Travel solutions

Q: Two years ago, I was scheduled to travel to Omaha, Nebraska, to stay with my mother and provide postoperative care for a week. My return flight was scheduled for a week later.

My mother had complications after surgery that not only lengthened her hospital stay, but also required me to lengthen my trip to take care of her when she returned home from the hospital.

I changed my return date to fly back a week later than scheduled so that I could give my mother two weeks of care at home instead of one. The cost to change my return flight was $360 — a $200 change fee, plus $130 fare difference and $30 processing fee.

I filed a claim with Allianz pursuant to “Trip Interruption due to Nonmedical Reasons.” The cause for filing the claim is stated in section two of its travel insurance policy. Per a letter submitted by my mother’s physician, my mother required extended hospitalization, and she required my care upon release due to her complications.

I have submitted this letter and other information to Allianz, but it just continues to ask for more information. Now Allianz wants a form completed that requires information from the hospital about my mother’s surgery and complications, despite having the letter from her physician.

This situation has taken up a lot of my time, and my mother is still having health problems, so I don’t want to continue asking her to chase down more information.

Two different Allianz agents, prior to me changing my flight, told me that I would simply need a letter from the physician explaining the situation in order to file a claim. I hope you can help get Allianz to honor what I believe is a valid claim. — Tami Miller, Malvern, Pennsylvania

A: Allianz should have paid this claim long ago. So why didn’t it?

Section two of your insurance policy says you’re covered when a family member who isn’t traveling with you is seriously ill or injured.

It states: “Specific requirement: The injury, illness or medical condition must be considered life threatening, require hospitalization, or he or she must require your care.”

That looks like a covered reason to you — and to me. So what’s the holdup? You say two representatives told you that a doctor’s letter would be enough to process the claim, but then another representative asked for additional details. Insurance companies are well within their rights to request this documentation, although they should also make every effort to resolve a claim in a timely manner. Two years is too long.

I list the Allianz customer-service contacts at http://elliott.org/company-contacts/allianz/, my consumer-advocacy site. Reaching out to one of them in writing might have helped move your claim along. But you can’t waive a paperwork requirement in the way you want. A company like Allianz must show its underwriters that it processed a valid claim.

I contacted Allianz on your behalf.

“We have been waiting for her to send us the required documentation we need to finalize her claim,” a representative told me. “The number one reason that claims are delayed is lack of proper documentation. In this case, we have decided to approve Ms. Miller’s claim based on the documentation we have.”


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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.