Summary of this article
Consumer Commission overturned health insurance claim rejection by HDFC ERGO
Provisional medical note insufficient for denying mediclaim settlement
Hospital clarification weakened insurer’s non-disclosure allegation against policyholder
Commission awarded Rs 6 lakh plus nine per cent interest
A health insurance claim can turn into a long fight if one line in a hospital record is read as final proof. That is what happened in a recent case from Andhra Pradesh, where a son had to approach the consumer commission after the insurer refused to pay for his father’s hospital treatment.
The dispute started after a violent attack in June 2024. The man’s parents were allegedly assaulted. His mother died in the incident, while his father survived with serious injuries and had to be treated in the hospital.
The son had an active health insurance policy for his father. The treatment was first taken at a government hospital and later at Continental Hospitals in Hyderabad, a network hospital under the policy. The family said the medical expenses came to around Rs 10.17 lakh across two spells of hospitalisation.
When the claim was filed, the insurer did not pay. HDFC ERGO General Insurance rejected the claim and later cancelled the policy, citing suppression of facts. The reason it relied on was a mention of “Alcohol Withdrawal Psychosis” in the discharge summary, according to a recent report by The Economic Times.
According to the insurer, this showed a history of alcohol consumption that had not been disclosed while taking the policy. The family disputed this strongly.
Hospital Later Clarified The Entry
The son took the matter to the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission in Kurnool. He argued that his father had no such alcohol history and that the insurer had wrongly used one hospital entry to reject the entire claim.
The hospital’s later clarification became important. Continental Hospitals said the mention of alcohol withdrawal was not a confirmed diagnosis. It was only kept as a provisional differential diagnosis because the patient had symptoms such as confusion and drowsiness.
The hospital also explained that these symptoms could be linked to other medical conditions and the trauma suffered by the patient. The patient had chronic kidney disease, anaemia, had undergone haemodialysis, and had also suffered physical and psychological shock after the assault.
The discharge summary was later revised, and the disputed entry was removed. Despite this, the insurer stood by its decision to repudiate the claim.
Commission Says Insurer Cannot Rely On Suspicion Alone
The consumer commission found fault with the insurer’s approach. It noted that the policy was active at the time of the incident and that the injuries had been caused by an assault. The expenses had arisen from treatment for those injuries.
The commission also observed that the insurer had mainly relied on one entry in the discharge summary, even though the hospital and doctors had later clarified that it was not a confirmed finding.
It held that such a claim could not be rejected merely on the basis of an unverified or provisional medical note. The insurer’s action was treated as a deficiency in service and an unfair trade practice.
The commission directed HDFC ERGO General Insurance to pay Rs 6 lakh towards the medical expenses. It also ordered interest at 9 per cent per annum from September 26, 2024, the date on which the claim was rejected, until the amount is paid.
Continental Hospitals was also pulled up for the way the medical entry was recorded. The commission said a diagnosis with serious insurance consequences should not be casually written without proper history or clinical confirmation. The hospital was directed to pay Rs 1 lakh as compensation for mental agony and Rs 25,000 as litigation costs.
Why This Order Matters For Policyholders
The case shows that a health insurance claim rejection need not be accepted blindly. If the insurer has rejected a claim on the basis of a doubtful entry, incomplete record, or assumption, the policyholder can challenge it.
For families, the lesson is simple. Hospital papers should be checked carefully before and after discharge. Discharge summaries, doctor notes, test reports, bills, prescriptions, and insurer communication should all be preserved.
If a wrong entry appears in the hospital record, the patient or family should ask for a written clarification immediately. Verbal explanations are rarely enough once a claim dispute begins.
The case also carries a warning for insurers. Non-disclosure has to be proved properly. A claim cannot be denied simply because one line in a medical record suggests something that is not backed by history, diagnosis, or evidence.
For policyholders, honest disclosure at the time of buying insurance remains essential. Past diseases, regular medicines, surgeries, hospitalisation history, and lifestyle-related declarations should be filled in carefully. But once a claim arises, insurers must also deal with it fairly and cannot use a doubtful hospital entry as a shortcut to reject payment.
FAQs
1. Can a health insurer reject a claim based on one hospital note?
Not if the note is unverified or only provisional. The insurer must have proper evidence before denying a claim.
2. What should policyholders do if a discharge summary has a wrong entry?
They should immediately ask the hospital for a written correction or clarification and keep it with the claim papers.
3. Can a rejected health insurance claim be challenged?
Yes. Policyholders can approach the insurer’s grievance cell, the insurance ombudsman, or the consumer commission, depending on the case.















