Choosing the Form of Health Insurance
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There are different forms of health insurance that guard against the financial expenditures from an illness or accident but the difference is in the amount of coverage.
One form of insurance is comprehensive
major medical that offers broader coverage for all medical treatment and services
paid at higher benefit limits. Dependant on your health status and other risk
factors the insurance company may accept or deny you for coverage.
The cost of your health plan is directly correlated with your health condition status.
Also, consider that besides your monthly premium outlay, there are out-of-pocket
expenses you will need to incur such as an annual deductible, benefit copayments
and a specified percentage of the medical bills up to maximum amount. If you are
able to qualify, pay, absorb the out-of-pockets expenses, and want wide-ranging
coverage-- consider a major medical health plan.
On the other hand, unlike major medical, a limited medical is not comprehensive.The
insurance benefits are tied to a fixed dollar amount and its usage to a specified
allotment. Contrary to comprehensive coverage, limited medical pays its benefits
upfront. In other words, there is no deductible to satisfy prior to having immediate
access to the insurance benefits.
In addition, most of these limited medicals do not require a health assessment or
underwriting and are made available to members of an association or employer groups.
If you are simply seeking access to a healthcare alternative with guarantee
acceptance consider
Intelicare Health membership features.
What are the factors in choosing a health insurance plan?
There are many different factors in choosing a health insurance plan. The one best suited for you or your family depends on some important considerations as noted below.
-Basic Forms of Insurance: What
form of health insurance do you need, comprehensive, catastrophic or limited medical?
-Budget: What is the amount that you can afford to pay for health insurance without
taking money away from money allocated to your primary needs such as food and housing?
-Medical History: Will your medical history affect the cost of insurance or limit
the types of health insurance that are available to you?
-Out-of-Pocket Expenses: How much out of pocket can you afford prior to insurance
paying their share
-Frequency of Benefits Use: Which benefits will you likely use the most?
-Medical Providers: Do you have freedom of choice or are you restricted to a network
of providers?
-Preventative Care: Does the health insurance promote wellness such as pap smears,
mammograms, prostate cancer screening or colonoscopies?
-Chronic Medical Conditions: Does the insurance company accept, rate-up or
reject chronic medical conditions such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
diabetes, asthma, heart disease, or arthritis?