This is very interesting. There was a heated discussion in this household about this last year. My husband thought it was ok, (it’s only a week), I was adamant that it was not a risk I would take.
We were about to go to Cyprus for one week to see family, most insurers wouldn’t even quote for us and just refused. Then we ‘got lucky’ , coughed up and went. The cover cost more than the whole trip.
We then asked about cover for Australia - £2k minimum, single trip only. Canada was going to be more than double that, again, single trip. So we were sad and thought that once you get over 70 travel is financially impossible., unless you are lucky enough to be rich.
Then someone mentioned packaged bank accounts and thanks to Martin Lewis’s website, we were able to finally get reasonably priced cover.
We too use the FlexPlus account with Nationwide, specifically for the travel insurance, as it’s multi-trip and worldwide. By opting for a joint account it covers us both if we decide to do solo trips independently of each other.
We did the full medical screening questionnaire and paid a bit extra as we are both over 70 and have several health conditions (DH has had a stroke previously, high blood pressure, COPD etc etc; I have AF, several autoimmune diseases, etc etc.) - but the eventual premium was nothing like the quotes we’d had before, if we could even get a quote: most companies refused us cover. It came to less than we’d paid for one week in Cyprus.
What the insurers told us was, they wanted to know everything, even the seemingly unimportant things, they were not nearly so concerned about what it was as not knowing. So that made it easy (if lengthy).
So we happily went to Australia this spring and are going to Canada and USA this autumn. While we still can, we will.
I haven’t read the article about the poor gentleman stuck in Turkey, but these reports are becoming a common occurrence. I hope things resolve for him soon, whatever the rights or wrongs of it.