rondezvous wrote:
Thank you for your replies! So, today I found the actual underwriter guidelines for the policy that I am applying (supposedly not for public use but on the net) which had use of Naltrexone listed in the uninsurable section. I am only 45 so I am hoping that in 5 or 10 years when I really should be applying for long term care insurance the negative view of this very helpful drug will have subsided. After all, those who are on Zyban to help with nicotine cravings are not discriminated against. Like henstooth said we should get credit for trying to live a healthier life! In 5 or 10 years I feel confident that by taking Naltrexone, I will have greatly reduced if not eliminated my alcohol consumption. But, I guess, because I actually admitted that I felt I was consuming too much is enough to list me as high risk with the insurance companies. I wish that I would have found this out before filling my prescription but the damage is done. Now I just need to focus on cutting down or quitting and hope that the future works itself out. I am hopeful, at least, that my life between now and then will be worth living!
Hi,
A few years ago, I had an insurance application declined - or deferred, really - because I disclosed that I had sought help from a doctor for alcohol consumption. They said to reapply when I had been abstinent for two years.
I'm guessing that no amount of control/moderation in the future would ever get them to reconsider that position. I have been AF for two and a half years now, so it's no longer an issue for me. But I suspect that (abstinance, that is) will be your only course if you want to be insurable in the future. I'd be surprised if this attitude changes in the next ten years, frankly.
Good luck, whatever your chosen path is,
c