by: Brad Stroh
At first glance, an indemnity health
insurance plan may seem to hand policy
holders the short end of the stick. After
all, this type of insurance tends to pay
less toward health care claims than a
managed-care plan. Additionally, the policy
holder generally pays more out-of-pocket and
has to deal with more paperwork when it
comes time to file a claim.
However, for a great number of people,
indemnity is the undeniable way to go.
Individuals may choose indemnity plans
because they have favored health care
providers who are not part of a managed-care
network, or because they travel a lot and
need the flexibility to seek care away from
home, or for any number of other reasons.
What makes an indemnity plan the right
choice is different from one consumer to the
next.
What primarily separates an indemnity
plan from a managed-care plan is the
presence or absence of a provider network. A
managed-care plan comes with a network of
health care providers who have arranged with
the insurance company to provide their
services at an agreed-upon rate. This allows
the insurance company to know how much to
expect to pay for any given service. It also
allows the provider to know to some extent
which services will be covered and the
corresponding level of coverage. Because the
insurance company has made prior
arrangements with these providers, paperwork
can be filed directly between the provider
and the insurance company. The insurance
company pays the provider directly for care,
requiring the policy holder to pay only a
small percentage of coinsurance or minimal
co-pay amount out-of-pocket.
With an indemnity plan, on the other
hand, there is no network of pre-approved
providers. This means the insurance company
is taking a greater risk when it comes to a
policy holder’s choices of health care
providers. The policy holder may choose a
provider that charges more than the
insurance company expected to pay for a
particular service.
For this and other reasons, insurance
companies offering indemnity plans give
themselves some protection from the choices
their policy holders may make. They
typically charge a higher annual deductible
that must be met before coverage begins.
They often require policy holders to pay the
full cost for the service out-of-pocket and
then to file the paperwork of the claim
themselves to seek reimbursement for the
care. This protects the insurance company
from paying for services that are not
covered under their plans and also from
paying more than what is reasonable for the
care their policy holders are claiming. The
insurance company may determine a reasonable
charge for a service by referring to a table
of UCR (usual, customary, and reasonable)
figures determined by the average cost
billed by providers in a particular area.
An indemnity plan may sound like a poor
choice for a consumer to make, but for the
reasons mentioned earlier as well as others,
an indemnity plan can be the best choice for
some consumers. An indemnity plan does not
require its policy holders to choose a
primary care physician (PCP) or obtain a
referral to receive care. In this way, it’s
one of the easiest plans to use. Policy
holders seek their health care whenever and
from whomever they choose.
Deciding between an indemnity and a
managed-care plan is an individual choice.
Like all decisions pertaining to health care
and health insurance, the options should be
thoroughly researched and carefully
considered. Under the right circumstances,
an indemnity plan can offer the greatest
flexibility in obtaining health care and
provide its policy holders the opportunity
to be in maximum control of their health
care choices. |