Tag Archive: Health Insurance


health_insurance.gifWhen it becomes law, families will save on their premiums, President Obama declared in his weekly radio address before Christmas, pitching his health care reform.

If only that were so. Nobody who tracks health insurance sees any sign of softening premium prices for people who already have insurance, Obamacare or not. Premiums for 2010 were up 10% and are predicted to keep growing at the same rate in coming years.

Health insurance is beginning to resemble air travel–where deep-pocketed business passengers subsidize penny-pinching vacationers. Insurance companies, under the measures in Congress, would be forced to take all comers, young and old, healthy and sick. View Full Article »

downfall_1Due to a budget shortfall, Lexington’s Urban County Government is dropping health insurance coverage for 556 employees of “outside agencies”. These are organizations that are connected with, but not directly run by, city government. In reference to 2008 spending, reducing employees of the 20 organizations from Lexington’s insurance plan would save the city $506,218 a year.

“The satellite agencies had been paying only their premiums,” said Susan Straub, spokeswoman for Mayor Jim Newberry. “… They were not funding the full cost of their health care.” View Full Article »

Senior-Insurance.comSenior citizens have many special needs when it comes to health insurance and long term care insurance. As we get older, affordable health insurance becomes more difficult to find, and more of our cost-of-living expenses become healthcare related.

For example, a pre-existing condition can make affordable insurance hard to find (for example, health insurance for diabetics). Fortunately, when it comes to obtaining health insurance, seniors have rights, as well as a number of different types of plans to choose from, through both government programs and private companies. You need information to help you make the right choices.

All seniors have access to the federally-subsidized Medicare program. In addition, they have the option of purchasing a Medicare supplement, also known as medigap insurance (note: not connected with or endorsed by the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program.). View Full Article »

OVER 40,000 people have cancelled their private health insurance following pay cuts and insurance premium hikes.

Some 2pc of the 2.27m people with health insurance have stopped their payments because of the growing pressure on their incomes, an Oireachtas committee heard yesterday.

That leaves another 40,000 relying on the already-under- pressure public health system.

Younger people account for the highest proportion of those cancelling their insurance, according to Hibernian Aviva Health. It told TDs and senators that 74pc of those who left its company in the last 12 months were under the age of 40.

The number of those forced to cancel their private health insurance coverage is likely to increase “significantly” in 2010, according to managing director Jim Dowdall.

“Against the backdrop of last week’s Budget, where in excess of €1bn in cuts are to be made in the health budget, it is clear that the public system will be less able to cater for the current level of demand placed on it, never mind respond to a significant increase in demand as a result of a reduction in the number of people who will be able to access private health care,” he said.

The largest of the healthcare companies, Vhi Healthcare, told the Oireachtas Committee on Health it will generate losses of over €80m this year in meeting the needs of its customers.

The company has lost almost 120,000 to its competitors, and through cancellations. Yet, it will have more customers over the age of 60 than it did at the start of the year. In 2009, it will have lost €170m in meeting the healthcare needs of customers over the age of 60.

Chief executive of VHI Jimmy Tolan said these level of losses were “unsustainable” in a highly competitive marketplace.

“Our younger customers have to fund the healthcare costs of our older members if they remain with Vhi Healthcare but they do not have to fund these costs if they move to Quinn or Hibernian,” he said. “In 2009, our average healthcare costs per customer will be €900 which is almost double our competitors.”

Donal Clancy of Quinn Healthcare claimed the overall market was “shrinking” as affordability becomes an issue.

The levy on healthcare policies is a “stealth tax that supports the inefficiencies of VHI”, he said.

The primarily large workplaces spent an average of $8,376 per employee on health benefits, according to a survey released Wednesday.

The relatively modest increase followed four years of cost increases above 6 percent for employers who subsidized employee health insurance. Employers, expecting a 10.5 percent rise if they didn’t make changes, increased deductibles and other insurance terms to shift more costs to employees.

The numbers were charted by Mercer, a benefits and management consulting company, in its annual National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans.

Some other points:

About 4 in 10 Kansas City employers will raise deductibles, copays, coinsurance or out-of-pocket maximums for their employees in 2010, the survey found. Half said they will raise employees’ share of the premium contribution.

Nearly 1 in 3 of the companies said they were offering health savings or health reimbursement accounts this year and intended to do the same next year.

Preferred provider organizations remain the dominant health delivery system for Kansas City area employees, Mercer found. More than 6 in 10 of the covered employees are enrolled in PPO or point-of-service plans.

About 1 in 4 are in health maintenance organizations, about 1 in 10 in consumer-directed health plans, and only about 1 in 100 are in traditional indemnity plans.

Plan Creates New Program to Pay for Long-Term Care

One provision of the health-care legislation with broad potential impact on Americans isn’t about health insurance. Instead, it would create a new federal long-term care benefit that would pay cash to people who become disabled.

Premiums for the program would be automatically deducted from the paychecks of people who work for participating employers, but employees would have the choice to opt out. Payouts would go only to those who had paid premiums for at least five years.

The long-term care program is in the House bill. But it is not yet clear if it will be in the Senate bill being shaped by Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. Democratic centrists such as Budget Committee Chairman Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota have warned the program could add to the deficit. Proponents say it would fund itself.

Leaders of the Senate health committee are pushing for the program partly as a legacy of the panel’s former chairman, the late Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. The Obama administration has endorsed it.
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Health insurance provider Insurance Care Direct Insurancequotescompany is expanding their operations with a Dental Insurance department to serve their clients that need the benefit of this service.

The policy is a reaction to what the company sees as an increasing number of people that have fond themselves without the benefit of this critical insurance due to job loss. The individual dental insurance policy that will be offered through Insurance Care Direct Insurancequotescompany will still provide the best health insurance quotes through the free quotes system.

Dental Insurance at Insurance Care Direct will still be under the direction of the health insurance agents that work here and are licensed. The firm prides itself on the fact that these agents are able to help their clients with all their health insurance needs. The training these agents have provides understanding for the restrictions and regulations in a number of states.

The free quotes system that’s used here at Insurance Care Direct Insurancequotescompany is a three stage process that’s designed to get you the dental health insurance quotes that you need. By filling out a simple forum, clients start on the path that will get them dental insurance quotes from the national carriers of prominence.

The process allows the client to apply online and save money since they are able to compare several sets of numbers from a home computer. Insurance Care Direct Insurancequotescompany was formed with the expressed intention of allowing the average American to get the best health insurance.

The firm was formed with a cross section of people from both the health insurance and medical professions. Among the other health insurance policies that Insurance Care direct specializes are life insurance and a comprehensive family health insurance policy. Student health insurance is also available for those who have a child that’s going away to college.

Although the individual dental insurance here might be little more expensive than other polices that come through employers, the agents at Insurance Care Direct are committed to getting their clients the best health Insurance quotes through the free quotes system.

For those of us lucky enough to have health insurance through our jobs, it’s time for our annual head scratch. Open enrollment is upon us, and we have to choose our coverage options.

If your boss offers a good plan and pays the bulk of the cost, give him or her a kiss. This stuff is expensive.

The average cost of family coverage is $13,375 this year, with employees paying on average $3,515 of that, according to a new survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Costs went up 5 percent in 2009, and we’re in for another boost next year. The New York Times last month reported that small businesses are getting hit with 15 percent price hikes from health insurance companies. Large firms, which pay medical claims with their own cash, are seeing smaller increases.

This year, about one in five employers shoved their higher costs on to employees, either by cutting coverage or boosting the worker’s share of the premiums. If the boss does that to you, give him a dirty look.

Don’t ignore open enrollment. At some employers, workers who fail to pick an insurance plan get no coverage at all, notes Larry Poger of Poger and O’Connor, a benefits consulting and brokerage form in Clayton.

Given the dollars involved, it pays to take a close look at the choices, says Sam Gibbs, vice president at eHealthinsurance.com, “It’s not unheard of for an employee to be paying $600 or $700 a month toward the premium,” he notes.

Workers at big companies usually have several health insurance options — some with low premiums and big deductible and co-pays, and others with high premiums and low deductible and co-pays.

The deductible is what you have to pay out of pocket for care before insurance kicks in. Co-pays and co-insurance are the portion of the health care bill that you have to pay even after you’ve paid the deductible. .
So, the first question is: Could you afford to pay a big deductible if you had to? If not, choose a low-deductible plan. Still, Poger finds that only one out of four workers actually runs through the deductible in a given year.

Check the plan’s maximum annual out-of-pocket expense. Many people who think they have good insurance find out otherwise when they see the portion of a hospital bill that they’re expected to pay. It’s important to have a reasonable maximum on what you can be charged.

Generally speaking, young healthy people without children will probably do better with high-deductible plans, says Dennis Nilges, benefit consultant with Wolfe Nilges & Nohorski in Des Peres. If they become sick, they’ll be stuck with bigger bills, but only for a year. They can switch to lower deductible plans when the next open enrollment period comes around, and their pre-existing condition will still be covered.

On the other hand, people with chronic illnesses, sniffly kids, or contemplating pregnancy, should probably grab low-deductible plans.

More employers these days are offering very-high deductible plans — at least $1,150 per person and $2,300 for a family — coupled with health savings accounts. A big benefit of health savings accounts is that money going in isn’t taxed, and you can withdraw money for health expenses without paying taxes. Take it out for any other reason and you’ll pay taxes plus a 10 percent penalty, unless you’re 65 years old or disabled.

You can take the account with you when you leave the company. Eventually, it becomes the equivalent of a retirement account.

Generally speaking, such plans are best for people both healthy and wealthy, who will have no problem paying a big deductible if they have to.

Most plans will charge you less to use a doctor and hospital in their network, and more if you stray outside. So, you’ll want a plan that covers your doctor, and the hospitals you prefer. Better check the list. If you do a lot of traveling, or have a kid away at college, look for a plan with a national network of doctors and hospitals.

Plans come with varying restrictions. HMOs are generally less expensive than other plans, often having no deductible. But they are more restrictive, trying to limit your care to network doctors and hospitals except in emergencies

Why would people who live in inner-ring suburbs such as Berwyn, Evanston, Oak Lawn and Oak Park be able to obtain health-care insurance quotes that are 14.6 percent, on average, lower than their Chicago neighbors?

Based on major health-insurance carriers’ rates and policies, people living 15 miles to 25 miles from downtown Chicago pay 12 percent to 15 percent less on their monthly premiums, and those who live 25 miles to 40 miles outside of the city pay 20 percent to 30 percent less.
Chicago-based Norvax makes software that lets people search for the lowest or best private coverage offered by insurance brokers and agents. Norvax’s public exchange, which boasts more than 80 insurance carriers, operates as insurancequotescompany.com. Norvax’s consumer markets team culled the data by running GoHealthIn surance.com quotes using 3,029 ZIP codes and 963 plans in Illinois, and then narrowing the field to the Chicago area.

Perhaps the most surprising finding is that people who live in the suburbs south and west of Chicago, areas generally considered blue-collar, pay 24.5 percent less for health-insurance coverage than do Chicagoans. People who live north of the city pay 14.6 percent less.Brandon Cruz, a software developer who co-founded Norvax with salesman Clint Jones, said he wasn’t shocked by the results because “different areas have different costs, based on the hospitals, doctors and [health-care] networks in those areas. The findings highlight the cost of health care in these areas.”

Judy Dugan, research director for Consumer Watchdog, a Santa Monica-based public policy advocacy group, said that while she couldn’t reach specific conclusions without the underlying data, the findings point out that today’s individual-coverage insurance market “is the Wild West” partly because each person is buying customized coverage that is largely unregulated.

Dugan speculated that many insurance companies don’t want to do business in an urban area because “they like a mommy and a daddy and three healthy kids” as clients.

“It’s one reason we need health-care reform — to get rid of this kind of weird disparity in pricing,” Dugan said.

Separate data from the latest U.S. Census Bureau from 2008 reveal that 26.5 percent of Chicagoans ages 18 to 64, or 470,344 residents, have no health-insurance coverage.

Among Chicagoans 65 and older, 3.8 percent, or 10,731 of the city’s elderly, have no health-insurance coverage.

In contrast, the census data show that in Evanston, 6.8 percent of people ages 18 to 64, or 3,393 residents, have no health-insurance coverage, while, statistically, virtually everyone 65 and older is covered.

These differences are created by state regulations and also by the insurance companies themselves.

The insurance companies typically divide a state into as many as eight geographical zones. While premiums are largely determined by the overall health of people who live in each zone, the insurer’s ability to negotiate discounted rates for services within its provider network in each zone also is a key factor. The amount of health-care services policyholders use in each zone, including prescription-drug use, also plays a factor in the premium differences.

Experts say any major health-care reform that Congress passes will change the balance of the insurance equation by banning insurers from charging women more than men, barring caps on lifetime benefits, limiting how much more insurers can charge older policyholders than younger ones, and prohibiting insurers from denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

Recently I had to get my car inspected. I was surprised to find out that my 95,000 mile car did not require anything. However, while it was there I decided to change the oil, coolant, and transmission fluid. Not surprisingly, while GEICO may have saved me more than 15%, it didn’t cover my maintenance. Shit!

Yeah I had to pay cash. But it was okay because I saved money assuming I was going to need new tires and/or brakes. Even if I did need these items, GEICO would not have covered anything. In fact, the only thing it will cover is collision and liability. You know, it covers the areas that I may not be able to afford if shit hits the fan.

So my question is: Why can’t my health insurance be like this? Does my health insurance need to cover my yearly physical? Does my health insurance need to be billed when I spend five minutes with my doctor for a stuffy nose and she tells me what I already know that I have a sinus infection. Does my health insurance need to cover the antibiotics? I know my car insurance doesn’t cover synthetic oil.

I take good care of my car because I don’t want to lose it prematurely. I don’t want to pay for something that could have been prevented. I have an incentive to keep my car healthy. Yet, I have no incentive other than a longer life to keep my body healthy because I know health insurance will cover anything. I can eat donuts every day and when I get a heart attack, they’ll pay for the surgery and the Lipitor after. No wonder why this country is so fat and unhealthy.

In a perfect world, we wouldn’t have any health insurance. But I understand this is not heaven. But why can’t we treat health insurance like car insurance:

• Mandate coverage for everyone (Increase the pool to decrease the cost).
• Require yearly physicals and other preventative measures.
• Don’t cover every little service and instead cover us when shit hits the fan such as cancer.
• Offer rewards to people for getting healthy the way car insurance takes 10% off for taking a class.
• And because I have a heart and realize we are more important than a car, assist those who can’t afford a physical.

Maybe health care costs have gone up because we use insurance too much. We expect health insurance to cover our bad behaviors but something tells me GEICO isn’t covering a repeat drunk driver. Instead of taking Lipitor, people should eat less cholesterol. If we had to buy our own medication we would probably take the generic cholesterol medication over Lipitor. Maybe this would make health care cheaper, easier, and oh yeah… maybe we’d be healthier. Because part of me is sickened by those in Congress that care more about government role and cost over how can we be healthier so that we can extend our life, liberty and happiness.

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