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NAIL-BITING

Tourist racks up £1,300 medical bill on US holiday after breaking her nail on the first day

A YOUNG woman was left with a medical bill of AUD$2,500 (£1,325) after breaking her nail on the first day of her holiday in the US.

Australian tourist Rachael Minaway, 32, had just arrived in Hawaii with a friend when she needed medical attention after getting her finger caught in the glovebox of their rental car.

 A female tourist was left with a high medical bill after breaking her nail on holiday
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A female tourist was left with a high medical bill after breaking her nail on holidayCredit: Rachael Minaway

Rachel : "We had a late check-in, so we headed straight for the beach, and we were so excited to run out of the car and get into the water."

"We were packing away the GPS in the glovebox, and I was being too quick and smashed my fingernail between the dashboard and the glovebox, and it cracked.

"I didn’t think it was a big deal at all, it’s happened to all of us before."

But after a while Ms Minaway’s finger started to go numb and she and her friend figured they should get it checked at the closest medical centre.

 Rachel broke her nail after closing the glovebox in her rental car
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Rachel broke her nail after closing the glovebox in her rental carCredit: Rachael Minaway

She said: "We typed in 'medical centre' in the GPS and I guess in Hawaii they call hospitals 'medical centres' because it directed us to the closest emergency room.

"At that point my hand was really hurting, and we thought, OK, they’ll just tell us what to do.

"We just wanted to get back to our trip. And I was wasting my friend’s time for a fingernail, it was so silly."

At the hospital, a doctor said it would be best to remove Ms Minaway’s fingernail, which she agreed to if she could get a local anaesthetic.

 She was forced to spend 30 minutes have the nail ripped off by a doctor
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She was forced to spend 30 minutes have the nail ripped off by a doctorCredit: Rachael Minaway

She said: "It was so painful, I did not want to feel him ripping it off.

"But we were taking photos and laughing through it, I honestly did not expect it to be a big deal."

After the consultation was over, which took around 30 minutes — Rachel checked out at reception and was presented with a huge bill of about AUD$1,200 (£654)

She said: "I had to pay it on the spot. I told them we’d only just landed, I hadn’t even checked in my luggage at the hotel.

 Thankfully, her insurer were able to cover the costs
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Thankfully, her insurer were able to cover the costsCredit: Rachael Minaway

"But they wouldn’t let us leave without paying it."

Rachel settled the bill and after getting to the hotel, she sent photos of the paperwork to her insurer 1Cover and made a successful claim.

But for months after returning home to Sydney, Rachel said she was inundated with new bills from the hospital — which tallied up to a massive AUD$2,500 (£1,325), all for a broken nail.

She said: "I was getting multiple invoices for months."

 She has since warned travellers to always take out travel insurance
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She has since warned travellers to always take out travel insuranceCredit: Rachael Minaway

"I remember emailing them after the first one and saying, 'No, sorry, I’ve already paid for this,' but the invoices were for different things.

"They kept finding new things to bill me for. After a few months I regretted giving them my real address.

"It was pretty upsetting. I was six months pregnant at that point, and I kept thinking, imagine if didn’t have insurance and actually had to pay for all this myself."

Thankfully, Rachel's insurer 1Cover was able to cover her for all her charges.


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But the avid traveller, who , said she "couldn’t believe" what an expensive ordeal had come of simply accidentally closing a glovebox on her finger.

The 32-year-old said: "I’d heard about how in America they don’t have Medicare like us, but I never expected (the cost) to be this outrageous for something this tiny.

The Unites States is the third-most visited overseas destination for Australian travellers, and it’s the source of the most expensive medical claims for travel insurers.

It can cost $280,000 for an air ambulance from the US back to Australia, an average of $140,000 for one week’s stay in an American intensive care unit and $20,000 for injured travellers who are in a stretcher or can’t walk to be repatriated back to Australia.

 Rachel, who now travels with her baby daughter, was covered by 1Cover travel insurance
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Rachel, who now travels with her baby daughter, was covered by 1Cover travel insuranceCredit: Rachael Minaway

1Cover has received claims for American medical costs of up to $1 million, the company says.

But medical bills for minor injuries, like Ms Minaway’s broken fingernail, are also unusually high in the US — and hospitals and medical centres were notoriously pushy about getting paid, 1Cover’s travel safety expert Richard Warburton said.

He told news.com.au: "Recently, we had another customer who faced costs of AUD$2,600 (£1,418) for a splinter she removed in the US. She was harassed continuously for this tiny injury once she got back to Australia.

"A recent customer of ours saw the doctor for an uncomplicated case of tonsillitis. She was billed AUD$10,000 (£5,455) and they didn’t even take out the tonsils.

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"Another patient had some nausea and vomiting over 24 hours. She was completely fine but was charged AUD$28,000 (£15,274).

"Sometimes the hospital will contact their travel insurer demanding payment for a customer. But sometimes they’ll contact the customer directly, and this is scary and intimidating."

Richard said where possible, travellers should contact their travel insurer at the time they saw a doctor or visited a hospital so they could be advised appropriately and the insurer could talk directly with the medical provider if needed.

He said a hospital or billing department might make an upfront charge, but they were likely to push for follow-up charges.

Providing travel insurance details with the hospital or billing department means they can keep liaising with the insurer and lay off pestering the patient.

Rachel said she would never risk travelling without insurance, especially now she travels with her young daughter.

A British dad was recently left fuming after his travel insurer refused to refund his £2,500 Disney World holiday after his 14-year-old son was diagnosed with bone cancer.

Michael Howorth slammed his insurer after they were forced to cancel the trip, only to be given just a percentage of their holiday payment back.

This story was originally published on and has been reproduced with permission.