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MEDICAL INSURANCE-UNDERSTANDING YOUR POLICY

posted January 14, 2007 - 3:07pm
MEDICAL INSURANCE-UNDERSTANDING YOUR POLICY

Let me just start by saying it is ALWAYS the responsibility of the patient to know and understand his/her medical INSURANCE policy! As the person who puchased and signed the contract, you should know exactly what it is you have bought.

Secondly, individual doctor's offices file your insurance for you only as a courtesy. They do not necesarily have to file for you and could, in fact, charge you up front and let you file on your own. It all depends on the office policy of that particular doctor and whether or not he/she has contracted with your insurance company. If they are, indeed, contracted, they will file for you. You should always ask when you make an appointment if the doctor is contracted with your INSURANCE.

Now, to the meat of it all! There are many different types of insurance policies available but your main policies are PPO (Preferred Provider Organization) and HMO (Health Management Organization).

PPO insurance means you can go to the doctor of your choice. But there is a catch! Although you get to choose, if you choose a doctor who is NOT listed in your preferred provider directory, your policy will only pay at "OUT OF NETWORK" RATES. This is a reduced rate where you pay more of the percentage and co-pay for using a non-preferred provider. There is yet ANOTHER CATCH. Your policy may NOT have out of network benefits. Here is one of those areas where it is up to you to read and understand your particular policy. If you DO NOT have out of network benefits, you (the patient) are fully responsible for all the charges accrued for that visit and they are payable at the conclusion of your visit.

There are three parts to PPO insurance policies. (Not all policies have ALL three so you must read your contract)

1. Co-pay - This is the money you pay off the bat for your visit. There are two levels of co-pays.

a. Office Visit; which is for Primary Care Physicians (General Practitioners, Internal Medicine Doctors, Rheumatologists and Gynecologists). These are the doctors who handle your general health and well being.

b. Specialist Office Visit - This is the same as office visit except that the co-pay is higher and is for visits to Specialists (Any other type of doctor not listed previously)

2. Deductible - Your deductible, just like in your AUTO insurance, is the amount you must pay out first before your insurance policy starts to pay out. The deductible sometimes applies to office visits as well, depending on individual policy but usually it applies to in-office procedures such as injectables and any bodily invasive surgical procedure. This can be cryotherapy, biopsy, use of a laser, excisions, etc.

3. Co-Insurance - This is the percentage that your insurance company will start to pay for in-office procedures AFTER your deductible is met. The insurance company usually pays the higher percentage while the patient is responsible for the smaller amount.

ALL OF THESE FEES ARE DUE AND PAYABLE AT THE CONCLUSION OF YOUR VISIT. Trust me when I tell you that it is perfectly legal to collect all these fees at the time of service and that the staff in that office have already called and confirmed your benefits with your insurance company before you were taken to the check out desk. It does you no good to argue about the amount with the receptionist because you already signed a financial policy agreement when you filled out your paperwork to see that doctor. Again, refer to my first statements that the physician's office DOES NOT have to file your insurance first and wait to see what comes back. They already know what your portion is going to be.

HMO Insurance - An Hmo has differences. You must pick and sign up for a particular physician listed in the Health Management Organization directory. You do not get the privilege of choosing just any doctor. This physician that you sign up for will direct all your care and will refer you to a Specialist within your HMO only when he/she deems it necessary. No matter what your current malady is, you must visit your PCP (Primary Care Physician) first and he/she will either attempt to treat or refer you to a specialist.

A referall is required to visit a specialist! It is YOUR responsibility (not the PCP"S office or the SPECIALIST office) to make sure a referral was generated and sent to the specialist before you can be seen by that specialist. You CANNOT be seen by specialty without a referral. These are rules written in stone with HMO's.

1. Co-pay - When you visit your PCP or a Specialist, you will pay ONLY your co-pay. This is the feature benefit of an HMO. Your out of pocket expense is negligible. The trade off is not picking who you see and having to go through the referral process.

There are other types of private medical insurances that function slightly differently but the principles are always the same. It is entirely up to the patient (policy holder) to read and understand his/her policy!

I have seen many patients in my fifteen years of working with health insurance pitch a fit at check out because they were being charged their full portion of the visit up front while screaming "but my other doctor files my insurance first!". Let me re-iterate that every physician's office policy is different and they are perfectly within their right to collect your share up front. When you singed their office policy at the start of your visit, you agreed to pay up front! Read what you sign before you sign it! That way, there are no surprises!

Finally, when you are investigating insurance policies of any kind, be sure to ask crucial and pertinent questions like "What is my responsibility financially, when I visit a doctor with this policy?" or "If I have any procedures, how does this policy work?"..."Do I have a deductible to meet first?"

Ask questions, investigate and UNDERSTAND your policy. Feel free to call your customer service number listed on your card with any questions about your benefits. A representative is always happy to assist you. It's what you pay for!

www.uhc.com
www.benefitplanners.com
www.humana.com
http://www.bluecross.com/
www.aetna.com

MICHELE GWYNN

FEATURED WRITER - TRAVEL

Copyright- Michele Gwynn All rights reserved
This article may be distributed freely on your website and in your ezines, as long as this entire article, copyright notice, links and the resource box are unchanged.



Comments

Excellent..

I've spent 15 years explaining it over and over again to the very people who should already know how it works...THE PATIENT The truth is, most people have no understadning of how it works. They think they just pay a co-pay and that's that. But, ask them about their auto policy and boy oh boy, they know all about their deductible then! :) It's good to put the info out there in a way that others can get an understanding. I can't tell you the number of times I've asked.."Is your insurance HMO or PPO"? and the patient just blinks.....It's important to know these things because believe me, a physician's office is going to ask and yes, they do need to know. It all has to do with whether or not they are contracted with your insurance and if they are going to need a referral. Michele http://www.xomba.com/user/micheleg4153 FEATURED WRITER: TRAVEL

ps - I understood it and if

ps - I understood it and if I can, anybody can. Flyswatter Xomba Moderator

Flyswatter

Xomba Moderator

This is great,Michele.

This is great,Michele. Medical insurance may not be exciting, but it's crucial and can be complicated, especially when you have to go back and decipher why you owe somebody money. You managed to spell out the ground rules in a way that everybody can understand. Thanks for the information. Flyswatter Xomba Moderator

Flyswatter

Xomba Moderator

Hi Les!

Sure, that's fine. I need to sit down and figure those things out. I haven't done more than glance at them (digg it, reddit, etc). I am just now getting proficient with the keywords. How ya been? Michele http://www.xomba.com/user/micheleg4153 FEATURED WRITER: TRAVEL

Good one!

I dugg this for you, and hope that is okay with you.

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