Understanding
Medical Health Insurance
DIFFERENT TYPES OF HEALTH
INSURANCE POLICIES
Health insurance is a legal contract
between two or more parties that promises certain performance
in exchange for considerations.
A health insurance policy is considered a unilateral contract.
This is because only one party (the insurer) is required to fulfill
their obligation. While a policy owner may decide to terminate
premium payments, as long as the payments are paid the insurer
must meet their responsibility under the contract.
A health insurance
policy can provide just one or any combination of certain benefits:
• Hospital, medical and surgical expenses resulting from sickness or
an accident
• Accidental death or dismemberment
•
Disability resulting from accident or sickness (sometimes this can
also be referred to as “loss of income” or “loss
of time”
An accident is an injury that
occurs accidentally. A sickness is an illness or disease that is
not the result of an accident.
Knowing
the difference is important because policies may have different
provisions that apply to accidents or sickness. Also, there
are some companies
that sell a separate accident policy that does not include
sickness.
The terms accident and sickness
are widely used and often interchangeable in any discussion of
health insurance. They are often abbreviated
as A&H and A&S. Health insurance is also referred
to as medical insurance.
As we discussed above, health
insurance is designed to protect again two types of economic loss.
Loss of income and expenses
for medical
care which places them in either of two broad policy categories:
• Disability income policies
• Medical expense policies
Disability income policies can
also be referred to as loss of income, loss of time or replacement
income. This type of
policy
will pay benefits to an insured who is disabled and can no longer work to
earn a regular income. Payments can be weekly or monthly
depending on the policy.
Medical expense policies are
represented by a wide range of coverage from very minimal to comprehensive
packages
with multiple
coverage.
Some include both accidents and illnesses, various
hospital expenses and other costs pertaining to medical care
such
as:
• Accident and sickness policies
• Hospital policies
• Basic medical expense policies
• Major medical expense policies
• Comprehensive medical expense policies
Any of these policies might cover
various combinations of the above and may be paid in a lump sum.
Accident Policies.
Some policies
cover only accidents and not illness. As you might imagine,
policies like this are
very
specific about
what is considered an accident.
It is important to understand
what is defined as an accident as it pertains to the health
insurance industry.
. .an
accident is an event
that is unforeseen and unintended.
Keep in mind that any discussion of this type
of policy also applies to any type of policy
that
includes accidental
coverage
not just
accident specific policies.
Accident benefits are most commonly
paid for accidental loss of life (also called accidental
death), accidental
loss of
limb or sigh (dismemberment),
loss of time and/or income, hospital expenses,
surgical expenses, and medical expenses like
visits to the
doctor.
Let’s expand a bit on dismemberment. As
we said, this would be loss of limb or sight,
however, different states have statutes
that define dismemberment and they can vary from
state to state. This is a subject that you need
to discuss with your insurance
agent to determine what actually constitutes
dismemberment in your state.
Accidental Death Benefit
can also be referred to as “principal
sum.” This type of coverage should
not be confused with life insurance. There
is a world
of difference between the two. Life
insurance policies will generally regardless
of the cause of death. An accidental
benefit is paid ONLY if the death is accidental
as opposed to a death by natural causes
or illness.
The person who received the death
benefit is called the beneficiary. The policy
owner has
the right
and responsibility
of naming
beneficiaries. Usually there is a primary
beneficiary however he/she can assign
a second and even a third beneficiary.
The primary beneficiary is the
first person in line to receive the benefit
in the event
of the
death
of the
policy holder.
They can
also name a second beneficiary who
would receive the benefit in the event the
primary beneficiary
dies before
the insured.
Some policies
can include a third beneficiary who
would be in line after the first two.
There is much more to be learned
about accidental death policies, but we
would like to mention
one important
element before
we move on. An accidental death may
not be instant. A person can
die as a
result of an accidental injury months
after the accident occurrence. Read
your policy
carefully because most
stipulate that the
accidental death benefit will only
be paid if
death occurs within three
months of the accident.