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Why Chronic Illness Is Now a Business Continuity Issue

Longer lives, longer health challenges and what SME owners should review next

Why Chronic Illness Is Now a Business Continuity Issue?w=400

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New Zurich research has put a sharper lens on a risk many business owners already sense in their teams and families: Australians are living longer, but more of those years may be affected by chronic illness.
For SMEs, this is not only a health story.
It is a continuity, productivity and financial resilience story.

The insurer’s latest chronic care research examined OECD health systems and found Australia performs strongly on broad health system effectiveness, ranking eighth among 38 OECD countries. However, the picture becomes more complex when the burden of ongoing illness is considered. Chronic conditions such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, mental health conditions, musculoskeletal disorders and neurological conditions are increasingly long-duration challenges that affect how people work, plan and recover.

Zurich also reported that mental health, musculoskeletal and neurological conditions accounted for almost 60% of the claims it received last year. Its Australian analysis identified mental disorders as the largest contributor to morbidity, affecting close to one in three people. Musculoskeletal conditions affect about one in five, while neurological disorders affect around one in 10. Cancer remains the leading contributor to deaths, followed by cardiovascular disease and neurological disorders.

For business owners, the lesson is practical. A key person does not need to die for a company to experience serious disruption. A long illness, recurring incapacity or reduced work capacity can affect revenue, client relationships, debt servicing, hiring decisions and ownership plans. This is where business life insurance, key person insurance and related protection strategies should be reviewed as part of a broader continuity plan, rather than treated as a set-and-forget product.

The report also reinforces the value of prevention and early intervention. While insurance cannot remove the health risk itself, the right cover can help protect cash flow, fund replacement expertise, support debt obligations or provide certainty for partners and families while recovery or transition decisions are made.

Business owners should consider three immediate questions:

  • Which people are essential to revenue, operations, lending confidence or client retention?
  • Would existing cover respond adequately if illness caused a long absence rather than an immediate fatal event?
  • Are sums insured, ownership structures and buy-sell arrangements still aligned with current business value and debt?

This is also an extension of the wider industry debate about disability claims, premium sustainability and access to risk advice. As chronic illness becomes a more visible driver of claims, tailored advisers and brokers can help SMEs compare policy definitions, exclusions, waiting periods and ownership structures before a health event forces the issue.

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
Moral Hazard:
The concept that individuals may take on more risk when they do not bear the full consequences of that risk, often relevant in insurance scenarios.