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Couple ‘stranded’ in Dubai amid row over £11,000 medical bill

Couple ‘stranded’ in Dubai amid row over £11,000 medical bill

A couple have spoken of their upset after becoming ‘stranded’ in Dubai amid a row over medical bills they say total more than £11,000. Katriona White, 54, fell seriously ill – leaving her unable to walk – after she and her husband Mick, 54, travelled to the United Arab Emirates from India where he had been working as a football coach.

The couple claim they were assured by their travel insurers they were covered and would be reimbursed. They claim they were told later they weren’t covered because of a ‘technicality’. Barclays insurance bosses said: “Our travel insurance documents and the annual eligibility statements are very clear that all trips must start and end in the UK and last no longer than 31 days.”

It means the pair have amassed medical bills totalling more than £11,000. Katriona is unfit to fly home because she has lost the use of her legs, while husband Mick can’t travel until he has settled the medical bill. He says a hospital in Dubai has seized his passport until the bill is paid.

The couple’s ordeal began shortly after the pair landed in Dubai from India, where Mick had been working as a football coach, on April 20. “After two or three days, she said she wasn’t feeling very well when she was in the shower. She said she felt frozen up. All her hands had spasmed up,” said Mick.

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Katriona was taken to a hospital in Dubai. Mick claims he was assured by his travel insurance the pair were covered under his policy, and would be able to reclaim any medical bills incurred. He said he had been paying £18-a-month into the policy for the previous 12 years without ever previously making a claim.

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He said he paid £800 on his credit card to the hospital for medical checks they carried out, but then checked his wife into a hotel when he learned an overnight stay at the hospital would cost at least £4,000. Mick said he ‘didn’t have that kind of money’ and medics at the hospital discharged his wife with some tablets. “They said after three or four days she would be OK,” he told the Manchester Evening News.

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  • June 7, 2023