Glossary of Insurance Terms:
25 Health Insurance Terms You Should Know
Capitation A method of paying
medical providers through a pre-paid, flat monthly fee for each
covered person. The payment is independent of the number of services
received or the costs incurred by a provider in furnishing those
services.
COBRA The Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985, commonly known as COBRA, requires group
health plans with 20 or more employees to offer continued health
coverage for you and your dependents for 18 months after you leave
your job. Longer durations of continuance are available under certain
circumstances. If you opt to continue coverage, you must pay the
entire premium, plus a two percent administration charge.
Coinsurance The amount you are
required to pay for medical care in a fee-for-service plan or preferred
provider organization (PPO) after you have met your deductible.
The coinsurance rate is usually expressed as a percentage of billed
charges. For example, if the insurance company pays 80 percent of
the claim, you pay 20 percent.
Copayment A cost sharing arrangement
in which a person pays a specific charge for a specific medical
service -- say $20 for an office visit or $10 for a prescription.
Deductible The amount of money
you must pay upfront each year to cover your medical care expenses
before your insurance policy starts paying.
Exclusions Specific conditions
or circumstances for which the policy will not provide benefits.
Fee-for-Service A payment system for
health care where the provider is paid for each service rendered.
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)
Prepaid health plans in which you pay a monthly premium and the
HMO covers your doctors' visits, hospital stays, emergency care,
surgery, preventive care, checkups, lab tests, X-rays, and therapy.
You must choose a primary care physician who coordina tes all of
your care and makes referrals to any specialists you might need.
In an HMO, you must use the doctors, hospitals and clinics that
participate in your plan's network.
Lifetime Limit A cap on the benefits
paid under a policy. Many policies have a lifetime limit of $1 million,
which means that the insurer agrees to cover up to $1 million in
covered services over the life of the policy.
Managed Care An organized
way to manage costs, use, and quality of the health care system.
The major types of managed care plans are health maintenance organizations
(HMOs), point-of-service (POS) plans and preferred provider organizations
(PPOs).
Medicaid A joint federal-state
health insurance program that is run by the states and covers certain
low-income people (especially children and pregnant women), and
disabled people.
Medicare The federally sponsored
health insurance program of hospital and medical insurance primarily
for people age 65 and over.
Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs now called Archer
MSA's) These health insurance plans provide incentives for
individuals to replace high premium, low-deductible policies with
affordable, high deductible catastrophic coverage. Premiums for
this coverage are lower and the savings may be used to fund a tax-pre
ferred medical savings account from which you can pay on a pre-tax
basis for qualified medical care and expenses, including annual
deductibles and copayments.
Out of-Pocket Maximum The most money
you will be required to pay in a year for deductibles and coinsurance.
It is a stated dollar amount set by the insurance company, in addition
to regular premiums.
Point-of-Service (POS) Plan A type of
managed care plan combining features of health maintenance organizations
(HMOs) and preferred provider organizations (PPOs), in which individuals
decide whether to go to a network provider and pay a flat dollar
copayment (say $10 for a docto r's visit), or to an out-of-network
provider and pay a deductible and/or a coinsurance charge.
Portability The ability for an
individual to transfer from one health insurer to another health
insurer with regard to pre-existing conditions or other risk factors.
Pre-authorization A cost
containment feature of many group medical policies whereby the insured
must contact the insurer prior to a hospitalization or surgery and
receive authorization for the service.
Pre-existing Condition A health
problem that existed before the date your insurance became effective.
Many insurance plans will not cover preexisting conditions. Some
will cover them only after a waiting period.
Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)
A network of health care providers with which a health insurer has
negotiated contracts for its insured population to receive health
services at discounted costs. Health care decisions generally remain
with the patient as he or she selects providers and determines his
or her own need for services. Patients have financial incentives
to select providers within the PPO network.
Premium The amount you or your employer
pays in exchange for insurance coverage.
Primary Care Physician Under a health
maintenance organization (HMO) or point-of-service (POS) plan, usually
your first contact for health care. This is often a family physician,
internist, or pediatrician. A primary care physician monitors your
health, treats most health p roblems, and refers you to specialists
if necessary.
Provider Any person (doctor or nurse)
or institution (hospital, clinic, or laboratory) that provides medical
care.
Third-Party Payer Any payer of health
care services other than you. This can be an insurance company,
an HMO, a PPO, or the federal government.
Usual and Customary Charge The amount
a health plan will recognize for payment for a particular medical
procedure. It is typically based on what is considered "reasonable"
for that procedure in your service area.
Utilization Review A cost control
mechanism by which the appropriateness, necessity, and quality of
health care services are monitored by both insurers and employers.
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