| Health
insurance is a legal contract between two or more parties that promises
certain
performance in exchange for considerations. A
health insurance policy is considered a
unilateral contract. This
is because only one party (the insurer)
is required to fulfil their
obligation.
While a policy owner may decide to terminate
premium payments, as long as
the payments are paid the insurer must meet their responsibility under
the
contract.
A
health insurance policy can provide just one or any combination of
certain
benefits:
-
Hospital, medical and surgical expenses resulting from sickness or an
accident
-
Accidental death or dismemberment
-
Disability resulting from accident or sickness (sometimes this can also
be
referred to as “loss of income” or “loss
of time”
An
accident is an injury that occurs accidentally. A sickness is
an illness
or disease that is not the result of an accident. Knowing the
difference
is important because policies may have different provisions that apply
to
accidents or sickness. Also, there are some companies that
sell a separate
accident policy that does not include sickness.
The
terms accident and sickness are widely used and often interchangeable
in any
discussion of health insurance. They
are often abbreviated as A&H and
A&S.
Health insurance is also referred to as
medical insurance.
As
we discussed above, health insurance is designed to protect again two
types of
economic loss.
Loss of income and expenses for medical care
which places them in either
of two broad policy categories:
-
Disability income policies
- Medical
expense policies
Disability
income policies can also be referred to as loss of income, loss of time
or
replacement income. This
type of policy will pay benefits to an
insured who is disabled and
can no longer work to earn a regular income. Payments
can be weekly or monthly depending on
the policy.
Medical
expense policies are represented by a wide range of coverage from very
minimal
to comprehensive packages with multiple coverage. Some
include both accidents and illnesses,
various hospital expenses and
other costs pertaining to medical care such as:
- Accident
and sickness policies
- Hospital
policies
- Basic
medical expense policies
- Major
medical expense policies
- Comprehensive
medical expense policies
Any
of these policies might cover various combinations of the above and may
be paid
in a lump sum.
Accident
Policies.
Some policies cover only accidents and not
illness.
As you might imagine, policies like this are
very specific about what is
considered an accident.
It
is important to understand what is defined as an accident as it
pertains to the
health insurance industry. . .an accident is an event that is
unforeseen and
unintended.
Keep
in mind that any discussion of this type of policy also applies to any
type of
policy that includes accidental coverage not just accident specific
policies.
Accident
benefits are most commonly paid for accidental loss of life (also
called
accidental death), accidental loss of limb or sigh (dismemberment),
loss of time
and/or income, hospital expenses, surgical expenses, and medical
expenses like
visits to the doctor.
Let’s
expand a bit on dismemberment. As
we said, this would be loss of limb or
sight, however, different
states have statutes that define dismemberment and they can vary from
state to
state.
This is a subject that you need to discuss
with your insurance agent to
determine what actually constitutes dismemberment in your state.
Accidental
Death Benefit can also be referred to as “principal
sum.”
This type of coverage should not be confused
with life insurance. There
is a world of difference between the two. Life
insurance policies will generally
regardless of the cause of death. An
accidental benefit is paid ONLY if the
death is accidental as opposed
to a death by natural causes or illness.
The
person who received the death benefit is called the beneficiary. The
policy owner has the right and
responsibility of naming
beneficiaries.
Usually there is a primary beneficiary however
he/she can assign a second
and even a third beneficiary.
The
primary beneficiary is the first person in line to receive the benefit
in the
event of the death of the policy holder. They
can also name a second beneficiary who
would receive the benefit in
the event the primary beneficiary dies before the insured. Some
policies can include a third beneficiary
who would be in line after
the first two.
There
is much more to be learned about accidental death policies, but we
would like to
mention one important element before we move on. An
accidental death
may not be instant. A person can die as a result of an
accidental injury
months after the accident occurrence. Read your policy
carefully because
most stipulate that the accidental death benefit will only be paid if
death
occurs within three months of the accident.
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