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When there is a conflict, instead of war they should have to dress up like clowns and take a balloon animal-making class. It's like that saying....."Give a man a balloon animal and he's happy for a day. Teach him to make balloon animals and he'll be happy for life." Heck, imagine if balloon animals were currency? Who would need insurance then? If prices go up, just blow up more balloon animals. Of course, that would probably cause the inflation rate to rise.......
If only world leaders dressed like bears and danced there would be less conflict in the world.
 
When there is a conflict, instead of war they should have to dress up like clowns and take a balloon animal-making class. It's like that saying....."Give a man a balloon animal and he's happy for a day. Teach him to make balloon animals and he'll be happy for life." Heck, imagine if balloon animals were currency? Who would need insurance then? If prices go up, just blow up more balloon animals. Of course, that would probably cause the inflation rate to rise.......
Condoms make really cool balloon animals too👍
 
We had Healthy Paws with B, started was 9 weeks old, and had it until his passing last September, a month short of 5 years old. 80% coverage with $500 deducible.

I brought B to the emergency vet 3x, and he also had a 4 day stay, a bone marrows aspiration, was in the oxygen chamber for 2 days..so much stuff....his last 2 weeks were tough on us all as the vets tried hard to figure out what was going on with him.

Ultimately, Healthy Paws paid out over $16k for all this, and also sent a lovely hand signed card after we had to send B over Rainbow Bridge. The biggest invoice took about 7 days to be paid to us; the others were paid within 2 business days. The only reason I didn't sign up C with Healthy Paws is I chose to switch to an insurance provider that covered the exam fees, which HP didn't (I knew that when I signed up).

I'm so sorry for those that had bad experiences with Healthy Paws; that truly sucks, and I hoped you switched to an insurance that you're happier with.

However, based on my own limited experience, telling people to put the premium in a savings account and just use those funds when something goes wrong...well, maybe put in double or triple because vets are expensive (but worth it!), and costs balloon quickly. Having insurance means you can focus on how to hopefully get your pup well and healthy again, and not be forced to immediately put them down because you've run out of funds.
 
We had Healthy Paws with B, started was 9 weeks old, and had it until his passing last September, a month short of 5 years old. 80% coverage with $500 deducible.

I brought B to the emergency vet 3x, and he also had a 4 day stay, a bone marrows aspiration, was in the oxygen chamber for 2 days..so much stuff....his last 2 weeks were tough on us all as the vets tried hard to figure out what was going on with him.

Ultimately, Healthy Paws paid out over $16k for all this, and also sent a lovely hand signed card after we had to send B over Rainbow Bridge. The biggest invoice took about 7 days to be paid to us; the others were paid within 2 business days. The only reason I didn't sign up C with Healthy Paws is I chose to switch to an insurance provider that covered the exam fees, which HP didn't (I knew that when I signed up).

I'm so sorry for those that had bad experiences with Healthy Paws; that truly sucks, and I hoped you switched to an insurance that you're happier with.

However, based on my own limited experience, telling people to put the premium in a savings account and just use those funds when something goes wrong...well, maybe put in double or triple because vets are expensive (but worth it!), and costs balloon quickly. Having insurance means you can focus on how to hopefully get your pup well and healthy again, and not be forced to immediately put them down because you've run out of funds.
ps
I want to add a couple of things:

1) We paid just under $3,500 in premiums during B's lifetime (HP refunded us his last month's premium), and about $4,000 out of pocket (the 20% difference, and a lot of different exam fees for a variety of specialists that weren't covered). The total for B's 2 weeks before passing was almost $20,000, and HP didn't have any qualms/issues with any of the tests or measures taken to diagnose him, or help him be comfortable once we found out what was going on.

2) Healthy Paws hasn't paid me to say any of this; it's just my experience with them.
 
I have three Goldens on Healthy Paws. Yes, the premiums have increased substantially but I have never had a problem getting a claim paid. When our Golden/Corgi mix Sonny was in ICU at the vet hospital for 10 days the bill with over $10K. They paid it immediately.
 
How's she doing?
She did fine, up and around after the anesthetic when we took her home, I was hoping she would nap! LOL
What I have found out is the VERY FIRST claim you make involves a little more than just submitting a bill. The surgery was done at the closest Vet place I could get to, and not her regular Vet. So I needed a history from her original Vet, along with the itemized deductions from the E.R. Vet.

And they have called me, and updated me, very nicely.

Well that was a long answer to "How's she doing"
LOLOLOL
 
Yes. Healthy Paws customer for 9 years. Now that my dog has become older, the company has discovered that one record from a vet we went to 8 years ago is no longer satisfactory to approve any future claims, because we do not have complete records over the history of the policy. The same record was valid for claims 6 months ago. Find another company. It is obvious what they are doing.
 
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