Thanks for bringing this up. I am in the market for health insurance.
Another good option, if you meet the income requirements, is Healthy New York.
I'll compare plans. I like the idea of an HSA but I don't have $5000 if something happens to me in the next couple of years... the deductible makes me a bit nervous.
Thanks for bringing this up. I am in the market for health insurance.
Another good option, if you meet the income requirements, is Healthy New York.
I'll compare plans. I like the idea of an HSA but I don't have $5000 if something happens to me in the next couple of years... the deductible makes me a bit nervous.
The thing about these HSA deductibles is that it is not just the deductible typically associated with a PPO or HMO, but includes all copays as well. With a PPO, you might pay a $500 deductible for the 20% of the charges that you owe (in an 80/20 plan), plus a $20 copay per doctor visit, plus $50 per emergency room visit, plus $10-$70 per prescription refill each and every month, etc.
*All* of those items count toward the deductible in an HSA. So if you budget accordingly and figure on paying enough into your HSA every month to cover those items (which would otherwise be out of pocket with a PPO), plus saving the difference in premiums between the PPO plan and the HSA plan, the savings balance adds up faster.
And if not and something big hits, well there's credit cards, payment plans worked out with the doctors/hospital, friends, family, or whatever you may have done to cope with a medical emergency before you had insurance.
Nothing makes you pinch your pennies and grill your doctor harder than having to shell out cash from your own HSA to cover whatever battery of tests he or she wants to put you through. It may be a rude awakening for some docs to adjust to the approach of patients with an HSA.
Darlings, where to start? Sometimes I feel as though I have lived a thousand lives in this one, dewy and unlined though my complexion may be. To Tell All may be to intimidate; thus I maintain, at most times, a discreet reserve. But here I share my musings, perhaps revealing the secret to my exquisite poise and charm.
4 comments:
Thanks for bringing this up. I am in the market for health insurance.
Another good option, if you meet the income requirements, is Healthy New York.
I'll compare plans. I like the idea of an HSA but I don't have $5000 if something happens to me in the next couple of years... the deductible makes me a bit nervous.
Thanks for bringing this up. I am in the market for health insurance.
Another good option, if you meet the income requirements, is Healthy New York.
I'll compare plans. I like the idea of an HSA but I don't have $5000 if something happens to me in the next couple of years... the deductible makes me a bit nervous.
With all that you have said about health insurance, I'd love to hear your thoughts on malpractice insurance.
The thing about these HSA deductibles is that it is not just the deductible typically associated with a PPO or HMO, but includes all copays as well. With a PPO, you might pay a $500 deductible for the 20% of the charges that you owe (in an 80/20 plan), plus a $20 copay per doctor visit, plus $50 per emergency room visit, plus $10-$70 per prescription refill each and every month, etc.
*All* of those items count toward the deductible in an HSA. So if you budget accordingly and figure on paying enough into your HSA every month to cover those items (which would otherwise be out of pocket with a PPO), plus saving the difference in premiums between the PPO plan and the HSA plan, the savings balance adds up faster.
And if not and something big hits, well there's credit cards, payment plans worked out with the doctors/hospital, friends, family, or whatever you may have done to cope with a medical emergency before you had insurance.
Nothing makes you pinch your pennies and grill your doctor harder than having to shell out cash from your own HSA to cover whatever battery of tests he or she wants to put you through. It may be a rude awakening for some docs to adjust to the approach of patients with an HSA.
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