Illness-episode approach: Costs and benefits of medigap insurance
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- Vol. 11 (4) , 121-131
Abstract
Over two-thirds of Medicare beneficiaries have private supplementary coverage, but few know enough about Medicare, their own supplements, or available alternatives to make intelligent comparisons and informed purchasing decisions. The illness-episode approach, a new way to provide insurance information to Medicare beneficiaries, calculates out-of-pocket costs likely to be faced by beneficiaries experiencing 13 illnesses, under Medicare alone and under different medigap policies. Applying the approach to six policies marketed in Los Angeles in 1986 revealed that plans varied widely in their ability to reduce financial vulnerability; many still leave the elderly with substantial out-of-pocket costs.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Financial Consequences of Joining a Medicare HMO: An Application of the Illness Episode Approach to Estimating Out-of-Pocket CostsJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1989
- Health Care Financing among the Elderly: Who Really Pays the Bills?Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1987
- Medigap insurance: pitfalls and progress.1986
- Consumer knowledge of Medicare and supplemental health insurance benefits.1986
- Protecting the Elderly Against High Health Care CostsHealth Affairs, 1986
- Private Health Insurance of the Medicare Population and the Baucus LegislationMedical Care, 1985
- The extent of ownership and the characteristics of Medicare supplemental policies.1985
- Knowledge of Their Health Insurance Coverage by the ElderlyMedical Care, 1984
- Medicare or ‘Medigap’? Dilemma for the ElderlyHealth & Social Work, 1984
- Demographic characteristics and health care use and expenditures by the aged in the United States: 1977-1984.1984