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Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Why can't health insurance be more like auto insurance?


I came across an interesting article comparing US health insurance to car insurance. The premise is that if car insurance worked like health insurance it would not work at all. Because it would mean that your insurance would have to pay for new tyres, services, maybe even petrol. Car insurance fortunately does not work that way, and that is why it is affordable and why it works.The article is reproduced below if you are interested. The original link is here.
Opinion
Why can't health insurance be more like auto insurance?
If insurance paid for every oil change and engine failure, we'd have an autocare crisis, too.
By Zach Krajacic
from the August 5, 2009 edition

BUFFALO, N.Y. - Imagine how much automobile insurance would cost if it paid for all expenses associated with owning an automobile – oil changes, engine failures, worn-out tires, brakes, rust, and so on. The number of people who couldn't afford car insurance would rise dramatically, and we would have a car insurance crisis in America.
That is the situation with healthcare. As health plans increasingly pay for almost every service or procedure, ameliorate our every discomfort, and succumb to every cultural whim and fad, the price of insurance continues to rise.
Health plans are paying for every imaginable benefit – while automobile insurers are not – because of both consumer demand and state mandates.
The demand for additional healthcare benefits is greater than for additional automobile insurance benefits because many people feel entitled to have access to every possible healthcare service. The costs of additional benefits are not always clear to consumers; thus, many people perceive the benefits to be "free." In response to consumer demand, health plans sometimes expand coverage on their own. In other cases, they are forced by politicians running for reelection to cover additional services or procedures.
To make health insurance more affordable, state governments should stop mandating additional benefits and rescind all of their previous mandates. In addition, both private and public insurers (such as Medicare) should agree to pay for only costly and essential medical services and procedures (similar to the way they banded together to pledge to reduce $2 trillion in healthcare expenses a few months ago).
Under the system I am proposing, health insurance would pay for emergencies and urgent care, diagnostic tests and X-rays, medically necessary surgery, hospitalization, therapy, and any other critical services that few people could afford to pay out of their own pockets. Individuals would pay for routine, discretionary, and elective services – such as doctor visits, acupuncture, marriage counseling – on their own.
This type of system – which has not yet been tried – would lower healthcare costs and make insurance more affordable for everyone, especially the uninsured, by reducing the number of healthcare services that are used. When the use of services goes up, health insurers must raise premiums to pay for the increase in expenses. This makes it more expensive for insured people to keep their health coverage, while also making it more expensive for uninsured people to purchase coverage.
Insurance is intended to be a pooling of people's money to pay for large, unexpected expenses – not for every expense that is incurred. In other words, it is supposed to be a safety net for catastrophic events.
Yet many Americans go to the doctor for all kinds of trivial ailments, because their insurance pays for it. True, many people want this type of coverage, but that is because they do not understand the long-term cost implications. If Americans want to keep the current healthcare system sustainable (and it appears they do), then they need to take on more financial responsibility for their healthcare. People who choose to visit the doctor for the sniffles should pay for it themselves rather than making everyone else pay for it. If they did, the use of services – and thus the cost of healthcare – would go down.
If we can budget for our phone, electric, cable, and gas bills, as well as for unexpected household and automobile expenses, then we can budget for routine healthcare services. This would require some families to forgo the purchase of a plasma TV, but it would make health insurance more affordable.
In addition, most health plans even cover lifestyle choices that have been sold as medical conditions by lobbyists, pharmaceutical and medical companies, politicians, the media, and pop culture. Some of these covered services – such as cosmetic procedures, birth-control pills, and abortion – do not even address a diagnosis. (Contrary to popular belief, pregnancy is not a malady.) If there is no medical condition, then health insurance should not be paying for it.
By shouldering a greater burden of their healthcare costs, Americans would probably eat more healthily, exercise more, quit smoking, and lead healthier and happier lives. A healthier population would use fewer medical services, which would lower healthcare costs and premiums.
When it comes to healthcare, we should not confuse luxury with necessity. By transforming health insurance into a system that simply pays for essential medical services and procedures, more Americans would be able to afford insurance – and there would be far fewer uninsured Americans.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Insurance Fraud


All right with the last couple of posts on home insurance car insurance I though i would post some examples of real life fraud. The examples that follow (By the way all from the US) were sourced from the Coalition against Insurance Fraud (USA) and are some sad exaples of how insurance fraud aen't always victim less crimes.

Read on you would be amazed...

Example of Car insurance fraud

In 1997, Long Beach California, two men attempted to stage a car accident to collect car insurance money by stopping suddenly on a freeway in front of a tractor. Unfortunately, Juan and Maria Lopez, and their 2 year old daughter were following the tractor in their car. When the tractor stopped in front of them, a gravel truck rammed the Lopez family from behind, killing the young family. The two men who had committed this act of car insurance fraud, resulting in the tragic death of the Lopez family, each received 11 years in prison.

Example of Contents Insurance Fraud

Once again in California, a software distributor had a lot of out-of-date merchandise he wasn’t able to sell. The merchandise was insured under his business contents insurance. In 1994, the Northbridge earthquake occurred, so the distributor ordered his staff to destroy the merchandise so he could claim it all under earthquake damage on his contents insurance. An employee reported the contents insurance fraud however, and the distributor received over 4 years in prison.

Example Of Building Insurance Fraud

A restauranter in Tampa hired two teenage boys to burn down her restaurant so she could collect building insurance money in 1996. The arson attempt went horribly wrong, and one boy died while the other was permanently scarred. The restauranter was sent to prison for 30 years.

Example of Home & Contents Fraud

A restaurant owner in Tampa hired two teenage boys to burn down her restaurant so she could collect building insurance money in 1996. The arson attempt went horribly wrong, and one boy died while the other was permanently scarred. The restauranter was sent to prison for 30 years.


Monday, August 10, 2009

WHATS PAY AS YOU DRIVE?


So what is this Pay As You Drive Inusrance that everybody seems to be on about? Well I will run you through it. Just consider if you fit into one of the below categories Do you fit one into one of these situations? You own a car and don't drive it that much? You live in a smalll community and don't drive all that far. You are in the military are overseas for most of the year. You have a vheicle that you only use on weekends to do a few things shopping ect (That's Me)

PAYD (Pay As You Drive) is a cover that you pay for the amount of miles you drive in a year. The more you drive the more you pay and of course the less you drive the less you would pay.

Sounds great right well in my opinion the financial reward for driving less makes goodeconomic sense. always go through the setails with your insurance to ensure you are comfortable with the level of cover, but it seems the pro's far outweigh the cons.

As always shop around!

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