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How To Avoid A Medical Financial Disaster |
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The inability to pay mounting
medical bills was the main cause for filing
nearly half of all personal bankruptcies in
2004, according to a study recently released
by Harvard University’s medical and law
schools. So what can you do to avoid a financial
disaster due to medical expenses?
Don’t assume
you’re not vulnerable. Just because
you have health insurance doesn’t mean
you’re not at financial risk. In a surprise
finding, the study learned that 76 percent of
the households that filed for bankruptcy because
they couldn’t pay their medical bills
had health insurance when their illnesses began.
In fact, the study said the
majority of the filers were middle-income homeowners.
The problem for many was that they lost their
employer-provided medical coverage when they
lost their job due to the illness. With no paycheck,
and mounting medical bills, they frequently
turned to credit cards to try to keep themselves
afloat, and eventually they could never recover
financially.
Try to maintain coverage.
Even if you lose your job, try to maintain medical
coverage. One option is COBRA, a federal program
that requires most employers to allow workers
covered under group plans to continue that coverage
for up to 18 months after loss of employment.
The downside is that the worker
must pay the entire premium, plus administrative
costs, which can be very difficult if you’ve
lost your job. The upside is that it can keep
major medical bills from piling up and it requires
your next employer’s insurance company
to cover you regardless of pre-existing conditions—something
an individual policy probably won’t do.
Build an emergency
fund. One way to help pay the COBRA
premium or high co-pays and deductibles under
current employer coverage is to have an emergency
cash reserve in place before a catastrophe strikes.
Build the reserve (to cover three to six months
bare-bones living expenses) through judicious
budgeting and diverting any extra income.
Don’t skip coverage.
Nearly a third of Americans under the
age of 65 went without health insurance for
a part or all of the two-year period from 2002–2003,
according to Families USA. Two-thirds of them
went six months or longer without coverage.
Some households truly can’t afford their
own coverage if it’s not offered through
work, but others who can afford the coverage
skip it just to “save money.” Don’t
go without.
Know your plan’s coverage.
If your plan lists approved doctors and hospitals,
study it so there are no surprises later. Using
providers not on the approved list, for example,
can significantly increase out-of-pocket expenses.
Know which services are and
are not covered by you policy, and what the
lifetime limits are of the coverage. Talk to
your human resources department if necessary.
The Harvard study found that
unreimbursed medical bills often piled up even
for people with coverage due to high co-pays
and deductibles, and unreimbursed expenses such
as prescription drugs and physical therapy.
The average out-of-pocket medical costs for
those filing for bankruptcy ran $11,854, according
to the Harvard study. This is where an emergency
fund can make the difference between solvency
and bankruptcy.
Don’t be rejected. If
the insurance company declines to pay for a
particular expense, appeal the decline, and
be persistent.
Don’t automatically choose
the “cheapest plan.” It may leave
serious gaps in coverage and actually be more
expensive in the long run. For example, a plan
with smaller co-pays and lower deductible or
specific coverage—even though the premiums
are higher—may make sense if you anticipate
certain medical needs, such as starting a family.
Use flexible spending accounts.
Employer-sponsored FSAs allow you to contribute
pre-tax dollars from your paycheck into an account
to later pay for co-pays, deductibles, and qualified
medical expenses not covered by insurance. The
downside is that any money in the FSA that you
don’t use during the year is forfeited,
so you need to conservatively estimate your
anticipated expenses.
Coordinate coverage. Spouses
often carry separate coverage at work. It may
be less expensive to carry both under one plan,
or at least be sure the plans don’t duplicate
coverage. Otherwise, you’re wasting dollars
you could stash in that emergency fund.
Improve your health. While
you can’t always prevent a financially
devastating illness, you can reduce your chances
of a serious medical problem by staying healthy
and minimizing risky behavior.
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