Trauma Insurance – vital risk insurance
Covers the all of the big three – Cancer, Heart Attack and Stroke plus much more…
Hearing that you have a major health problem like cancer or experiencing a sudden event like a heart attack are two of the hardest things that a person can face.
Unfortunately this is just the start… then the financial problems enter the picture.
Trauma insurance can be used in these situations to lift the financial burden of during these events, meaning you can focus on getting well.
Buyer beware! Like anything in life you often get what you pay for. There are a wide range of Trauma policies available to you on the market through different outlets, online, over the phone, and through providers such as banks.
When choosing a Trauma Insurance policy it is important to compare apples with apples. Some of the Trauma policies mentioned above cover only 5 conditions!
At Austar Financial Services our advisers only recommend using the top rated Trauma policies and our specialist advisers use research to help us make sure our clients get the best policies available to them. After all the last thing we want to do is tell a client that their claim is declined as the condition they are suffering was not covered.
Having Trauma insurance in place provides you with choice. In the event something happens you can choose what the lump sum of money paid out is used for. You could pay off the mortgage, take some time off to support your partner, or take a long holiday.
Talk to an Austar Financial Adviser today on 09 281 3690 for more information.
- Alzheimer’s Disease
- Angioplasty
- Aortic Surgery
- Aplastic Anaemia
- Benign Brain Tumour
- Benign Spine Tumour
- Blindness
- Cancer
- Cardiomyopathy
- Chronic Kidney Failure
- Chronic Liver Failure
- Chronic Lung Failure
- Coma
- Coronary Artery Surgery
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
- Deafness
- Dementia
- Diabetes*
- Encephalitis
- Heart Attack
- Heart Valve Replacement
- HIV – medically acquired
- HIV – occupationally acquired
- Intensive Care Treatment
- Loss of Independent Existence
- Loss of Limb and Sight
- Loss of Limbs
- Loss of Speech
- Major Burns
- Major Head Trauma
- Meningitis and/or Meningococcal Disease
- Motor Neurone Disease
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Muscular Dystrophy
- Open Heart Surgery
- Organ Transplant
- Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest
- Paralysis (Paraplegia, Quadriplegia,
- Diplegia, Tetraplegia and Hemiplegia)
