Student health insurance is important
If you’re a student, student health insurance should be near the top of your list of priorities. You’re away from home and probably aren’t depending on the parents as much anymore, and without that place on your family’s health insurance policy, a student health insurance plan is the only way to insure that you are taken care of so that you don’t end up slouching under the weight of medical debt for the rest of your life. You want to get that good job and live good after college, not be worrying about the thousands and thousands of dollars in medical costs even after you pay off your student loans.
But the strange truth is that college students, even ones studying medicine, are opting out of student health insurance. The widely held belief seems to be that the university clinic is an okay way to take care of your medical needs. It isn’t. Student health clinics are sub standard and don’t see to your needs. If you want real coverage an protection, you need to get student health insurance.
Different insurance companies will give you different quotes on your student health insurance premium. Because of this, the most important step in taking out a student health insurance policy is to shop around. That means finding quotes from different companies and comparing. There are plenty of sites on the internet that provide you with free quotes, and it’s very easy to do the research.
Once you have these quotes, you’ll be able to narrow it down to a list and talk to your insurance companies personally. Here are a few questions that you should ask:
- What is the maximum that I am covered for?
- Do I have to get a referral if I want to see a specialist?
- Is the student health insurance policy for both undergaduates and graduate students?
- Do I get to choose my own doctor? From a list, or freely?
- What does it cost?
- How high is the deductible?
- Am I covered to go see a doctor when I am not sick or injured?
- Am I covered while traveling?
These are important questions to ask, but if you think of more, go ahead by all means. Anything that you can do to help you narrow it down.
The deductible is a really important aspect. If you get a higher one, you’ll get cheap health insurance rates. But if you do end up opting for a higher one, consider that it should be something you’ll be able to afford. If you’re a medical student, you could get some professional courtesy, which will make things cheaper but won’t apply to deductibles.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama
What you need to know about group health insurance
There are about five things about group health insurance that lots of employers don’t know but should. Providing group health insurance for your employees is a big deal, and you should educate yourself as much as you can about it. Most employees can agree that they want to get the cheapest group health insurance that they can, but also realize that they need to get quality group health insurance for their employees. If you’re sincere about this desire, it’s important to know as much as you can about group health insurance rates.
- Competition and law. There’s a lot of it going on in the state of Texas, especially in the Houston the health insurance business. It’s also regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance, which enforces the Insurance Code. Every year new laws make insurance policies even more complex than ever before and make it more expensive for companies to get group health insurance plans. The congress in your state has an effect on what you’re paying for group health insurance.
- Lying about rates. Group health insurance agents try to get more customers by lying and saying that they can get you cheaper health insurance rates. That’s not the case. Considering that group health insurance is regulated by the state, the prices are the same all across the board among agents.
- Agents don’t really know. Agents don’t know what insurance companies’ rates will actually be, they can only guess. It will depend, in the end, on the company and on each employee employed by it and their medical condition. If you have a company with as few as 50 employees, you can get rates from an agent that up to 67% off from what you’re going to get from the actual insurance company.
- Bribes. Getting some gifts for giving your business to a group health insurance agent may seem like it’s okay and many might not realize what it really is. Exchange of cash or gifts can make the group health insurance agent lose his or her license and is against the law.
- Knowledge. Just because group health insurance agents can’t know for sure how much a certain insurance company is going to charge, they can still help your company save up to hundreds of thousands of dollars on group health insurance costs. Things like programs that help employees maintain themselves in good health can contribute to these huge savings.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama.
Cheap health insurance in Denver, can I trust the insurance company?
Always keep in mind while you’re shopping for cheap health insurance Denver and throughout the U.S., you’re not shopping for a company that cares about you and wants you to get quality health care at cheap prices.
You are dealing with very large corporations that are in the business of making as much profit as possible. Being profitable is easy…bring in as many premium dollars as possible and pay out as little as possible. Read the exclusions thoroughly, then read them again. Make yourself very familiar with their pre-existing clauses and how they may apply to you. The insurance company can trace your medical records back for years, so don’t think they won’t find out about bad test results you had while covered under another company.
The insurance companies employ doctors whose sole job is to figure out how many patients they can deny treatment to. For every procedure that they determine as “unnecessary,” their companies save thousands. Even little dollars add up.
I have a great PPO, but recently experienced this situation myself when my internist prescribed Nexium to help heal an irritated areas of my esophagus and stomach. When I went back to the pharmacy an hour after dropping off my prescription, the pharmacist told me that my insurance company had decided I couldn’t have that medication. WHAT!!!????!! They told her that they didn’t approve that medication for my diagnosis. Wow.
So I’m using an over-the-counter medication and waiting to see if it does what I need. I have heard numerous horror stories of people being denied coverage for various procedures, but I had never experienced this type of discrimination myself. But just think about the implications of thousands of people getting prescriptions for Nexium at $100+ a pop. That’s a lot of profit down the tubes.
