healthinsuranceinfo.net

Archive for August, 2008

Fight back when your health plan says No

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Bernadine Healy, MD, former director of NIH and now health editor at US News & World Report, has written a chilling piece on how easy it is for insurers to deny claims. From the article, “How Crafty Health Insurers Are Denying Care“:

An estimated 10 to 15 percent of [health insurance] claims are denied for various reasons, some of them technical, such as not meeting filing deadlines or failing to get pretreatment authorizations. Denials that produce the most disputes are those where insurers judge the care to be unnecessary or unproven, pitting a proverbial sick David against a multibillion-dollar Goliath. What few Davids know is that insurance contracts by law grant companies the legal right to manage a patient’s care, including denying it, sight unseen, and give them the final say, if challenged. Unless the state steps in.

She notes that insurance companies use software that even they call “denial engines,” that reviews every claim in the hopes of turning it down, a practice that Dr. Healy calls “serving up excuses to deny legitimate coverage.”  What’s a consumer to do?

Dr. Healy points out that in 43 states and the District of Columbia, you can file an appeal for a state review if you are denied coverage and have gone through the insurer’s opaque internal review process.  The good news is that if you can stand the red tape, about half of the time the consumer wins her appeal. And what the state says is the final word.

It’s still troubling that insurers are doing such a poor job of adhering to the law that they are losing half the appeals brought to the state, and that consumers in seven states have no state-based recourse.

As always, reading your policy carefully is the first step in ensuring you get the coverage you’re entitled to.

If you still have concerns that you are being denied a policy or denied coverage  without a good reason, our Consumer Guides to Getting and Keeping Health Insurance, for every state, can get you on the path to finding out what your state requires, and how to contact the appropriate authorities.

Americans Skipping Doctor Visits to Save Money

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

The San Francisco Chronicle presents the results of a study saying 22% of Americans who were surveyed, said they were avoiding doctor visits to save money in tough economic times. But will this decision cost them their health?

As the article states:

Officials who regulate state insurance practices said they’re concerned that as times get tougher, an increasing number of insured will forgo necessary care and possibly incur greater costs down the road due to delays in treatment.
-22% of Americans surveyed cut visits to doctor, by Victoria Colliver

Are you avoiding or delaying a visit to the doctor because you’re unsure whether your plan will cover it or whether it will incur further costly expense? This may be prudent, but you can also arm yourself with more information about your health care plan and your options for staying out of debt from doctors’ visits. See our FREE Guides to Managing Medical Bills which contain valuable advice like:

  • what your individual health insurance, medicare or medicaid probably covers,
  • how to compare plans or figure out what your plan is supposed to cover,
  • how to negotiate with your doctor’s office on steep medical bills,
  • Lots of other great advice!

Please visit and download your copies today.

More Americans Marrying for the Insurance

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

“I love him a lot, and I want to marry him … I just don’t want to be forced to marry him early for insurance purposes.”
Brandy Brady of Lake Charles, Louisiana, as reported in the New York Times

More trips down the aisle are being prefaced with these kinds of statements as the cost of individual health insurance in the US continues to climb.

The August 12 New York Times reports, in its story “Health Benefits Inspire Rush to Marry, or Divorce,” that one study shows 7 percent of adults in the US have a family member who married for insurance benefits, and that a wedding officiant in Kentucky estimates that one in 10 couples he marries cites health insurance as the reason for their betrothal.

Equally troubling are the stories of two married couples shared in the article. The Parishes of Nobleville, Indiana, delayed finalizing a divorce so that the wife could stay on her husband’s health insurance for chemotherapy.  The Moultons of Washington state nearly divorced, just so that ailing wife Michele could leave the policy her husband had purchased, to go into the state’s high-risk pool.  The Moultons avoided divorce only when a family member stepped in to help with the roughly $50,000 in debt that accrued because of her illness.

Are you considering all your options for getting health insurance? A lot varies by state.  Read the healthinsuranceinfo.net guide for consumers in the individual health plan market for your state (and the state of your fiance, if it’s different!).

Phony insurance scams – have you been duped? How can you protect yourself?

Monday, August 11th, 2008

From Victoria Knight in the August 12 Wall Street Journal:

The most prevalent way to sell phony insurance continues to be through real or bogus associations. Between 2000 and 2002, 144 such scams left more than 200,000 policyholders with more than $252 million in medical bills, according to a 2004 report by Congressional investigators. Illegal health plans flourish especially during periods of high premium increases. On Thursday the National Association of Insurance Commissioners issued an alert to consumers warning them about such fraudsters.

What can you do to protect yourself if you’re looking at association health plans? The article offers the following advice:

  • Associations that provide a wide variety of member services, such as credentialing, rather than just health insurance, and which have stricter entry requirements, tend to offer the better plans.
  • Call your state’s insurance department to find out if the insurer that underwrites the association’s plan is licensed in the state where you live, is financially sound and has a good track record of paying claims.
  • If you’re buying a policy from a national association, find out if your state regulator is authorized to intervene if you have problems. If the association is headquartered in another state, for instance, your state’s regulator’s hands may be tied and the other state’s regulator may not be able to help either because you’re not a resident.
  • Don’t just look at the premiums. A low monthly price may be attractive but to find out the real value of the plan, look at the deductible, co-insurance and benefits. If you have a past or existing condition, is it covered? And if you do get sick, will you be able to renew the policy, and, if so, at what cost? (healthinsuranceinfo.net’s Evaluating Health Insurance Choices Worksheet FREE two-page worksheet will help you compare health insurance costs and coverage (pdf file PDF format, two pages, 135 KB).)
  • Look for a well-established plan with a history of reasonable renewal rates.
  • Explore all your options, including policies insurers sell directly to individuals or small business owners, as they may offer more comprehensive coverage for less.

Read the original article at the Wall Street Journal’s website: More Turn to Professional Groups for Insurance

Good health insurance is expensive

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Congressional Quarterly reports on a recent study from the American Enterprise Institute, evaluating different hypothetical scenarios that would allow people to purchase health insurance across state lines. The AEI found that if individuals were allowed to purchase health policies in nearby state, up to 12 million more people would leave the rolls of the uninsured. This supports the organization’s general contention that increased competition and less regulation for businesses, is good for consumers.

However, the results raised serious questions for many health policy researchers, who noted that inexpensive “policies” often don’t cover basic health care needs for consumers.

Karen Pollitz, the Georgetown University professor who runs healthinsuranceinfo.net,  reacted to the findings:

“[Saying that policies that don't cover a consumer's health needs are cheaper than those that do is] like saying a roller skate is cheaper than a car. … Good health insurance that will take care of you when you’re sick is expensive because health care is expensive. … The regulations [in states that have them] require that the insurance be meaningful.”

Click here: Congressional Quarterly’s story.