|
What Are My Health Plan Choices?
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
care—and 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.
|