General Information About Health Insurance
How Health Insurance Works in the United States
Health care in the United States can be very expensive. A single doctor’s office visit may cost several hundred dollars and an average three-day hospital stay can cost tens of thousands of dollars (or even more) depending on the type of care provided. Most of us could not afford to pay such large sums when we get sick, especially since we don’t know when we might become ill or injured or how much care we might need. Health insurance offers a way to reduce such costs to more reasonable, affordable amounts. The way it typically works is that the consumer (you) pays an up front premium to a health insurance company and that payment allows you to share ‘risk’ with lots of other people (enrollees) who are making similar payments. Since most people are healthy most of the time, the premium dollars paid to the insurance company can be used to cover the expenses of the (relatively) small number of enrollees who get sick or are injured.
Important Questions to Ask When Selecting Health Insurance
Insurance companies, as you can imagine, have studied risk extensively, and their goal is to collect enough premium to cover medical costs of the enrollees. There are many, many different types of health insurance plans in the United States and many different rules and arrangements regarding care. Following are three important questions you should ask when selecting health insurance:
Key Question #1: Where Can I Receive Care Using My Health Insurance Plan?
One way that health insurance plans control their costs is to influence access to providers. Providers include physicians, hospitals, laboratories, pharmacies, and other entities. Many insurance companies contract with a specified network of providers that has agreed to supply services to plan enrollees at more favorable pricing. If a provider is not in a plan’s network, the insurance company may not pay for the service(s) provided or may pay a smaller portion than it would for in-network care. This means the enrollee who goes outside of the network for care may be required to pay a much higher share of the cost.
If you have a plan through a parent, for example, and that plan’s network is in your home town, you might not be able to get the care you need in the Stanford area, or you might incur much higher costs to get that care in the Stanford vicinity.
Key Question #2: What Does My Health Insurance Plan Cover?
Under the Affordable Care Act, plans in the United States are required to offer a number of ‘essential health benefits’ which include:
- Ambulatory patient services (those you would typically receive outside of a hospital)
- Emergency services
- Hospitalization
- Maternity and newborn care
- Pediatric services, including oral and vision care
- Mental health and substance-use disorder services
- Preventive services (e.g., some immunizations) and chronic disease management
- Rehabilitative and habilitative services
- Some laboratory services
- Prescription drugs
For our international students, who might be considering coverage through a plan not based in the U.S., asking the question, ‘what does the plan cover in the U.S.?’ is extremely important.
Key Question #3: How Much Will My Health Insurance Cost?
As a general rule of thumb, the more you pay in premium up front, the less you will pay in the form of deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance when you access care. The less you pay in premium, the more you will pay when you access care.
The question for our students is pay a larger share now? Or, pay a larger share later?
Consider that anticipated costs at the time of service may discourage students from getting needed care.
Important Insurance Terms and Concepts
Out-of-Pocket Expenses
The terms ‘out-of-pocket cost’ and ‘cost sharing’ refer to the portion of your medical expenses you are responsible for paying at the time you receive health care. Out-of-pocket costs are additional to the monthly health insurance premium you pay.
Annual Deductible
The annual deductible is the amount you pay each plan year before the insurance company starts paying its share of the costs. For example, if the deductible is $2,000, then you would be responsible for paying the first $2,000 in health care you receive each year out of pocket, after which the insurance company would start paying its share.
Copayment (or ‘Copay’)
A copayment is a fixed, up front amount you pay each time you receive care when that care is subject to a copay. For example, a copay of $30 might be applicable for a physician visit, after which the insurance company picks up the rest. Plans with higher premiums generally have lower copays, and vice versa. Plans that do not have copays typically use other methods of cost sharing.
Coinsurance
Coinsurance is a percentage of the cost of your medical care. For example, you might pay $200 (20 percent) for an MRI that costs $1,000. Your insurance company will pay the other $800 (80 percent). Plans with higher premiums typically have lower coinsurance.
Annual Out-of-Pocket Maximum
The annual out-of-pocket-maximum is the most cost-share you will be responsible for in a year. It is the total of your deductible, copays, and coinsurance (but does not include your premiums). Once you hit this limit, the insurance company will pick up 100 percent of your covered costs for the remainder of the plan year. Most enrollees never reach the out-of-pocket maximum but it can happen if a lot of costly treatment for a serious accident or illness is needed. Plans with higher premiums generally have lower out-of-pocket limits.
What It Means to Be a ‘Covered Benefit’
The terms ‘covered benefit’ and ‘covered’ are used regularly in the insurance industry, but can be confusing. A ‘covered benefit’ generally refers to a health service that is included (i.e., ‘covered’) under the premium for a given health insurance policy that is paid by, or on behalf of, the enrolled patient. ‘Covered’ means that some portion of the allowable (or ‘negotiated’) cost of a health service will be considered for payment by the insurance company. “Covered’ does not mean that the service will be paid at 100%.
For example, in a plan under which urgent care is ‘covered,’ a copay for the service might apply. The copay is an out-of-pocket expense for the patient. If the copay is $100, the patient has to pay this amount (usually at the time of service), and then the insurance plan ‘covers’ the rest of the allowed cost for the urgent care service.
In some instances, an insurance company might not pay anything toward a ‘covered benefit.’ For example, if a patient has not yet met an annual deductible of $1,000, and the cost of the covered health service provided is $400, the patient will need to pay the $400 (often at the time of service). What makes this service ‘covered’ is that its cost counts toward the annual deductible, so only $600 would remain to be paid by the patient for future services before the insurance company starts to pay its share.
Please keep these terms and concepts in mind as you consider your health insurance options.