Importance of Travel Insurance
Even small, unexpected medical emergencies away from home can lead to thousands of dollars in medical bills. Here are a few examples that will hopefully make you think twice about not buying travel insurance.
According to BCAA and its travel insurance underwriters – respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia, asthma and bronchitis are the most common medical claims.
The average cost you’d have to pay out of pocket if you left home with no insurance…. more than $2700. Stomach problems are also common. Illnesses such as food poisoning, ulcers or gallstones can run you up to 21- hundred dollars in medical care.
Even just a skin, blood or ear infection can cost close to $700.00
And check out heart attacks… a whopping $17,000 if you don’t have insurance. And that’s just the average. Claims can reach as high as $300,000 for something like a quadruple bypass.
One of the biggest problems is that many people think they have enough protection through their credit card or employer plan, but those can often have limits. There’s a chance those plans don’t protect your spouse or children, or apply to trips 30 days or longer. Some may also cap coverage at 100- thousand dollars of medical expenses. Help ensure you’re covered properly by checking if your insurance allows access to a network or health providers, including top tier hospitals. Incidental expenses such as phone charges or renting wheel chairs or crutches. And transportation back to Canada… or transportation for someone to be at your bedside.
It’s really not something most of us want to think about when we’re heading out on vacation… but again it’s a case of better to be safe than sorry.

Nice post, this is certainly an issue when tvrnelliag in Thailand especially. You make the point that a unforeseen illness can be expensive by Thai standards but you should also make people aware that they can and should haggle with the bill, if you are a foreigner in Thailand you will be charged a hell of a lot more.I have heard personal accounts from a number of people who were faced with massive bills getting them reduced after arguing their case.One friend I know was in a bad motorcycle accident, smashed shoulder and a cracked skull, when a bill of over 300,000 baht was put in front of him he protested that he lived here and wanted a Thai price’, he was then quoted 100,000 baht for the same treatment.Quite a reduction I am sure you will agree.I am not sure if this practice happens all over Thailand (although it probably does!) but thats the way it is in Samui and Phangan.To finish off, I dont have medical insurance either