How to Compare Health Plans
After you review what benefits are available and decide what is important to you, you can compare plans. Many things should be considered. These include services offered, choice of providers, location, and costs. The quality of care is also a factor to think about.
Services
Find out what types of care or services the plan won’t pay for. These usually are called exclusions.
Few indemnity and managed care plans cover treatments that are experimental. Ask how the plan decides what is or is not experimental. Find out what you can do if you disagree with a plan’s decision on medical care or coverage.
Choice
What doctors, hospitals, and other medical providers are part of the plan? Are there enough of the kinds of doctors you want to see? Do you need to choose a primary care doctor? If you want to see a specialist, can you refer yourself or must your primary care doctor refer you? Do you need approval from the plan before going into the hospital or getting specialty care?
Location
Where will you go for care? Are these places near where you work or live? How does the plan handle care when you are away from home?
Costs
No health insurance plan will cover every expense. To get a true idea of what your costs will be under each plan, you need to look at how much you will pay for your premium and other costs.
* Are there deductibles you must pay before the insurance begins to help cover your costs?
* After you have met your deductible, what part of your costs are paid by the plan?
* Does this amount vary by the type of service, doctor, or health facility used?
* Are there copayments you must pay for certain services, such as doctor visits?
* If you use doctors outside a plan’s network, how much more will you pay to get care?
* If a plan does not cover certain services or care that you think you will need, how much will you have to pay?
* Are there any limits to how much you must pay in case of major illness?
* Is there a limit on how much the plan will pay for your care in a year or over a lifetime? A single hospital stay for a serious condition could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.


