Collywobbles
New User
My child's pony has been having routine annual dental checks and rasping by the vet when his vaccinations were due. Vet said he had good teeth and didn't mention any problems to me except the odd sharp point. Fast forward to this summer when vet identified a broken tooth that needed extracting due to infection. I was surprised (as no concerns had been raised before) and asked whether infection just a year after the previous check was normal and she said that yes, the timescale was possible. She asked me to check with insurer (SEIB) whether the pony was covered for dental work. They procrastinated with their answer but didn't hesitate to put an immediate exclusion on 'teeth and gums' for the next renewal.
As the equine dentist only visits the vet periodically, I had to go ahead with the extraction before hearing back from SEIB. Now they are refusing to pay as on the pony's clinical history (which the vets didn't share with me until the insurers asked for it), there is a reference to 'sharp points' and 'caries' which they said I should have told them about. Consequently they've put a retrospective exclusion on teeth and gums dating to 2015! The vet never mentioned the caries and as I always understood the point of routine rasping to be to get rid of 'sharp points' (don't most equines have these at some point?) I just mentioned that the pony had had his annual 'routine rasping' at renewal.
I've written back to SEIB explaining this but they don't want to know. Really appalling customer service too. So based on my experience, I'm wondering how many others might not be aware that their insurance could refuse to pay for dental work on the basis of observations recorded in the clinical history. Sharp points on teeth are very common and I think caries are too, so I was wondering what proportion of horse owners would actually be excluded from dental treatment if these are mentioned on the clinical history but not raised as a problem by the vet during routine rasping?
If anyone else has similar experiences - or advice - I'd be really grateful to hear it.
As the equine dentist only visits the vet periodically, I had to go ahead with the extraction before hearing back from SEIB. Now they are refusing to pay as on the pony's clinical history (which the vets didn't share with me until the insurers asked for it), there is a reference to 'sharp points' and 'caries' which they said I should have told them about. Consequently they've put a retrospective exclusion on teeth and gums dating to 2015! The vet never mentioned the caries and as I always understood the point of routine rasping to be to get rid of 'sharp points' (don't most equines have these at some point?) I just mentioned that the pony had had his annual 'routine rasping' at renewal.
I've written back to SEIB explaining this but they don't want to know. Really appalling customer service too. So based on my experience, I'm wondering how many others might not be aware that their insurance could refuse to pay for dental work on the basis of observations recorded in the clinical history. Sharp points on teeth are very common and I think caries are too, so I was wondering what proportion of horse owners would actually be excluded from dental treatment if these are mentioned on the clinical history but not raised as a problem by the vet during routine rasping?
If anyone else has similar experiences - or advice - I'd be really grateful to hear it.