Introduction
If you have ever been sick or
injured, you know how important it is to have health coverage.
But if you’re confused about what kind is best for you, you’re
not alone.
What types of health coverage are
available? If your employer offers you a choice of health
plans, what should you know before making a decision? In
addition to coverage for medical expenses, do you need some
other kind of insurance? What if you are too ill to work? Or,
if you are over 65,will Medicare pay for all your medical
expenses?
These are questions that today’s
consumers are asking; and these questions aren’t necessarily
easy to answer.
This booklet should help. It
discusses the basic forms of health coverage and includes a
checklist to help you compare plans. It answers some commonly
asked questions and also includes thumbnail descriptions of
other forms of health insurance, including hospital-surgical
policies, specified disease policies, catastrophic coverage,
hospital indemnity insurance, and disability, long-term care,
and Medicare supplement insurance.
While we know that our guide can’t
answer all your questions, we think it will help you make the
right decisions for yourself, your family, and even your
business.
Making Sense of Health
Insurance
The term health insurance refers to
a wide variety of insurance policies. These range from
policies that cover the costs of doctors and hospitals to
those that meet a specific need, such as paying for long-term
care. Even disability insurance—which replaces lost income if
you can’t work because of illness or accident—is considered
health insurance, even though it’s not specifically for
medical expenses.
But when people talk about health
insurance, they usually mean the kind of insurance offered by
employers to employees, the kind that covers medical bills,
surgery, and hospital expenses. You may have heard this kind
of health insurance referred to as comprehensive or major
medical policies, alluding to the broad protection they offer.
But the fact is, neither of these terms is particularly
helpful to the consumer.
Today, when people talk about broad
health care coverage, instead of using the term "major
medical," they are more likely to refer to fee-for-service or
managed care. These terms apply to different kinds of coverage
or health plans. Moreover, you’ll also hear about specific
kinds of managed care plans: health maintenance organizations
or HMOs, preferred provider organizations or PPOs, and
point-of-service or POS plans.
While fee-for-service and managed
care plans differ in important ways, in some ways they are
similar. Both cover an array of medical, surgical, and
hospital expenses. Most offer some coverage for prescription
drugs, and some include coverage for dentists and other
providers. But there are many important differences that will
make one or the other form of coverage the right one for
you.
The section below is designed to
acquaint you with the basics of fee-for-service and managed
care plans. But remember: The detailed differences between one
plan and another can only be understood by careful reading of
the materials provided by insurers, your employee benefits
specialist, or your agent or broker.
Fee-for-Service
This type of coverage generally
assumes that the medical provider (usually a doctor or
hospital) will be paid a fee for each service rendered to the
patient—you or a family member covered under your policy. With
fee-for-service insurance, you go to the doctor of your choice
and you or your doctor or hospital submits a claim to your
insurance company for reimbursement. You will only receive
reimbursement for "covered" medical expenses, the ones listed
in your benefits summary.
When a service is covered under
your policy, you can expect to be reimbursed for some, but
generally not all, of the cost. How much you will receive
depends on the provisions of the policy on coinsurance and
deductibles. Here’s how it works:
- The portion of the covered
medical expenses you pay is called
"coinsurance."
Although there are variations,
fee-for-service policies often reimburse doctor bills at 80
percent of the "reasonable and customary charge." (This is
the prevailing cost of a medical service in a given
geographic area.) You pay the other 20 percent—your
coinsurance. However, if a medical provider charges more
than the reasonable and customary fee, you will have to pay
the difference. For example, if the reasonable and customary
fee for a medical service is $100, the insurer will pay $80.
If your doctor charged $100, you will pay $20. But if the
doctor charged $105, you will pay $25. Note that many
fee-for-service plans pay hospital expenses in full; some
reimburse at the 80/20 level as described above.
- Deductibles are the amount of
the covered expenses you must pay each year before the
insurer starts to reimburse you. These might range from$100
to $300 per year per individual, or $500 or more per family.
Generally, the higher the deductible, the lower the
premiums, which are the monthly, quarterly, or annual
payments for the insurance.
- Policies typically have an
out-of-pocket maximum. This means that once your expenses
reach a certain amount in a given calendar year, the
reasonable and customary fee for covered benefits will be
paid in full by the insurer. (If your doctor bills you more
than the reasonable and customary charge, you may still have
to pay a portion of the bill.) Note that Medicare limits how
much a physician may charge you above the usual amount.
- There also may be lifetime
limits on benefits paid under the policy. Most experts
recommend that you look for a policy whose lifetime limit is
at least $1 million. Anything less may prove to be
inadequate.
Managed Care
The three major types of managed
care plans are health maintenance organizations (HMOs),
preferred provider organizations (PPOs), and point-of-service
(POS) plans.
Managed care plans generally
provide comprehensive health services to their members, and
offer financial incentives for patients to use the providers
who belong to the plan. In managed care plans, instead of
paying separately for each service that you receive, your
coverage is paid in advance. This is called prepaid
care.
For example, you may decide to join
a local HMO where you pay a monthly or quarterly premium. That
premium is the same whether you use the plan’s services or
not. The plan may charge a copayment for certain services—for
example, $10 for an office visit, or $5 for every
prescription. So, if you join this HMO, you may find that you
have few out-of-pocket expenses for medical care—as long as
you use doctors or hospitals that participate in or are part
of the HMO. Your share may be only the small copayments;
generally, you will not have deductibles or
coinsurance.
One of the interesting things about
HMOs is that they deliver care directly to patients. Patients
sometimes go to a medical facility to see the nurses and
doctors or to a specific doctor’s office. Another common model
is a network of individual practitioners. In these individual
practice associations (IPAs), you will get your care in a
physician’s office.
If you belong to an HMO, typically
you must receive your medical care through the plan.
Generally, you will select a primary care physician who
coordinates your care. Primary care physicians may be family
practice doctors, internists, pediatricians, or other types of
doctors. The primary care physician is responsible for
referring you to specialists when needed. While most of these
specialists will be "participating providers" in the HMO,
there are circumstances in which patients enrolled in an HMO
may be referred to providers outside the HMO network and still
receive coverage.
PPOs and POS plans are categorized
as managed care plans. (Indeed, many people call POS plans "an
HMO with a point-of-service option.") From the consumer’s
point of view, these plans combine features of fee-for-service
and HMOs. They offer more flexibility than HMOs, but premiums
are likely to be somewhat higher.
With a PPO or a POS plan, unlike
most HMOs, you will get some reimbursement if you receive a
covered service from a provider who is not in the plan. Of
course, choosing a provider outside the plan’s network will
cost you more than choosing a provider in the network. These
plans will act like fee-for-service plans and charge you
coinsurance when you go outside the network.
What is the difference between a
PPO and a POS plan? A POS plan has primary care physicians who
coordinate patient care; and in most cases, PPO plans do not.
But there are exceptions!
HMOs and PPOs have contracts with
doctors, hospitals, and other providers. They have negotiated
certain fees with these providers—and, as long as you get your
care from these providers, they should not ask you for
additional payment. (Of course, if your plan requires a
copayment at the time you receive care, you will have to pay
that.)
Always look carefully at the
description of the plans you are considering for the
conditions of payment. Check with your employer, your benefits
manager, or your state department of insurance to find out
about laws that may regulate who is responsible for
payment.
Self-insured Plans
Your employer may have set up a
financial arrangement that helps cover employees’ health care
expenses. Sometimes employers do this and have the "health
plan" administered by an insurance company; but sometimes
there is no outside administrator. With self-insured health
plans, certain federal laws may apply. Thus, if you have
problems with a plan that isn’t state regulated, it’s probably
a good idea to talk to an attorney who specializes in health
law.
Appropriate Care
HMOs, PPOs, and fee-for-service
plans often share certain features, including pre
authorization, utilization review, and discharge
planning.
For example, you may be asked to
get authorization from your plan or insurer before admission
to a hospital for certain types of surgery. Utilization review
is the process by which a plan determines whether a specific
medical or surgical service is appropriate and/or medically
necessary. Discharge planning is an approach that facilitates
the transfer of a patient to amore cost-effective facility if
the patient no longer needs to stay in the hospital. For
example, if, following surgery, you no longer need
hospitalization but cannot be cared for at home, you may be
transferred to a skilled nursing facility.
Almost all fee-for-service plans
apply managed care techniques to contain costs and guarantee
appropriate care; and an increasing number of managed care
plans contain fee-for-service elements. While the distinctions
among plans are growing increasingly blurred, the number of
options available to consumers increases every
day.
How Do I Get Health
Coverage?
Health insurance is generally
available through groups and to individuals. Premiums—the
regular fees that you pay for health insurance coverage—are
generally lower for group coverage. When you receive group
insurance at work, the premium usually is paid through your
employer.
Group insurance is typically
offered through employers, although unions, professional
associations, and other organizations also offer it. As an
employee benefit, group health insurance has many advantages.
Much—although not all—of the cost may be borne by the
employer. Premium costs are frequently lower because economies
of scale in large groups make administration less expensive.
With group insurance, if you enroll when you first become
eligible for coverage, you generally will not be asked for
evidence that you are insurable. (Enrollment usually occurs
when you first take a job, and/or during a specified period
each year, which is called open enrollment.) Some employers
offer employees a choice of fee-for-service and managed care
plans. In addition, some group plans offer dental insurance as
well as medical.
Individual insurance is a good
option if you work for a small company that does not offer
health insurance or if you are self-employed. Buying
individual insurance allows you to tailor a plan to fit your
needs from the insurance company of your choice. It requires
careful shopping, because coverage and costs vary from company
to company. In evaluating policies, consider what medical
services are covered, what benefits are paid, and how much you
must pay in deductibles and coinsurance. You may keep premiums
down by accepting a higher deductible.
Pre-existing
Conditions
Many people worry about coverage
for preexisting conditions, especially when they change jobs.
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA) helps assure continued health insurance coverage for
employees and their dependents. Starting July 1, 1997,
insurers could impose only one 12-month waiting period for any
preexisting condition treated or diagnosed in the previous six
months. Your prior health insurance coverage will be credited
toward the preexisting condition exclusion period as long as
you have maintained continuous coverage without a break of
more than 62 days. Pregnancy is not considered a preexisting
condition, and newborns and adopted children who are covered
within 30 days are not subject to the 12-monthwaiting
period.
If you have had group health
coverage for two years, and you switch jobs and go to another
plan, that new health plan cannot impose another preexisting
condition exclusion period. If, for example, you have had
prior coverage of only eight months, you may be subject to a
four-month, preexisting condition exclusion period when you
switch jobs. If you’ve never been covered by an employer’s
group plan, and you get a job that offers such coverage, you
may be subject to a 12-month, preexisting condition waiting
period.
Federal law also makes it easier
for you to get individual insurance under certain situations,
including if you have left a job where you had group health
insurance, or had another plan for more than 18 months without
a break of more than 62 days.
If you have not been covered under
a group plan and have found it difficult to get insurance on
your own, check with your state insurance department to see if
your state has a risk pool. Similar to risk pools for
automobile insurance, these can provide health insurance for
people who cannot get it elsewhere.
What Is Not Covered?
While HMO benefits are generally
more comprehensive than those of traditional fee-for-service
plans, no health plan will cover every medical
expense.
Very few plans cover eyeglasses and
hearing aids because these are considered budgetable expenses.
Very few cover elective cosmetic surgery, except to correct
damage caused by a covered accidental injury. Some
fee-for-service plans do not cover checkups. Procedures that
are considered experimental may not be covered either. And
some plans cover complications arising from pregnancy, but do
not cover normal pregnancy or childbirth.
Health insurance policies
frequently exclude coverage for preexisting conditions, but,
as explained, federal law now limits exclusions based on such
conditions.
You should also remember that
insurers will not pay duplicate benefits. You and your spouse
may each be covered under a health insurance plan at work but,
under what is called a "coordination of benefits" provision,
the total you can receive under both plans for a covered
medical expense cannot exceed 100 percent of the allowable
cost. Also note that if neither of your plans covers 100
percent of your expenses, you will only be covered for the
percentage of coverage (for example, 80 percent) that your
primary plan covers. This provision benefits everyone in the
long run because it helps to keep costs down.
What Happens to My Insurance if I
Lose My Job?
If you have had health coverage as
an employee benefit and you leave your job, voluntarily or
otherwise, one of your first concerns will be maintaining
protection against the costs of health care. You can do this
in one of several ways:
- First, you should know that
under a federal law (the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985, commonly known as COBRA), group
health plans sponsored by employers with 20 or more
employees are required to offer continued coverage for you
and your dependents for 18 months after you leave your job.
(Under the same law, following an employee’s death or
divorce, the worker’s family has the right to continue
coverage for up to three years.) If you wish to continue
your group coverage under this option, you must notify your
employer within 60 days. You must also pay the entire
premium, up to 102 percent of the cost of the coverage.
- If COBRA does not apply in your
case—perhaps because you work for an employer with fewer
than 20 employees—you may be able to convert your group
policy to individual coverage. The advantage of that option
is that you may not have to pass a medical exam, although an
exclusion based on a preexisting condition may apply,
depending on your medical history and your insurance
history.
- If COBRA doesn’t apply and
converting your group coverage is not for you, then, if you
are healthy, not yet eligible for Medicare, and expect to
take another job, you might consider an interim or
short-term policy. These policies provide medical insurance
for people with a short-term need, such as those temporarily
between jobs or those making the transition between college
and a job. These policies, typically written for two to six
months and renewable once, cover hospitalization, intensive
care, and surgical and doctors’ care provided in the
hospital, as well as expenses for related services performed
outside the hospital, such as X-rays or laboratory tests.
- Another possibility is obtaining
coverage through an association. Many trade and professional
associations offer their members health coverage—often
HMOs—as well as basic hospital-surgical policies and
disability and long-term care insurance. If you are
self-employed, you may find association membership an
attractive route.
Frequently Asked
Questions
Q
What is the first thing I should know about buying
health coverage?
A
Your aim should be to insure yourself and your family
against the most serious and financially disastrous losses
that can result from an illness or accident. If you are
offered health benefits at work, carefully review the plans’
literature to make sure the one you select fits your needs. If
you purchase individual coverage, buy a policy that will cover
major expenses and pay them to the highest maximum level. Save
money on premiums, if necessary, by taking large deductibles
and paying smaller costs out-of-pocket.
Q Can I buy a single health
insurance policy that will provide all the benefits I’m likely to need?
A No. Although you can select a plan or buy a policy
that should cover most medical, hospital, surgical, and
pharmaceutical bills, no single policy covers everything.
Moreover, you may want to consider additional single-purpose
policies like long-term care or disability income insurance.
If you are over 65, you may want a Medicare supplement policy
to fill in the gaps in Medicare coverage.
Q I’m planning to keep working after age 65. Will I be
covered by Medicare or by my company’s health insurance?
A If you work for a company with
20 or more employees, your employer must offer you (through age 69) the same health
insurance coverage offered to younger employees. After you
reach age 65, you may choose between Medicare and your
company’s plan as your primary insurer. If you elect to remain
in the company plan, it will pay first—for all benefits
covered under the plan—before Medicare is billed. In most
instances, it is to your advantage to accept continued
employer coverage.
But be sure to enroll in Medicare
Part A, which covers hospitalization and can supplement your
group coverage at no additional cost to you. You can save on
Medicare premiums by not enrolling in Medicare Part B until
you finally retire. Bear in mind, though, that delayed
enrollment is more expensive and entails a waiting period for
coverage.
Q I’ve had a serious health condition that appears to be
stabilized. Can I buy individual health coverage?
A Depending on what your condition is and when it was
diagnosed and treated, you can probably buy health coverage.
However, the insurer may do one of three things:
• provide full
protection but with a higher premium, as might be the case
with a chronic disease, such as diabetes;
• modify the benefits to
increase the deductible;
• exclude the specific
medical problem from coverage, if it is a clearly defined
condition, as long as the insurer abides by state and
federal laws on exclusions.
Q One of my medical bills was turned down by the
insurance company (or health plan). Is there anything I can
do?
A Ask the insurance company why the claim was rejected.
If the answer is that the service isn’t covered under your
policy, and you’re sure that it is covered, check to see that
the provider entered the correct diagnosis or procedure code
on the insurance claim form. Also check that your deductible
was correctly calculated.
Make sure that you didn’t skip an
essential step under your plan, such as pre admission
certification. If everything is in order, ask the insurer to
review the claim.
Comparing Plans
Whether you end up choosing a
fee-for-service plan or a form of managed care, you must
examine a benefits summary or an outline of coverage—the
description of policy benefits, exclusions, and provisions
that makes it easier to understand a particular policy and
compare it with others.
Look at this information closely.
Think about your personal situation. After all, you may not
mind that pregnancy is not covered, but you may want coverage
for psychological counseling. Do you want coverage for your
whole family or just yourself? Are you concerned with
preventive care and checkups? Or would you be comfortable in a
managed care setting that might restrict your choice somewhat
but give you broad coverage and convenience? These are
questions that only you can answer.
Here are some of the things to look
at when choosing and comparing health insurance
plans.
Health Insurance Checklist
Covered medical services
- Inpatient hospital services
- Outpatient surgery
- Physician visits (in the hospital)
- Office visits
- Skilled nursing care
- Medical tests and X-rays
- Prescription drugs
- Mental health care
- Drug and alcohol abuse treatment
- Home health care visits
- Rehabilitation facility care
- Physical therapy
- Speech therapy
- Hospice care
- Maternity care
- Chiropractic treatment
- Preventive care and checkups
- Well-baby care
- Dental care
- Other covered services
Are there any medical service
limits, exclusions, or preexisting conditions that will affect
you or your family?
What types of utilization review,
pre authorization, or certification procedures are
included?
Costs
How much is the premium?
$_____________________________________________
Are there any discounts available
for good health or healthy behaviors (e.g.,
non-smoker)?
__________________________________________________________________
How much is the annual
deductible?
$_________________________________
per person
$_________________________________
per family
What coinsurance or co-payments
apply?
_________________________________%
after I meet my deductible
$_________________________________copay or %
coinsurance per office visit
$_________________________________copay or %
coinsurance for "wellness" care (includes well-baby care,
annual eye exam, physical, etc.)
$_________________________________%
copay or coinsurance for inpatient hospital care
Other Forms of Health
Insurance
In addition to broad coverage for
medical, surgical, and hospital expenses, there are many other
kinds of health insurance.
Hospital-surgical policies,
sometimes called basic health insurance, provide benefits when
you have a covered condition that requires hospitalization.
These benefits typically include room and board and other
hospital services, surgery, physicians’ non surgical services
that are performed in a hospital, expenses for diagnostic
X-rays and laboratory tests, and room and board in an extended
care facility.
Benefits for hospital room and
board may be a per-day dollar amount or all or part of the
hospital’s daily rate for a semi-private room. Benefits for
surgery typically are listed, showing the maximum benefit for
each type of surgical procedure.
Hospital-surgical policies may
provide "first-dollar" coverage. That means that there is no
deductible, or amount that you have to pay, for a covered
medical expense. Other policies may contain a small
deductible.
Keep in mind that hospital-surgical
policies usually do not cover lengthy hospitalizations and
costly medical care. In the event that you need these types of
services, you may incur large expenses that are difficult to
meet unless you have other insurance.
Catastrophic coverage pays hospital
and medical expenses above a certain deductible; this can
provide additional protection if you hold either a
hospital-surgical policy or a major medical policy with a
lower-than-adequate lifetime limit. These policies typically
contain a very high deductible ($15,000 or more) and a maximum
lifetime limit high enough to cover the costs of catastrophic
illness.
Specified or dread disease policies
provide benefits only if you get the specific disease or group
of diseases named in the policy. For example, a policy might
cover only medical care for cancer. Because benefits are
limited in amount, these policies are not a substitute for
broad medical coverage. Nor are specified disease policies
available in every state.
Hospital indemnity insurance pays
you a specified amount of cash benefits for each day that you
are hospitalized, generally up to a designated number of days.
These cash benefits are paid directly to you, can be used for
any purpose, and may be useful in meeting out-of-pocket
expenses not covered by other insurance.
Hospital indemnity policies
frequently are available directly from insurance companies by
mail as well as through insurance agents. You will find that
these policies offer many choices, so be sure to ask questions
and find the right plan to meet your needs.
Some policies contain limitations
on preexisting medical conditions that you may have before
your insurance takes effect. Others contain an elimination
period, which means that benefits will not be paid until after
you have been hospitalized for a specified number of days.
When you apply for the policy, you may be allowed to choose
among two or three elimination periods, with different
premiums for each. Although you can reduce your premiums by
choosing a longer elimination period, you should bear in mind
that most patients are hospitalized for relatively brief
periods of time.
If you purchase a hospital
indemnity policy, periodically review it to see if you need to
increase your daily benefits to keep pace with rising health
care costs.
Medicare supplement insurance,
sometimes called Medigap or MedSup, is private insurance that
helps cover some of the gaps in Medicare coverage.
Medicare is the federal program of
hospital and medical insurance primarily for people age 65 and
over who are not covered by an employer’s plan. But Medicare
doesn’t cover all medical expenses. That’s where MedSup comes
in.
All Medicare supplement policies
must cover certain expenses, such as the daily coinsurance
amount for hospitalization and 90 percent of the hospital
charges that otherwise would have been paid by Medicare, after
Medicare is exhausted. Some policies may offer additional
benefits, such as coverage for preventive medical care,
prescription drugs, or at-home recovery.
There are 10 standard Medicare
supplement policies, designated by the letters A through J.
With these standardized policies, it is much easier to compare
the costs of policies issued by different insurers. While
all10 standard policies may not be available to you, Plan A
must be made available to Medicare recipients
everywhere.
Insurers are not permitted to sell
policies that duplicate benefits you already receive under
Medicare or other policies. If you decide to replace an
existing Medicare supplement policy—and you should do so only
after careful evaluation—you must sign a statement that you
intend to replace your current policy and that you will not
keep both policies in force.
People who are 65 or older can buy
Medicare supplement insurance without having to worry about
being rejected for existing medical problems, so long as they
apply within six months after enrolling in Medicare.
Long-term care policies cover the
medical care, nursing care, and other assistance you might
need if you ever have a chronic illness or disability that
leaves you unable to care for yourself for an extended period
of time. These services generally are not covered by other
health insurance. You may receive long-term care in a nursing
home or in your own home.
Long-term care can be very
expensive. On average, a year in a nursing home costs about
$40,000. In some regions, it may cost much more. Home care is
less expensive, but it still adds up. (Home care can include
part-time skilled nursing care, speech therapy, physical or
occupational therapy, home health aides, and
homemakers.)
Bringing an aide into your home
just three times a week—to help with dressing, bathing,
preparing meals, and similar chores—easily can cost$1,000 a
month, or $12,000 a year. Add in the cost of skilled help,
such as physical therapy, and the costs can be much
greater.
Most long-term care policies pay a
fixed dollar amount, typically from$40 to more than $200 a
day, for each day you receive covered care in a nursing home.
The daily benefit for at-home care is usually half the benefit
for nursing home care. Because the per-day benefit you buy
today may be inadequate to cover higher costs in the future,
most policies also offer an inflation adjustment
feature.
Keep in mind that unless you have a
long-term care policy, you are not covered for long-term care
expenses under Medicare and most other types of insurance.
Recent changes in federal law may allow you to take certain
income tax deductions for some long-term care expenses and
insurance premiums.
Disability insurance provides you
with an income if illness or injury prevents you from being
able to work for an extended period of time. It is an
important but often overlooked form of insurance.
There are other possible sources of
income if you are disabled. Social Security provides
protection, but only to those who are severely disabled and
unable to work at all; workers’ compensation provides benefits
if the illness or injury is work-related; civil service
disability covers federal or state government workers; and
automobile insurance may pay benefits if the disability
results from an automobile accident. But these sources are
limited.
Some employers offer short- and
long-term disability coverage. If you are self-employed, you
can buy individual disability income insurance policies.
Generally:
- Monthly benefits are usually 60
percent of your income at the time of purchase, although
cost-of-living adjustments may be available.
- If you pay the premiums for an
individual disability policy, payments you receive under the
policy are not subject to income tax. If your employer has
paid some or all of the premiums under a group disability
policy, some or all of the benefits may be taxable.
Whether you are an employer
shopping for a group disability policy or someone thinking of
purchasing disability income insurance, you will need to
evaluate different policies. Here are some things to look
for:
- Some policies pay benefits only
if someone is unable to perform the duties of their
customary occupation, while others pay only if the person
can engage in no gainful employment at all. Make sure that
you know the insurer’s definition of disability.
- Some policies pay only for
accidents, but it’s important to be insured for illness,
too. Be sure, as you evaluate policies, that both accident
and illness are covered.
- Benefits may begin anywhere from
one month to six months or more after the onset of
disability. A later starting date can keep your premiums
down. But remember, if your policy only starts to pay (for
example) three months after the disability begins, you may
lose a considerable amount of income.
- Benefits may be payable for a
period ranging anywhere from one year to a lifetime. Since
disability benefits replace income, most people do not need
benefits beyond their working years. But it’s generally wise
to insure at least until age 65 since a lengthy disability
threatens financial security much more than a short
disability.
A Final Word
If you get health care coverage at
work, or through a trade or professional association or a
union, you are almost certainly enrolled under a group
contract. Generally, the contract is between the group and the
insurer, and your employer has done comparison shopping before
offering the plan to the employees. Nevertheless, while some
employers only offer one plan, some offer more than one.
Compare plans carefully!
If you are buying individual
insurance, or any form of insurance that you purchase
directly, read and compare the policies you are considering
before you buy one, and make sure you understand all of the
provisions. Marketing or sales literature is no substitute for
the actual policy. Read the policy itself before you
buy.
Ask for a summary of each policy’s
benefits or an outline of coverage. Good agents and good
insurance companies want you to know what you are buying.
Don’t be afraid to ask your benefits manager or insurance
agent to explain anything that is unclear.
It is also a good idea to ask for
the insurance company’s rating. The A.M. Best Company,
Standard & Poor’s Corporation, and Moody’s all rate
insurance companies after analyzing their financial records.
These publications that list ratings usually can be found in
the business section of libraries.
And bear in mind: In some cases,
even after you buy a policy, if you find that it doesn’t meet
your needs, you may have 30 days to return the policy and get
your money back. This is called the "free
look." |