Guest guest Posted July 16, 2003 Report Share Posted July 16, 2003 I have done some work in advocacy for those with disabilities so I may be able to address some health insurance realities. The pivotal words are " enrollment " and " claims. " Most employee health plans will not disqualify you if you have a disability --but your status for claims settlement can and often does change after your diagnosis is known if your disability requires costly or long-term attention. In other words, insurance companies are only too happy to get your employer's business through premiums you and your employer pay...but if you become disabled in any way that requires costly maintenance, claims may be denied. So your company changes insurance firms and hosts a new enrollment period? Same deal. You're unlikely to get excluded, but you're also unlikely to get disability-related claims paid. Why? Health insurance packages for most companies tend to cover conventional expenses (annual physical, maternity, common maintenance drugs, etc. ) What they are not set- up to cover is long-term or catastrophic illness. The reality is...no one is. Only the very wealthy on this planet exist without the concern for costs of needed health care. Right now, millions of folks make life-changing decisions because health care is so costly. I sincerely hope that in the remainder of my life compassionate and sensible people will work to make health care affordable for all. It will take a major societal shift in priorities--but humans are capable of benevolent evolution. -- in Newington Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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