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Health Insurance
Check Up (Part One) Checkup
on Health Insurance Choices (Part 1)
From the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
Today, there are more types of
health insurance, and more choices, than ever before. The information
presented here will help you choose a plan that is right for you. You
may be buying health insurance for the first time, or you may already
have health insurance but want to consider changing plans. Married or
single, children or no children, this information will help you to find
out how to choose a health insurance plan that best meets your needs and
your pocketbook. Definitions of the health insurance terms used are
included in the section called
Understanding Health Insurance Terms.
Thinking About Health Insurance
Choices
Which of these statements best describes
your thoughts on health insurance?
"I get health insurance through
my job. I have the coverage I need...I think"
Many employers offer a choice of plans.
The information provided will help you figure out the plan that's best
for you.
"I know I need health insurance,
but I'm not sure how to get the best protection at the lowest
cost."
You're not alone. Many people have
questions about how to select a health insurance plan. The information
provided will help you find some answers.
"I can't afford health insurance
right now. I have too many bills to pay and other things I need to
buy."
Health insurance is one of your most
important needs. Without it, one serious illness or accident could wipe
you out financially. The information provided will help you decide which
is the best plan you can afford.
Why Do You Need Health Insurance?
Today, health care costs are high, and
getting higher. Who will pay your bills if you have a serious accident
or a major illness? You buy health insurance for the same reason you buy
other kinds of insurance, to protect yourself financially. With health
insurance, you protect yourself and your family in case you need medical
care that could be very expensive. You can't predict what your medical
bills will be. In a good year, your costs may be low. But if you become
ill, your bills could be very high. If you have insurance, many of your
costs are covered by a third-party payer, not by you. A third-party
payer can be an insurance company or, in some cases, it can be your
employer.
Where Do People Get Health Insurance
Coverage?
Group Insurance
Most Americans get health insurance
through their jobs or are covered because a family member has insurance
at work. This is called group insurance. Group insurance is generally
the least expensive kind. In many cases, the employer pays part or all
of the cost.
Some employers offer only one health
insurance plan. Some offer a choice of plans: a fee-for-service plan, a
health maintenance organization (HMO), or a preferred provider
organization (PPO), for example. Explanations of fee-for-service plans,
HMOs, and PPOs are provided in the section called Types of Insurance.
What happens if you or your family
member leaves the job? You will lose your employer- supported group
coverage. It may be possible to keep the same policy, but you will have
to pay for it yourself. This will certainly cost you more than group
coverage for the same, or less, protection.
A Federal law makes it possible for
most people to continue their group health coverage for a period of
time. Called COBRA (for the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1985), the law requires that if you work for a business of 20 or
more employees and leave your job or are laid off, you can continue to
get health coverage for at least 18 months. You will be charged a higher
premium than when you were working.
You also will be able to get insurance
under COBRA if your spouse was covered but now you are widowed or
divorced. If you were covered under your parents' group plan while you
were in school, you also can continue in the plan for up to 18 months
under COBRA until you find a job that offers you your own health
insurance.
Not all employers offer health
insurance. You might find this to be the case with your job, especially
if you work for a small business or work part-time. If your employer
does not offer health insurance, you might be able to get group
insurance through membership in a labor union, professional association,
club, or other organization. Many organizations offer health insurance
plans to members.
Individual Insurance
If your employer does not offer group
insurance, or if the insurance offered is very limited, you can buy an
individual policy. You can get fee-for-service, HMO, or PPO protection.
But you should compare your options and shop carefully because coverage
and costs vary from company to company. Individual plans may not offer
benefits as broad as those in group plans.
If you get a noncancellable policy
(also called a guaranteed renewable policy), then you will receive
individual insurance under that policy as long as you keep paying the
monthly premium. The insurance company can raise the cost, but cannot
cancel your coverage. Many companies now offer a conditionally renewable
policy. This means that the insurance company can cancel all policies
like yours, not just yours. This protects you from being singled out.
But it doesn't protect you from losing coverage.
Before you buy any health insurance
policy, make sure you know what it will pay for...and what it won't. To
find out about individual health insurance plans, you can call insurance
companies, HMOs, and PPOs in your community, or speak to the agent who
handles your car or house insurance.
Tips when shopping for individual
insurance:
- Shop carefully. Policies differ
widely in coverage and cost. Contact different insurance companies,
or ask your agent to show you policies from several insurers so you
can compare them.
- Make sure the policy protects you
from large medical costs.
- Read and understand the policy. Make
sure it provides the kind of coverage that's right for you. You
don't want unpleasant surprises when you're sick or in the hospital.
- Check to see that the policy states:
the date that the policy will begin paying (some have a waiting
period before coverage begins), and what is covered or excluded from
coverage.
- Make sure there is a "free
look" clause. Most companies give you at least 10 days to look
over your policy after you receive it. If you decide it is not for
you, you can return it and have your premium refunded.
- Beware of single disease insurance
policies. There are some polices that offer protection for only one
disease, such as cancer. If you already have health insurance, your
regular plan probably already provides all the coverage you need.
Check to see what protection you have before buying any more
insurance.
What Are Your Choices?
There are many different types of health
insurance. Each has pros and cons. There is no one "best"
plan. The plan that's right for a single person may not be best for a
family with small children. And a plan that works for one family may not
be right for another.
For example, if your family includes
just two adults, it may be less expensive for each of you to have
individual coverage than for just one of you to have a family plan. If
you have children, or if you might have children soon, you need a family
plan. Because your situation may change, review your health insurance
regularly to make sure you have the protection you need.
Choosing a health insurance plan is
like making any other major purchase: You choose the plan that meets
both your needs and your budget. For most people, this means deciding
which plan is worth the cost. For example, plans that allow you the most
choices in doctors and hospitals also tend to cost more than plans that
limit choices. Plans that help to manage the care you receive usually
cost you less, but you give up some freedom of choice.
Cost isn't the only thing to consider
when buying health insurance. You also need to consider what benefits
are covered. You need to compare plans carefully for both cost and
coverage.
Although there are many names for
health insurance plans, the information here groups them as three main
types:
- Fee-For-Service (or Traditional
Health Insurance)
- Health Maintenance Organizations (or
HMOs)
- Preferred Provider Organizations (or
PPOs)
Which Type Is Right for You?
For each group, choose the statement 1
or 2 that best describes how you feel:
- Having complete freedom to choose
doctors and hospitals is the most important thing to me in a health
plan, even if it costs more.
- Holding down my costs is the most
important thing to me, even if it means limiting some of my choices.
- I travel a lot or have children that
live away from me and we may need to see doctors in other parts of
the country.
- I do not travel a lot and almost all
care for my family will be needed in our local area.
- I don't mind a health insurance plan
that includes filling out forms or keeping receipts and sending them
in for payment.
- I prefer not to fill out forms or
keep receipts. I want most of my care covered without a lot of
paperwork.
- In addition to my premiums, I am
willing to pay for the cost of routine and preventive care, such as
office visits, checkups, and shots. I also like knowing that I can
get an appointment for these services when I want one.
- I want a health plan that includes
routine and preventive care. I don't mind if I have to wait for
these services to be scheduled for an available appointment with my
doctor.
- If I need to see a specialist, I
probably will ask my doctor for a recommendation, but I want to
decide whom to go to and when. I don't want to have to see my
primary care doctor each time before I can see a specialist.
- I don't mind if my primary care
doctor must refer me to specialists. If my doctor doesn't think I
need special services, that is fine with me.
If your answers are mostly 1: You want
to make your own health care choices, even if it costs you more and
takes more paperwork. Fee-for-service may be the best plan for you.
If your answers are mostly 2: You are
willing to give up some choices to hold down your medical costs. You
also want help in managing your care. Consider a health maintenance
organization.
If your answers are some 1's and some
2's: You might want to look for a plan such as a preferred provider
organization that combines some of the features of fee-for-service and a
health maintenance organization.
The differences among fee-for-service
plans, HMOs, and PPOs are not as clear-cut as they once were.
Fee-for-service plans have adopted some activities used by HMOs and PPOs
to control the use of medical services. And HMOs and PPOs are offering
more freedom to choose doctors, the way fee-for-service plans do. By
studying your health insurance options carefully, you will be able to
pick the one that provides you with the coverage you need, no matter
what it is called.
Managed Care: A Way to Control Costs
Managed care influences how much health
care you use. Almost all plans have some sort of managed care program to
help control costs. For example, if you need to go to the hospital, one
form of managed care requires that you receive approval from your
insurance company before you are admitted to make sure that the
hospitalization is needed. If you go to the hospital without this
approval, you may not be covered for the hospital bill.
Types of Insurance
Fee-for-Service
This is the traditional kind of health
care policy. Insurance companies pay fees for the services provided to
the insured people covered by the policy. This type of health insurance
offers the most choices of doctors and hospitals. You can choose any
doctor you wish and change doctors any time. You can go to any hospital
in any part of the country.
With fee-for-service, the insurer only
pays for part of your doctor and hospital bills. This is what you pay:
- A monthly fee, called a premium.
- A certain amount of money each year,
known as the deductible, before the insurance payments begin. In a
typical plan, the deductible might be $250 for each person in your
family, with a family deductible of $500 when at least two people in
the family have reached the individual deductible. The deductible
requirement applies each year of the policy. Also, not all health
expenses you have count toward your deductible. Only those covered
by the policy do. You need to check the insurance policy to find out
which ones are covered.
- After you have paid your deductible
amount for the year, you share the bill with the insurance company.
For example, you might pay 20 percent while the insurer pays 80
percent. Your portion is called coinsurance.
To receive payment for fee-for-service
claims, you may have to fill out forms and send them to your insurer.
Sometimes your doctor's office will do this for you. You also need to
keep receipts for drugs and other medical costs. You are responsible for
keeping track of your medical expenses.
There are limits as to how much an
insurance company will pay for your claim if both you and your spouse
file for it under two different group insurance plans. A coordination of
benefit clause usually limits benefits under two plans to no more than
100 percent of the claim.
Most fee-for-service plans have a
"cap," the most you will have to pay for medical bills in any
one year. You reach the cap when your out-of-pocket expenses (for your
deductible and your coinsurance) total a certain amount. It may be as
low as $1,000 or as high as $5,000. Then the insurance company pays the
full amount in excess of the cap for the items your policy says it will
cover. The cap does not include what you pay for your monthly premium.
Some services are limited or not
covered at all. You need to check on preventive health care coverage
such as immunizations and well-child care.
There are two kinds of fee-for-service
coverage: basic and major medical. Basic protection pays toward the
costs of a hospital room and care while you are in the hospital. It
covers some hospital services and supplies, such as x-rays and
prescribed medicine. Basic coverage also pays toward the cost of
surgery, whether it is performed in or out of the hospital, and for some
doctor visits. Major medical insurance takes over where your basic
coverage leaves off. It covers the cost of long, high-cost illnesses or
injuries.
Some policies combine basic and major
medical coverage into one plan. This is sometimes called a
"comprehensive plan." Check your policy to make sure you have
both kinds of protection.
What Is a "Customary" Fee?
Most insurance plans will pay only what
they call a reasonable and customary fee for a particular service. If
your doctor charges $1,000 for a hernia repair while most doctors in
your area charge only $600, you will be billed for the $400 difference.
This is in addition to the deductible and coinsurance you would be
expected to pay. To avoid this additional cost, ask your doctor to
accept your insurance company's payment as full payment. Or shop around
to find a doctor who will. Otherwise you will have to pay the rest
yourself.
Questions to Ask About Fee-for-Service
Insurance
- How much is the monthly premium?
What will your total cost be each year? There are individual rates
and family rates.
- What does the policy cover? Does it
cover prescription drugs, out-of-hospital care, or home care? Are
there limits on the amount or the number of days the company will
pay for these services? The best plans cover a broad range of
services.
- Are you currently being treated for
a medical condition that may not be covered under your new plan? Are
there limitations or a waiting period involved in the coverage?
- What is the deductible? Often, you
can lower your monthly health insurance premium by buying a policy
with a higher yearly deductible amount.
- What is the coinsurance rate? What
percent of your bills for allowable services will you have to pay?
- What is the maximum you would pay
out of pocket per year? How much would it cost you directly before
the insurance company would pay everything else?
- Is there a lifetime maximum cap the
insurer will pay? The cap is an amount after which the insurance
company won't pay anymore. This is important to know if you or
someone in your family has an illness that requires expensive
treatments.
Health Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs)
Health maintenance organizations are
prepaid health plans. As an HMO member, you pay a monthly premium. In
exchange, the HMO provides comprehensive care for you and your family,
including doctors' visits, hospital stays, emergency care, surgery, lab
tests, x-rays, and therapy.
The HMO arranges for this care either
directly in its own group practice and/or through doctors and other
health care professionals under contract. Usually, your choices of
doctors and hospitals are limited to those that have agreements with the
HMO to provide care. However, exceptions are made in emergencies or when
medically necessary.
There may be a small copayment for each
office visit, such as $5 for a doctor's visit or $25 for hospital
emergency room treatment. Your total medical costs will likely be lower
and more predictable in an HMO than with fee-for-service insurance.
Because HMOs receive a fixed fee for
your covered medical care, it is in their interest to make sure you get
basic health care for problems before they become serious. HMOs
typically provide preventive care, such as office visits, immunizations,
well-baby checkups, mammograms, and physicals. The range of services
covered vary in HMOs, so it is important to compare available plans.
Some services, such as outpatient mental health care, often are provided
only on a limited basis.
Many people like HMOs because they do
not require claim forms for office visits or hospital stays. Instead,
members present a card, like a credit card, at the doctor's office or
hospital. However, in an HMO you may have to wait longer for an
appointment than you would with a fee-for-service plan.
In some HMOs, doctors are salaried and
they all have offices in an HMO building at one or more locations in
your community as part of a prepaid group practice. In others,
independent groups of doctors contract with the HMO to take care of
patients. These are called individual practice associations (IPAs) and
they are made up of private physicians in private offices who agree to
care for HMO members. You select a doctor from a list of participating
physicians that make up the IPA network. If you are thinking of
switching into an IPA-type of HMO, ask your doctor if he or she
participates in the plan.
In almost all HMOs, you either are
assigned or you choose one doctor to serve as your primary care doctor.
This doctor monitors your health and provides most of your medical care,
referring you to specialists and other health care professionals as
needed. You usually cannot see a specialist without a referral from your
primary care doctor who is expected to manage the care you receive. This
is one way that HMOs can limit your choice.
Before choosing an HMO, it is a good
idea to talk to people you know who are enrolled in it. Ask them how
they like the services and care given.
Questions to Ask About an HMO
- Are there many doctors to choose
from? Do you select from a list of contract physicians or from the
available staff of a group practice? Which doctors are accepting new
patients? How hard is it to change doctors if you decide you want
someone else? How are referrals to specialists handled?
- Is it easy to get appointments? How
far in advance must routine visits be scheduled? What arrangements
does the HMO have for handling emergency care?
- Does the HMO offer the services I
want? What preventive services are provided? Are there limits on
medical tests, surgery, mental health care, home care, or other
support offered? What if you need a special service not provided by
the HMO?
- What is the service area of the HMO?
Where are the facilities located in your community that serve HMO
members? How convenient to your home and workplace are the doctors,
hospitals, and emergency care centers that make up the HMO network?
What happens if you or a family member are out of town and need
medical treatment?
- What will the HMO plan cost? What is
the yearly total for monthly fees? In addition, are there copayments
for office visits, emergency care, prescribed drugs, or other
services? How much?
Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs)
The preferred provider organization is
a combination of traditional fee-for-service and an HMO. Like an HMO,
there are a limited number of doctors and hospitals to choose from. When
you use those providers (sometimes called "preferred"
providers, other times called "network" providers), most of
your medical bills are covered.
When you go to doctors in the PPO, you
present a card and do not have to fill out forms. Usually there is a
small copayment for each visit. For some services, you may have to pay a
deductible and coinsurance.
As with an HMO, a PPO requires that you
choose a primary care doctor to monitor your health care. Most PPOs
cover preventive care. This usually includes visits to the doctor,
well-baby care, immunizations, and mammograms.
In a PPO, you can use doctors who are
not part of the plan and still receive some coverage. At these times,
you will pay a larger portion of the bill yourself (and also fill out
the claims forms). Some people like this option because even if their
doctor is not a part of the network, it means they don't have to change
doctors to join a PPO.
Questions to Ask About a PPO
- Are there many doctors to choose
from? Who are the doctors in the PPO network? Where are they
located? Which ones are accepting new patients? How are referrals to
specialists handled?
- What hospitals are available through
the PPO? Where is the nearest hospital in the PPO network? What
arrangements does the PPO have for handling emergency care?
- What services are covered? What
preventive services are offered? Are there limits on medical tests,
out-of-hospital care, mental health care, prescription drugs, or
other services that are important to you?
- What will the PPO plan cost? How
much is the premium? Is there a per-visit cost for seeing PPO
doctors or other types of copayments for services? What is the
difference in cost between using doctors in the PPO network and
those outside it? What is the deductible and coinsurance rate for
care outside of the PPO? Is there a limit to the maximum you would
pay out of pocket?
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