Group health insurance in Lexington
Randall Jackson, Sr., of Lexington, Kentucky, owns a small car repair shop with only three workers other than himself. They work well and hard, but Jackson is unable to give them the one thing that he believes is necessary for an employer to provide for his employees–health insurance. He has worked side by side with these good men and see them go through struggles with their health and that of their families, but as not been able to offer a helping hand because the price of health insurance is so high that he, in his small business, cannot afford to provide it. Not even for just three employees.
This situation is a big one concerning Lexington health insurance. It is required by law that companies with more than fifty employees provide health insurance plan options to its employees, but that leaves smaller companies with fewer employees high and dry. These companies are able to slide under the law without insurance, even if they can afford it, but for the most part small companies in Lexington are unable to provide health insurance coverage to their employees because it is too much cost in addition to the payroll. These small businesses already have enough trouble keeping ahead with a proft. Adding health insurance coverage would diminish that profit by quite a bit.
The state of Kentucky has come up with a solution, though, and although they are only trying it out at the moment, it will probably do a lot of good to help small companies and their employees with health insurance in the future. Called ICARE, which stands for Insurance Coverage Affordability and Relief to Employers, this jump start program is intended for providing small businesses with enough money to insure their employees. Passed by the state legislature in early 2007, the program will provide small businesses with forty dollars per employee, which will go towards their health insurance coverage. This forty dollar per person sum is given for each month, and if a certain employee is high risk or has a pre existing condition, then they are provided with extra for him or her.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama.
Applying for KCHIP Lexington health insurance
KCHIP, or the Kentucky Child Health Insurance Program, is a version of health insurance for Lexington and the rest of the state of Kentucky that is sponsered by the state and provides coverage for eligible children. KCHIP is not only for when a child has an emergency, but it also useful for helping prevent future problems by going to the doctor for well check ups and receiving vaccinations. It is for children in Kentucky who are unable to afford medical health insurance, but who are also unable to qualify for Medicaid.
To get started with KCHIP, you need to fill out an application. In order to do this, you will have to go to an eligibility office in your area. These offices are usually open from eight to five, and if you don’t know where one is, you can look it up in the phone book. You need to remember what you should take with, which is:
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two months worth of pay stubs for every working person that lives with you
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if you have any other type of income, such as Social Security, take the last award letter.
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proof that you have childcare with receipts from the daycare or nanny
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medical insurance info, but only if your kid had insurance at least si months ago
If your child was insured at some point within the past six months, there is certain information that you need to provide. This information includes what the company that insured your child was called, what plan your child had, and what the number of your policy or group was. You also need to provide the dates in which the policy was in effect, the person whose name is the main one on the policy, and anybody else whose name is on the policy.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama.
What Else Do I Need to Know About the Kentucky Child Health Insurance Plan?
Many children are provided with health insurance by their parents or through their parents’ employer, but many times that health insurance is less than perfect. Child health insurance often does not cover the types of things that children need most, and if you have only partial insurance coverage, you may want to get assistance from the state of Kentucky to help you supplement that coverage so that your child does not go without. Unfortunately, you can’t get KCHIP if your kid is already insured, no matter how sparely. What you can do is apply for Medicaid.
If you choose to cancel your insurance policy and get KCHIP, then your child may have to wait six months before they can receive child health insurance coverage through this state insurance plan. This will never be the case for families who make little enough to qualify for KCHIP and not be required to pay a premium. However, if you are trying to insure a previously covered infant and your income is at least 186% of the federal poverty level, then you will have to wait six months. The same applies to any child up to the age of eighteen whose family makes at least 156% of the federal poverty level. If you lost your insurance in circumstances that you could not take charge of, you can get this waiting period waived.
There are children who may have been previously insured but who do not need to wait, nor pay a premium, in order to receive KCHIP. They are able to be insured as soon as they are approved, regardless of how they came to be uninsured. These children include those between the ages of one and five whose parents make at least 134% of the federal poverty level, and at least 150%; and kids between six and eighteen whose parents make at least 101% and at most 150%.
Cheers,
Fashun Guadarrama.
