Brian Gruss - Insurance Planner
…Has Your Best Interests at Heart
Health
Insurance Terms
Agent
Advisors who work with you to assess your insurance needs and
help plan for long-term financial security and stability. Brian
Gruss is an agent.
Balance billing
A bill for the difference between what your insurer will pay and
what the physician charges for a service.
Coinsurance
The amount you are required to pay for medical care in a fee-for-service
plan and certain managed care plans after you have met your deductible.
The coinsurance rate is usually expressed as a percentage. For
example, if the insurance company pays 80 percent of the claim,
you pay 20 percent.
Coordination
of benefits
A system to eliminate duplication of benefits when you are covered
under more than one group plan. Benefits under the two plans are
usually limited to no more than 100 percent of the claim.
Copayment
A way of sharing medical costs. You pay a flat fee every time
you receive a medical service (for example, $20 for every visit
to the doctor). The insurance company pays the rest.
Covered expenses
Most insurance plans, whether they are fee-for-service or managed
care plans, do not pay for all services. Some may not pay for
prescription drugs. Others may not pay for mental health care.
Covered services are those medical procedures the insurer agrees
to pay for. They are listed in the policy.
Deductible
The amount of money you must pay each year to cover your medical
care expenses before your insurance policy starts paying. On some
plans the deductable is waved for certain benefits.
Exclusions
Specific conditions or circumstances for which the policy will
not provide benefits.
Managed care
The way a health care system manages costs, use, and quality.
All HMOs and PPOs, and even many fee-for-service plans, apply
managed care techniques.
Maximum out-of-pocket
The maximum amount money you will be required pay a year for deductibles
and coinsurance. It is a stated dollar amount set by the insurance
company, in addition to regular premiums. After you have met this
out-of-pocket maximum, your plan turns into a catastrophic plan
and pays 100% until the end of the calendar year.
Noncancellable
policy
A policy that guarantees that you will receive insurance as long
as you pay the premium. This is also known as a guaranteed renewable
policy.
Preexisting
condition
A health problem that existed before the date your insurance coverage
became effective.
Premium
The amount you or your employer pay, in addition to copayments,
coinsurance and deductibles, in exchange for insurance coverage.
Primary care
physician
A primary care physician monitors your health, diagnoses and treats
minor health problems, and refers you to specialists if another
level of care is needed.
Provider
Any person (doctor, nurse, dentist) or institution (hospital or
clinic) that provides medical care.
Third-party
payer
Any payer for health care services other than you. This can be
an insurance company, an HMO, a PPO, or the Federal Government.
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