Discount Medical Health Insurance

 

August 21, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Health Insurance Quotes 

Reader question:

What’s the deal with those discount health insurance cards?

Martha

Great question.

Discount medical health insurance cards claim to be a great alternative for people who don’t have the money to be able to afford insurance. For that very reason, they may be a little attractive at first, especially to any of the millions of uninsured who have no other option. It would be a great idea to offer low cost health insurance to those who fall through the gap between government aid and medical self sufficiency. However, upon closer look, this discount medical health insurance cards aren’t all that they’re cracked up to be.

The business of discount health cards is growing fast, and many health insurance companies are now offering them as an affordable alternative to full on health insurance plans. What they do is give the card holder discounts on things like doctor appointments, hospital visits, and prescriptions. In some cases, they may be the only option for someone who can’t afford health insurance, and thus it won’t matter that that person is still footing the whole medical bill, just with a slight discount. However, for those who feel the need to avail themselves of this option, an eye should be kept out for the many cards that are fraudulent.

Many sellers of these fraudulent discount cards make it look like the cards are actual health insurance, when they aren’t. They are not regulated, and there’s no way to protect yourself as a consumer if you get one of these cards. Even the more normally legitimate businesses that offer the cards tend to make it look like the savings and discounts that you get from them are much more than they actually are. If you fall for this, you could end up paying more for a card every month than it’s saving you money.

Even if the discounts they promise are technically on the card, a lot of times there will be a bunch of under the table fees that will take those away, so that in the end the only thing that this card you have will be is a piece of useless plastic. It can have the effect of making some people who can barely afford their health insurance plan exchange it for a card, convinced by the companies that it is an actual health insurance plan, only to find themselves paying all of their medical bills.

There are many of these companies out there who are trying to steal your money without actually giving you anything in return. One company has already charged unwilling customers for cards that they never wanted, fraudulently using their credit card numbers.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.

Two tiered Columbia health insurance plan

 

August 10, 2007 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Private Health Insurance 

Reader question:

What types of health care plans are offered at Columbia University?

Randall

Great question.

There are two types of health insurance plans that you can get if you are a registered full time student at Columbia University, either as a grad student or an undergrad. One of them is the basic level, and the other the comprehensive, and you have the option to get both. Every student who registers full time at Columbia is automatically enrolled into the Columbia health insurance program, so it is likely that if you attend Columbia you will be choosing between one of these health insurance coverage plans.

The basic level plan is the one at which everybody starts. You are automatically put into this plan, although you may get a waiver or even get the comprehensive plan instead. This is the average plan that works for most students and is made for the people with less risk. If you don’t plan on using a more than average amount of health service, and you want a cheap plan, then the basic level may be for you. The basic level comes with $300,000 of coverage and might be a good option for students who can’t afford to pay high monthly premiums, as it puts more of the burden on co pays than on premiums.

The comprehensive plan is the next level up, and it comes with a million dollars worth of maximum coverage over the course of the insured person’s life. It comes with everything that the basic level does, with a little extra. It helps for people who need more extensive mental care by providing them with off campus mental evaluation and treatment, and it also comes with greater provisions for things like prescriptions and recovery treatments. This is the best option for students with a pre existing condition, although it can be expensive because the monthly premium costs more, but copayments and deductibles are smaller.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.

Child health insurance in Florida for American Indians

 

August 3, 2007 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Child Health Insurance 

Reader question:

I’m an American Indian living in Florida. Are my children eligible for KidCare Florida health insurance?

Sam

It depends.

If you are a Native American, then it will still depend on your income and other eligibility requirements to determine whether or not your children are able to get KidCare Florida health insurance, such as determining whether or not your child is provided with health care insurance through your employer. If you otherwise meet the eligibility rules, then your children probably will be able to get insured through KidCare child health insurance.

The great thing about getting KidCare child health insurance if you are an American Indian is that it has pretty much no cost. Unlike other KidCare recipients, who must pay a monthly premium as well as some co-payments and fees for doctor visits and prescriptions, if you are an American Indian the service is entirely free, with no monthly charge nor co-payments. Call the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation to find out if your child is eligible.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.

Georgia health insurance for children

 

Reader question:

I need Georgia health insurance for my three year old daughter. Is this available in my state?

Amber

Great question.

All states, of course, have Medicaid, which is a federal program, but naturally Medicaid does not cover everybody who needs health insurance. Although the income requirements for it are a little more loose than for other welfare programs, there are many people who make too much to qualify, but at the same time make too little to get a family health insurance plan with their own money. These people are locked in a dilemma, because they need to get child health insurance for their kids, as well as for themselves.

Georgia health insurance offers the PeachCare program for child health insurance to cover those kids whose parents make too much to be able to get Medicaid. This comes with coverage as extensive as that of Medicaid itself, from things like hospital stays and emergency room visits, to things like prescriptions and eyeglasses and dental appointments. It provides basically everything you need to protect your child’s health throughout his or her lifetime with this Georgia health insurance plan.

It isn’t free, though, but it is a whole lot cheaper than normal child health insurance. Every month there is a cost of about ten to thirty five dollars for each child over the age of five. There is a maximum cost of seventy dollars per month, per family, though, so if you have five children over five you won’t be paying that total. To find out more about this kind of Georgia health insurance, you can go to the state’s PeachCare website for more information.

One of the drawbacks is that, unlike most health insurance plans, which will cover a child until he or she has completed college, PeachCare ends once the child reaches the age of nineteen, whether they are still going to school or not.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.

How does short term health insurance work?

 

July 28, 2007 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Health Insurance Quotes 

Reader question:

How does short term health insurance work?

Mac

Like this.

  • It’s kind of like an indemnity plan. What that means is that you are able to pick the doctors and specialists that provide you with your medical care without having to get a referral from within your health insurance plan’s network. They will have to be pre-certified in most cases, so you should understand this requirement before choosing a health care provider.
  • There are certain limits, but a good deal is provided for, even some mental care, along with the usuals of things like surgery, diagnostics, and prescriptions.
  • One of the major drawbacks of short term health insurance is that it doesn’t cover preventive medical care, which is one of the reasons why it is so cheap. It only pays if you get injured or fall ill while your in the policy period. Anything before or after is not their concern.
  • Like a lot of health insurance plans, temporary health insurance doesn’t cover anything that involves a pre-existing condition, which goes along with the only within the insured period idea. This is a bad deal for people who have such conditions, but that’s the kind of limit that you get for opting for a cheap health insurance coverage plan. If you’ve had a condition within the last three years, then you are in most cases out.
  • Short term health insurance coverage can actually often be renewed for up to three years, but this comes withfurther restrictions. If you had to file a claim during your first year, you probably won’t be allowed to renew. If you did file a claim and are renewed, whatever you filed a claim for is now an existing condition. That means that if last year you got a gunshot wound in your leg and were covered, this year if you get one in your arm you won’t be.
  • Lots of temporary health insurance provides offer a one hundred percent money back guarantee within a month if you don’t like your coverage and haven’t filed any claims.

Cheers,

Fashun Guadarrama.

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