T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1308.1 | Leominster HCHP rates | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Mon Dec 10 1990 13:28 | 8 |
| I live in Leominster, and the package I got states my individual cost
per week would be $7.72 and Family cost per week would be $28.43 for
the HCHP. I am currently in CMHC, and probably won't change, but would
be interested to know how the Leominster HCHP rates fit with other
communities...what do Clinton & Northboro rates look like?
Mark
|
1308.2 | | AKOCOA::LAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Mon Dec 10 1990 14:32 | 1 |
| Clinton is $7.72 for HCHP and Northboro is $2.43 for the same plan.
|
1308.3 | | ELWOOD::PRIBORSKY | Mirrors and no smoke (we hope) | Mon Dec 10 1990 14:49 | 14 |
| Are those the individual or family rates? I'm curious about this too,
since the cost to me (living in Gardner) of all the HMOs is greater
than the DEC Plan 2. Gardner isn't in Healthnet area yet. Could
others who have Tufts please post their charges where you live?
It seems to me the HMO's are a premium out there.
Here's the costs in Gardner:
Plan Individual Family
Tufts 9.25 31.69
CMHC 8.77 25.82
Montachusett (Blue Cross) 7.33 22.76
DEC #1 -0- 8.50
DEC #2 4.50 20.50
|
1308.4 | Yeah, and what if you moved? | CIMNET::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MET-1/K2,291-7592 | Mon Dec 10 1990 14:52 | 16 |
| If you continue your dialogue with Mr. Brady, you might also want to ask
him what would happen if you voluntarily moved from Clinton to Nor'b'ro
during the year. Would your costs go down? If you moved the other way,
would your costs go up? Would you have an opportunity to re-enroll at
the time you voluntarily moved?
I asked this in one of the meetings (sales presentations?), and was not
given an answer. Something to the effect of "we have a memo in to
Corporate to find out about that..."
Who is this guy, Corporate, anyway?
Broader question: Why didn't "Corporate" think through these details
before implementing the program? Surely it should have occurred to
_someone_ that people do move, even when they're not part of a Digital
relocation...
|
1308.5 | HMOs not Digital running this. | OOES::ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Mon Dec 10 1990 16:39 | 19 |
|
It was my understanding from the meeting I was in that Digital
is not running this Healthnet thing rather the HMOs have targetted
specific areas to test it before implementing it on wider
scale.
So the HMOs *not* Digital planned and implemented this whole thing.
We were told to send mail to our personnel reps who would then forward
it to the different digital liasons and their respective HMOs inorder
to get the inequities resolved.
Otherwise it'll be at least a year before everyone is offerred the
healthnet/reduced basic-HMO package.
Mike
----
|
1308.6 | | COOKIE::WILKINS | OOPS - software's oat bran | Mon Dec 10 1990 16:51 | 54 |
| Here is the response I got from "Corporate Benefits" via my PSA.
I had asked about the seeming geographic descrimination between
inside and outside the Colorado Digital HealthNet area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The employee's understanding of the rates for the Digital
Medical Plans being different for employees living in or out of a
HealthNet area is correct. They are different.
The costs for indemnity plan coverage are skyrocketing for both
employees and the company. The addition of HealthNet gives
employees an alternative opportunity to receive quality medical
care for an affordable price. In areas where we have been able
to offer HealthNet, we have based the cost sharing on managed
care, and the rates reflect that basis. Without this additional
choice, everyone choosing the indemity plans would have very high
payroll deductions with no alternative. In non-HealthNet areas,
it would not be fair to use the same basis of cost sharing, since
those employees do not have the alternative choice. This is in
no way discriminatory to either HealthNet or non-HealthNet
employees, since the choices are different for them.
If your employee feels it is appropriate to seek legal action, he
is free to do so.
2. No one likes to see payroll deductions go up, but the reality
is that as costs continue to rise rapidly, employees will see
their deductions rise as well.
Insurance costs for a group are determined by the usage of the
group, not by one individual. Your employee and his family might
have had small medical expenses this year, but they may have huge
expenses next year. If you think of the parallel of car
insurance or home owner's insurance, it might be easier to
explain. I have to pay auto insurance every year, and I have
never had a claim. That doesn't mean that my own premium won't
increase if the cost for providing auto insurance goes up.
Digital has determined that HMO's are able to control costs by
managing a patient's care appropriately. We are supporting the
managed care concept for the long-term future, not just as a
short-term fix. The HMO's chosen to be included in HealthNet
were carefully chosen as quality providers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I feel that the above statements reflect a complete lack of understanding
and disregard of the concerns of myself and other employees.
I haven't decided yet whether to take up the gauntlet of legal action
thrown down by the above anonymous spokesman from "Corporate Benefits".
Dick
|
1308.7 | Marlboro | ROYALT::GONDA | DECelite: Pursuit of Knowledge, Wisdom, and Happiness. | Mon Dec 10 1990 17:28 | 15 |
| Marlboro:
Choice Individual Family
===========================================
HEALTHNET/HCHP 3.43 19.02
HEALTHNET/Fallon 1.00 9.05
Lahey/Blue Cross 1.71 8.36
Tufts 3.72 17.28
Pilgrim 2.96 10.75
Bay State 3.88 14.79
Harvard CHP 2.43 14.02
Fallon CHP 0.00 4.05
DMP1 5.50 21.75 (Ouch!
DMP2 10.25 34.00 Ouch! Ouch!)
Any errros were unintentional and author is not liable for it.
|
1308.8 | Leominster's 6 choices | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Tue Dec 11 1990 07:54 | 13 |
| Leominster:
Provider Individual Family
==================================================
Central Mass (CMHC) $8.77 $25.82
Harvard (HCHP) $7.72 $28.43
Tufts (TAHP) $9.25 $31.69
Montachusett (MHP) $7.33 $22.76
Digital (DMP1) $0.00 $ 8.50
Digital (DMP2) $4.50 $20.50
Mark
|
1308.9 | Change rates by changing mailing address? | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Tue Dec 11 1990 08:36 | 8 |
| And for at least this upcoming year could once control how much
they pay for insurance by quickly changing their mailing address
so their mailing address is in a cheaper area? I believe one is
entitled to have a mailing address anywhere they desire. For the
person in Clinton what would happen if they got a PO Box in Northboro?
If one could juggle their rates like this then the system is broken.
|
1308.10 | | WJOUSM::WALSH | Howie @WJO | Tue Dec 11 1990 12:27 | 12 |
| > <<< Note 1308.5 by OOES::ULTRA::SEKURSKI >>>
> -< HMOs not Digital running this. >-
> It was my understanding from the meeting I was in that Digital
> is not running this Healthnet thing rather the HMOs have targetted
> specific areas to test it before implementing it on wider
> scale.
>
> So the HMOs *not* Digital planned and implemented this whole thing.
Digital identified which towns Healthnet would be offered in
according to the Fallon rep who visited our site.
|
1308.11 | My rates are going DOWN (from 25.78 to 10.75)! :o | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Tue Dec 11 1990 20:52 | 19 |
| Don't know why mine differs so much at points with .7:
Marlboro:
Provider Individual Family
==========================================================
HealthNet - Harvard (HCHP) 2.43 14.02
HealthNet - Fallon 1.00 9.05
Fallon 0.00 4.05
Tufts (TAHP) 3.72 17.28
Central Mass (CMHC) 7.06 24.42
Bay State 3.88 14.79
Pilgrim 2.69 10.75
Harvard (HCHP) 2.43 14.02
Digital (DMP1) 5.50 21.75
Digital (DMP2) 10.25 34.00
Steve
|
1308.12 | Ashby, MA | AKOFIN::SHAW | Over 70,000 served each week | Wed Dec 12 1990 12:12 | 17 |
| Ashby, MA
Ashby is not a HEALTHNET area. The choices are limited in my opinion.
Provider Individual Family
==========================================================
Central Mass (CMHC) 8.77 25.82
Bay State 9.17 29.20
Tufts 9.25 31.69
Montachusett 7.33 22.76
Digital (DMP1) ZERO 8.50
Digital (DMP2) 4.50 20.50
Rick
|
1308.13 | | AISG::KCHEN | | Wed Dec 12 1990 12:22 | 10 |
| >
> Fallon 0.00 4.05
>
This is way cheaper than what I was quoted in my open enrollment
booklet ($3.05 individual, $14.06 family). I live in either Shirley
or Lancaster, depending on whether you are speaking to my mailman
or tax collector. Could somebody living in Shirley/Lancaster please
post their Fallon rates so that I know I am not being socked for
putting down the wrong address.
|
1308.14 | Hudson MA | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Wed Dec 12 1990 15:55 | 1 |
| Hudson is the same at Marlboro. See .11 for the rates.
|
1308.15 | | OOES::ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Wed Dec 12 1990 16:01 | 23 |
|
I was wrong in my earlier reply Digital did plan this and very
badly.....
My yearly cost will go up $500.00 more per year with Fallon than
the person a few cubes away for the *same coverage* at the *same
facility* with the *same doctor*. I've heard of other people who will
see differences of up to $800.00 this year.
This is not an insignificant increase....
$500.00 could take care of:
- 1 month child care
- 10 weeks of groceries
- more than half my Mass. car insurance rate
- etc.
Mike
----
|
1308.16 | Imagine how much our taxes would go up for universal health care | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Dec 13 1990 12:18 | 19 |
| Just as an aside, for comparison of weekly cost:
Harvard Community Health Plan (HMO only, without Healthnet):
DEC, in the low-cost areas: Individual: $ 2.43
Family: $14.02
DEC, in the high-cost areas: Individual: $ 7.72
Family: $28.43
Man-off-the-street: Individual: $35.30
(does not include Couple: $70.60
prescriptions) Family: $91.15
Since DEC will pay you $20/week if you opt out, I would suspect DEC is paying
somewhere between $27.72 and $35.50 per week to HCHP for individual employees
and somewhere between $48.43 and $91.15 for employees with 2 or more dependents.
/john
|
1308.17 | Here's Colorado Springs Rates | SSDEVO::EKHOLM | Greg - party today, tomorrow we die! (Cluster Adjuster) | Sat Dec 15 1990 14:52 | 18 |
| Colorado Springs, Co
Individual Family
HealthNet Program $ 2.30 13.01
Lincoln $ 1.30 8.01
HMO Colorado $ 2.94 10.24
Health Network Co. $ 1.17 10.41
DMP #1 $ 5.50 21.75
DMP #2 $10.25 34.00
Woodland Park .LT. 15 miles away
DMP #1 unk $ 8.50
Pissed and enjoying it less.
Greg
|
1308.18 | Family status change | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Fri Apr 26 1991 16:06 | 26 |
|
My wife and I both work for DEC and we just had a baby.
We were planning on her opting out and me covering both
of them under the family plan.
According to her PSA you could only choose the opt out
option back in December. ( Not having the old mail concerning
this I don't remember whether this is what it actually said
or not but I do seem to remember some discussion about a change in
family status .... )
Furthermore even though she's now covered under my insurance
she's forced to continue to pay the single rate every week.
Somehow this doesn't sound right.....
I've sent mail off to my personnel rep asking for a confirmation
and explanation of the above but haven't heard back yet.
Has anyone else been in this position before ?
Mike
----
|
1308.19 | No all benefits affected by Status Change | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Fri Apr 26 1991 18:45 | 25 |
| re .18
I remeber a discussion which went something like. If I had opted out
due to my spouse having insurance which covered both of us, then she
lost the insurance due to a change in her employment status. I could
opt back in.
I do not remember anyone bringing up the option of opting out due
to a child birth or other status change which would force/allow me
to pick up family coverage when I previously only had single coverage.
The opt/out provision was intended to be a yearly decision much like
the dependant care and optional medical payments provisions. Status
changes do not allow you to increase/decrease your dependant care
deduction, so I can see possible argument exists for not allowing your
wife to opt out. But she could have been reinstated in, if something
had happended to you which made it necessary to let her back in!!
I would push this one up to the group personnel manager or to benefits
and compensation committee before I would let it go. BTW, why didn't
you change to the family plan and have her opt/out in November, knowing
she was pregnant! I would have discussed this with them back then to
make sure I knew my options.
|
1308.20 | | CECV03::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Apr 29 1991 09:13 | 11 |
| it was explained to us that ONLY a change in employment or marital
status would be sufficient to change the insurance. they will have a
yearly "open enrollment" period for everyone else.
i'd say that if you and your wife were married when the enrollment
period was over last year, (you knew she was pregnant then, didn't
you?), and you were both THEN employees of DEC, and you still are, then
you will have to (or should) wait until the next open enrollment. I am
quite sure a change in dependants is NOT reason to make an exception.
tony
|
1308.21 | | GEMINI::GIBSON | | Mon Apr 29 1991 09:39 | 6 |
| My husband's open enrollment period is different from mine. As of
May 1 I am covered by his Bay State policy, but I must maintain my
HealthNET until December. There's no other way for us to handle it
because of the date discrepancy.
Linda
|
1308.22 | I got out once | HPSTEK::PASCO | Mark 'PASCO' Pascarelli | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:41 | 15 |
| Before OPT-OUT gained you any money... I exitted the Health plan in the
middle of the year. My wife's employer picked up more of the tab than
DEC if she chose Dependant coverage. Sure enough, now that you get a
rebate for OPTing OUT Her plan cost's more and is in danger of
disappearing so I'm back covering us through DEC.
But...There is no way they can stop you from chosing NO coverage for
one person. You might not get any money back until the next open
enrollment but You shouldn't be charged for the one who drops coverage.
I did have to sign something saying that I realized that I would have
NO COVERAGE and could not get in until the next open enrollment.
Pasco
|
1308.23 | | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Mon Apr 29 1991 13:54 | 33 |
|
re .18 and .19
Back when they were sending out PSAs to talk about the changes in
health coverage she did ask that exact question and was told by
the particular person giving the talk that having a baby is a
change in family status so yes she was eligible for opt out....
Since then her group has reorged *and* the supporting personnel
group has also reorgged now a differnet interpretation is being
rendered.
Since she had already fielded that question with her PSA back in
early December and was told it was OK to wait we did, and I didn't
pursue the matter.
I'm pursuing it now though....
re.20
Right. That's what I thought. Yeah you wouldn't have any personal
coverage but you would still be covered under my family plan.
This seems to be a classic case of the left hand not knowing what
the right hand is doing.
Mike
----
|
1308.24 | From the Benefits Book... | FRIGID::LERVIN | | Tue Apr 30 1991 10:11 | 15 |
| This is from the 1988 Benefits book:
"If you don't have dependent coverage and wish to add a new dependent,
you need to fill out the GIA form. Again, you have 31 days from the
date of marriage, birth or adoption to enroll this new dependent in the
plan without providing evidence of insurability. (Only the newly
eligible dependent can be added at this time without going through the
evidence of insurability process.)"
Page 1.9
In other words, you should be able to add your baby to your health
insurance plan. As for dropping your wife's coverage, I don't think
that is possible.
|
1308.25 | HCRA gotcha | ONEDGE::MAFFA | | Tue Apr 30 1991 14:50 | 35 |
|
While we're on the subject of DEC spouses...
When we decided at open enrollment time that one of us should opt
out, we didn't really think it would matter which one got the
Health Care Reimbursement Account and which one of us opted out,
but just today we found out why it matters...
I opted out and my wife added me to her HMO and also chose the HCRA.
Since we are both on the same 'policy' for the HMO, whenever either
one of us has expenses beyond that covered by the HMO, those expenses
can be paid with the HCRA. But, we each have separate dental policies,
so when my wife has dental costs beyond those covered by the dental
plan she can pay them with the HCRA; unfortunately, I cannot do that
because I am not a dependent on her dental policy.
The even more interesting part is that if, for example, we both get
new eyeglasses which are not covered by any policy at all, we can both
use the money from the HCRA.
I understand, now, the reasoning why it works this way - basically
because I am a dependent on her HMO (and we pay for that) and I am
not a dependent on her dental (it would cost me $2.25/week to become
a dependent there), but we never realized this at open enrollment time.
Maybe this was obvious to others at open enrollment time, but we
certainly did not realize that whichever one of us had the expected
greater uncovered dental costs should have opened the HCRA.
I guess now we know...
It just seems kind of strange to me that the only difference between
being able to use the HCRA more or less, is that it is in her name
rather than mine.
|
1308.26 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Apr 30 1991 19:42 | 11 |
| Now wait a minute....
Though not _exactly_ the same situation, I was explicitly told by my PSA
that I could drop my dependent coverage at any time -- a change of family
status was only required if you wanted to _add_ coverage.
My wife's open enrollment period is from now until 10 May. With no children,
it makes more sense for each of us to take our own single coverage. I'm
going to be really annoyed if I was given incorrect information.
/john
|
1308.27 | no surprize here | CECV03::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed May 01 1991 09:02 | 2 |
| are you surprized that YOUR PSA tells you one thing and MINE tells me
another?
|
1308.28 | another inequity | CECV03::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed May 01 1991 09:09 | 14 |
| I'd just LOVE to get on board one of the HMO's I've heard/read about
thru DEC's new plans...
But, I am REQUIRED to select DMP1 OR DMP2. Because my dependant kids
live in another state, and MY HMO couldn't be THEIR HMO. And DEC can't
find a way to reconcile this little problem. A lot of us Non Custodial
Parent's are plagued by this. The result is that our insurance cost's
are higher than they have to be.
I don't mean for this to sound like a wailing cry for symmpathy...
because I'm glad to be able to provide SOME insurance for the kids, but,
it points to another "inequity".
tony
|
1308.29 | After several hours.... | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Wed May 01 1991 15:16 | 24 |
|
My PSA did some homework surrounding all this stuff and right
there in black and white somewhere in the Policies and Procedures
manual it's spelled out that if two DEC employees are married
and they have a baby.
- One of the pair can drop their independant coverage
and be covered under the others family plan
- The person dropping their individual health care plan
is then eligible for opt-out
This must all be done within 31 days after the person comes
back to work.
After all this my PSA called my wife's PSA and everything has
been straightened out.
Mike
----
|
1308.30 | | ATPS::BLOTCKY | | Mon May 06 1991 09:08 | 22 |
| RE: .25
> can be paid with the HCRA. But, we each have separate dental policies,
> so when my wife has dental costs beyond those covered by the dental
> plan she can pay them with the HCRA; unfortunately, I cannot do that
> because I am not a dependent on her dental policy.
I think you might be confusing the "automatic" reimbursement feature of
HCRA with "coverage". According to the mailing I just got, if you have
HCRA and file a Digital Dental Plan claim, any charges over the amount
covered will be automatically paid from your HCRA account; one does not
have to mail in a separate HCRA form for the difference. If you are
covered by your own dental plan, they can't automatically pay from your
wife's HCRA account, but you can still file a HCRA form for the difference.
My wife is a Digital employee. I added dependent dental last
enrollment period (for our kids). When I asked, I was told that my
wife should still file claims under her own individual employee
coverage (you cannot "opt-out" of dental) and that I would have to file
a HCRA form to get back the uncovered amount.
Steve
|
1308.31 | How many more hidden "benefits" | AZTECH::JARRETT | | Tue May 07 1991 12:49 | 7 |
| On a slightly different track... Just found out the hard way that drugs
prescribed by a dentist are *not* covered by JH dental if you opted out of the
JH medical plan for an HMO (i.e. loss of PCS card)... Same is true for any other
medical professional prescribing drugs who is not associated with the HMO e.g.
opthmalogist. (My PSA was surprized too!).
|
1308.32 | Some HMOs coer the drugs with just co-pay .. | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early, Digital Services | Wed May 08 1991 15:09 | 15 |
| re: 1308.31 Health Plan Inequities 31 of 31
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>On a slightly different track... Just found out the hard way that drugs
>prescribed by a dentist are *not* covered by JH dental if you opted out of the
>JH medical plan for an HMO (i.e. loss of PCS card)... Same is true for any other
>medical professional prescribing drugs who is not associated with the HMO e.g.
>opthmalogist. (My PSA was surprized too!).
I'm not sure if this is true all around, but my son (17 1/2 ) was
having tooth problems. The Dentist called our HMO (Fallon Clinic),
and whomever they talked too must have been impressed because the HMO
provided the drugs (Motrin and 'penicillin') for the usual co-pay.
_be
|
1308.33 | Check with your HMO | BSS::D_BANKS | David Banks -- N�ION | Wed May 08 1991 16:33 | 14 |
| Re: <<< Note 1308.32 by AHIKER::EARLY "Bob Early, Digital Services" >>>
> The Dentist called our HMO (Fallon Clinic),
> and whomever they talked too must have been impressed because the HMO
> provided the drugs (Motrin and 'penicillin') for the usual co-pay.
The same is essentially true in our HMO (Health Network in Colorado Springs).
They seem to cover any drug prescribed by a non-HMO doctor (including Dentists)
as long as they are contacted in advance for approval.
So check with your (.31) HMO and you may have coverage there. If not, you
probably chose the wrong HMO :-(
- David
|