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My vets are quite lenient with payments and have let me pay in installments on occasions before I had insurance, *touches wood* but i've never had to claim off the insurance but could be worth asking next time I guess what the procedure is. |
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i do thank everyone else again for telling me your experiences and not judging me for my confusion |
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i can see why a vet would want payment up front when there is no insurance but when there is, there should be no need to, yes i know there there are people out there that will try anything on but as long as you take your paper work with you then it should be fine as far as i can see (it should say on there what they will not pay for so the vet woul know what will be covered) my vets are very good, we had an out of hour call a few years ago and my vets are part of a practice and we ended up not at our vets and i only had half the money on me, they said that was fine and to take it to my vets with in the next week, they had no way of knowing if i was lying, i have also only had a $50 (sorry no pound sign) note and they didnt have enough change for me so said to pay next time and she know that would be over 2 months away |
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Oh how I hate insurance claims!!! At the moment I'm in charge of submitting the insurance claims at my practice. We can make direct claims from PetPlan (as a petplan practice) and in the majority of cases, ask for payment upfront before claiming from other insurance companies-purely due to the £1,000's owed to the practice in bad debts, we had instances of clients paying us the excess then keeping hold of the insurance cheque. Not that I'm suggesting that any Catsey members would do this! I obviously can't speak for any other vet practice,just wanted to explain it from the side of the veterinary practice. The best thing to do is to request a meeting with the practice manager/partner to discuss paying by installments. Obviously,no animal should be refused treatment in an emergency. |
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Pinklizzy took the words right out of my mouth we also work on the same policy as her practice with regards to asking for payment upfront, and claiming the money back for the client. It does depend on the individual practice, and no vet has the right to refuse treatment in an emergency. If you are struggling, I would suggest a meeting with the practice manager or whoever is in charge of finances to discuss possible options for payment plans or claiming direct. I personally hate it on insurance adds where they pretty much state "don't worry about vets bills as your vet will claim direct" leading clients into a false sense of security, when unfortunately in many cases that just isn't so. |
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I agree that it's down the the discretion of the vets practice. I'm with M&S for a couple of my cats, AXA (who underwrite M&S) for another and PetPlan for another. I always have to pay my vets up front and then claim back from the insurance company, as that is how my vets deal with claims. Having said that, they did make an exception for me once when one of my cats had a few successive vets stays and it was breaking my bank balance!! They claimed direct from M&S and sorted it themselves. Perhaps you could change vets rather than insurance companies?? Be careful with changing insurance companies as any pre-existing medical conditions will not be covered by the new insurer/policy. |
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