Donald E. L. Johnson, a former editor and publisher of Health Care Strategic Management and a former editor of Modern Healthcare, has been writing about health care business, insurance, stocks and politics s since 1976 and has been blogging at www.businessword.com since early 2003.
If you’ve been uninsured in Florida for more than six months, you may be able to buy a stripped down health insurance policy
for as little as $150 a month regardless of your health status and
pre-existing medical conditions. But there are gotchas that could cost
you thousands and even bankrupt you if you get sick.
The new legislation is primarily aimed at people who can afford
health insurance but have chosen to be self-insured so they can spend
their money on something besides health insurance. Nationally, some 14
million people who can afford to buy health insurance don’t. They
effectively self-insure themselves against financially catastrophic
risks. Many become bankrupt after they require financially catastrophic
health care and can’t pay their bills.
In Florida, insurers will be able to offer policies that cover a lot
of primary care and preventive care services, the maintenance services
that you should pay for out of pocket and should not be insured. But
those policies may have onerous caps on payments for expensive hospital
stays and illnesses, according to a report by the New York Times.
To buy real insurance that covers financially catastrophic illnesses, consumers will have to buy optional coverage.
In other words, the new law enacted by Florida has authorized
insurers to sell savings accounts where they are paid to hold
consumers’ dollars until they need primary and preventive care. But
insurers can sell policies that don’t provide the catastrophic coverage
almost everyone needs sooner or later.
The NY Times reports:
The low-cost plans have to include preventive services,
office visits, screenings, surgery, prescription drugs, durable medical
equipment and diabetes supplies.Some options offered by insurers have to include catastrophic and
hospital coverage. But an insurance company could, for instance, choose
to limit the number of days of hospitalization it will cover or place a
dollar cap on reimbursing certain services.
That makes no sense. Florida politicians have got it backwards. They’re
requiring insurers to cover routine maintenance and not the kinds of
medical care that put people into bankruptcy.




