Health insurance basics
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It's a fact of life — you need health insurance — and the
time to get it is before you have an accident, suffer
a serious illness, or discover you're pregnant. Insurance
doesn't cover health care for medical problems or conditions
that start before the moment you have your policy. Finding
adequate coverage might seem overwhelming, but knowing the
basics can help make your search less stressful.
Your boss doesn’t have to
provide health insurance
The first reality of health insurance
is you do not have a right to it. There are no state
or federal laws requiring private employers to offer health
benefits to their workers.
“For a number of valid reasons
employers are not mandated to offer or provide health
insurance for their employees,” explains Peter Bigelow, CLU,
employee benefits specialist with The Foresight Group. “It
is common knowledge; however, that most employers though not
mandated to do so offer insurance to their employees for a
variety of reasons related to competition and smart business
practice.”
If you have benefits through your
employer, and you quit or lose your job, don't assume you
will be able to pick up the identical coverage for the same
price.
Similarly, don't expect your former
employer to extend your benefits beyond your last day at
work. There is no "grace period" during which you're still
covered.
If you do lose your employer-sponsored benefits, there is
a federal plan called COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus
Reconciliation Act) that could provide you with a short-term
safety net. For more information, see Know your COBRA
rights.
Another federal law that offers some protection to
workers experiencing a short-term lapse in their coverage is
HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act).
Your rights under this act are explained in The HIPAA law:
Your rights to health insurance portability.
Individual health insurance
can be costly
If you need to purchase individual health insurance, it
can be expensive. Unlike group plans, in which the costs and
risks associated with health care are spread among many
people; individual health policies are "medically
underwritten" to take into account your personal
health history. Any "pre-existing" condition such as heart
disease, diabetes, and even pregnancy, can nix your chances
of acceptance or boost your premiums. Some states require
individual health insurers to offer everyone a plan, a
mandate known as "guaranteed issue."
Expect to pay more and more
Once you have a health plan, don’t expect your premiums
to remain the same. Health insurance companies often seek
permission to raise premiums. Additionally, some states
allow health insurers to "file and use" rate increases,
which means the insurers only have to submit their increases
in writing and then they may immediately begin charging
customers more money. Unless insurance regulators determine
the rates are excessive, the insurers are allowed to keep
charging the higher premiums.
North Carolina Insurance Commissioner Jim Long says even
if you have group health insurance, there’s a good chance
your rates will climb. “Even
though you have not presented any claims, others that are
insured by the same type policy have presented claims. Rates
are directly affected by the claims experience of the group
insured under a given plan or policy,” Long explains.
Help when you
can't afford an individual plan
If you're a college student and you
need coverage — perhaps you're being dropped from your
parents' plan — your school might offer reasonable health
insurance. See Health plans for college students for more
information.
No matter what your age, there are several federally
sponsored programs to help you if can't afford the premiums
for individual health insurance, providing you meet their
eligibility guidelines:
·
Medicare, a health insurance program for
people age 65 or older, certain younger people with
disabilities, and people with end-stage renal disease.
 | Medicaid, a program for the poorest
individuals and low-income families with children.
|
 | The Children's Health Insurance
Program (CHIP), a plan that provides health care to
children whose parents make too much to qualify for
Medicaid, but earn too little to afford individual health
insurance. |
Many states
offer health care plans for children of parents, who don’t
have health insurance through work and cannot afford
individual plans. Some states have expanded the plans to
cover the parents as well.
New York
Governor George Pataki, like many of his fellow governors,
is urging low-income parents to sign up for these programs.
“This landmark health insurance program for working adults
with lower incomes will help ensure that hundreds of
thousands of families get the high-quality health care they
need to build a happy and healthy future,” Pataki says.
Making sense
of alphabet soup
Before you visit a country where the population speaks a
foreign language, it helps to know a few key words and
phrases. The same holds true when you're trying to decipher
the lingo of health insurance. Whether you're buying
individual or group health insurance, know there are several
health plan varieties, including traditional indemnity
fee-for-service plans (FFS), health maintenance
organizations (HMOs), point of service plans (POS), and
preferred provider organizations (PPO). Each plan has its
own features to consider before making your choice.
FFS, also
called traditional indemnity
FFS coverage offers flexibility in exchange for higher
out-of-pocket expenses, more paperwork, and higher premiums.
FFS advantages
 | You may choose your own doctors and
hospitals.
|
 | You may visit any specialist without
getting permission from a primary care physician. |
FFS disadvantages
 | There's typically a deductible
(anywhere from $500 to $1,500) before the insurance
company starts paying claims, and then doctors are
reimbursed about 80 percent of the bill while you pick up
the remaining 20 percent.
|
 | You might have to pay up front for
medical services, and then submit the bill for
reimbursement.
|
 | FFS plans pay only for "reasonable
and customary" medical expenses. If your doctor charges
more than the average for your area, you will have to pay
the difference. |
HMO
HMOs are the least expensive, but also the least flexible
of all the health insurance plans. They are geared more
toward members of a group seeking health insurance.
HMO advantages
 | They offer their customers low
co-payments, minimal paperwork, and coverage for many
preventive-care and health-improvement programs. |
HMO disadvantages
 | You must choose a primary
care physician, also known as a PCP.
|
 | HMOs require you to see only network
doctors, or they won't pay.
|
 | You must get a referral from
your PCP to see a specialist. |
POS
POS plans are more flexible than HMOs, but they also
require you to select a primary care physician (PCP).
POS advantages
 | Depending on your insurance
company's rules, you may choose to visit a doctor outside
the network and still receive coverage — but the amount
covered will be substantially less than if you went to a
physician within your network.
|
 | These plans tend to offer more
preventive care and well-being services, such as workshops
on smoking cessation and discounts to health clubs. |
POS disadvantages
 | You must choose a PCP.
|
 | While you may choose to see a
physician outside the network, if you don't receive
permission from your PCP, you're likely to wind up
submitting the bills yourself and receiving only a nominal
reimbursement — if any. |
PPO
PPOs give policyholders a financial incentive —
reasonable co-payments (also called co-pays) — to stay
within the group's network of practitioners.
PPO advantages
 | The standard co-payment is $10 for a
routine office visit during regular hours.
|
 | You may go to any specialist without
permission, as long as the doctor participates in the
network. |
PPO disadvantages
 | If you see an out-of-network doctor,
you might have to pay the entire bill yourself, and then
submit it for reimbursement.
|
 | You might have to pay a deductible
if you choose to go outside the network, or pay the
difference between what network doctors and out-of-network
doctors charge.
|
How to find an
individual health plan
Your first step in getting health
coverage is to contact an insurance agent in your area, or
an insurance company. An agent should be familiar with the
insurance companies that do business in your state,
especially those able to provide the coverage you need.
You might do business with either a "captive" agent who
works for one insurance company, or an independent agent or
broker who sells policies for a variety of companies. A list
of agents can be found in your phone book or by contacting
your state department of insurance.
You should discuss with your agent your own particular
health insurance needs. Think carefully about what coverage
you must have. Do you need health insurance for your whole
family, or just yourself? Do you want to choose your
providers? If you're over 65, do you need insurance to fill
the gaps in Medicare? Do you need — and can you afford —
long-term disability and/or long term care coverage?
When you've found the right coverage, you need to fill
out an application or give information to your agent to
complete the necessary forms. Be honest. It's important to
disclose your medical history thoroughly and accurately.
Report all of your health problems to your agent. If any of
your health information is misstated or incomplete, the
company might refuse to pay your claims and could cancel
your policy.
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