More than 163 million people in the USA have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine as of May 23, and that doesn’t jeopardize their life insurance policies.
Claims that life insurance companies deny life insurance coverage to people who received a vaccine popped up again in May, two months after an industry trade group sought to quash similar rumors that circulated on social media.
An Instagram post that generated more than 1,200 likes as of May 23 claims that a “friends aunt” died and “was denied her life insurance because … she willingly took an EXPERIMENTAL vaccine.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the COVID-19 vaccines authorized for emergency use are safe and effective.
About 54% of Americans are covered under a life insurance policy, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Applications ticked up during the pandemic, mostly among younger people, according to The Wall Street Journal.
The account that shared the post declined to provide USA TODAY with additional details, including the name and contact information for the person who it said was denied or the insurance company responsible for the denial.
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Industry groups, state regulators and individual insurers have said vaccine is not a factor in life insurance.
The insurance industry and regulators have pushed back against misinformation surrounding life insurance coverage and claims about payouts related to people who get COVID-19 vaccines.
In March, the American Council of Life Insurers responded to a social media post that said payouts were denied to beneficiaries when the insured received a vaccine.
“Life insurance policy contracts are very clear on how policies work, and what cause, if any, might lead to the denial of a benefit,” said Paul Graham, the organization’s senior vice president, in a statement March 12.
Whether someone received COVID-19 vaccine is not a consideration for life insurers deciding whether to pay a claim, he said.
“The COVID vaccine does not impact life insurance costs for coverage already in place,” Jan Graeber, ACLI’s senior health actuary, told USA TODAY. “For new coverage, and not just related to COVID, companies consider health factors as information is available and in accordance with regulations that govern the industry. As experience with COVID grows, there may be near-term impacts to consider, including with the vaccine and new virus strains and consumer behavior to mitigate risk. There may also be long-term impacts to consider as more information is gathered about COVID.”
A Canadian trade group also responded in March to misinformation about the effect of a COVID-19 vaccine on life insurance.
States, where insurance companies are regulated, issued similar statements calming fears about coverage and payment denials.
Regulators in Maryland, New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Washington state all said the same thing: Whether someone is vaccinated against COVID-19 is irrelevant to whether a life insurance claim would be paid. Industry groups in those states joined regulators in their statements.
“Pennsylvanians should be wary of social media posts and conversations claiming the vaccine will prevent them from obtaining life insurance policies or adversely impact their life insurance benefits; this is simply not true,” Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Jessica Altman said in a statement March 25.
Some individual life insurers said COVID-19 vaccine is not a factor in decisions about coverage or payment.
John Hancock’s application for life insurance doesn’t ask whether an individual has been vaccinated against COVID-19, the company posted March 15 on its website, and vaccination would not be factored into “the risk classification process.” Prudential’s website says COVID-19 vaccine does not affect eligibility determination in paying claims.
“We do not ask about immunizations (for any virus/disease) through the application process and have no plans to ask about the COVID-19 vaccine,” according to Lincoln Financial Group’s website. “Therefore, the COVID-19 vaccine is not a factor in the underwriting process.”
Based on our research, we rate FALSE the claim that life insurance companies deny policy payouts because insured people received a COVID-19 vaccine. The American Council of Life Insurers, individual insurance companies and regulators in several states released statements saying COVID-19 vaccine is not a factor in determining whether an insurer will pay out on a life insurance policy.
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