According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, “Health insurance is a legal entitlement to payment or reimbursement for your health care costs, generally under a contract with a health insurance company. Health insurance provides important financial protection in case you have an accident or sickness.” Health insurance can generally be used to help pay for medical services, care, medications, and special equipment needed for injury or sickness. Keep reviewing to understand major terms used in the insurance industry.
“Simply put, a health insurance premium is the regular fee paid to the insurance company or health plan to maintain coverage,” explains US News.
Section 42 U.S. Code § 300gg of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) states how insurers determine the cost of a premium. Factors may include age, geographic location, family size, and tobacco use. Insurance companies may not use pre-existing conditions, gender, or medical history as a factor when determining premium costs.
One study analyzing deductions stated, “The insured person must pay a certain and fixed amount for covered health care services before the insurance organization starts to pay. The philosophy of deductibles is that most insured persons can afford low expenses of visits, medications, etc. without suffering much pressure. The reason for using this kind of cost-sharing was that insurers, physicians, and many other people believed that if insurers were involved in paying for these costs from the very beginning of health costs, this would increase excessive use of medical services and consequently increase health care costs.”
The Bureau of Labor Statistics defines copayment as, “A form of medical cost sharing in a health insurance plan that requires an insured person to pay a fixed dollar amount when a medical service is received. The insurer is responsible for the rest of the reimbursement.
Forbes explains that, “coinsurance is a percentage of a healthcare bill you pay after reaching your plan’s deductible and before hitting a plan’s out-of-pocket maximum. During coinsurance, you split the costs for healthcare services with your insurer. Coinsurance levels are often between 20% and 40%, depending on the health plan. Unlike copays, coinsurance doesn’t have different amounts based on the type of care. Plans with lower coinsurance levels often have higher premiums; plans with higher coinsurance levels may have lower premiums. Once you reach your out-of-pocket max, the insurance company picks up the rest of the year’s healthcare service costs.”
”An annual out-of-pocket maximum is the most you will pay for in-network health care services in a year before the health insurance plan pays for all the health costs. This out-of-pocket maximum is in place to reduce the possibility of financial ruin if you face a busy year of healthcare costs and hospitalizations,” explains Forbes.
Healthcare organizations must understand these terms to verify patient coverage, manage billing efficiently, and ensure proper reimbursement.
Terms like premiums, deductibles, copays, and coinsurance determine what portion of medical costs patients must pay, affecting collections and revenue cycles.
Patients may delay necessary treatments due to cost concerns, making it important for providers to communicate financial responsibilities clearly.