What to do if you can’t get or afford Health Insurance?

Posted on 7 March 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

With the threat of individual health insurance plans in California potentially being kicked out of the state for possible non-compliance with the state laws, some people with individual health insurance policies are probably holding their breath in hopes to have reasonably priced health insurance that will still cover them.

Read the rest of this entry »

  • Share/Bookmark
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • COBRA premium reduction I'm going to divert from my usual ramblings and talk about the staggering (to me, at least) implications of the COBRA premium reduction. First of all, what is COBRA?  From Wikipedia:  "The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985... is...
  • Top 10 reasons I'm glad Bush is President- a satire. Feel free to add your thoughts in the comments section and I will add them to the list! 1. Constant entertainment. Did you happen to watch his speech at the NAACP? Better than any show on Comedy Central. I especially...
  • New flu strikes lungs: WHO The World Health Organization (WHO) has acknowledged what regular readers of Health Spectator already knew: that the "new" H1N1 swine flu has a tendency to devastate the lungs in at least a significant portion of the people it infects. We...
  • 4 Habits for Saving Money on Routine Family Medical Care The following guest column is from Paul at www.healthharbor.com.  HealthHarbor is a site devote to helping people be smarter consumers of healthcare.  It provides ideas and guidance on saving money on healthcare, getting the most from your health coverage, and...
  • Customizing a Budget It is a good idea for you to put together your own unique budget work sheet when it comes to getting started in setting up a budget for your household. Make sure that the categories and the information that you...

Health Care Fit for Animals – NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF New York Times

Posted on 2 September 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

Health Care Fit for Animals

A most interesting and insightful article and op ed by Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times

Is it accurate and insightful or just slighted propaganda ?
The analogy of the  lines and lines of would be ( or denied ) patients at a Tennessee fair grounds – waiting to be assessed or treated is certainly a stark monument to the tales of American private health care – certainly when one invokes the proof source of the Micheal Moore landmark film Sikko, yet one wonders as well at the rigid and self serving bureaucracies of the medical care systems of such countries with  “socialized “  or state run medical care systems – such as Canada or Britain who would downright deny and forbid these patients to have any alternative health care by any means.  Indeed “private ” operations might well be shut down , or worse their professionals chastised and punished by any of a number of means.

The expression in the former Communist Soviet Unions was “They pretend to pay us …. we pretend to work”  along with the maxim everyone had a job but no one could eat ( properly).   That was except for the Communist party bosses.

Opponents suggest that a “government takeover” of health care will be a milestone on the road to “socialized medicine,” and when he hears those terms, Wendell Potter cringes. He’s embarrassed that opponents are using a playbook that he helped devise.

“Over the years I helped craft this messaging and deliver it,” he noted.

Mr. Potter was an executive in the health insurance industry for nearly 20 years before his conscience got the better of him. He served as head of corporate communications for Humana and then for Cigna.

He flew in corporate jets to industry meetings to plan how to block health reform, he says. He rode in limousines to confabs to concoct messaging to scare the public about reform. But in his heart, he began to have doubts as the business model for insurance evolved in recent years from spreading risk to dumping the risky.

Then in 2007 Mr. Potter attended a premiere of “Sicko,” Michael Moore’s excoriating film about the American health care system. Mr. Potter was taking notes so that he could prepare a propaganda counterblast — but he found himself agreeing with a great deal of the film.

A month later, Mr. Potter was back home in Tennessee, visiting his parents, and dropped in on a three-day charity program at a county fairgrounds to provide medical care for patients who could not afford doctors. Long lines of people were waiting in the rain, and patients were being examined and treated in public in stalls intended for livestock.

“It was a life-changing event to witness that,” he remembered. Increasingly, he found himself despising himself for helping block health reforms. “It sounds hokey, but I would look in the mirror and think, how did I get into this?”

Mr. Potter loved his office, his executive salary, his bonus, his stock options. “How can I walk away from a job that pays me so well?” he wondered. But at the age of 56, he announced his retirement and left Cigna last year.

This year, he went public with his concerns, testifying before a Senate committee investigating the insurance industry.

“I knew that once I did that my life would be different,” he said. “I wouldn’t be getting any more calls from recruiters for the health industry. It was the scariest thing I have done in my life. But it was the right thing to do.”

Mr. Potter says he liked his colleagues and bosses in the insurance industry, and respected them. They are not evil. But he adds that they are removed from the consequences of their decisions, as he was, and are obsessed with sustaining the company’s stock price — which means paying fewer medical bills.

One way to do that is to deny requests for expensive procedures. A second is “rescission” — seizing upon a technicality to cancel the policy of someone who has been paying premiums and finally gets cancer or some other expensive disease. A Congressional investigation into rescission found that three insurers, including Blue Cross of California, used this technique to cancel more than 20,000 policies over five years, saving the companies $300 million in claims.

As The Los Angeles Times has reported, insurers encourage this approach through performance evaluations. One Blue Cross employee earned a perfect evaluation score after dropping thousands of policyholders who faced nearly $10 million in medical expenses.

Mr. Potter notes that a third tactic is for insurers to raise premiums for a small business astronomically after an employee is found to have an illness that will be very expensive to treat. That forces the business to drop coverage for all its employees or go elsewhere.

All this is monstrous, and it negates the entire point of insurance, which is to spread risk.

The insurers are open to one kind of reform — universal coverage through mandates and subsidies, so as to give them more customers and more profits. But they don’t want the reforms that will most help patients, such as a public insurance option, enforced competition and tighter regulation.

Mr. Potter argues that much tougher regulation is essential. He also believes that a robust public option is an essential part of any health reform, to compete with for-profit insurers and keep them honest.

As a nation, we’re at a turning point. Universal health coverage has been proposed for nearly a century in the United States. It was in an early draft of Social Security.

Yet each time, it has been defeated in part by fear-mongering industry lobbyists. That may happen this time as well — unless the Obama administration and Congress defeat these manipulative special interests. What’s un-American isn’t a greater government role in health care but an existing system in which Americans without insurance get health care, if at all, in livestock pens.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/27/opinion/27kristof.html?em=&pagewanted=print

  • Share/Bookmark
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • Saving money on health care Like Tricia at Blogging Away Debt, I spent some time this weekend reading Fred Brock's latest book, Health Care on Less Than You Think, so that I could review it. Of course, I had another big motive as well: finding...
  • Fred Brock's Health Care on Less Than You Think The publishers were kind enough to send a review copy to me.  It's a good book, so here's a review!  (No other strings except the complimentary copy of the book.)Fred Brock's Health Care on Less Than You Think is an...
  • Senate OK's Health Care Bill in Victory for Obama In an epic struggle settled at dawn, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed health care legislation Thursday, a triumph for President Barack Obama that clears the way for compromise talks with the House on a bill to reduce the ranks of the...
  • Remote Area Medical provides free health care in U.S. Remote Area Medical (RAM), founded by Stan Brock, is a foundation that provides free medical care to remote parts of the world---including the United States. For 20 years now, RAM has provided free medical service to people in Wise County,...
  • Hard Truth Week in Review - Health Care Whining Edition Our local paper ran yet another article featuring the stories of those who do not have health care insurance. The reporter undercuts the merits of the story by including the whinings of this woman who says she can't afford health...

Local Health Care Insurance Utilization of Medical Tourism

Posted on 19 September 2008 in Uncategorized by admin

What is interesting to note is that even the medical insurance industry has now stepped into the act of evaluation , promotion and use of medical tourism both as a cost saving and queue shortening procedure..
Some will say that the basic tactic and reputation of insurance companies is to gladly accept insurance premiums while trying to shirk or avoid payouts.  While this is not true, it is true that as if with any business profitability is key.   Thus any cost savings or reductions are highly powered for any insurance provider or company due to its very powerful effect on the bottom line.  Any cost savings are money earned for the firm.  The one major concern to medical insurance providers who utilize medical tourism in an effort to save costs is prevention of any additional costs – whether it is for additional therapy when the patient returns home and has problems, or even of lawsuits.  For patients themselves it can be a nightmare.  The foreign medical care may be protected first by actual geographic and cost logistics, their legal and / or medical system and the costs of conducting legal actions in the far away foreign country.  As a result the first actions of unhappy or ill treated medical tourists who have been sent for far away medical care by their health care insurance company is to seek redress from their insurance provider.
As a result health care insurance companies have shied away from using medical tourism and medical tourist facilities – at least until the cost structure more than justified it.

Medical Tourism Medical Tourism

Winnipeg Auto Finance Cost Savings

www.mmedsolution.com



  • Share/Bookmark
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • 50 Ways to Leave you Richer -- Part V iz Pulliam Weston posts an article on 50 Ways to Trim your Budget. The points in this series of posts will be taken from her list in this article. This installment will address insurance, tax, and medical costs. I hope...
  • Building Your Own Gym At Home pt 1 Why spend all that money on a gym membership when you end up making up excuses not to go every week? Why not build your own home gym where you can work out comfortably in your own home? Here is...
  • Medical Insurance: Review Your Coverage for the New Year The beginning of a new calendar year is an important time for medical insurance. Since several components of your coverage hinge around the calendar year, this is a great time to evaluate your coverage and make sure that you understand...
  • Open Enrollment Time As the new year comes hurtling closer and closer, many people find themselves faced with making some major decisions about their healthcare choices. For a great deal of employers, the first of the year marks the advent of their health...
  • Florida Homeowner Insurance - January Special Session I have been writing about the current situation in Florida with rising homeowner insurance costs.  Governor elect Charlie Crist and the legislature will be having a special session in January to address some of the issues with the insurance rates...

Medical Treatment Costs – A Relative View

Posted on 14 September 2008 in Uncategorized by admin

 

                    To many overseas , or even in Canada , the concept of not being provided with medical care – uninsured or not insured , or not being able to afford medical care may sound unlikely or even preposterous.   Yet it is the sad fact for many in the United States.  On top of that health care costs themselves in the U.S. compared to other places are relatively much higher.   This is said to be the result of many causes – not one in themeselves.    It costs money to run a business – especially in the states.  Doctors not only have to be paid relatively large pay scales compared to the U.K., Europe and Canada and yet their costs are not small .   Doctors have to pay substantial costs for health care insurance due to the plague or almost an industry of lawsuits against them.  It is said that having 2 lawyers in a town increases the total costs of legal services and  total services used immensely .  Imagine a whole industry based on seeking lawsuits against medical practitioners.  Its defensive medical system at its finest.  On top of that add other costs – costs of modern equipment , running a hospital often with unionized staff .  On more point is the cost of administration – both in the medical insurance plans and companies for administration and non payment and collection of bills to doctors.

                    What is interesting is that even though patients and health care consumers in other countries with socialized or public health care believe all in all that their healthcare is “free”  even though they may be subsidizing it greatly with tax dollars either specifically collected for that purpose or from general tax accounts – from say gasoline taxes or income taxes.

                  Even though these citizens may be astounded that someone in America will gladly pay for medical treatment in their countries the actual consumer may see it as a tremendous bargain and value when all costs are counted up.   Its similar to a Canadian citizen making a special trip to farwaway Texas or Florida to purchase a automobile to bring it back to Canada.  Even though the car may be manufactured in Canada under free trade Nafta rules when it is all said and done they may be greatly ahead in the bargain – even when including travel as well as other costs.  To boot they even get a sort of vacation away from home during the cold Canadian winter.   The Canadian car industry may not like it , however you cannot  “have your cake and it too”.  If these local north american industries wish to benefit from the economies of scale that a free larger market provides for , they cannot pick and choose what rules and procedures they wish to follow and which they don’t.  The only people in the equation who may be perplexed may well be the customs officers at the Canadian border who when finding that even when the rules are followed , they cannot stop the process.  It is all perfectly legal and proper.  If the customs agent was not suave enough to use those same rules – and even contacts to obtain a similar bargain that is their issue and not one of the thorough and determined modern consumer.

<p><a href=’http://www.pressreleasepoint.com/nip-and-tuck-solutions-take-price-medical-tourism-down-under’>Nip and Tuck Solutions take the price of Medical Tourism Down …</a> – This is the age of affordable international travel and with it has come the rise of medical tourism and healthcare. Nip and Tuck Solutions Australia has seen a dramatic increase in demand for Medical tourism services for Australian …</p>
<p><a href=’http://www.groundreport.com/article.php?articleID=2872902&offset=2′>GroundReport | Malaysia | Medical Tourism an extra advantage to …</a> – As healthcare becomes increasingly expensive, savvy patients are now looking to Medical Tourism as a cost-effective alternative to receiving medical treatment and Malaysia stands out to be the best option available. …</p>
<p><a href=’http://malaysiahotelnews.blogspot.com/2008/11/medical-tourism-feeling-slight-pain.html’>Malaysia Hotel News: Medical tourism feeling slight pain from turmoil</a> – Mahkota Medical Centre Sdn Bhd chief executive officer Francis Lim was of the view that Malacca could gain from the slowdown. “We may benefit as we still have price advantage over Singapore … unless Singapore adjusts their prices …</p>
<p><a href=’http://www.buzzle.com/articles/the-danger-of-medical-tourism.html’>The Danger of Medical Tourism!</a> – What can appear to be an attractive and relatively cheap prospect for those considering some form of plastic surgery, can often turn into an expensive nightmare. The perils of medical tourism. The Danger of Medical Tourism!.</p>
<p><a href=’http://medicalnewstodayblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/wellpoint-pilot-program-will-provide.html’>Medical News Today: WellPoint Pilot Program Will Provide Coverage …</a> – “It allows the customers to have choice,” Hashmi said, adding, “Certainly the cost difference is striking enough for some procedures.” According to the Star, the proliferation of medical tourism programs like WellPoint’s could “create …</p>
<p><a href=’http://indolac.wordpress.com/2008/11/25/medical-tourism-to-india-all-expenses-paid/’>Medical Tourism to India, All Expenses Paid</a> – In January, Serigraph Inc., a West Bend, Wis., manufacturer, will become the first US company of any size to embrace medical travel or medical tourism, offering employees the option of having certain nonemergency operations, …</p>

 

 

Medical Tourism Medical Tourism

Travel Room Hotel Room Rooms

SEO Bid Directory

www.mmedsolution.com

 

 

Global economic recession: A blessing for Indian medical tourism ... - According to Ankur Bharti, consultant, Technopak Health, cost-cutting would be the main growth driver for the country’s medical tourism this year. “Cost-cutting would be the main reason why more international patients would come to ...

Tourism plan forms part of Oman commercial growth - Travel ... - Tourism plan forms part of Oman commercial growth. by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on Tuesday, 02 December 2008. HOTEL PLAN: Omran has signed a deal with IHG to build a new ...

  • Share/Bookmark
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • Medical and Health Insurance Premiums: Finding Deductions As we age and pay off our mortgages, it seems that baby boomers and retirees are less likely to itemize deductions. On the other hand, this stage in our lives can introduce new sources of deductions that we may not...
  • Medical Treatment And Your Credit It’s a common theme on the news and in the papers, the cost of virtually everything is going up and more and more families are finding it harder to keep up with monthly expenses, let alone what happens in an...
  • Checklist: Calculating the Total Cost of an IP Phone System Checklist: Calculating the Total Cost of an IP Phone System TCO involves everything from network preparation to maintenance to bandwidth costs. by Robert Poe | January 20, 2009    Knowing what you're going to have to spend on a new IP...
  • Unclaimed Perks On Your Reward Credit Card? They May Cost More Soon Are you holding a lot of points or rewards on your reward credit card?  If so, you may want to carefully consider turning in those points or redeeming the rewards that you have earned soon.  With new credit card rules...
  • 10 Benefits of Hosting your Own Blog If you want to create an edge over many of the other bloggers on the web, then one of the best things that you can do is host your own blog. There are a number of benefits of hosting your...

It Is Possible to Dispute Health Insurance Decisions for Medical Tourism Costs

Posted on 22 March 2007 in Uncategorized by admin




Often patients get very frustrated waiting in medical treatment queues. Who needs this they say. On top of this the mental turmoil of waiting in the medical treatment queue can cause needless mental turmoil and much worse patient treatment outcomes.

However in some cases the medical insurance administration will refuse to pay costs for overseas or out of country medical treatment – deeming that such treatment is “unnecessary” , “not essential” or even a vacation by the patient.

I t can often be said that medical insurance administrators see them themselves not as providing essential levels of medical care but rather as parcels out or controllers and allocators of limited resources. On top of that as the resources become less and less even more medical administration is needed , not less , ” to dole out the limited resources”.

However a U.K. woman has won a three year legal battle with her local medical insurance agency to force the local NHS Health Trust to pay for her medical treatment abroad- an enforced reversal of their stated judgment.

This decision and judgment can well form the basis of precedents of further claims for medical tourism treatment costs , especially in daunting potential life threatening illnesses – such as cancer – where time is of the greatest essence.

In this case the patient was told that the time frame for a simple scan of her back would be approximately one year.

T he patient picked up and had the relatively simple procedure done at a private clinic in another E.U. country. Attempting reimbursement for the approximately $ 700 scan – the claim was refused , resulting in a three to four year legal battle.

In the end the NHS Health Care Trust relented and agreed to pay both legal and medical costs.

Thus a precedent has been set in both medical , legal and medical tourism venues.

Medical Tourism Medical Tourism

http://lakol.org/

Glucophage Online Pharmacy

Realty Tax and Insurance
www.mmedsolution.com




  • Share/Bookmark
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • Globefunder Medical Bill Collections Not P2P Lending IOUSOS by Gloubefunder presented at Finovate.  IOUSOS is a medical bill collections portal.  I was a bit surprised at first, but I suppose if you find a willing partner and you can provide the service then why not.  It is...
  • Article Submission Secrets - A Great Formula for Prospect & Profit Pulling Titles for Your Articles Powerful article marketing requires that you write a great title for your articles.So here is just one of my formulas for a great title - Keywords - Benefits - Keywords. Use your keywords in the beginning of your title, make...
  • Back From the Brink Whoa!  That was close!  RateLadder almost shutdown permanently...  My hosting provider performed an upgrade over thanksgiving on the shared server...  There have been issues.  While thinking the issues were fixable on my end I made the mistake of upgrading my version...
  • The Downsides of Free Blogging Platforms for Corporate Blogging (Blogger, etc... focus on how posts may be deleted forever without warning, lack of professionalism, etc...) In a lot of different instances when it comes to blogging, making use of a free blogging platform can really come in handy. If...
  • Increase Traffic to Blog, pt1 This is part one in a three part series dedicated to increasing traffic to your blog in a number of different ways. Now that you have your blog set up and you are beginning to post useful information in its...