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Insurance Author: Phil Lebherz Last Updated: Apr 23, 2009 - 8:29:17 PM



Holding On to Your Health Coverage: 5 Steps to Consider If You've Been Laid-Off
By Phil Lebherz
Dec 1, 2008 - 1:11:07 PM

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'You shouldn't have to lose your safety net... ' says nonprofit founder

(HealthNewsDigest.com) - SAN JOSE, Calif.,-- With U.S. unemployment at a record 6.5% and layoffs continuing, the ranks of the uninsured will continue to grow. However, armed with statistics that nearly one-third of the current uninsured have government programs they are eligible for but don't know it, Phil Lebherz, executive director of the nonprofit Foundation for Health Coverage Education (FHCE), advises "being laid off shouldn't automatically mean you go without health coverage."

The nonprofit health coverage think tank has come up with 5 steps people need to take in reviewing how they can hold on to their current coverage or transition to some form of gap coverage.

5 Steps to Take for Holding on to Your Insurance Coverage

1. COBRA. While this may be the most expensive option, it's a good one for
someone with a pre-existing medical condition. For people recently laid
off, the first, immediate option to review is COBRA coverage. COBRA is
required of businesses with 20 or more employees. It provides
continuation of group health coverage that otherwise might be
terminated. One common myth about COBRA coverage is that it is only
good for 18 months, but quite often this is not the case as it can be
continued indefinitely through state COBRA programs. First steps
include checking with the employer's human resources department to
receive complete information on how to qualify for COBRA, the costs and
how to apply. If COBRA is an option, it should be carefully reviewed
before being refused as once it's dismissed, it can't be recalled.
2. High Deductible Plans. For healthy individuals, another cost
effective option while unemployed may be to purchase lower-cost high
deductible individual coverage. until new employment is found. With
the exception for New York, Massachusetts and Vermont, a person can
obtain this coverage for anywhere from $50 to $150 per month providing
basic catastrophic coverage with a high deductible until he or she
becomes eligible for the new employer's plan. You can visit
www.nahu.org for a national listing of insurance brokers near you.
3. Going from a double- to a single-income family. For the family in a
two-income home where one parent has been laid off, checking into
programs like Healthy Families is an important step. In many states, a
family of 4 can make up to $60,000 (California, Connecticut, Hawaii,
Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington, D.C.) and in
other states up to $50,000 a year (Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, New
Mexico, New York, Washington) and still qualify the children for
comprehensive coverage. These programs may provide low-cost health
coverage for children and teens up to age 19 including comprehensive
health, dental and vision coverage. Moving the family's young
dependents from private insurance to government sponsored plans can
reduce monthly premiums and perhaps make a family's adult private
premium coverage affordable.
4. Coverage for Pre-existing Conditions. For people who have been laid
off and must purchase individual health insurance but are unable to
obtain coverage due to a pre-existing condition, many states have
government sponsored medical risk insurance pools (such as California's
Major Risk Medical Insurance Program). State residents who qualify for
these programs participate in the cost of their continued coverage by
paying premiums that are supplemented by the state. Go to your state's
government website to find out what type of medical pool coverage may
be offered.
5. Help for Single Pregnant Women. For a single woman who is pregnant and
doesn't make more than $25,900 in a year, there are maternity programs
state by state which will pay for the coverage of the baby before,
during and after the birth of the child into the first year. With names
like Access for Infants and Mothers, this often comprehensive coverage
provides low-cost or free health coverage for pregnant women before,
during and following the delivery of the baby and health coverage for
their newborn through the baby's first year of life.

Concerned that so many Americans don't know where to go to find out about eligibility for government sponsored and low cost programs, the FHCE has centralized information about public programs available in all 50 states and captured, on a single website database, more than 174 government programs that can help. To identify what they qualify for, website visitors can take the simple 5-Question Eligibility Quiz online, or phone the free 24/7, multilingual U.S. Uninsured Help Line at 800-234-1317 and talk with a live counselor who will review the questions with them. This eligibility review is a starting point with the Fresno, California-based call center's staff who then guide each caller through their options and to the appropriate state-sponsored program.

The Foundation for Health Coverage Education is a non-profit organization based in San Jose, California. For more information, please visit the website at www.coverageforall.org .

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