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What Are My Health Plan Choices? (Continued)
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 deductible—such as $200—to 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 services—say $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.
Primary Care Doctors
Your primary care doctor will serve as your regular doctor, managing
your care and working with you to make most of the medical decisions
about your care as a patient. In many plans, care by specialists
is only paid for if your are referred by your primary care doctor.
An HMO or a POS plan will provide you with a list of doctors from
which you will choose your primary care doctor (usually a family
physician, internists, obstetrician-gynecologist, or pediatrician).
This could mean you might have to choose a new primary care doctor
if your current one does not belong to the plan.
PPOs allow members to use primary care doctors outside the PPO
network (at a higher cost). Indemnity plans allow any doctor to
be used.
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