Tag: insurance

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By Susan Jaffe  | October 15, 2013 |  Kaiser Health News produced in collaboration with 

The seven-week enrollment period for next year’s Medicare prescription drug and managed-care plans begins Tuesday, but seniors shouldn’t simply renew their policies and assume the current coverage will stay the same. There’s a likely payoff for those who pay close attention to the details.[More in KHN] [More in USA Today]

Seniors Cautioned To Pay Close Attention To Details As Enrollment Begins In Medicare Plans

Obama administration delaying some rules for appealing health insurance denials

By Susan Jaffe |  March 30, 2011 | Kaiser Health News  produced in collaboration with   

The Obama administration is delaying until next January its enforcement of some new rules designed to protect patients who appeal insurers’ decisions to deny or reduce health care benefits… not affected by the latest government announcement is the timeframe given to consumers to file an appeal. Under most plans, beneficiaries have 180 days after receiving a denial notice to request a review…. more

Younger, Disabled Medicare Beneficiaries Have Trouble Getting Supplementary Insurance

By Susan Jaffe   KAISER HEALTH NEWS  | March 7, 2011   This story was produced in collaboration with  

Joe Hobson, 63, crosses the street in front of his Arlington apartment. (Jessica Marcy / Kaiser Health News).

One night three years ago, Joe Hobson finished reading a book, went to sleep and woke up blind. The problem,a rare hereditary disease, forced him to give up his 20-year communications job, along withits generous health insurance. Now 63, the Arlington man is covered by Medicare, the federal program for elderly and disabled Americans.

Like many people with Medicare, Hobson would like to buy supplemental, or Medigap, insurance to help cover his out-of-pocket costs, such as co-payments and deductibles. But Medigap prices can be prohibitive for disabled beneficiaries younger than 65. The cheapest plan for such people in Northern Virginia is $338 a month, according to Brad Rothermel,an Annandale insurance agent who has helped Hobson look for a policy. That’s three times the premium of a plan with much better benefits that is available to a 65-year-old. And the private insurers that offer Medigap policies are free to reject Hobson or charge him extra because of his preexisting health conditions.[Continued in KHN]  andin The Washington Post]