Sep 17 2009

Swine flu shots will be available soon, priority groups first

Tag: AccuQuote News, Health InsuranceDenise Mancini @ 12:53 pm

The federal government has decided that five priority groups should be first in line to receive the H1N1 vaccination. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the following people take precedence:

  • Children and young adults through age 24
  • People caring for infants under six months
  • Pregnant women
  • Health care workers
  • People aged 25-64 with health conditions that put them at high risk of flu complications. Those conditions include cancer, blood disorders, asthma, diabetes, heart disease, kidney disorders, liver disease and neurological disorders such as muscular dystrophy and multiple sclerosis. People with weakened immune systems also get priority.

U.S. officials confirmed that the first doses of the vaccination should be available in early October. Shots made by four manufactures were approved in the U.S. on Monday.

Be sure to keep yourself and your family protected by getting a swine flu shot as soon as the vaccination arrives.

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Sep 10 2009

Protect yourself from the flu

Good news! The swine flu pandemic has hardly made a presence in the term life insurance industry and even chief underwriters at some of the best term life insurance companies have reported that most swine flu cases have been mild, and mortality is actually lower than the normal seasonal flu.

Better News! There are no underwriting implications if you’ve experienced side effects from the swine flu. (Any serious side effects will be underwritten on their own, without designating the swine flu as the foremost cause.)

Even though discussions of the recent swine flu pandemic have slowed down a bit since the illness first surfaced, we believe it’s still important to be aware of how to stop the spread of germs approaching flu season.

Following are ways to stop the spread of germs from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC.gov):

  • Get vaccinated (the seasonal flu shot will not protect against the H1N1 virus)
  • Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze
  • Wash your hands often with soap and water or alcohol-based hand cleaner
  • Avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth
  • Try to avoid close contact with sick people
  • If you become sick or develop a fever, stay home for at least 24 hours, unless serious medical attention is needed
  • While sick, limit contact with others
  • Take flu antiviral drugs if your doctor recommends them

For more information on term life insurance if you’ve been affected by the flu, call an experienced life insurance agent who can assess your financial needs and give you a free term life insurance quote.

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Jun 11 2009

Medical Bills Cause Large Percentage of Bankruptcy

Tag: Health Insurance, Other news and insurance informationByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

According to Reuters, a recent report shows that medical bills are the cause of more than 60 percent of U.S. personal bankruptcies.

More than 75 percent of these bankrupt families had health insurance but still were overwhelmed by their medical debts, the team at Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School and Ohio University reported in the American Journal of Medicine.

The burden of medical bills lies with the immediate family and the estate if the event that the person passes away.  Having a term life insurance policy can help with these expenses once the person is deceased, leaving the family with more of the estate.  Medical costs continue to rise in the U.S. that’s why it’s important to protect yourself and have the appropriate medical insurance, but also think ahead.  You never know what tomorrow brings. That’s where a life insurance policy can help. It’s an essential part of a solid financial plan.

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May 28 2009

Health Insurance: Stay Protected Amid Layoffs, Budget Cuts

Tag: AccuQuote News, Health InsuranceByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

The national unemployment rate is at 8.5 percent and families are struggling to pay for their health insurance coverage. However, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), there are still ways for people to remain protected.

They suggest the following options for newly unemployed people:

  • Consider joining your spouse’s plan if you’re married
  • Consider COBRA
  • Research eligibility for government-sponsored plans
  • Purchase a private plan
  • Join a state-sponsored risk pool

We don’t sell health insurance, only discount term life insurance, but we do have a trusted partner that can help.

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May 13 2009

Don’t lose your insurance benefits if you lose your job

If you lose your job, you may lose your insurance benefits too.  So what should you do? First, consider switching to a term life insurance policy. If you have a group life policy, you will most likely lose your coverage if you lose your job. A term life insurance policy is usually less expensive and portable.

In addition, you may want to consider comparing individual health insurance policies.  Why? If your company goes bankrupt and there is no longer a health plan. COBRA may not be available.  In addition, individual health insurance policies are usually less expensive than COBRA depending on your health.

You protect your health and life, but don’t forget to protect your biggest asset…your ability to work.  Shop around for individual disability coverage. Unlike the one from an employer, consumers can keep this coverage if they move from job to job. And, benefits will be tax-free if the premiums are paid by the insured.

Be sure to a policy is paid for before dropping ANY existing coverage.  If you are one of the unfortunate people that will lose your job, you’ll be happy that you took a moment to consider your insurance needs before hand

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Mar 19 2009

Tips when you lose your health insurance

Tag: Health InsuranceByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

I’m not a heath insurance expert, but I do recognize that economic times are tough and many are being layoffs. As a result many people are losing their health insurance coverage.

Hopefully, your spouse or partner is still working and you can qualify as a dependent on his or her plan.  However, if this isn’t an option, you use COBRA. COBRA is available for 18 months after loosing your employer health coverage. COBRA allows you to keep the health plan that your employer used to provide as long as that plan still exists. If your employer is still in business and offering some health insurance to current employees you can usually qualify.

If you can’t afford COBRA, try applying for Medicaid or Medicare. Almost every state has a local Medicaid office and toll-free numbers. Each state is different but Medicaid allows low-income and eligible people to qualify to have their medical bills paid directly. Some still require co-payments.

Finally, ask your doctor about reduced fees or treatment and drug options for those with lower income or no health insurance.

If you lose your group life insurance plan and need affordable life insurance, contact us and we’d be glad to help find a plan that’s right for you.

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Mar 02 2009

Be wary of “affordable” heath plans

Tag: Health InsuranceByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

I’m an expert when it comes to term life insurance policies, but I saw this article in consumer reports and thought it’s something you should know about. Someone who can’t obtain comprehensive individual health insurance – especially in this economy – might be tempted to purchase one of the many lower-cost “affordable” plans out there.  These plans are frequently marketed through associations.

But experts say stay away because the premiums aren’t worth their limited coverage.

Consumer Reports tells the story about Susan Kelly, a 47-year-old Houston real-estate agent, said she had an individual “catastrophic hospital expense plan” through the National Association for the Self-Employed for about $650 a month. In 2004 she got a diagnosis of breast cancer. “The insurance covered my surgery and the three days I was in the hospital, and that was it,” she says. It didn’t cover tests, biopsy, or chemotherapy. She is paying off a $100,000 debt.

Here’s what Consumer Reports suggests to check in a plan:

  • Make sure it mentions all types of coverage, including hospitalization, in-patient and outpatient surgery, office visits, mental health care, physical therapy, and prescription drugs.
  • Avoid plans that set fixed dollar or number limits on visits, such as four visits per year or $500 per hospital day.

Look for disclaimers such as “This is not major medical coverage.” Avoid a plan that calls itself “limited benefit” insurance.

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Dec 22 2008

Why Tie Health Insurance to a Job?

Tag: Health InsuranceByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

This article taken from the Wall Street Journal posed an interesting question. What are your thoughts?

Not many people are buying cars built 60 years ago. No one is watching TV on a set manufactured in the 1940s. Patients are not lining up to see a doctor who hasn’t cracked a book since before the polio vaccine was discovered. Why, then, do millions of Americans get their health care through an employer-based system from the 1940s?

Employers didn’t start offering health benefits roughly 60 years ago because they were experts in medical decisions. It was a way of circumventing the World War II wage and price controls. Barred from offering higher salaries to attract workers, employers offered health insurance instead. Aided by an IRS ruling that said workers who received health benefits did not have to pay income taxes on them, and by the fact that employers could write off the cost of the health benefits as a business related expense, this accidental arrangement became the primary way most Americans access health care.

The system worked at first, but a lot has changed in 60 years. Back then, the average soldier returning from World War II took a job with a local company where he would work for decades until he got a gold watch at a big retirement party. Today, lifetime employment is dead. By 42, the average American will change jobs 11 times.

Sixty years ago, most American companies competed only against neighboring companies for lucrative contracts. Today, most businesses are up against foreign companies that don’t foot the bill for their employees’ health-care costs.

Today, health-care costs are increasing at twice the rate of inflation. To stay in the black, companies are forced to raise their employees’ premiums and deductibles, opt for cheaper insurance plans, or worse yet, drop health benefits altogether. Since 2000, the percentage of employers providing health insurance has declined by nearly 10%.

For too many, the employer-based system is inefficient. Each employer purchases health insurance separately. According to a recent estimate by the McKinsey Global Institute, this adds more than $75 billion in underwriting, marketing, sales, billing and other administrative costs that offer no health benefits. More than half of all American employers who offer health-care benefits don’t offer their employees a choice. Consequently, most Americans don’t have the option of giving their business to insurance companies that treat them well and only cover what they need. This prevents the usual market forces from holding down costs.

Workers are the ones paying for this waste. The money that employers are spending to buy health care for their employees could otherwise go to workers in the form of higher wages, empowering individuals to make their own health-care choices.

The currently available alternative to this employer-based system is even more horrifying. Individuals buying insurance don’t have the same purchasing power as large businesses and end up paying much higher prices to cover administrative costs and risks. They also don’t get the tax breaks that employers get for buying health insurance. In most states, insurance companies have the right to discriminate against individuals by denying coverage or charging astronomical prices to anyone with a pre-existing condition. It is no surprise that, when given the choice between the employer-based system and buying health insurance on their own, the vast majority of Americans reject the latter. (A Kaiser Health Tracking Poll this summer, for example, found that only 17% of Americans said they would prefer to buy insurance on their own.)

But this is a false choice. It assumes that the current system is the only option. Why can’t Americans have the best of both worlds?

Americans need some of the benefits of the employer-based system: the security of being part of a large group, of not being denied coverage because of age and pre-existing conditions, and the convenience of having experts screen qualified plans and manage enrollment. But Americans also need portable insurance — coverage that follows them when they change jobs, lose jobs, start a business or whatever else may come. Americans need more choices and the market power to buy the health coverage that works best for them and their families and, in turn, to make insurance companies compete for their business.

Such a system could be implemented today by creating state or regional insurance exchanges that pool individuals and small groups to pay the same lower prices charged to larger employers; that certify that all insurance benefit packages meet minimum consumer protection standards; that manage the enrollment process; that collect premiums; and that require insurance companies to issue and renew coverage for anyone who applies, protecting the insurers by paying them a risk-adjusted premium that pays them more when they enroll sicker, more costly, patients.

Fundamentally, this means that insurance companies would have to change their business model to compete on the basis of quality, price and benefits, rather than by “cherry picking” the healthiest people to cover. It means spending less money on administrative costs and more money on keeping patients healthy. And it means letting everyone keep the health insurance they have if that’s what they want, but giving all employers and employees more choices for their health care.

In the coming year, there will be no shortage of suggestions for fixing the nation’s health-care system. But what Americans and the president-elect need to ask is whether the health-care system that was founded in the 1940s is the best health-care system for the 21st century. We believe that Americans deserve better.

Dr. Emanuel, an oncologist and chairman of the department of bioethics at the National Institutes of Health, is author of “Healthcare, Guaranteed” (Public Affairs, 2008). Mr. Wyden, a Democrat, is a U.S. senator from Oregon and sponsor of The Healthy Americans Act.

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Nov 26 2008

eHealthInsurance’s Top 5 Tips for Open-Enrollment

Tag: Health Insurance, VideoByron Udell @ 3:07 pm

  1. Review Every Plan: Start reviewing every plan available from your employer now.  You may be able to choose a plan that would cost less if you were later required to pay the entire premium through COBRA. Always make sure that the plan you choose will cover the health care benefits you need for the coming year.
  2. Evaluate Premiums: Look at the premium for your current employer-sponsored plan and see if that premium is increasing. If saving on your monthly share of the premium is a priority, you may want to revisit this plan and opt for one of the less expensive plans available from your company’s benefits provider.
  3. Shop Smarter: Buy only what you need and potentially save on the monthly premium.  Choosing a high deductible plan is smart for some individuals and families because it typically reduces monthly premiums, but you must be prepared to pay the amount of the deductible in the coming year as health care needs arise.
  4. Compare with your Spouse: Check your spouse’s plan to see if the employee share of the premium is more or less than your plan. It may be more cost-effective to insure you or your family under their plan.
  5. Mix and Match: Depending on health conditions, it can be less expensive for certain family members to be on a separate plan than the employer-sponsored plan.  Do the math on separate policies if there are special needs.  It’s easy to price individual and family plans online.
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Nov 18 2008

Are you paying too much for health insurance?

Tag: Health InsuranceByron Udell @ 12:00 pm

eHealth, Inc., the parent company of eHealthInsurance, one of our preferred partners, recently announced the release of a new study on the individual health insurance market.
The analysis provides facts on actual premiums paid for individual health insurance and the nature of accompanying plan benefits. The research, based on a nationwide sample of over 227,000 individual and family major medical policies that were purchased through eHealthInsurance and active in August 2007, revealed the following insights:

– The average monthly premium for individual policies was $158

– The average premium for family policies was $366

– The average deductible for individual policies was $1,972

– The average deductible for family policies was $2,610

– The majority of family policies had annual premiums between $3,400 and $4,650

– Half of all individual policy holders paid less than $130 per month for monthly premiums

– More than half of all family policy holders paid less than $300 per month for monthly premiums

– Women paid, on average, 18% more than men did for individual health insurance premiums

– The average plan lifetime limit was $3.9 million(1)

– A vast majority of individual and family policyholders had lab x-ray, emergency, prescription and chiropractic coverage

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