Question
I applied for a life insurance policy and was denied. The reason was the letter a doctor I had been seeing wrote. I saw a psychologist for about 5 months for depression and OCD. Neither of which I have ever taken medication for nor have they affected my ability to have a successful career and very stable family.
In any case, I requested a copy of the APS that had been sent to the underwriters and was very alarmed that the letter was two pages of very subjective explanation of my condition. My wife and I looked through it and there were 11 innacurate and misleading descriptions and 2 very false claims. I am not concerned as much about being denied the life insurance and I am about fixing the image this doctor portrayed in this letter.
Answer
Very wise of you. Do you have a question for us?
Answer
Yes, I do have a question. I had a brief consultation with an attorney who said I did not have a case.
I am wanting another opinion. Has anyone ever heard of this happening? Is there anything worth pursuing? Or is it that I just got my feelings hurt and have to get over it? What should I do next?
Answer
Thank you for the original response. I have never used this board before. It is my first time and I was not sure how much to share on the board in order to get a response to the above questions. However, if you have any input, I would be very thankful.
Answer
I'm not an attorney but I've worked with for and with the insurance business all my life, and I don't see any reason to disagree with the attorney you saw. The criteria for issuing a policy is subjective to a certain degree so I can't see that you have a case against the insurance company. Whether you have a case against the doctor is impossible to say without knowing precisely what was said, but unless what he said was outright lies (as opposed to having a differing opinion from you) it is unlikely.
Answer
Hi Needavice: The terms used by docs to describe your conditions can be alarming to the patient if the patient ever reads the report. "Subjective" findings (if it's headed that way in the report) would be the description of symptoms you had given the doc. "Objective" findings would be the doc's findings. If you are concerned about the image this doc portrayed in his report, (and if you are still under his care and have a FU appointment), ask him to explain it. These disorders can be used to deny life insurance because the risk of suicide attempt comes with them. Hope this helped you some.
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Originally posted by Nneedofadvice
I applied for a life insurance policy and was denied. The reason was the letter a doctor I had been seeing wrote. I saw a psychologist for about 5 months for depression and OCD. Neither of which I have ever taken medication for nor have they affected my ability to have a successful career and very stable family.
In any case, I requested a copy of the APS that had been sent to the underwriters and was very alarmed that the letter was two pages of very subjective explanation of my condition. My wife and I looked through it and there were 11 innacurate and misleading descriptions and 2 very false claims. I am not concerned as much about being denied the life insurance and I am about fixing the image this doctor portrayed in this letter.