Do You Know Your Health Insurance Basics?

A premium is:
A more expensive health plan
An insurance payment
A rebate check
A premium is:
A premium is the amount that you or your employer pay for your health insurance, generally once a month.

A deductible is:
The amount you pay before your insurance kicks in
The monthly fee you pay for your health plan
An extra fee for brand name drugs
A deductible is:
A deductible is what you must pay for your health care before your insurance pays its part. Most plans have deductibles, which start over every January. For example, if your plan has a $1,000 deductible and you have surgery that costs $5,000, you’ll pay $1,000 before your insurer helps you cover your bills.

A copay is:
Part of your deductible
Paid by your insurer
A flat fee for a covered service that you pay to your health care provider
A copay is:
A copay is a fixed amount -- often $15 or $20 -- that you pay for covered services like a prescription or a doctor’s visit. Some health plans also apply coinsurance to certain services. With it, you pay a percentage of the total cost of care. For example, if you have a 20% coinsurance, and your doctor's appointment costs $300, you'd pay $60. That's if you've met your deductible.

An out-of-pocket maximum is:
The most you'll pay each year
A limit on your doctor's charges
The most your insurance will pay
An out-of-pocket maximum is:
Your out-of-pocket maximum is the most you have to pay each year toward your medical services or prescription drugs before your insurance pays for all your care. This amount does not include what you pay in premiums. The Affordable Care Act limits the out-of-pocket maximums. In 2016, for one adult, it can be no more than $6,800, and for a family, it can be no more than $13,700.

Your insurer may not cover certain tests or procedures unless you first get:
Preauthorization
A waiver
Prioritization
Your insurer may not cover certain tests or procedures unless you first get:
If your doctor says you need a test or procedure, your health plan may have to give permission if it's to be covered by insurance. Giving that permission is called preauthorization. Your plan's overview of benefits lists what care needs to be preauthorized. If you don't get it when it's required, your health plan won't pay its part of the costs.

EOB means:
Early Option Billing
Explanation of Benefits
Extra Oversight Board
EOB means:
After you’ve visited your doctor or had a procedure in a hospital, you may receive an explanation of benefits form telling you how much of the charges your insurance will pay. The EOB isn’t a bill itself, but it can tell you what your doctor may charge you. Look for the words “due from patient” to see how much you may owe after your insurance pays. Not all plans provide EOBs.

An HMO health plan limits your choice of doctors.
True
False
An HMO health plan limits your choice of doctors.
An HMO, or health maintenance organization, has its own network of doctors, hospitals, specialists, and pharmacists that its members are required to use. You can go out of network, but if you do, you will probably have to pay 100% of the cost of your care unless it's an emergency.

A health insurance Marketplace is a:
Place to buy insurance stock
Website to buy a health plan
Company to regulate insurance
A health insurance Marketplace is a:
Each state must either have a health insurance Marketplace, also called an Exchange, or use the federal one. These sites are for people who don't have insurance from an employer or through Medicare, Medicaid, the VA, or TRICARE. You can use them to compare health plans. And you can find out if you qualify for a subsidy, which is money from the federal government to lower your insurance costs.

Under the Affordable Care Act, you can be denied health insurance for a pre-existing condition.
True
False, unless you purchase a short-term health plan that provides coverage for less than 12 months
Under the Affordable Care Act, you can be denied health insurance for a pre-existing condition.
Before the act was passed, health insurance plans could deny coverage or limit benefits if you had a pre-existing condition like diabetes, heart disease, or asthma. Insurers can no longer refuse to cover anyone because of pre-existing conditions or charge them more for a health plan based on their medical condition.

Preventive care includes:
Tests like colonoscopies
Breastfeeding support
Both
Preventive care includes:
Under the health care reform law, many preventive care services now must be fully covered by health insurance. That means you don't have a copay, owe coinsurance, or have to meet a deductible first. These services include annual physicals, screening tests like colonoscopies, Pap smears, and mammograms, as well as breastfeeding support and supplies. You may have to go to a provider in your network for it to be free, however.

Your health insurance runs out after you spend:
$1 million
$500,000
Never
Your health insurance runs out after you spend:
Lifetime limits are now banned for all new health insurance policies.
Insurance companies used to have annual limits and lifetime limits on how much they'd pay for your health care. For example, if you had $100,000 or more of treatment in 1 year, or more than $1 million over a few years, you hit your limit. After that, you had to pay for 100% of your health care.

Your insurance company’s decision on what to cover is final.
True
False
Your insurance company’s decision on what to cover is final.
If your insurance company denies a claim -- meaning that it refuses to pay its part for services you think are covered -- you have the right to appeal, and the health plan is required to respond. If the plan rules against your appeal, you can request an external review of your case. That means someone who’s not connected to your health insurance company will decide whether the health plan must pay.