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Archive for September, 2007

New Health Insurance Guide for Massachusetts

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute has just released its latest FREE guide for consumers in the market for health insurance: Consumer Guide to Getting and Keeping Health Insurance in Massachusetts.

This guide includes important NEW information for Massachusetts residents related to recent changes in the law. Beginning July 1, 2007, all Massachusetts residents must obtain and maintain health insurance. Individuals who cannot show proof of health insurance coverage will lose their personal income tax exemption and face significant tax fines.

Consumers, legislators, researchers, policy experts and social workers will all find this 49-page guide to the protections consumers have, and lack, as they seek health care coverage, of use. Download the guide now.

Insurance regulators seek to crack down on worst offenders in limited health coverage

Sunday, September 9th, 2007

Several states are investigating and considering actions to regulate the practices of limited- or scheduled-benefit plans being offered by HealthMarkets and its subsidiaries, Mega Life, Mid-West National and Chesapeake Life. Regulators say they have received a higher-than-normal rate of complaints about poor coverage and deceptive sales practices from these insurers.

While some analysts say that these low-coverage policies are better than nothing for sick consumers, the question remains of whether limited-benefit coverage policies, which set tight limits on what, and how much, the insurer will pay, are offering policyholders enough financial protection to be considered “insurance” at all.

As quoted in a recent USA Today story, Georgetown University Health Policy Institute’s Mila Kofman says: “The idea behind being privately insured is that your insurance company will pick up the bills when you’re sick, not for government programs to pick up the bills after you’ve paid premiums to the insurer … By the time a consumer realizes they don’t have a major medical policy, it’s too late.”

Read the original story at USA Today’s website: Limited policies vex some buyers.