Your Last Piece of Back to School Prep

Aug 24, 2016
Categories: General · Safety
Staebler blog logo
You’ve spent the past two weeks scouring stores and hunting down everything your kids will need to go back to school. They have a wardrobe of snazzy new clothes to hit their new class fresh, comfy running shoes for another year of exploring, and even some new backpacks (even though the old ones were still perfectly fine). You’ve got new water bottles, lunch bags, ice packs, and have stocked up on enough granola bars and recess snacks to feed a small army (so it will last your kids roughly a week and a half). You’re ready for the new school year.
There is just one last back to school essential to shop for – student accident insurance.
While not as fun as multi-coloured pens and psychedelic binders, student accident insurance should be on the top of your shopping list this back to school season. Kids get into accidents. It’s part of growing up. Each year, over 1.5 million children sustain injuries of all sorts, large and small. Those odds only increase if your child is involved with any kind of recreational sport or extracurricular activity. We all collect a few scrapes, dings, and injuries when we’re young, sooner or later.
But, while the occasional trip to the ER for some stitches might be a fairly normal part of growing up, the expenses of those accidents can still be shocking. Depending on what kind of treatment your child needs, those bills can exceed the benefits of your government or group insurance plans, or fall outside of their purview. Even a minor injury can become a major financial liability without the proper protection.
Say your daughter chips a tooth playing field hockey. OHIP doesn’t cover dental services, so if your group plan only provides partial coverage or less, you could be easily looking at over $1000 in dental work. One small chip thanks to an errant stick or a bad bounce of the ball can become a serious burden. Let’s be real, losing a grand out of the budget isn’t something that can be easily absorbed for most families. But with student accident insurance, you’re protected from that unfortunate possibility.
Student accident insurance doesn’t stop at protecting your family’s financial well-being in the case of an injury, it’s also about maintaining quality of life and normalcy. Tutoring benefits can keep your child up-to-date with their studies if an injury prevents them from attending class for over 30 days. The package can even include the cost of rental equipment and programs to facilitate those studies. Injuries are tough for kids to deal with as it is. They don’t need the stress of coming back to class and feeling behind their peers and overwhelmed by the amount of catch-up they have in front of them on top of everything else.
If your child is injured while on a trip out of the province (on a school trip or a sports event for example), out-of-province emergency medical protection will ensure that they will have access to whatever medical assistance they need, wherever they are. This benefit can cover everything from the cost of an alternative ambulance service (airlift, etc) for up to $1000, to the costs of splints, crutches, and braces. A great peace of mind for any parent nervous about their child traveling.
Send your kids back to school this year knowing they have a safety net under them. For a price that costs less per month than one of those new backpacks they insisted on, you can make sure that your family is protected financially, physically, and emotionally for any of life’s dings and scrapes to come. It’s the most important preparation you’ll take this back to school season.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

With more and more roundabouts popping up in Waterloo Region, we thought this little tutorial my help you thru safe and without incident. Click here to view. For the Ministry of Transportation's handbook on how to manoeuvre thru a roundabout click here. We here at...

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Health Alert! Ground Beef Recall

As a result of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency's (CFIA) investigation, the public warning issued on March 17, 2012 has been updated to provide details of over 135 affected products under various brand names and codes that may be contaminated with E. coli For a...

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Leap Year Facts and Traditions

Tobogganing in July and sunbathing in December are just some of the wacky phenomena we'd have to contend with if we didn't have leap years to keep our calendar in sync with the Earth's orbit around the sun. The answer, simply put, is that the Earth doesn't take...

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Facebook said to File for Mega IPO

Facebook is expected to submit paperwork to regulators on Wednesday morning for a US$5-billion initial public offering and has selected Morgan Stanley and four other bookrunners to handle the mega-IPO, sources close to the deal told IFR.  For more informtion on this...

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Family won’t get Insurance Payout

No claim made; 'Accident' doesn't meet compensation criteria Despite some media reports the Shafia family, might receive payouts under Quebec's no-fault insurance system. The board says, there will be no payout. Click here to get the whole story.

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Are you Prepared for Winter Driving?

We've got the first few snow falls behind us and many more ahead. Most drivers will prepare for the winter with the basics; winter tires, winter windsheild fluid, scrapers and brushes. A recent Canadian Automobile Association survey shows only 36% of Canadian...

read more
How to Proceed thru a Roundabout

Telephone Fraud

A telephone fraud scam continues to target consumers across Canada. The scam, which received wide publicity in November and December and was highlighted by the Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC), involves calls from fraudsters claiming to be from an insurance company....

read more