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- Introduction
-
- Changes
and choices with health care
- Overview
of this section
- Choosing
a Plan
-
- What
Are My Health Plan Choices?
- Where
Do I Get These Health Plans?
- What
Plan Benefits Are Offered?
- What
Is Most Important to Me in a Plan?
- How
Do I Compare Health Plans?
- How
Do I Find Out About Quality?
Changes and
Choices
Health care
in America is changing rapidly. Twenty-five years ago, most people
in the United States had indemnity insurance coverage. A person
with indemnity insurance could go to any doctor, hospital, or other
provider (which would bill for each service given), and the insurance
and the patient would each pay part of the bill.
But today,
more than half of all Americans who have health insurance are enrolled
in some kind of managed care plan, an organized way of both providing
services and paying for them. Different types of managed care plans
work differently and include preferred provider organizations (PPOs),
health maintenance organizations (HMOs), and point-of-service (POS)
plans.
You've probably
heard these terms before. But what do they mean, and what are the
differences between them? And what do these differences mean to
you?
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Overview
This section
can help you make sense of your choices for getting health care
insurance:
- See the
questions and answers on important things you should know when
"Choosing a Plan."
- Even if
you don't get to choose the health plan yourself (for example,
your employer may select the plan for your company), you still
need to understand what kind of protection your health plan provides
and what you will need to do to get the health care that you and
your family need.
The more you
learn, the more easily you'll be able to decide what fits your personal
needs and budget.
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Choosing a
Plan
Choosing between
health plans is not as easy as it once was. Although there is no
one "best" plan, there are some plans that will be better
than others for you and your family's health needs. Plans differ,
both in how much you have to pay and how easy it is to get the services
you need. Although no plan will pay for all the costs associated
with your medical care, some plans will cover more than others.
Almost all
plans today have ways to reduce unnecessary use of health careand
keep down the costs of health care, too. This may affect how easily
you get the care you want, but should not affect how easily
you get the care you need.
Plans change
from year to year, so you should carefully consider each plan, using
the questions outlined in this booklet. If you get health insurance
where you work, you should start with your employee benefits office.
Its staff should be able to tell you what is covered under the plans
available. You can also call plans directly to ask questions.
Health insurance
plans are usually described as either indemnity (fee-for-service)
or managed care. These types of plans differ in important ways that
are described below. With any health plan, however, there is a basic
premium, which is how much you or your employer pay, usually monthly,
to buy health insurance coverage. In addition, there are often other
payments you must make, which will vary by plan. In considering
any plan, you should try to figure out its total cost to you and
your family, especially if someone in the family has a chronic or
serious health condition.
Indemnity and
managed care plans differ in their basic approach. Put broadly,
the major differences concern choice of providers, out-of-pocket
costs for covered services, and how bills are paid. Usually, indemnity
plans offer more choice of doctors (including specialists, such
as cardiologists and surgeons), hospitals, and other health care
providers than managed care plans. Indemnity plans pay their share
of the costs of a service only after they receive a bill.
Managed care
plans have agreements with certain doctors, hospitals, and health
care providers to give a range of services to plan members at reduced
cost. In general, you will have less paperwork and lower out-of-pocket
costs if you select a managed care type plan and a broader choice
of health care providers if you select an indemnity-type plan.
Over time,
the distinctions between these kinds of plans have begun to blur
as health plans compete for your business. Some indemnity plans
offer managed care-type options, and some managed care plans offer
members the opportunity to use providers who are "outside"
the plan. This makes it even more important for you to understand
how your health plan works.
Besides indemnity
plans, there are basically three types of managed care plans: PPOs,
HMOs, and POS plans.
Indemnity
Plan
With an indemnity
plan (sometimes called fee-for-service), you can use any medical
provider (such as a doctor and hospital). You or they send the bill
to the insurance company, which pays part of it. Usually, you have
a deductiblesuch as $200to pay each year before the
insurer starts paying.
Once you meet
the deductible, most indemnity plans pay a percentage of what they
consider the "Usual and Customary" charge for covered
services. The insurer generally pays 80 percent of the Usual and
Customary costs and you pay the other 20 percent, which is known
as coinsurance. If the provider charges more than the Usual and
Customary rates, you will have to pay both the coinsurance and the
difference.
The plan will
pay for charges for medical tests and prescriptions as well as from
doctors and hospitals. It may not pay for some preventive care,
like checkups.
Managed Care
Preferred
Provider Organization (PPO). A PPO is a form of managed care
closest to an indemnity plan. A PPO has arrangements with doctors,
hospitals, and other providers of care who have agreed to accept
lower fees from the insurer for their services. As a result, your
cost sharing should be lower than if you go outside the network.
In addition to the PPO doctors making referrals, plan members can
refer themselves to other doctors, including ones outside the plan.
If you go to
a doctor within the PPO network, you will pay a copayment (a set
amount you pay for certain servicessay $10 for a doctor or
$5 for a prescription). Your coinsurance will be based on lower
charges for PPO members.
If you choose
to go outside the network, you will have to meet the deductible
and pay coinsurance based on higher charges. In addition, you may
have to pay the difference between what the provider charges and
what the plan will pay.
Health Maintenance
Organization (HMO). HMOs are the oldest form of managed care
plan. HMOs offer members a range of health benefits, including preventive
care, for a set monthly fee. There are many kinds of HMOs. If doctors
are employees of the health plan and you visit them at central medical
offices or clinics, it is a staff or group model HMO. Other HMOs
contract with physician groups or individual doctors who have private
offices. These are called individual practice associations (IPAs)
or networks.
HMOs will give
you a list of doctors from which to choose a primary care doctor.
This doctor coordinates your care, which means that generally you
must contact him or her to be referred to a specialist.
With some HMOs,
you will pay nothing when you visit doctors. With other HMOs there
may be a copayment, like $5 or $10, for various services.
If you belong
to an HMO, the plan only covers the cost of charges for doctors
in that HMO. If you go outside the HMO, you will pay the bill. This
is not the case with point-of-service plans.
Point-of-Service
(POS) Plan. Many HMOs offer an indemnity-type option known as
a POS plan. The primary care doctors in a POS plan usually make
referrals to other providers in the plan. But in a POS plan, members
can refer themselves outside the plan and still get some coverage.
If the doctor
makes a referral out of the network, the plan pays all or most of
the bill. If you refer yourself to a provider outside the network
and the service is covered by the plan, you will have to pay coinsurance.
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Where Do I
Get These Health Plans?
Group Policies
You may be
able to get group health coverageeither indemnity or managed
carethrough your job or the job of a family member.
Many employers
allow you to join or change health plans once a year during open
enrollment. But once you choose a plan, you must keep it for a year.
Discuss choices and limits with your employee benefits office.
Individual
Policies
If you are
self-employed or if your company does not offer group policies,
you may need to buy individual health insurance. Individual policies
cost more than group policies.
Some organizationssuch
as unions, professional associations, or social or civic groupsoffer
health plans for members. You may want to talk to an insurance broker,
who can tell you more about the indemnity and managed care plans
that are available for individuals. Some States also provide insurance
for very small groups or the self-employed.
Medicare
Americans age
65 or older and people with certain disabilities can be covered
under Medicare, a Federal health insurance program.
In many parts
of the country, people covered under Medicare now have a choice
between managed care and indemnity plans. They also can switch their
plans for any reason. However, they must officially tell the plan
or the local Social Security Office, and the change may not take
effect for up to 30 days. Call your local Social Security office
or the State office on aging to find out what is available in your
area.
Medicaid
Medicaid covers
some low-income people (especially children and pregnant women),
and disabled people. Medicaid is a joint Federal-State health insurance
program that is run by the States.
In some cases,
States require people covered under Medicaid to join managed care
plans. Insurance plans and State regulations differ, so check with
your State Medicaid office to learn more.
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What Plan
Benefits Are Offered?
Most plans
provide basic medical coverage, but the details are what counts.
The best plan for someone else may not be the best plan for you.
For each plan you are considering, find out how it handles:
- Physical
exams and health screenings.
- Care by
specialists.
- Hospitalization
and emergency care.
- Prescription
drugs.
- Vision care.
- Dental services.
Also ask about:
- Care and
counseling for mental health.
- Services
for drug and alcohol abuse.
- Obstetrical-gynecological
care and family planning services.
- Ongoing
care for chronic (long-term) diseases, conditions, or disabilities.
- Physical
therapy and other rehabilitative care.
- Home health,
nursing home, and hospice care.
- Chiropractic
or alternative health care, such as acupuncture.
- Experimental
treatments.
Some plans
offer members health education and preventive care, but services
differ. Ask questions such as:
- What preventive
care is offered, such as shots for children?
- What health
screenings are given, such as breast exams and Pap smears for
women?
- Does the
plan help people who want to quit smoking?
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What Is Most
Important to Me in a Plan?
In choosing
a plan, you have to decide what is most important to you. All plans
have tradeoffs. Ask yourself these questions:
- How comprehensive
do I want coverage of health care services to be?
- How do I
feel about limits on my choice of doctors or hospitals?
- How do I
feel about a primary care doctor referring me to specialists for
additional care?
- How convenient
does my care need to be?
- How important
is the cost of services?
- How much
am I willing to spend on premiums and other health care costs?
- How do I
feel about keeping receipts and filing claims?
You might also
want to think about whether the services a plan offers meet your
needs. Call the plan for details about coverage if you have questions.
Consider:
- Life changes
you may be thinking about, such as starting a family or retiring.
- Chronic
health conditions or disabilities that you or family members have.
- If you or
anyone in your family will need care for the elderly.
- Care for
family members who travel a lot, attend college, or spend time
at two homes.
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How
Do I Compare Health Plans?
After you review
what benefits are available and decide what is important to you,
you can compare plans. Many things should be considered. These include
services offered, choice of providers, location, and costs. The
quality of care is also a factor to think about (see How
Do I Find Out About Quality?).
Services
Look at the
services offered by each plan. What services are limited or not
covered? Is there a good match between what is provided and what
you think you will need? For example, if you have a chronic disease,
is there a special program for that illness? Will the plan provide
the medicines and equipment you may need?
Find out what
types of care or services the plan won't pay for. These usually
are called exclusions.
Few indemnity
and managed care plans cover treatments that are experimental. Ask
how the plan decides what is or is not experimental. Find out what
you can do if you disagree with a plan's decision on medical care
or coverage.
Choice
What doctors,
hospitals, and other medical providers are part of the plan? Are
there enough of the kinds of doctors you want to see? Do you need
to choose a primary care doctor? If you want to see a specialist,
can you refer yourself or must your primary care doctor refer you?
Do you need approval from the plan before going into the hospital
or getting specialty care?
Location
Where will
you go for care? Are these places near where you work or live? How
does the plan handle care when you are away from home?
Costs
No health insurance
plan will cover every expense. To get a true idea of what your costs
will be under each plan, you need to look at how much you will pay
for your premium and other costs.
- Are there
deductibles you must pay before the insurance begins to help cover
your costs?
- After you
have met your deductible, what part of your costs are paid by
the plan?
- Does this
amount vary by the type of service, doctor, or health facility
used?
- Are there
copayments you must pay for certain services, such as doctor visits?
- If you use
doctors outside a plan's network, how much more will you pay to
get care?
- If a plan
does not cover certain services or care that you think you will
need, how much will you have to pay?
- Are there
any limits to how much you must pay in case of major illness?
- Is there
a limit on how much the plan will pay for your care in a year
or over a lifetime? A single hospital stay for a serious condition
could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
You can't know
in advance what your health care needs for the coming year will
be. But you can guess what services you and your family might need.
Figure out what the total costs to your family would be for these
services under each plan.
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How Do I Find
Out About Quality?
Quality is
hard to measure, but more and more information is becoming available.
There are certain things you can look for and questions you can
ask. Whatever kind of plan you are considering, you can check out
individual doctors and hospitals.
Many managed
care plans are regulated by Federal and State agencies. Indemnity
plans are regulated by State insurance commissions. Your State Department
of Health or insurance commission can tell you about any plan you
are interested in.
You can also
find out if the managed care plan you are interested in has been
"accredited," meaning that it meets certain standards
of independent organizations. Some States require accreditation
if plans serve special groups, such as people in Medicaid. Some
employers will only contract with plans that are accredited.
Several national
organizations review and accredit plans and institutions. You can
contact these organizations to see if a plan you are considering,
or an institution in the plan, is accredited.
Another approach
is to ask the plan how it ensures good medical care. Does the plan
review the qualifications of doctors before they are added to the
plan? Plans are supposed to review the care that is given by their
doctors and hospitals. How does the plan review its own services,
and has it made changes to correct problems? How does the plan resolve
member complaints?
Some managed
care plans survey members about their health care experiences. Ask
the plan for a report of the survey results.
Some plans
and independent organizations are also beginning to produce "report
cards." These reports often include satisfaction survey results
and other information on quality, such as if a plan provides preventive
care (for example, shots for children and Pap smears for women)
or if the plan follows up on test results. Report cards may also
include information on how many members stay in or leave the plan,
how many of the plan's doctors are board certified, or how long
you may have to wait for an appointment.
Report cards
can only give you an idea of how a plan works and may not give a
full picture of a plan's quality. Ask plans if their activities
have been reported in report cards developed by outside groups (business
or consumer organizations).
Also keep any
eye out for magazine articles that rate health plans.
Finally, you
can talk to current members of the plan. Ask how they feel about
their experiences, such as waiting times for appointments, the helpfulness
of medical staff, the services offered, and the care received. If
there are programs for your particular condition, how are the patients
in it doing?

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