Need A New Health Insurance Plan? Health Care Terms to Know
| 5 min read
Rick Notter is vice president, Individual Business Unit, at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. He joined Blue Cross in 2011 and has over 20 years of experience in the individual insurance business. A graduate of the University of Southern Indiana, Rick began his professional career as a television anchor and reporter in Indiana. He left his TV career and founded a sports newspaper covering Indiana University basketball and football, building it to a circulation of over 20,000 with subscribers in all 50 states and 21 foreign countries. After he sold the publication, Rick began his career in the insurance industry. Rick is the author of two books, the Hoosier Handbook and Sound Advice: Music’s Effect on Life, Health and Happiness. Rick has received awards from The Associated Press, the Society of Professional Journalists, The Midwest chapter of the Radio and Television News Directors Association, The Indiana Psychological Association, The Indiana Dietic Association, Writer’s Digest, and The Next Generation Indie Book Awards. He is also a 3-time winner of the Evansville Freedom Festival Chili Cookoff. Rick currently serves on the Board of Trustees for Detroit Public Television and is a past board member of the Indiana Association of Health Underwriters, the College Sports Publishers Association, and the Monroe County (Indiana) YMCA. Rick has four children (two of whom live in Michigan) and three grandchildren. When not working, Rick enjoys spending time with his children, traveling, or playing golf.
Availability of subsidies
- The Advanced Premium Tax Credit subsidy, which lowers monthly health insurance payments or premiums.
- The Cost Sharing Reduction subsidy, which reduces the out-of-pocket costs paid during a policy period – usually a year – for health care services received. This type of subsidy is only available on Silver plans.
Types of health plans
- HMOs, or Health Maintenance Organizations, have their own network of doctors, hospitals, and healthcare providers that an individual’s insurance company agrees to pay for. HMO members are required to select a primary care provider who will be their partner in health care.
- PPOs, or Preferred Provider Organizations, offers flexibility when choosing health care options. Those with this type of plan can go to any health care professional they want without a referral — inside or outside of their network. Staying inside their network means lower out-of-pocket costs. When traveling outside their network, higher out-of-pocket costs will arise and not all services are covered.
Health care terms to know
- Copayment: A copay is a fixed-dollaramount a patient is expected to pay for health care services. This cost is generally paid at the time of the visit, rather than billed later.
- Coinsurance: This term refers to the percentage of covered health care services a patient is expected to pay after a deductible is met. If a person’s health insurance plan has a 20% coinsurance, the individual is then expected to pay 20% of each medical bill.
- Deductible: The amount a patient must pay on covered health care services before an insurer starts contributing. Throughout the year, these payments go toward an annual deductible. Once the deductible is met, patients share the cost with the health insurance company by paying coinsurance and copays until the out-of-pocket maximum is reached.
- Health Savings Account (HSA): A health savings account (HSA) can help prepare for current and future health care expenses. Individuals decide how much to contribute to their account every year and can use these funds to pay for IRS defined qualified medical expenses. An important reminder—savings roll over year-over-year without limit and are kept tax-free, grow tax-free and can be withdrawn tax-free for medical expenses at any time. These accounts work with qualified high-deductible PPO and HMO health plans.
- Out-of-pocket maximum: This is the most an individual would have to pay for in-network covered services in a plan year. After an individual pays this amount – through deductibles, copayments and coinsurance – their health plan will pay 100% of the cost of covered benefits.
- Premium: Health insurance premiums refer to the standing cost of coverage, typically charged every month by an insurer. This reoccurring payment can vary based on the plan type and level of coverage.
- Provider network: A provider network is determined by a health care plan. Opting for an in-network doctor versus out-of-network can drastically affect the cost of services. Health insurance mobile apps or websites, like bcbsm.com, are great places to confirm a current or new doctor is covered under a specific plan. It’s also important to contact clinics directly to ensure services are covered.
- Total benefit maximum: This is the total dollar amount an insurance company will pay during an individual’s lifetime for health care services considered non-essential, such as chiropractic care, orthotics and services like acupuncture. Non-essential benefits differ between health plans.