Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta
Page 7 of 9

Health Insurance

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Health Insurance: Coverage Status by Selected Characteristics of All Persons in the United StatesHealth Insurance: Coverage Status by Selected Characteristics of All Persons in the United States
Article Outline
C

Catastrophic Coverage

Catastrophic health insurance—also known as major medical insurance—is a policy of health insurance with a relatively high deductible, often as high as $500 or $1000. Although catastrophic health insurance policies offer coverage only beyond this high deductible amount, they can help people avoid bankruptcy in the event of a catastrophic illness or injury that requires expensive medical treatments. Because catastrophic health insurance policies have a high deductible, they typically charge policyholders relatively low monthly premiums.

D

Specified Disease Policies

Some insurance companies offer specified disease policies that cover only one illness, such as cancer. These plans offer no benefits at all for medical costs associated with any disease other than that specified in the policy. Therefore, most people who purchase these policies also need to be covered by a more comprehensive policy. Some of these policies provide only for the treatment of the specified illness and exclude from their benefits package the costs of diagnosing the disease.

E

Long-Term Care Policies

Americans increasingly buy long-term care policies to cover nursing home costs. Medicare and most private medical insurance policies cover medically necessary services such as care while recuperating from surgery, but they do not pay for the so-called custodial care offered by nursing homes. In about 80 percent of American families, at least one family member will eventually need long-term care. The average annual cost of a nursing home stay in the United States is around $40,000. Long-term care policies can help families meet these high medical expenses incurred by the elderly.

IX

Specific Benefits

Each health plan or insurance policy must define what kinds of medical services are covered by insurance. These policies must also explain limitations or exclusions of coverage for specific services. In addition, insurance policies define the kinds of medical care providers that are covered by insurance. For example, covered providers usually include physicians and hospitals, but the policy’s terms may also include coverage for nurse practitioners, midwives, chiropractors, and naturopaths.



Almost all health insurance plans cover the cost of diagnostic tests, prescription drugs, and other items necessary to provide care in hospitals. Some policies also provide coverage for such things as prescription drugs to be taken outside of hospital settings.

A

Inpatient Hospital Care

Hospitals provide inpatient care when they admit a patient for an overnight stay. Most comprehensive health insurance policies cover the costs of inpatient care as long as that level of care is considered necessary to treat the patient’s condition.

Hospital indemnity policies pay a specified dollar amount per day of inpatient care, regardless of the cause of the hospitalization. The amount paid by the insurer varies neither with the services provided nor with the expense of those services. The benefit amounts paid by hospital indemnity policies are generally quite low when compared with the typical cost of a hospital stay.

Prev.
| | | | | | | |
Next
Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2009 Microsoft