- 15,041
All I know, is that if a husband is finally buying life insurance on himself and his wife... and THEN finds out that his wife was cheating on him... well, this whole "insure your love" campaign probably couldn't have gotten any worse. And to cheat on a responsible man with someone else for a 'fling' would certainly show that woman's priorities.
Just sayin'.
Whole lot of assuming going on in there.
Maybe it is his, maybe it isn't. We don't have a clue because odds are we aren't even getting half the story that the agent knows.
But I do know, it is a HIPAA violation to tell the husband, regardless of whether it is his or not. Now if it is his, almost certainly nothing comes of it. If it isn't, well it might get real ugly, and not just for the agent and his E&O carrier.
Also, many disease can mimic other conditions, so assuming it was found in the blood or urine and not disclosed as an answer, there could be a health issue going on. No telling.
So to sum it all up. There is no telling what is really going on, but to tell anyone but her at this point is almost certainly a HIPAA violation.