Saturday, August 27, 2011

Debunking Common Health Insurance Myths

Health insurance can be a complicated thing, so it’s no wonder there are a lot of common myths about it that people subscribe to. It’s not easy to do the research, open your mind, and explore options you previously hadn’t considered. That’s why it’s important to dispel some common health insurance myths right off the bat.

Myth: “I don’t need health insurance now…I can risk it until I get a job.”

Reality: Get the health insurance. People with health insurance that develop health issues often do better than people without the insurance. People without health insurance will also run into far more trouble at hospitals and clinics than people who do have health insurance.

Think about it: you might be healthy and might stay that way for a long time. But are you willing to bet money on it?

Myth: “Only young people are without health insurance coverage.”

Reality: You’d be surprised. 3/4ths of people without health insurance are over the age of 25, and the amount of middle-aged people and senior citizens without health insurance is climbing. It’s not just the young and careless among us: even the older citizens of the United States are many times without proper coverage.

Myth: “If the government doesn’t provide health insurance, no one will.”

Reality: Even if you think government has its role in providing health insurance, the private market does provide quality health insurance. The government isn’t necessarily a one-stop-shop for all things medical.

Health insurance companies compete with each other to provide you coverage by providing lower costs, better deductibles, and more comprehensive coverage.

Myth: “Medicare or Medicaid will pick up the tab; I’ll be fine.”

Reality: Perhaps Medicare or Medicaid will help you. Perhaps it won’t. There’s no use in remaining ignorant to the topic. Don’t place your long-term hopes in anything that can be taken away from you.

Instead, keep your eyes open and make sure that you have fallback options for the long term. Save money and be sure to stay covered long into the future.

Myth: “Only the wealthy can afford totally comprehensive health insurance.”

Reality: They can, but if you look into it, so can you. Just ask around. Ask a local insurance provider for total umbrella insurance, and how it can be made the most affordable to you. You’d be surprised at the kinds of answers you might get.

Naturally, the more coverage you get, the more you might be expected to pay. But you don’t know how much more that will be until you find out for yourself, and – of course – you never know how worth it it might end up being.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

E-Mealz

Easy way to make meals for your family and you can choose healthy eating options also like Gluten Free!

Emealz - Easy Meals for Busy People!

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Small Business Owners In Need Of Affordable Health Insurance–Can Affordable Healthcare Plans Be Found?

Small business health insurance is often seen as too costly for either an employer with numerous workers or for someone running a business who is simply self-employed. Yet, there have been options that have become available as of late and traditional means that have been used by countless businesses as a way to provide health insurance coverage for either themselves or their employees.

For small business owners, traditional employer group health insurance plans are available and are usually felt to be one of the more affordable health insurance options since employers can, in some ways, tailor a plan that can be helpful for their workers and affordable as well. Insurance options may vary from state to state but employer group health insurance plans have been more cost efficient for some business owners because of the coverage options and the fact that risk can be spread out over a large number of workers, which can help lower costs as well.

Yet, there is currently a tax credit in place for small business employers who offer health insurance for their workers, in cases where the workforce is small. Costs for premiums may be lessened under this credit for businesses as this tax incentive is hoped to either cause more employers to consider health insurance plans for their workers or prompt businesses who currently offer their workers health insurance to continue to do so.

However, some business owners, like those who may be self-employed and are only in need of health insurance for themselves, are turning to traditional plans in some cases, but there are those who are simply looking into short-term health insurance plans. Short-term health insurance for self-employed individuals isn’t as inclusive, in terms of coverage, but it has helped those who are self-employed guard themselves against high medical costs in case of a major medical emergency.

Business owners are often advised to shop around when seeking a health insurance plan, as there are obviously some plans which are more affordable than others. However, in spite of worries over premium costs, small business owners may be in a better position by spending the funds for these health insurance plans rather than risk shouldering the burden, or having their employees shoulder the burden, of medical costs when uninsured.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Health Reform Provides Employer Subsidies in 2010

We’re all hearing a lot about health care reform, but much of the information can be confusing. REGIT is providing clients with information we receive that outlines the changes in easy-to-understand language.

At this time, we are primarily focused on the changes that will take place in late September 2010. One significant change occurring then is that employers with less than 25 employees and an average annual wage of less than $50,000 may be eligible for a subsidy for their employees’ health insurance premium.

Please contact me to receive the 3-step test that will tell you whether your business is eligible for the subsidy. We encourage you to do this soon. There is also a great deal of information at www.irs.gov that gives greater details of this subsidy. You may also wish to consult your accountant or legal counsel on this.

REGIT will continue to be a resource to you as health care reform regulations are written. Please feel free to call if we can be of help to you.


Lorraine Allen
(630) 652-1067
lallen@regitinc.com

Monday, April 5, 2010

Timeline of health care reform

IMMEDIATE FIXES: 2010 – as of April 1st still waiting on these changes to be implemented, no exact time yet

- SMALL BUSINESSES: Tax credits start flowing to businesses with fewer than 50 employees, covering 35% of premiums, to help them afford coverage. By 2014, that will rise to 50%.

- SENIORS: They get a $250 rebate to help fill the "doughnut hole" in Medicare drug coverage.

- YOUNG ADULTS: Health insurers are required to let young people stay on their parents' policy up to their 27th birthday.

- PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS: Insurers will be barred from denying coverage to kids with pre-existing conditions. Adults will have to wait until 2014 for the same protection. But high-risk pools will offer an option for affordable coverage until then.

- NO LIMITS ON COVERAGE: Insurers can't place lifetime caps on benefits any longer.

- PREVENTIVE CARE: New private plans will have to cover checkups and other preventive services with no co-pays. By 2018, all plans must comply.


2011

- HEALTH CARE COMPANIES KICK IN: Drugmakers pony up new fees, starting at $2.7 billion. Insurance and medical-device providers follow in 2013.
2013

- TAXES: Medicare payroll taxes increase - from a rate of 1.45% to 2.35% - for singles earning more than $200,000 a year and families above $250,000.


2014

This is when all Americans will feel the bill's impact - in their wallets, if not elsewhere.

- INDIVIDUAL MANDATE: Almost everyone will be required to get insurance or face a fine - $95 in 2014, $325 in 2015 and $695 in 2016 (with a maximum of $2,250 for a family). There is an exemption for low-income people.

- EMPLOYER MANDATE: Businesses with 50 or more employees must offer insurance or pay a $2,000-per-worker penalty.

- HEALTH CARE EXCHANGES: These new state-based marketplaces should be open for business, giving individuals and small businesses a place to shop for affordable insurance .

- SUBSIDIES: To help pay for insurance, the feds will offer subsidies to families making as much as $88,000 a year. Out-of-pocket spending will be tied to a person's income and kept as low as $1,000.


2018

- TAX ON HIGH-COST HEALTH PLANS: A 40% excise tax will be slapped on high-cost "Cadillac" plans starting in 2018.


2020

- Benefits that began to close Medicare's "doughnut hole" for prescription drugs in 2010 will finally complete the job in 2020.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Health Care Bill Summary and Timeline

You've probably heard by now that the health care reform bill will enable you to find coverage if you're sick and keep your existing coverage if you get sick, or that it will enable you to afford to buy insurance or get it for free. But when? Here's a summary and timeline of when the bill's various benefits and protections - and its costs - will take effect.

Upon the President's signature, your dependent children will be allowed to remain on your insurance policy up to age 26, and your insurer will not be permitted to deny them coverage based on pre-existing conditions. Children covered by Medicaid or state Children's Health Insurance Programs cannot be dropped from this point until 2019, and adults covered by state Medicaid programs cannot be dropped until the state insurance exchanges go into operation in 2014, unless a state needs to do so to close a budget shortfall. Also: a 10 percent excise tax on indoor tanning goes into effect, as does a tax credit of up to 35 percent for small businesses with fewer than 25 employees that offer health insurance.

Three months after the bill becomes law, individuals who have been unable to obtain coverage because of pre-existing conditions for at least six months will be able to purchase it from special high-risk insurance pools. The pools will be folded into the state insurance exchanges when they take effect in 2014.


Six months after the bill becomes law, Medicare recipients who have fallen into the coverage gap ("donut hole") in Medicare Part D prescription drug benefits will receive a $250 rebate, the first of a series of gradual closings of the coverage gap phased in through 2020. New insurance policies sold from this date forward must exclude preventive care and screenings from annual deductibles, and insurers will no longer be able to cancel policies except in cases of fraud or set lifetime coverage caps from this point forward.

In 2011, Medicare Part D recipients who fall into the "donut hole" will receive a 50 percent discount on their prescriptions. A new, voluntary insurance plan providing modest cash assistance for long-term in-home or nursing home care becomes available this year. Also, the first of a 10-year series of cuts in subsidies to Medicare Advantage plans - private insurance plans that pay medical expenses and often offer extra benefits not covered by Medicare -- taxes effect. Seniors enrolled in these plans will likely face hikes in premiums, reductions in benefits, or both. Employers have to start reporting the value of employees' health care benefits on their W-2s, and community health centers would get increased funding to treat low-income and underserved individuals.

In 2012, nonprofit insurance co-ops will be created to compete with for-profit insurers, and physicians, hospitals and payers will be encouraged to band together in "accountable care organizations."

In 2013, the Medicare payroll tax will rise from 1.45 percent to 2.35 percent for individuals making more than $200,000 a year and married couples making more than $250,000 a year, and a new Medicare tax on unearned income of 3.8 percent takes effect. Annual contributions to tax-sheltered flexible spending accounts for medical expenses will be capped at $2,500, indexed for inflation from this point. A 2.3 percent sales tax will apply to medical devices other than vision and hearing aids.

In 2014, most of the bill's most heralded benefits take effect. This is the year when the state insurance exchanges go on-line, with subsidized coverage available in the form of tax credits, and when Medicaid will be expanded to cover individuals making up to 133 percent of the Federal poverty level (currently about $28,300 for a family of four). Insurers will be prohibited from denying coverage to adults with pre-existing conditions and charging higher premiums to individuals with chronic conditions starting this year, and they will also be required to cover maternity care the same as all other medical procedures. 2014 is also the year the mandates kick in: individuals who do not have insurance and cannot prove hardship will pay a $95 fine, rising to $695 by 2016; families without insurance will pay fines of up to $2,250, indexed for inflation after 2016; and employers with more than 50 employees that have any employees enrolled in subsidized coverage through the exchanges will pay a penalty of $2000 times the number of workers employed minus 30.

In 2018, the tax on so-called "Cadillac health plans" takes effect. Employers who provide insurance policies worth more than $10,200 per individual or $27,500 per family will pay a tax of 40 percent of the value of the plan above the thresholds, indexed for inflation.

President Obama will sign the bill at 11:15 a.m. Eastern Time today.

Written by Sandy Smith
For HULIQ.com

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Health Premium Subsidy Eligibility Period Extended to March 31

The Senate voted Tuesday, March 2, to extend benefits for involutarily terminated workers. The measure includes an additional 30-day eligibility period of the health benefits premium subsidty for COBRA and state continuation coverage. The extension is retroactive to March 1. As a result of the latest law, most individuals involuntarily terminated from employment between March 1 and March 31 will now be eligible to apply for the 65 percent premium reduction and continuation coverage.