Category: Finance, Insurance.
According to a March 5, Reuters newswire story, 2007, pediatricians throughout Texas and the U. The HDHPs, called" consumer- directed" plans by supporters, encourage people to take a more active role in their medical care.
S. are warning that new high- deductible health plans( HDHPs) are compromising patient care, especially among poorer children, with the unintended consequence of increasing medical costs. But the American Academy of Pediatrics has joined other plan critics who fear high deductibles in the plans will lead patients to skip preventive care, most importantly immunizations and annual physicals for children. The Academy represents 60, 000 physicians in the United States specializing in treating children. And this could lead to costlier treatment down the road, if a patient, for example winds up in an emergency room. "Faced with difficult choices, families may seek to' load up' on a scheduled visit to save money or delay care until after the deductible is met, " the group wrote in the March issue of Pediatrics, the official journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, . The report comes as the share of U. Roughly 60 percent offered health coverage during 2005, down from 69 percent in 200Health insurance reform has become a national issue as the ranks of the uninsured rises steadily, now at 46 million, or 17 percent of the U. S. employers offering health insurance has been slipping, according to the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.
S. population. These plans are typically are coupled with a pre- tax Health Savings Accounts( HSAs) used to pay for health costs. In 2005, in lieu of dropping health coverage, about 30 percent of large and midsize corporations offered the high- deductible plans. That compares with seven percent of companies polled by employee benefits consultant Watson Wyatt in 200 The nation's biggest health insurance companies, such as UnitedHealth Group and WellPoint Inc. , have touted high- deductible plans to employers as a way to rein in medical costs, by encouraging better health- care choices. It recommends changing the tax code to compel the plans to exempt preventive care, in other words to not require a deductible. The plans are able to exempt preventive services from the deductible requirement, and about 30 percent of the existing plans do so, according to the pediatricians' group. Deductible would, still apply to, however minor illnesses that can balloon to major illnesses without proper treatment.
Some high- deductible plan critics also say patients with these plans are more likely than those with traditional insurance to skip prescriptions and fail to follow up with their doctors. The pediatrician's group also worries that high- deductible plans will lead to a" destabilization" of employer- sponsored health insurance. There are High Deductible Health Plans on the market that encourage customers to focus on preventive care.
No comments:
Post a Comment