Travel Insurance

Travel Health Overview – Altitude Sickness

Most of us plan very well for our trips away from home, and for overseas trips in particular. However, there is one condition that almost always takes people by surprise – altitude sickness. This is very much a disease of modern times – in the past, it wasn’t possible for us to ascend a mountain quickly enough that we would not be used to the lowered oxygen levels of high altitudes. Now planes and cars have made this a very real worry – but unfortunately it isn’t possible to tell who will be worst affected by it! We look at the recommended level of travel insurance cover for places prone to causing altitude sickness, and how you can identify and recover from it.
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Travel Health Overview – Deep Vein Thrombosis

Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is one of the scariest of all travel-related diseases. It can affect relatively healthy people, taking relatively short flights. People in their twenties have been known to develop DVT, as have people that are fanatical exercisers and have never had a cardiovascular problem in their life. There is no vaccination for DVT – however there are certain precautions that you can take to protect yourself against it. There are also certain precautions that you can take against the financial loss you might suffer if your trip is disrupted by having to seek medical treatment for DVT, such as travel insurance. We take an in-depth look at the condition.
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Summer 2009/10 Travel Health Alerts

Nobody wants to get sick on an overseas holiday! Much as travel insurance has freed us to truly enjoy other countries, including their rivers, food and people without the risk of coming home tens of thousands of dollars in debt from medical bills, prevention is always better than cure. The health landscape worldwide is constantly changing, as new strains of disease evolve and find resistance to current treatments, so it is important to check out current events in the world health arean before you leave the country. Today we look at what you should be aware of, for travel insurance and vaccination purposes, if you are travelling overseas during summer 2009/2010.
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The History of Travel Insurance

Sometimes it seems that insurance cannot be more than a hundred years old … after all, before 1900 there were few people that owned cars, most built their houses by hand and did not take out an enormous bank loan for it, and there was almost no overseas travel (after all, many people had to walk for a full day just to get to the nearest town!). In fact, insurance in general (and even travel insurance) has been around for literally thousands of years. We travel from ancient Mesopotamia to the 21st century, exploring how insurance has changed.
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Is Insurance a Form of Gambling? The Ned Flanders Approach to Travel

For those of us that have grown up with the concept of insuring important or expensive things, the idea that it is a form of gambling is usually quite foreign. After all, there is a world of difference between the glazed eyes and bad decisions that fill pokies venues, and the sensible mainstream idea of insurance. Actually, insurance can be likened to gambling – but only in a very abstract sense. Today we explore the Ned Flanders approach to travel and travel insurance … and why for most of, his ar-diddly-arguments just don’t hold up!
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Working Overseas and Travel Insurance – What You Need to Know

The cost of going overseas is enormous compared to the cost of your everyday life … when you factor in flights, paying for accommodation nightly instead of monthly, the cost of eating out many nights, renting a car rather than owning it, and incidentals like travel insurance and passports, the bill is staggering. Working overseas is a great way to not only meet people and learn about other cultures, but may be the only thing that makes it possible for you to live overseas. If you’re planning on backpacking around the world, we have some tips on working overseas, and how it may affect your travel insurance.
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Inform Yourself as a Form of Travel Insurance, with Smartraveller

Taking an overseas trip will always engender equal parts excitement and panic … and that is not necessarily a bad thing! That nagging fear of the unknown is what prompts us to take measures to inform and protect ourselves, like making inquiries, taking out travel insurance, and being vaccinated. Making assumptions when you are overseas can be a quick route to hospital, jail, and in extreme cases, a coffin. When it comes to informing yourself, nobody has better, more comprehensive and trustworthy evidence than the Smartraveller site run by the Australian government. Here we look at the site’s main sections and features, and why they create a form of primary travel insurance for you!
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Travel Insurance as a Social Service

Travel insurance has been called many things since it was invented. It has been named a ‘necessary evil’, and has often been called ‘another gosh-forsaken bill to pay’. However, insurance has also been called the handmaiden of industry, and many people don’t actually realize how much the conveniences and technologies we enjoy today are due to that crazy concept, engendered many decades ago, to help spread risk and loss in the case of adverse events. In its own way, the concept of travel insurance has helped you sit on your computer right now, on the internet, live in a house with heating (possibly your own house), have a job you enjoy, and come home with delicious Indian takeaway to sit in front of the television and watch amazing documentaries and informative news. And the bonds between insurance and these phenomena are not tenuous … let me explain!
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Travel Insurance Policies – Do You Have One Already?

Every different type of insurance is necessary, or at least advisable, for different categories of people. Homeowners should take out home and contents insurance, car owners will need third-party damage cover at a minimum, and sole income earners in a family should have income protection insurance. Overseas travelers should have travel insurance – however, if you are a generally well-insured person, you may not need as much travel insurance as the general spiel would have you believe. Today we are looking at the insurance policies you may already have that cover adverse overseas events and the associated costs. We also look at the events that travel insurance is the only way to cover, and the circumstances when you should still get more than the base level of cover. Please note that in all of the following, you should speak with representatives of your current insurers for assurance that you have cover.
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Paying Too Much for Travel Insurance? Overinsuring versus Underinsuring

Looking at information from many travel insurance companies, you can see a visible push towards the highest level of cover. You are urged to be careful, not to take chances with your health, and to put in just that little bit extra to get a lot in return. It is very true that comprehensive travel insurance plans often give customers much more value than the extra cost represents. You can increase the number of adverse events you are covered for by 100%, for only a 20% greater charge (over and above basic travel insurance). But do you really need that extra cover? Today we are looking at the risks of over-insurance and excessive caution, as well as the risks of underinsurance.
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