Compare GSI Insurance Options at Mass General
GSI Insurance Mass General Housestaff
Official GSI Provider for Mass General
GSI Insurance Mass General Residency Program
Mass General resident disability insurance through Guardian GSI provides Massachusetts General Hospital residents and fellows with individual coverage without medical underwriting or health questions. Eligible doctors secure permanent discounts up to 30% and a policy that remains in force after training.
GSI Disability Quotes for Mass General Residents
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Mass General GSI Disability Insurance Specialists
$8,000 Benefits for Mass General Residents
Eligible Mass General physician trainees can start with up to $8,000 per month in disability coverage, establishing a stronger income protection baseline for Mass General residents.
Own-Occupation Coverage for Mass General
Guardian GSI disability insurance uses a true own-occupation definition, so Mass General housestaff are covered when they cannot perform the duties of their specialty.
Short GSI Application for Mass General Trainees
The Mass General GSI process is streamlined: (1) request a quote, (2) review policy design, (3) complete a short application, and (4) secure individual disability income insurance.
Future Increase Options for Mass General Housestaff
Mass General housestaff who add a future increase option can expand monthly benefits up to $15,000 without medical underwriting. This allows Massachusetts General Hospital fellows and residents to scale protection as income increases. The structure preserves insurability without re-entering underwriting.
Mass General Brigham GME Eligibility
Mass General Brigham Graduate Medical Education (GME) ties GSI eligibility directly to active training status within qualifying residency or fellowship programs. With more than 1,500 physician trainees at Massachusetts General Hospital and over 2,500 across the Mass General Brigham system, GSI availability is determined by individual residency and fellowship programs and confirmed at the time of application.
The key decision is timing. This opportunity exists only during active training at Mass General, and once that window closes, the GSI offer is no longer available.
Your Mass General GSI Offer Expires
Once the Mass General GSI window closes, new disability insurance applications require full underwriting. Insurers review an applicant’s medical history, prescriptions, and prior diagnoses.
Under full underwriting, insurers evaluate:
- Medical records and prescription history
- Prior diagnoses such as mental health or musculoskeletal conditions
- Occupational exposure such as needle-stick incidents
- Specialty-specific risk factors
Mass General residents and fellows who apply during training bypass this process entirely through guaranteed standard issue coverage while eligibility remains in place.
GSI Insurance for Residents at Mass General FAQs
Mass General residents and fellows access guaranteed standard issue disability income insurance through qualifying residency and fellowship programs affiliated with Mass General Brigham Graduate Medical Education. GSI means the policy is issued without individual medical underwriting — no medical exam, no health questions, no review of your medical history, and no exclusions based on prior diagnoses. Your eligibility is based entirely on your active training status within a qualifying program, not on your health.
The policy is individually owned, meaning it belongs to you and not to your employer or training institution. It remains in force after training ends, regardless of where you practice or what state you move to. The permanent discount secured during training applies to the policy for its entire life.
No. Because the Mass General GSI program issues coverage on a guaranteed standard issue basis with no medical underwriting, there is no pre-existing condition review and no exclusion applied to any prior or current health history. A fully underwritten individual policy would exclude any condition treated within two years of the effective date, or any condition that produced symptoms within one year that a reasonable person would seek treatment for. The GSI program eliminates both of those limitations entirely. From the effective date forward, the policy covers disabilities arising from any injury or sickness not otherwise excluded by the policy’s standard terms.
The policy travels with you. Individual disability insurance issued on a non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable basis is not tied to your state of training, your employer, or your specialty. Once issued, the policy remains in force in any state in which you practice medicine, on the same terms and at the same premium, for as long as premiums are paid. The insurer cannot cancel your coverage and cannot change your premium during the non-cancellable period.
No. A non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable policy gives the insurer no right to cancel coverage, increase premiums, or change the terms of the policy during the non-cancellable period — regardless of any changes in your health, your specialty, your income, or your claims history. The policy remains exactly as issued for as long as you pay your premiums.
Mass General residents who apply with another carrier first risk receiving an exclusion, rating, or decline that forfeits GSI eligibility. If you have been assessed by another carrier for a non-GSI offer, you are no longer eligible for the Guardian GSI offer.
Applying for Guardian GSI first means you get guaranteed standard issue coverage for the entire length of your career, regardless of which state you decide to practice medicine in. Mass general residents are advised to review GSI insurance after Match Day, when eligibility begins.
Apply for Mass General Guardian GSI Income Protection Insurance
When a carrier conducts full underwriting, they review your medical history, prescription records, and prior diagnoses. If they rate your policy (meaning they charge you more due to a health risk), attach an exclusion (meaning they exclude a condition from coverage), or decline your application, that adverse underwriting decision becomes part of your insurance history. The Guardian GSI program requires that you have no prior adverse underwriting actions to qualify. Once that record exists, you cannot undo it.
This is not a procedural formality. Mass General residents who have had minor mental health treatment, a prior musculoskeletal issue, or a history of prescription use for a common condition may be rated or excluded under full underwriting. The same resident applying through the GSI program would receive guaranteed standard issue coverage with no medical questions asked and no exclusions applied — ever.
The sequence matters more than the timing. Apply for your Mass General GSI policy first. Only after that policy is in force should you consider any additional medically underwritten coverage.
Not necessarily. The Mass General GSI programs are linked to specific residency and fellowship programs. Eligibility is confirmed at the time of application through participating Mass General Brigham training programs. Apply now to see if you qualify.
Under a fully underwritten individual disability policy, a pre-existing condition limitation prevents the insurer from paying benefits for any disability that begins within the first two years after your policy’s effective date if that disability relates to a condition in your medical history.
The definition is broader than most residents expect. Under the policy language used by Guardian’s Berkshire Life subsidiary, a pre-existing condition includes any condition for which you received professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment within two years before your policy’s effective date. It also includes any condition that caused symptoms within one year before your effective date that a reasonable person would ordinarily seek medical attention for — even if you did not actually seek treatment.
That second clause is the one that catches residents off guard. A condition you were aware of but chose not to address, or one that produced intermittent symptoms you attributed to stress or training demands, could still qualify as a pre-existing condition under a fully underwritten policy.
Under the Mass General GSI program, this limitation does not exist. Because the program issues coverage on a guaranteed standard issue basis with no medical underwriting and no medical questions, there is no pre-existing condition review, no lookback window, and no exclusion attached to any prior or current health history. The policy covers what it covers from day one.
This is one of the most significant and least discussed advantages of GSI coverage for residents who have any prior medical history at all.
Mass General residents and fellows with own-occupation disability insurance receive benefits if they cannot perform the duties of their medical specialty, even if they are able to work in another job.
Learn How Own-Occupation Coverage Works for Mass General Physicians
The own-occupation definition in a Guardian GSI policy means that you are considered totally disabled if, due to injury or sickness, you are unable to perform the material and substantial duties of your occupation — even if you are capable of working in a different field or a different medical role.
Your occupation is defined as the occupation or occupations in which you were gainfully employed during the 12 months before your disability began. Importantly, it is not defined by your job title, your employer, or your specific position. This means that if you are a Mass General resident in a surgical subspecialty and you become disabled from performing surgical procedures, you are covered — even if you could theoretically practice in a non-surgical advisory or administrative capacity.
For physicians whose practice is concentrated in surgical procedures, the policy includes an important enhancement. If more than 50 percent of your income comes from performing surgical procedures — defined as medical interventions involving an incision with instruments in a clinical or hospital setting, typically involving anesthesia — you are considered totally disabled if you cannot perform those procedures, regardless of whether you are still employed or earning income in another capacity. This applies to both inpatient and outpatient procedures.
A parallel enhancement applies for physicians who earn more than 50 percent of their income from hands-on patient care — defined as meeting with patients in a clinical setting to provide medical advice, evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Under this enhancement, you are considered totally disabled if you cannot provide that hands-on care, even if you remain employed in your practice or another occupation.
These enhancements are embedded in the policy language and apply to physicians who limit their occupation to a single medical specialty. If you have limited your practice to a single specialty, the policy treats that specialty as your occupation for purposes of the disability definition.
For Mass General residents in surgical fields, interventional specialties, or hands-on clinical disciplines, this distinction is material. It is worth confirming with your advisor which definition applies to your specific practice pattern.
Most residents understand that a disability policy has an elimination period — a waiting period, typically 90 days, that must pass before benefits begin. What is far less understood is that the elimination period operates within a second, less-discussed timeframe called the accumulation period.
Here is how the two interact. The elimination period is the number of days you must be disabled before benefits accrue. Those days do not need to be consecutive. However, they must all occur within the accumulation period, which is an uninterrupted window of consecutive days that begins on the first day of disability. If the accumulation period expires before you have satisfied the elimination period, the elimination period clock resets and you must start over.
For a resident with an intermittent condition — a back injury that improves and then worsens, an autoimmune flare, or a mental health episode with periods of recovery — this distinction can be significant. A disability that spans a long enough period without continuously satisfying the elimination period requirements could mean starting the elimination period over from the beginning.
This is not unique to the Mass General GSI program — it is standard policy structure. But it is a provision that very few consumer-facing sources explain, and understanding it before a claim occurs matters. If you have questions about how the elimination and accumulation periods would apply to a specific health situation, speak with a disability insurance specialist before you need to file a claim.
If a disability ends and then recurs, whether it is treated as a continuation of the original claim or as an entirely new claim depends on how much time has passed since your recovery.
Under Guardian’s policy structure, a recurrent disability — one that results from the same or related cause as a previous disability — is treated as a continuation of the prior claim if you return to full-time work for fewer than six months before the disability returns and benefits were received under the policy for the prior disability. In that case, no new elimination period is required and your prior claim simply resumes.
If more than six months of full-time work separates the two periods of disability, or if the new disability results from a different cause, it is treated as a new and separate disability, and a new elimination period applies.
For Mass General residents and fellows in demanding specialties where conditions like burnout, musculoskeletal injury, and stress-related illness tend to be episodic rather than continuous, understanding this distinction before a disability occurs is important. A resident who returns to work prematurely and then relapses within six months is in a meaningfully different position than one who waits until they are fully recovered before returning.
Disability claims related to mental health conditions — including depression, anxiety, burnout, and substance-related disorders — are among the most common reasons physicians file disability claims, and among the least understood in terms of how policies treat them.
Under the Guardian GSI policy available to Mass General residents, mental health and substance-related disorders are defined broadly to include any disorder classified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, including psychiatric, psychological, emotional, and behavioral disorders, as well as disorders related to stress or substance dependency, and any biological or biochemical disorder or imbalance of the brain regardless of cause.
Standard policy language limits benefits for disabilities caused by or resulting from mental health or substance-related disorders to a specified number of months during the policyholder’s lifetime — commonly 24 months. After that limit is reached, benefits for mental health-related disability continue only if the policyholder is continuously confined in a hospital for treatment and under the regular care of a physician.
This limitation applies to the base policy. It does not apply to severe disability or catastrophic disability claims that result from a functional impairment or cognitive impairment — such as dementia or irreversible neurological conditions — even if those conditions have a mental health component.
The key advantage of the GSI program for residents with any prior mental health history is that no mental health exclusion can be attached to the policy at issue. Under full underwriting, a prior mental health diagnosis or treatment history can result in a named exclusion that eliminates all coverage for that condition. Under GSI, coverage is issued on a guaranteed basis, which means the only limitation that applies is the standard benefit duration limit — not a named exclusion.
If you have questions about how a specific mental health history might affect your coverage options, request a quote to speak with a disability insurance specialist.
Portability means that your disability insurance policy belongs to you, not to your employer or your training program. Once issued, the policy remains in force regardless of where you practice, which state you move to, or whether you leave Massachusetts General Hospital entirely.
Under the Guardian non-cancellable and guaranteed renewable structure, the insurer cannot cancel your policy and cannot change your premium during the non-cancellable period, which extends to age 65 or 67 depending on the policy you select. The policy continues on the same terms regardless of changes in your health, your specialty, your income, or your employment status, as long as premiums are paid.
After the expiration date — typically age 65 or 67 — a conditional renewal option allows you to continue coverage on a year-by-year basis as long as you are not disabled, you are gainfully employed full time for at least ten months per year, and premiums are paid on time. Premiums at that point are subject to change based on rates in effect for your age and classification.
The practical implication for a Mass General resident is that a policy secured during training at a permanent discount travels with you to your first attending position, your second practice, and any state in which you ultimately practice medicine. The GSI discount, once locked in, applies to the policy for life — not just during your training years.
The Future Increase Option rider allows Mass General residents to purchase additional disability coverage in the future without answering any medical questions. The rider is one of the most valuable components of a GSI policy for residents who expect their income to grow substantially after training — which is virtually every resident.
Here is how it works in practice. The rider specifies a total increase option amount — the maximum additional monthly benefit you can purchase over the life of the rider. Each year on your policy anniversary, a window opens during which you can exercise an increase option by applying for an increase policy. The application requires evidence of your income and employment but no evidence of your medical insurability. Your health history at the time of the increase is irrelevant.
Before age 45, you can apply for all or any portion of the remaining increase option amount during each annual window. After age 45, the amount you can apply for in any single window is limited to one-third of the original total increase option amount, or the remaining balance if it is under $1,000.
A Special Option Date — triggered by losing eligibility for a group long-term disability plan — opens a 90-day window during which you can exercise an increase option regardless of the standard anniversary schedule. This matters for residents transitioning from a training program that provided group LTD coverage to a private practice or institution that does not.
The Future Increase Option rider terminates at age 55, or when the total increase option amount has been fully used. This means that securing the rider during training and exercising it consistently in the years after residency is the most effective way to build total disability coverage that keeps pace with physician income growth.