The Dream of Moving Abroad in Later Life, With Good Health Care
FOR
the well-traveled, the idea of retirement abroad can seem an idyll. You
pick a place you’ve loved visiting, whether it’s the thrumming avenues
of Paris or the sunny strands of Panama, and jet off for the perfect
permanent vacation.
But
the fantasy can become less carefree if you haven’t figured out in
advance what to do about health insurance. The best policies, those
offering the broadest coverage and giving access to the best hospitals,
can be jarringly costly. More affordable alternatives can come with
exceptions that may surprise people accustomed to the comprehensive
coverage offered through many United States employers. Many countries
offer high-quality care — France is a prominent example — but retirees
won’t be able to access it without insurance or paying out of pocket.
And in almost all cases, Medicare doesn’t pay for health care provided
outside of the United States.
“Health insurance really is a primary consideration when retiring overseas,” said Brendan Sharkey, director of individual products for HTH, which sells and administers GeoBlue international health insurance.
“People may want sunshine and affordable living, but they’ll also want
to make sure they’ll be covered adequately.” That means not just buying a
policy, but also assessing the quality of health care in the country
where they plan to settle.
“If
you’ve had two heart attacks, you have to ask yourself if it makes
sense to retire in Nicaragua, where the underlying quality of care just
isn’t there,” Mr. Sharkey said. More practical alternatives might be
Panama or Thailand — warm, affordable countries known for better-quality
care, he said.
For
health insurers, age equals risk — senescence brings sickness. So older
people can expect to pay up for international health insurance,
especially as they reach their middle to late 70s. “It’s the same
everywhere in the world — the older you get, the more expensive the
premiums,” said Steve Nelson, product development manager at Medibroker, an insurance brokerage in North Shields, England.
At Cigna,
international health premiums can range from a couple of hundred
dollars a month for the most basic plan to several thousand for a
comprehensive one, said James T. O’Brien, head of the Americas region for Cigna’s global individual plans.
“Our
product is designed to take all comers — we’ve made it modular and
flexible,” Mr. O’Brien said. Cigna offers three levels of inpatient
coverage, with total annual limits of $1 million, $2 million or $3
million. A customer can then choose among several deductibles, ranging
up to $10,000 a year, and can add coverage for such things as outpatient
care, medical evacuation and vision and dental services.
Anyone
shopping around should understand that insurers individually assess
applicants for international medical policies, Mr. O’Brien added.
Coverage isn’t automatic, as it is with Medicare. The insurer reviews an
applicant’s health, typically either through a questionnaire, an
examination of medical history or both. The insurer then decides whether
to offer coverage, what the premium will be and whether to exclude any
conditions.
Cigna imposes no age limits on its plans, but some insurers won’t cover people who have crossed an age threshold. Allianz Worldwide Care, for example, won’t accept applications from people past their 76th birthday, said Alexander Bender,
a senior manager for client relations, based in Dublin. Once Allianz
does enroll people, it guarantees lifelong coverage as long as they pay
their premiums, he said. HTH sets a similar limit for its longer-term
GeoBlue policies.
Age
also can bring ailments that complicate coverage. “The older you are,
the more underlying conditions you may have,” said Mr. Sharkey. “Once
somebody starts having multiple conditions — maybe high blood pressure,
obesity and high cholesterol — it becomes difficult to cover them in one
of our long-term plan.
Like
many insurers, HTH offers policies that can cover either short or long
stays abroad. The short-term ones are intended for travelers and
snowbirds, while the long-term ones are for full-time foreign residents.
“For longer-term coverage, there are medical conditions that are an
automatic decline — if you’re a pacemaker recipient, if you’re diabetic
and insulin-dependent, if you’re undergoing cancer treatment,” said Mr.
Sharkey.
Another
consideration is whether you want coverage in the United States. Some
international health insurers won’t cover domestic care, and others
charge more for it. Allianz, for example, offers policies that provide
coverage that is worldwide or worldwide minus the United States. Allianz
singles out this country, sometimes even doubling its policy premiums,
because health care costs more here than elsewhere, Mr. Bender said.
Despite
the many factors, expatriate retirees find ways to cover their health
costs that are as varied as the places they pick as their new homes.
When Joseph S. Coyle and his wife, Sigun, retired to Paris about a decade ago, they acquired coverage by joining the Association of Americans Resident Overseas,
a Paris-based group that represents United States expatriates. Members
can buy into a group plan insured by Swiss Life in Zurich. The Coyles
pay about 10,000 euros a year (around $13,720), Mr. Coyle said.
“When we started, it was much less, but I’m 78,
so the coverage has bumped up for me,” he said. It has gotten expensive
enough that the Coyles are considering returning the United States. “If
one of us gets seriously sick, we’re going to have to go back,” he
said.
Josef D. Woodman, author of “Patients Beyond Borders,”
a book that guides people on finding affordable health care outside of
the United States, said that a few countries allow retirees who have
established residency to participate in their national health plans. But
gaining access to these plans can entail the use of public hospitals
and lengthy waits for nonemergency services, he said.
Mr.
Woodman cautioned against going without coverage, and said most
retirees should consider buying at least a high-deductible policy
covering catastrophic illness.
“Even
in places like Thailand where good health care is really cheap, cancer
is going to be expensive,” he said. “I can’t think of any country where
cancer or a serious car accident wouldn’t be financially disastrous.
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