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Living Longer, But Not Always Healthier: What It Means for Cover

New chronic illness data highlights the importance of reviewing financial protection before health changes occur

Living Longer, But Not Always Healthier: What It Means for Cover?w=400

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New research from Zurich Australia has put a timely spotlight on a challenge many families already understand: Australians may be living longer, but not necessarily spending all of those extra years in good health.
Reported on 13 July 2026, the Zurich Chronic Care Index ranked Australia eighth out of 38 OECD countries for overall health system performance, reflecting strong healthcare capacity and relatively low mortality.
However, the same analysis points to a widening gap between lifespan and health span.

For households, that distinction matters. A longer life affected by chronic illness can mean more time away from work, higher out-of-pocket costs, a greater need for care, and increased pressure on partners, adult children or other family members. This is where personal insurance planning becomes more than a box-ticking exercise. Life cover, income protection, trauma insurance and total and permanent disability cover each respond to different risks, and chronic illness can expose gaps that are easy to miss when people only focus on death cover.

Zurich’s analysis found Australia performs less strongly on morbidity, which measures the burden of people living with illness. Mental disorders, musculoskeletal conditions and neurological disorders were identified as leading contributors to chronic illness in Australia. Zurich also indicated those categories made up close to 60 per cent of its claims during 2025. For consumers, the message is not that every policy will respond in the same way, but that policy definitions, waiting periods, exclusions and benefit structures deserve close attention.

This is especially relevant for people in their 30s, 40s and 50s who are juggling mortgages, children, ageing parents or business responsibilities. A serious illness does not always remove the need for income immediately and permanently; sometimes it reduces capacity over time, creates recurring treatment costs or changes the kind of work a person can safely perform. That is why reviewing life insurance options before a medical diagnosis or major health change can be so important.

The findings also add context to recent industry discussion about mental health claims, TPD sustainability and affordability. Insurers are under pressure to price products realistically, while consumers need cover that remains understandable and dependable at claim time. The practical takeaway is to avoid assuming that default cover inside superannuation, an old policy, or a low-cost quote will automatically suit today’s health and family risks.

Australians concerned about chronic illness risk should check how much cover they hold, what events are actually insured, how income is defined, and whether exclusions apply. If the wording is unclear, specialist advice can help translate technical terms into real-world implications. Longer lives are a positive story, but the financial plan behind them needs to account for the years when health, work and family support may become more complicated.

Published:Wednesday, 15th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Knowledgebase
Occupational Hazard:
A risk associated with the nature of a particular occupation, which may affect insurance premiums.