a luxury detail. It is a fundamental pillar, alongside nutrition, physical activity, and mental wellbeing.

No senior should have to choose between the medical care they need and the financial security of their family. And no senior should have to navigate that choice alone, through a portal, with a query deadline.

"Happiness always along with life — not the end of life." True happiness requires that ageing adults are protected — financially, medically, and with the dignity of honest, personal care.