Fact of Life: Full Insurance Cover Doesn't Have to Cost More
In yachting, crew pregnancy tends to be a somewhat taboo subject, certainly when it comes to medical insurance. It happens to be one of the things that is unique to medical and accident cover in the superyacht industry.
Given the challenges yacht crew face with insurance, you might think that superyacht crew are bad insurance risks. But they’re not, especially given their youth and activity which show them having a better claims record than the general public.
But perhaps because of its relative size, when it comes to covering what the industry actually needs, most insurance companies seem to have a take-it-or-leave-it attitude, especially when processing claims or try to squeeze the square box of maritime medical insurance experience into the round hole of Superyachts.
Oh Yes You Can
So not surprisingly, lots of people in the industry think that yacht crew just can’t get cover for pregnancy and things like routine dental or hazardous sports for that matter. But they were wrong – you could always get it, but it was very, very expensive. You can get coverage for anything almost anywhere... if you’re willing to pay.
But pregnancy cover included at no extra cost?
Enter RSA and Moore Stephens Brokers Limited who have teamed up to create the Superyacht Crew Plan.
“It needed someone to go directly to the insurance company on behalf of the crew” says Melanie, Senior Crew Benefits Adviser with Moore Stephens Brokers Limited (MSBL), “MSBL showed RSA why yacht crew are actually very good risks and RSA came through with a truly unique policy - which includes pregnancy cover (how does US$20,000 of cover sound?), at no extra cost, whether for an individual or for a group policy,”
Its coverage also carries a wellness benefit.
MSBL was able to create this coverage for superyacht crew via their direct connections with the London insurance market with over 50 years’ experience in ferreting out coverage for risks.
The Elephant In The Room
But that leaves a more difficult superyacht issue.
Although the Superyacht Crew Plan includes pregnancy at no extra cost, you still have to have the courage to ask for it.
And for roughly half of superyacht crew – ironically those who might need it - this is not as easy as it may sound.
The problem is, if you happen to be a female, just the simple act of casually suggesting that perhaps your yacht’s group policy might include pregnancy cover, can morph into a very un-career-enhancing episode – “So, why would you need that?”
Although it’s a fact of life - if you’ll pardon the expression - that women get pregnant, and often before their thirty-fifth birthday, sadly pregnancy can sound the death knell for a yachting career.
“There are at least two things in play here: first the potentially pregnant crew member worries that she is letting the team down by being pregnant,” says Melanie, “and then of course everybody assumes that nobody ever comes back to yachting after pregnancy.”
The “Superyacht Crew Plan”, offered exclusively by Moore Stephens, was designed especially for superyacht crew to fill what was an unquestionably unfair coverage gap - even if no one wanted to discuss it. As long as you’re not pregnant at the inception of the policy, as Melanie said, it provides up to US$20,000 of cover.
Unlike most other plans, it also provides cover if you’re injured in what the industry calls “hazardous sport” – sports that most people, not just yacht crew, participate in; sports like skiing, scuba diving, jet skiing, ironman events etc.
So Don't Take No For An Answer
“We’re not order takers for the insurance company; I think there’s been a tendency among those sourcing insurance for crew to just accept what the insurance company says,” commented Melanie. “We don’t work like that. Often once the insurance company understands what needs to be covered, it can be at no extra cost – but someone has to ask.”
Besides motorcycle and ironman event coverage, MSBL has arranged running coverage for rotational Crew, Medical Repatriation and Emergency Travel Expenses incurred as a direct result of a Pre-Existing Condition, cover for guests aboard during amateur racing regattas events, at no extra cost, and cover for a Captain's wife to have a baby privately in the UK, at a very favourable negotiated increase.
But Just Try To Get Paid
“And we don’t stop there; our job's not done until the insured gets paid, so we stay on our yacht crew’s case throughout the claims process,” enthused Melanie.
For yacht crew, getting paid for a claim can be a hassle, more so if you’re on a yacht and don’t know where you’ll be tomorrow – especially when it can take up to six weeks.
“With RSA we are turning claims around and getting the crew paid typically within five or six working days,” Melanie observes.
“A yacht can be anywhere, and on charter the crew are running flat out,” says Melanie. “Yacht crew need someone fighting their corner. We walk them through the entire claim process, following up continuously until they are paid.”
The first problem in the process can be a simple error in completing the claim form.
“I ask crew to email their claim to me first so I can personally run a check and make sure everything the insurance company needs is there,” Melanie explains. “One sure way to have your claim end up in the insurance company’s pending tray is to have the tiniest error, leave a box un-ticked or even leave something blank.”
But even the most careful edit doesn’t mean the insurance company still won’t need answers to a question or two. That’s when it’s important that you’re speaking to the same person, every time.
“With me pushing for them, yacht crew always talk to the same person, me, so they don’t have to explain the same story over and over again,” says Melanie. “It also helps that we personally know everyone in the RSA claims department.”
The Bottom Line - Have It Your Way
As Melanie believes, “the job of a good service provider is not just to process a customer’s order. As true professionals we find out what our clients want, and then do our utmost to get just that. It makes for a great experience for all parties.
“At least that’s how we do it,” concluded Melanie, “and crew really seem to appreciate it.”
For further information please contact:
Melanie Langley, Senior Crew Benefits Adviser
Email: Melanie.langley@mscb.im
Tel: +44 (0) 7476 592592
Web: Moore Stephens Crew Benefits Limited
Moore Stephens Isle of Man is an independent member firm of Moore Stephens International Limited. Moore Stephens International Limited is regarded as one of the world’s leading accounting and consulting networks with 657 member and correspondent offices in some 106 countries. Moore Stephens Brokers Limited* is a company incorporated in the Isle of Man No.126547C and is registered with the Isle of Man Financial Services Authority in respect of General Business. Moore Stephens Crew Benefits Limited is incorporated in the Isle of Man No. 124557C. Registered office and place of business: 26-28 Athol Street, Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 1JB, British Isles.
Related Article:
Crew Pregnancy: Where the Industry Fails Us
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