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PostPosted: Tue Feb 16, 2010 11:01 am 
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Good article from Megan McArdle on what exactly healthcare insurance means in relation to what resources you have, this part in particular resonated with me:

http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/arc ... enefit.php

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But the answer as to why I have health insurance is simple: my employer pays for it. If my employer didn't pay for it, I wouldn't have it. I'd buy a catastrophic policy from a reputable insurer to cover any amount that might bankrupt me, and self-insure for everything else. That would probably cost me a little more than what I pay The Atlantic for my first-dollar coverage, so I opt for the first-dollar coverage. It's not like I get the money The Atlantic is spending on my benefits back if I choose to go without.

But do I think I would be noticeably more likely to die if I did give up my policy? Certainly not for the next twenty years, because I am unlikely to get cancer much before 65, and everything else that might kill me would be treated on an emergent basis, where insurance probably wouldn't affect my outcomes nearly as much as the fact that I am an upper middle class professional with a (soon to be) husband who writes about health care policy for a living and a father who used to work for the New York City health and hospitals corporation, both of whom will no doubt be sitting on top of the doctors and the hospital bureaucracy to make sure I get excellent care. At 65 I qualify for Medicare, if it hasn't bankrupted the government.


and

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I have immense resources at my disposal, most of them non-monetary. There are many ways in which I would like to even out those differences, but privilege cannot be transferred into someone else's checking account.


The whole things is good though, read it at the link above.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 22, 2010 9:39 pm 
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There's no point in putting out an opposition health bill, because a certain house speaker is unlikely to give it any air time. This is how a bill to audit the fed that has over 200 sponsors fails to see the light of day.

Now I hope we have real debate on Thursday rather than just the President preaching at us for the most part and a couple of people backing him up.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:25 am 
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Catastrophic coverage plus a health savings account is really the best option. The government could even pay for the catastrophic coverage, because it's really cheap. Doctors will give you massive discounts if you pay cash. I'm really starting to lend towards this option myself, because I've discovered that all the things I have 50% coverage for on my health insurance are really useless. If you offer to pay cash, they will often give you the treatment for close to half price anyway. Then when you consider an HSA is also tax-deductible there's really no contest.

The problem is the vast majority of Americans don't have the self-discipline to actually save any money for these things. They'll get sick and have to pay $10k out of pocket and then complain that their health care is terrible.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 8:37 am 
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I have an HSA and I think it's a great option for many people. I agree with you though X, people wont pay into it and then complain later. Really, what is my obligation to people like that? Why should I care if they dont?

Sort of along those lines:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 72742.html

Quote:
Mr. Emanuel, who had long advocated for a smaller health-care bill, argued that the state of play in Congress did not favor the Democrats’ sweeping legislation, which was helping drive down Mr. Obama’s approval ratings, one person involved in the talks said…

White House senior adviser David Axelrod was among those to articulate the arguments for moving forward with the comprehensive approach, in conference calls with congressional leaders and elsewhere, according to Democrats familiar with the debate, though the senior White House aide said he did not take sides in the central legislative strategy debate.

The president explored a scaled-back approach and asked his staff to examine areas of broad political agreement, according to congressional aides involved in the process. The exercise quickly pointed to a practical problem: You could not make incremental changes that were politically popular without pursuing the whole package.

For instance, Republicans and Democrats agree they should prevent insurers from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions. But without a mandate requiring healthy people to buy coverage, insurers would wind up with a slew of sick customers without healthy ones to balance them out. That would likely lead to either soaring premiums or a bankrupt industry.


Who would get comprehensive insurance if you could just pick it up once you actually got sick? You'd grab some cheap basic coverage and let it ride or pay out of pocket. Of course that'd lead to bankrupt companies or insanely high premiums.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 8:41 am 
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Other than minor issues with portability, the major issue remains Medicaid and Medicare, as they set billing standards and payment standards.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 9:06 am 
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Which nobody will touch.

Way too easy to demagogue and old people vote in high percentages.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 9:43 am 
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Dash wrote:
I have an HSA and I think it's a great option for many people. I agree with you though X, people wont pay into it and then complain later. Really, what is my obligation to people like that? Why should I care if they dont?


Don't you have to spend everything in your HSA by years end?

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 9:44 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
Dash wrote:
I have an HSA and I think it's a great option for many people. I agree with you though X, people wont pay into it and then complain later. Really, what is my obligation to people like that? Why should I care if they dont?


Don't you have to spend everything in your HSA by years end?


No. You can use it the next year. Also if you switch to a different healthcare provider, you can transfer the funds.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 10:23 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
Dash wrote:
I have an HSA and I think it's a great option for many people. I agree with you though X, people wont pay into it and then complain later. Really, what is my obligation to people like that? Why should I care if they dont?


Don't you have to spend everything in your HSA by years end?

You're thinking FSA, or Flexible Spending Account. That usually requires you to spend all funds by the end of the year (or March, depending on the kind of plan). HSA is a Health Savings Account. On top of paying a health insurance premium, money is deposited into a permanent account, sometimes with an employer match, up to a certain maximum. The money sits there until you use it all. The only thing that sucks about moving to this plan is the first couple years while you build up your padding. If you have a bad year or two, its really gonna hurt if you don't already have up ancillary savings somewhere else.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 10:27 am 
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Screeling wrote:
You're thinking FSA, or Flexible Spending Account. That usually requires you to spend all funds by the end of the year (or March, depending on the kind of plan). HSA is a Health Savings Account. On top of paying a health insurance premium, money is deposited into a permanent account, sometimes with an employer match, up to a certain maximum. The money sits there until you use it all. The only thing that sucks about moving to this plan is the first couple years while you build up your padding. If you have a bad year or two, its really gonna hurt if you don't already have up ancillary savings somewhere else.

Actually, a really bad year or two is one of two points where the plan makes the most sense, since you have an absolute max outlay, which at $2700, is probably no more or less than you would pay in co-pays and other expenses for a single hospital stay plus a doctor's appointment or two. After that amount, everything is covered.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 10:33 am 
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Ladas wrote:
Screeling wrote:
You're thinking FSA, or Flexible Spending Account. That usually requires you to spend all funds by the end of the year (or March, depending on the kind of plan). HSA is a Health Savings Account. On top of paying a health insurance premium, money is deposited into a permanent account, sometimes with an employer match, up to a certain maximum. The money sits there until you use it all. The only thing that sucks about moving to this plan is the first couple years while you build up your padding. If you have a bad year or two, its really gonna hurt if you don't already have up ancillary savings somewhere else.

Actually, a really bad year or two is one of two points where the plan makes the most sense, since you have an absolute max outlay, which at $2700, is probably no more or less than you would pay in co-pays and other expenses for a single hospital stay plus a doctor's appointment or two. After that amount, everything is covered.

I dunno, I still look at that as a lot of money. :)

The other plans my work offers don't have that kind of deductible before the 100% kicks in.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 10:51 am 
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Oh, its a lot of money, no question. I was just making the point that the two points at which the HSA with a HD plan work is someone that never gets sick, or someone that is in terrible health. The in between people are stuck, kind of, because there isn't as much advantage in the cost savings (outside of premiums) of a HD plan over a PPO.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 12:57 pm 
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Ladas wrote:
Oh, its a lot of money, no question. I was just making the point that the two points at which the HSA with a HD plan work is someone that never gets sick, or someone that is in terrible health. The in between people are stuck, kind of, because there isn't as much advantage in the cost savings (outside of premiums) of a HD plan over a PPO.

Your deductible resets every year no? So if you have a chronic condition or get a serious long-term illness then every year you are responsible for that deductible without the ability to replenish your HSA right?

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:16 pm 
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Hopwin wrote:
Your deductible resets every year no? So if you have a chronic condition or get a serious long-term illness then every year you are responsible for that deductible without the ability to replenish your HSA right?

Yes, the deductable on your HDHP resets annually just like it does for a PPO.

That said, an HSA isn't exclusive to a HDHP. You can also have an HSA in conjunction with your typical PPO. And don't think of your HSA as a long term savings account or retirement account (though it can become one if you are overall healthy). It is intended to be a means by which to use pre-tax money to pay for medical care, as opposed to post-tax money. If you are healthy and your annual expenditures don't exceed your contributions, then that tax free money rolls over (and probably earns tax free interest while in the account). And currently, I believe the max annual contribution to an HSA is slightly higher than the max annual medical expenditure (I believe for our plan, the max contribution is $2,900 for an individual while the max annual medical cost is $2,750).

One other thing, your HSA is not directly tied to your HDHP or PPO in terms of what you can use for reimbursement. You can also use those pre-tax dollars for the purchase of many over the counter or subscriptions, such as aspirin, eye glasses, contacts, etc. The argument there of course, is that if you have those annual expenses, it is in your benefit to put that money into the account and get reimbursed for the expenses when they occur. As long as the expenses are medical (there is a list of what counts and what doesn't from the Fed gov), the reimbursements are tax-free. If you end up using the money for non-medical reasons, those funds have to be claimed as income on your tax statements when you file the next year (maybe penalties associated similiar to an IRA, since an HSA is basically a 529 or IRA).


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:28 pm 
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Screeling wrote:
I dunno, I still look at that as a lot of money. :)

The other plans my work offers don't have that kind of deductible before the 100% kicks in.


But you probably pay a premium for that plan no? In my case, it's pay 2500ish in premiums for the plan or... go HSA, pay a tiny premium (500 bucks I think it was) and contribute money to my account tax free. Not to mention my company kicked in 1000.00 bucks for the HSA last year. Then if I dont use it, I get to keep it. Not so with the premium, you pay that no matter what obviously. So:

Traditional plan: 2500.00 premium. No deductible. 10-15$ co-pays etc.
HSA: 500.00 Premium. Company gives me 1000.00 (similar to a 401k match kinda thing). I have them take out 2500.00 from my paycheck tax free to go into this account. If I use it I use it, if I dont I keep it.

Great deal for me. Guy at work uses it too and he has an existing medical condition so he knows he's gonna be paying money. He used the HSA too and it's working for him.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 1:33 pm 
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Dash wrote:
But you probably pay a premium for that plan no? In my case, it's pay 2500ish in premiums for the plan or... go HSA, pay a tiny premium (500 bucks I think it was) and contribute money to my account tax free. Not to mention my company kicked in 1000.00 bucks for the HSA last year.

When we first offered the HDHP, because the premium for the plan was less than the traditional PPO, to keep everyone's benefits package the same in value, the company contributed the difference between the two premiums into the HSA of those that opted to join the HDHP. The first couple years it amounted to around $1,000.


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 2:28 pm 
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Dash wrote:
Screeling wrote:
I dunno, I still look at that as a lot of money. :)

The other plans my work offers don't have that kind of deductible before the 100% kicks in.


But you probably pay a premium for that plan no? In my case, it's pay 2500ish in premiums for the plan or... go HSA, pay a tiny premium (500 bucks I think it was) and contribute money to my account tax free. Not to mention my company kicked in 1000.00 bucks for the HSA last year. Then if I dont use it, I get to keep it. Not so with the premium, you pay that no matter what obviously. So:

Well, insurance through my work was a rip-off. The HSA plan through BCBS was about half to 70% the PPO plan without any money being paid into it. They were both rip-offs anyway for what you got, so we went with my wife's insurance instead. Mine used to be better when we first got married. Now her insurance is TONS better.

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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 2:32 pm 
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Just to clarify for those not familiar with the acronyms, an HSA is not an insurance plan. it is a tax free account where the funds are earmarked for medical expenses.

High Deductible Health Plans and PPOs are insurance plans generally offered through private employers.


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