The Hartford Cuts Rates for Women With Breast Cancer
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HARTFORD, Conn. – The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. is cutting life insurance rates for some women with breast cancer, citing improved treatment and research that is helping more women survive the disease.
The policies, which will cost the same as for healthy women, will be available to women 40 and older who have been treated for early stages of breast cancer. Previously, those women would have paid more for coverage or would have been denied coverage.
“Treatment for breast cancer has improved and continues to improve every year,” said Ann Hoven, chief medical director of The Hartford’s individual life division. “There really is a great deal of hope that we’re winning the fight against breast cancer.”
Due to medical advances the death rate for breast cancer has dropped 20 percent since 1991, Hoven said.
The Hartford’s new underwriting guidelines provide individual life insurance policies at standard rates to women who have been treated for localized, small breast cancer, which is defined as one centimeter or less, and for women with a strong prognosis for survival.
Up to 15 percent of all life insurance applicants who have been treated for stage-one breast cancer in the past five years, or more than 100,000 women, would be eligible for life insurance policies at standard rates, Hoven said.
