Dr. Dhiraj explores why timely health insurance is essential for senior citizens’ financial security and dignity on DifferentTruths.com.

AI Summary
- The Insurance Paradox: As age advances, healthcare needs increase, making insurance both more critical and harder to obtain due to rising premiums and pre-existing conditions.
- Financial Safeguard: Securing insurance early protects retirement savings from the impact of medical inflation and prevents families from choosing between medical treatment and long-term financial stability.
- Empowering Independence: Dedicated senior policies preserve dignity by ensuring medical decisions are based on clinical needs rather than affordability or dependency.
There is a strange irony in health insurance. The people who need it the most often find it the hardest to obtain. When individuals are young, healthy, and rarely visit hospitals, insurance is relatively inexpensive and easy to buy. As age increases and healthcare becomes more important, premiums rise, medical histories become more complex, and policy conditions become stricter. This reality makes health insurance for senior citizens one of the most important financial planning decisions facing Indian families today.
Why does insurance become more important with age?
Medical science has helped people live longer than ever before. However, longer life often brings increased healthcare needs. Conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, arthritis, heart disease, cataracts, and kidney disorders become more common as people age. A hospitalisation that might have been rare during working years can become more likely during retirement. The financial implications are significant. A knee replacement may cost several lakhs. Cardiac procedures often involve substantial expenditure. Long-term treatments for chronic illnesses can continue for years. Even a routine hospitalisation can put pressure on retirement savings.
The issue is not whether healthcare expenses will arise. The issue is whether families are prepared when they do.
The Cost of Waiting Too Long
One of the most common mistakes families make is postponing insurance decisions. Many parents spend decades supporting children, building homes and preparing for retirement. Health insurance is often ignored because everyone appears healthy. Then a diagnosis arrives. Suddenly, the search for health insurance begins. Unfortunately, insurance works best before illness appears. Once significant medical conditions develop, premiums increase, and options may become limited. The best time to purchase health insurance is usually several years before it becomes necessary.
Understanding Senior Citizen Policies
Recognising the growing healthcare needs of older adults, insurers now offer specialised plans for senior citizens. These policies are designed with the understanding that medical requirements differ significantly from those of younger policyholders. However, buyers must look beyond the headline coverage amount. Waiting periods, co-payment clauses, room-rent limits, disease-specific restrictions, and claim procedures can significantly affect a policy’s usefulness. A policy should not be judged only by how much cover it promises. It should also be judged by how effectively that cover works during actual treatment.
The Reality of Co-Payment
Many senior citizen policies include co-payment provisions. This means that the policyholder shares part of the treatment cost with the insurer. Suppose a policy includes a 20 per cent co-payment clause and the hospital bill amounts to ₹5 lakhs. In such a case, the insurer may pay ₹4 lakh while the family must pay the remaining ₹1 lakh. This example highlights why understanding policy details is important. A large coverage amount may still leave meaningful out-of-pocket expenses.
‘Sandwiched’ Generation Problem
Many middle-aged Indians find themselves supporting both children and ageing parents simultaneously. Home loans may still be running. Children’s education expenses continue to rise. Retirement planning remains unfinished. At the same time, parents require increasing healthcare support.
A major medical emergency can therefore affect multiple financial goals simultaneously. Money intended for retirement, education, or long-term investment may suddenly be redirected toward healthcare expenses. For this reason, health insurance for parents is not merely a medical decision. It is a family financial stability decision.
Should children buy insurance for their parents or guardians?
Increasingly, the answer is yes. Many parents belong to a generation that spent most of their lives without health insurance and therefore underestimate its importance. They often believe savings alone will be sufficient. Healthcare costs today tell a different story.
Children with stable incomes are often better positioned to secure coverage before medical conditions become more restrictive. These conversations may feel uncomfortable, but addressing them sooner usually improves the situation. Health insurance should be viewed not as a sign of weakness but as a form of family preparedness.
Medical Inflation Never Retires
One challenge that many retirees underestimate is medical inflation. A treatment costing ₹4 lakhs today may cost considerably more ten years later. While retirement income may remain relatively stable, healthcare costs often continue to rise. This means that even individuals who have accumulated substantial retirement savings remain exposed to healthcare inflation.
Without adequate insurance, medical expenses can slowly erode wealth built over an entire lifetime.
Health Insurance and Dignity
The discussion ultimately goes beyond money. Most elderly individuals do not want to become financially dependent on their children during illness. They want treatment decisions to be based on medical necessity, not affordability. Health insurance helps preserve independence, dignity, and choice. During difficult moments, having options matters.
The Final Words…
Growing older is unavoidable. Becoming financially vulnerable because of healthcare expenses is a risk. The best time to plan for senior citizen health insurance is before it becomes urgently necessary. Every year of delay narrows options and increases uncertainty.
Health insurance is not merely about paying hospital bills. It is about protecting retirement savings, preserving dignity, reducing stress on children, and ensuring that healthcare needs, rather than financial limitations, drive medical decisions. After spending a lifetime creating security for the family, no one should have to watch that security disappear because of a single medical emergency.
In the next column, we will address a question that almost every family eventually asks: How much health insurance is actually enough? Are ₹5 lakhs sufficient? Is ₹10 lakhs enough, or has medical inflation completely changed the answer?
Picture design by Anumita Roy
Dr Dhiraj Sharma, faculty in Management Studies at Punjabi University, Patiala, writes at the intersection of economy, finance, governance, culture, literature, and social change. His interdisciplinary work examines how individuals and institutions adapt to economic and societal shifts. Beyond academia, he pursues creative writing—fiction, non-fiction, poetry—and excels as an avid birder, nature/wildlife photographer, and painter in realistic/semi-impressionist styles. He actively supports government/NGO initiatives for bird watching, butterfly monitoring, and natural habitat conservation. He is our Associate Editor: Economy, Finance and Governance.




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