Strong Eagle wrote:The big kicker, IMHO, is that there is no overseas medical coverage. If you are an American, this is particularly acute, as there are a lot of global health policies that do provide coverage everywhere except the USA.
Indeed this is the case, SE. My Medisave linked IP does cover emergency and planned treatment overseas in line with coverage in Singapore, but limits the cost to Singapore private hospital rates. And that'll probably cover only a third of US medical cost (admittedly at 1/10 of the premium)
Strong Eagle wrote:I was EP before I was PR, and as an American, I chose a policy that let me come visit the USA for up to four weeks at a time... and I forget the number of times per year... perhaps 3?... and I would have full medical coverage while in the USA.
I also chose a policy that had repatriation benefits so that if I ended up with something like cancer, I would be repatriated back to the USA and my medical bills would be covered there.
I also got an evacuation insurance rider so that if I was in the middle of BumF*ck, Laos, and broke my neck, I'd be airlifted to the nearest qualified hospital.
The non-medisave linked insurance I was looking at does cover emergency overseas costs to the extent of coverage limits ($1 million) excluding pre-existing conditions at the time of policy start date (not trip start date), so this is the closest i can get to being reasonably covered if planning to travel to the US regularly
Strong Eagle wrote:Because I was travelling to the USA once or twice a year, I never considered in other supplemental policies to jig in with MediSave.
I plan on staying in Singapore, so the Medisave-supplement IP makes sense in my case. (Although i am not sure if the additional rider to the IP that the agent managed to sell me, does)
Strong Eagle wrote:One other alternative, which I provided to my employees who needed it, was comprehensive travel insurance which included medical care, evacuation, etc when out of Singapore.
This is a half-way alternative which costs under $500/year, but the pre-existing condition seems to apply to anything existing before the trip, so basically it excludes anything except things like auto accident, breaking a bone, food poisoning, developing sepsis etc. But I've read several cases where situations like heart attack, stroke or cancer was declined, saying it existed before the trip, even if it didn't exist at the time of initial policy start - I may not be fully informed on this one, but stating anecdotally.