Another bit of legal progress in Canada!

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by Storm Crow, May 30, 2016.

  1. Now this may not seem important to a lot of you, but it is important! Why? Because people have had to either lie on the insurance form, or be forced to pay much higher premiums, or just be denied life insurance altogether.

    Not having life insurance affects many aspects of your adult life. Try to buy a house without it and see how far you get! OK, on to this important news article about a major change for cannabis users!



    Sun Life first insurer to stop treating pot users as smokers as marijuana increasingly accepted as a medicine

    Sun Life first insurer to stop treating pot users as smokers as marijuana increasingly accepted as a medicine

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    A woman smokes a joint during the annual 420 marijuana rally on Parliament hill on Wednesday, April 20, 2016 in Ottawa.

    In a new sign of marijuana’s growing normalization in Canada, a major life insurance company has decided to treat cannabis users as non-smokers, reversing a long-standing policy and offering the group far cheaper premiums.

    Like its competitors, Sun Life has for years classified anyone who disclosed using marijuana — either recreationally or for medical purposes — as a smoker, saddling them with charges that could be triple those of non-smokers.

    But in a message to brokers last week, the company said the latest research on the drug’s health impacts convinced it to change that approach.

    “In our industry, we keep up to date with medical studies and companies update their underwriting guidelines accordingly,” Sun Life said in a statement Friday. “As a result, people who use marijuana are now assessed … at non-smoker rates, unless they also use tobacco.”

    In our industry, we keep up to date with medical studies and companies update their underwriting guidelines accordingly

    The change comes as cannabis is increasingly accepted as a medicine for various ailments, and the federal government prepares to legalize recreational possession as well.

    Sun Life’s decision was likely motivated by what would have been an unthinkable factor for a legitimate corporation in the past: a burgeoning market of Canadians who admit to using marijuana, said broker Lorne Marr of Toronto’s LSM Insurance.

    “They’re trying to get an edge on the other companies,” he suggested. “I don’t think they’re just trying to lower consumers’ premiums.”

    The head of a patient advocacy organization hailed the new policy as an important breakthrough, saying the insurance issue has been a “huge concern.”

    Not only have users of medical cannabis been forced to pay “exorbitant” life insurance rates, but in some cases they’ve actually been turned down for coverage, said Jonathan Zaid, founder of Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana.

    “It was a huge discrepancy in the way patients were being treated,” he said. “I’ve even heard of (medical marijuana users) who couldn’t get mortgages because they were denied life insurance.”

    Companies apply the policy to patients who smoke pot, employ vaporizers or just consume the drug in edible products, said Zaid. And yet there is little good evidence that even long-term smoking of it causes cigarette-like harms, he said.

    It was a huge discrepancy in the way patients were being treated

    Cannabis smoke does contain many of the same carcinogens as tobacco fumes, but a Canadian co-authored study published last year — like others before it — concluded there was little evidence of an increased risk of lung cancer, even in habitual users. Experts say that’s likely because cigarette smokers suck in far more of those cancer-causing chemicals on average than pot users.

    “It’s great that they’re recognizing that the old policy wasn’t based on science,” Zain said. “There’s no evidence that there is any long-term risk of cancer or anything equivalent to tobacco.”

    Being treated as a smoker by insurers certainly carries a financial sting. One $500,000 policy with a 20-year term costs non-smokers $53 a month, smokers $148, said Marr.

    Applications typically ask if customers use marijuana and, while it’s possible to give a false response, companies administer urine and blood tests to back up information clients give them, he said.

    Marr said it’s likely now that other insurers will follow Sun Life’s example.





    And the "dominoes" continue to fall! :weed:


    Granny
     
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  2. When will the insurers get on board with covering medical cannabis? It's outrageous that they will cover percocet but not cannabis. Stupid Health Canada is dragging their feet in giving it an identification number, claiming there are not enough studies done on cannabis to fully approve it.

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