Q: We recently sailed with Celebrity Cruises from New Zealand to Australia. Unfortunately, I was injured on one of the Celebrity-sponsored excursions, a whitewater rafting adventure. Our raft partially capsized in a 23-foot waterfall, ejecting three of us.

I broke a bone in my left hand. The ship’s medical doctor X-rayed my hand and put my arm in a cast for the rest of the cruise. Celebrity did not bill me. The doctor explained that it was because the cruise line took responsibility, since it was one of its excursions.

I visited my primary care physician when I came home, who referred me to an orthopedic surgeon. The surgeon sent me to physical therapy, hoping to avoid surgery. After 15 sessions, therapy ended a few months ago.

Celebrity took responsibility for the injury and treated me, but it didn’t cover the costs of therapy. The insurance we purchased through Transamerica Casualty Insurance Company for the cruise also denied reimbursement, stating that coverage ended once the trip ended.

Per your newspaper column, I wrote to Celebrity’s president and CEO, but it’s been over a month and I have not heard back. A representative emailed me a couple of times and directed me to a website that no longer works. Can you help me persuade Celebrity to cover my $653 physical therapy bill? —Marlene Nagy, Oro Valley, Arizona

A: If Celebrity took responsibility for your accident, it should have taken full responsibility for it. Also, it should have thanked you for going to therapy instead of surgery. That probably saved the company a few thousand dollars.

A few facts about your case stick out. First, there’s the part about sending guests down a 23-foot waterfall. That seems a little bit out of line with Celebrity’s promise of “classic, elegant cruising.” There’s nothing elegant about plunging down a waterfall, if you ask me.

Then there’s the doctor who assured you that the cruise line would take responsibility for the accident. When someone says that to you, you need to get it in writing. What, exactly, does Celebrity plan to “take responsibility” for? Does that extend to your post-vacation treatment as well? You can’t assume that it will pay every bill; that’s not how cruise lines operate, nor any other travel business, for that matter.

Finally, there’s the insurance company that rejected your claim on a technicality. Yes, your therapy happened after the cruise. But the injury took place while you were on the ship. Come on.

You did the right thing by sending a brief, polite email to the Celebrity Cruise executives I list on my consumer-advocacy site: http://elliott.org/company-contacts/celebrity-cruises/. The response from a customer-service representative was normal; it’s rare to have an executive reply personally, though it’s known to happen.

I contacted Celebrity on your behalf, and it agreed to pay your physical therapy bill.


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Christopher Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine and the author of “How to Be the World’s Smartest Traveler.” You can read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org, or email him at chris@elliott.org.