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Archive for the 'Health Insurance Information' Category
I cannot believe that we needed to conduct a study in order to know that individuals who understand their health insurance coverage requirements, will make better choices about seeking medical services. The Boston Herald recently published the findings of just such a study. What was found was that individuals who knew what their co-payments were for medical services were more cost-conscious when deciding when to seek those medical services. These individuals were considered “savy.”
I don’t call it being savy. I call it using common sense. If you know that each emergency room visit is going to require you to pay $250 out of your pocket versus $25 for each physician office visit, common sense says that you will visit your physician and not the hospital emergency department.
In a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Karen Ignagni head of America’s Health Insurance Plans and the nation’s top health insurance industry official, said that the industry will fully comply with new regulations preventing coverage denials for children with pre-existing conditions. The regulations are expected to be issued within the next few weeks.
It is troubling that Ms. Ignagni was in a position where she had say to the federal government that the health insurance industry will follow the rules and not cause problems. However it is believable that this was required given the recent actions by health plans to haphazardly rescind coverage based upon pre-existing conditions.
Reading the first line of this article in the New York Times, The Many Hidden Costs of High-Deductible Health Insurance, made me think back to our recent post regarding choosing the right health insurance and the fact that young Americans are willing to do the research but not sure where to turn for assistance. This article provides a detailed understanding of what additional costs may be hidden in the high-deductible health insurance plans.
I can’t believe that it was back on 9/28/06 when we posted our first item on the problems California insurers were facing for wrongfully rescinding patients’ policies. Almost three years later, we are still hearing about cases where Blue Shield of California and HealthNet are still under fire for rescinding policies. The AP is reporting that HealthNet just entered into a settlement with a class of patients where HealthNet will create a $1.95 million fund to pay those patients’ outstanding medical costs. Blue Shield, on the other hand, has seen a different turn of events. A California judge ruled yesterday that Blue Shield was right to drop the policy of a man who sued the insurer for wrongfully terminating his policy. The judge foudn that Blue Shield conducted an appropriate investigation of the matter and determined that the patient’s spouse did in fact knowingly misrepresent information on the patient’s insurance application.
I love to see where the largest payers rank when it comes to percentage of claim denials, days in A/R, denial transparency. That is why I was so excited to see the new report issued by Athena Health. This site allows you to analyze payer performance by region and by issue. Can you believe that UnitedHealth Group ranks #1 in the nation for the percentage of denied claims that close with only one additional resubmission? Of course they ranked 4th in the percentage of denied claims requiring additional work on the back-end.
Health insurance is clearly a necessity but where do we go to choose what is right for us? Sounds like many young Americans are in the same quandary when it comes to this question. A recent study reported by Dow Jones Newswire shows that young Americans do not feel they have the information needed to make the right decision about health insurance coverage. The poll further found that while the individuals were willing to research their options, many felt they lacked the proper resources.
Watch out friends! If you are conducting research online be sure you know who is sharing this information with you. Many insurance companies want you to believe you are getting tremendous coverage for small monthly premium payments but hidden in the policy they will make a portion of the claims your responsibility.
To share a personal example, just a year ago Trilogi, Inc. my employer, polled the staff to choose between two health plans: one plan that cost a bit more monthly but provided greater coverage including lower deductibles and out-of-pocket costs, and a second plan that cost less each month but that provided less coverage and had a higher deductible. At the time, the staff was relatively new in dealing with health insurance issues so a majority opted for the “cheaper” monthly premium. After a year of following up with insurance carriers and seeing just how much insurance carriers are leaving as patient responsibility, we polled the same group of individuals to see which type of plan they would choose now and to no surprise, the group stated they would rather pay a few dollars more each month for better coverage in the long run.
UnitedHealth Group, the nation’s largest insurer, released its report on the U.S. can save money on health care. Please remember that this is the same group whose President and CEO, Stephen J. Hemsley, was recently called to be questioned by the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation in hearings entitled “Deceptive Insurance Industry Practices — Are Consumers Getting What They Paid For?”
We all know that there is a growing cost to medical providers rendering services to the uninsured population — approximately $42.7 billion went unpaid last year. We also know that someone has to be contributing to paying for that care. But did you know that that cost is being covered through a hidden tax on the premiums of people with insurance? According to today’s USA Today, the average U.S. family and their employers paid an extra $1,017 in health care premiums last year to compensate for the uninsured.
What is missing from the studies done and the statements made at the congressional hearings is that on top of paying a “hidden tax” on our premiums, most insureds are actually “underinsured” and end up footing most of their healthcare expenses because of high deductibles or insurance denials. To be paying a tax on top of that for healthcare services not rendered to those individuals is just one more reason why the current health insurance industry needs immediate reform.
Business Week reported that UnitedHealth Group, Inc., the nation’s largest managed care company by revenue, spent $1.5 million during the first quarter of 2009 to lobby Congress, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. It seems to me that that money would have been better spent paying patients’ medical bills.
Well at least that is President Bush’s way of dealing with the “frustrations” of the health care crisis. In a roundtable discussion with small business owners earlier this week, President Bush continued to try to sell people on the idea that through tax incentives, people will be able to get affordable health care coverage. He further stated that small business owners should be able to cross state lines to pool risk with other employers in other states in order to afford better insurance. Nothing really new or exciting came out of his discussion. We are still waiting on a solution.