Tag Archives: AARP

Your Questions About Medicare Insurance Coverage Gap

Mary asks…


Question on Medicare Part D?

I totally do not understand how ALL the Medicare Part D plans work. I’m told there is what they call a Dough-nut hole, or Coverage gap period in ALL the different plans, in where you have to keep paying some company your monthly premiums, but your actually have no coverage on your prescription medicine discounts. During this period you have to pay regular high prices for your prescription medicine. This seems crazy to me. Would be like buying Life insurance, and paying a monthly premium twelve months out of the year, but if you should die between July and December you have no coverage, ONLY if you die between Jan. and June. I would appreciate it so much if someone out there could explain to me how this Part D works, and why it is set up the way it is, I just don’t get it. Thank you so much for your help.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

I took a course on health care systems and we learned a lot about Medicare. Part D is drug coverage. I’m not sure on the exact number amounts, but if you have costs ranging from $1.000-$3,000 (this is just an estimate), then that’s the Basic level and they’ll cover 50% of your bills and you’ll have to pay for the other 50%. If your bills are anywhere from $3,00-$5,000, then that’s the Donut Hole, and you’ll have to pay for 100% of it. Basically, since it’s not Basic and it’s not Catastrophic, you have to take care of it. If your costs are in the Catastrophic level, for example $5,000+, they’ll pay for 95% of it and you’ll pay the remaining 5% of your bill. You can find more information on the Medicare website. You can search it in Google.

Sandra asks…

How did Obama bribe his way to getting the health bill passed?

As the suicidal Democratic congressmen proceed to rubber-stamp the Obama healthcare reform despite the drubbing their party took in the ’09 elections, the president trotted out the endorsements of the AMA and the AARP to stimulate support. But these – and the other endorsements – his package has received are all bought and paid for.
Here are the deals:
The American Medical Association (AMA) was facing a 21 percent cut in physicians’ reimbursements under the current law. Obama promised to kill the cut if they backed his bill. The cuts are the fruit of a law requiring annual 5 percent to 6 percent reductions in doctor reimbursements for treating Medicare patients. Bravely, each year Congress has rolled the cuts over, suspending them but not repealing them. So each year, the accumulated cuts threaten doctors. By now, they have risen to 21 percent. With this blackmail leverage, Obama compelled the AMA to support his bill…or else!
The AARP got a financial windfall in return for its support of the healthcare bill. Over the past decade, the AARP has morphed from an advocacy group to an insurance company (through its subsidiary company). It is one of the main suppliers of Medi-gap insurance, a high-cost, privately purchased coverage that picks up where Medicare leaves off. But President Bush-43 passed the Medicare Advantage program, which offered a subsidized, lower-cost alternative to Medi-gap. Under Medicare Advantage, the elderly get all the extra coverage they need plus coordinated, well-managed care, usually by the same physician. So more than 10 million seniors went with Medicare Advantage, cutting into AARP Medi-gap revenues.
Presto! Obama solved their problem. He eliminates subsidies for Medicare Advantage. The elderly will have to pay more for coverage under Medigap, but the AARP — which supposedly represents them — will make more money. (If this galls you, join the American Seniors Association, the alternative group; contact sbarton@americanseniors.org. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .)
The drug industry backed ObamaCare and, in return, got a 10-year limit of $80 billion on cuts in prescription drug costs. (A drop in the bucket of their almost $3 trillion projected cost over the next decade.) They also got administration assurances that it will continue to bar lower-cost Canadian drugs from coming into the U.S. All it had to do was put its formidable advertising budget at the disposal of the administration.
Insurance companies got access to 40 million potential new customers. But when the Senate Finance Committee lowered the fine that would be imposed on those who don’t buy insurance from $3,500 to $1,500, the insurance companies jumped ship and now oppose the bill, albeit for the worst of motives.
The only industry that refused to knuckle under was the medical device makers. They stood for principle and wouldn’t go along with Obama’s blackmail. So the Senate Finance Committee retaliated by imposing a tax on medical devices such as automated wheelchairs, pacemakers, arterial stents, prosthetic limbs, artificial knees and hips and other necessary accoutrements of healthcare.
So these endorsements are not freely given, but bought and paid for by an administration that is intent on passing its program at any cost.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

He could sell an electric razor to an Amish man. Everybody just believes Obama. I don’t. Wake up America.

Betty asks…

Does any one know the real reason that the AMA and AARP are supporting Obamacare ?

Here are the deals:

* The American Medical Association (AMA) was facing a 21 percent cut in physicians’ reimbursements under the current law. Obama promised to kill the cut if they backed his bill. The cuts are the fruit of a law requiring annual 5-6 percent reductions in doctor reimbursements for treating Medicare patients. Bravely, each year Congress has rolled the cuts over, suspending them but not repealing them. So each year, the accumulated cuts threaten doctors. By now, they have risen to 21 percent. With this blackmail leverage, Obama compelled the AMA to support his bill…or else!

* The AARP got a financial windfall in return for its support of the healthcare bill. Over the past decade, the AARP has morphed from an advocacy group to an insurance company (through its subsidiary company). It is one of the main suppliers of Medi-gap insurance, a high-cost, privately purchased coverage that picks up where Medicare leaves off. But President Bush-43 passed the Medicare Advantage program, which offered a subsidized, lower-cost alternative to Medi-gap. Under Medicare Advantage, the elderly get all the extra coverage they need plus coordinated, well-managed care, usually by the same physician. So more than 10 million seniors went with Medicare Advantage, cutting into AARP Medi-gap revenues.

Presto! Obama solved their problem. He eliminates subsidies for Medicare Advantage. The elderly will have to pay more for coverage under Medigap, but the AARP — which supposedly represents them — will make more money. (If this galls you, join the American Seniors Association, the alternative group; contact sbarton@americanseniors.org. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .)

* The drug industry backed ObamaCare and, in return, got a 10-year limit of $80 billion on cuts in prescription drug costs. (A drop in the bucket of their almost $3 trillion projected cost over the next decade.) They also got administration assurances that it will continue to bar lower-cost Canadian drugs from coming into the U.S. All it had to do was put its formidable advertising budget at the disposal of the administration.

* Insurance companies got access to 40 million potential new customers. But when the Senate Finance Committee lowered the fine that would be imposed on those who don’t buy insurance from $3,500 to $1,500, the insurance companies jumped ship and now oppose the bill, albeit for the worst of motives.

The only industry that refused to knuckle under was the medical device makers. They stood for principle and wouldn’t go along with Obama’s blackmail. So the Senate Finance Committee retaliated by imposing a tax on medical devices such as automated wheelchairs, pacemakers, arterial stents, prosthetic limbs, artificial knees and hips and other necessary accoutrements of healthcare.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Because obama is in bed with them as he is with everyone! These people truly do NOT know what and who they voted in!

Ruth asks…

do you wonder how this healthcare unread bill passed the house?

Obamacare Endorsements: What the Bribe Was
Sunday, November 8, 2009 10:39 AM
By: Dick Morris & Eileen McGann
As the suicidal Democratic congressmen proceed to rubber-stamp the Obama healthcare reform despite the drubbing their party took in the ’09 elections, the president trotted out the endorsements of the AMA and the AARP to stimulate support. But these – and the other endorsements – his package has received are all bought and paid for.
Here are the deals:
The American Medical Association (AMA) was facing a 21 percent cut in physicians’ reimbursements under the current law. Obama promised to kill the cut if they backed his bill. The cuts are the fruit of a law requiring annual 5 percent to 6 percent reductions in doctor reimbursements for treating Medicare patients. Bravely, each year Congress has rolled the cuts over, suspending them but not repealing them. So each year, the accumulated cuts threaten doctors. By now, they have risen to 21 percent. With this blackmail leverage, Obama compelled the AMA to support his bill…or else!
The AARP got a financial windfall in return for its support of the healthcare bill. Over the past decade, the AARP has morphed from an advocacy group to an insurance company (through its subsidiary company). It is one of the main suppliers of Medi-gap insurance, a high-cost, privately purchased coverage that picks up where Medicare leaves off. But President Bush-43 passed the Medicare Advantage program, which offered a subsidized, lower-cost alternative to Medi-gap. Under Medicare Advantage, the elderly get all the extra coverage they need plus coordinated, well-managed care, usually by the same physician. So more than 10 million seniors went with Medicare Advantage, cutting into AARP Medi-gap revenues.
Presto! Obama solved their problem. He eliminates subsidies for Medicare Advantage. The elderly will have to pay more for coverage under Medigap, but the AARP — which supposedly represents them — will make more money. (If this galls you, join the American Seniors Association, the alternative group; contact sbarton@americanseniors.org. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .)
The drug industry backed ObamaCare and, in return, got a 10-year limit of $80 billion on cuts in prescription drug costs. (A drop in the bucket of their almost $3 trillion projected cost over the next decade.) They also got administration assurances that it will continue to bar lower-cost Canadian drugs from coming into the U.S. All it had to do was put its formidable advertising budget at the disposal of the administration.
Insurance companies got access to 40 million potential new customers. But when the Senate Finance Committee lowered the fine that would be imposed on those who don’t buy insurance from $3,500 to $1,500, the insurance companies jumped ship and now oppose the bill, albeit for the worst of motives.
The only industry that refused to knuckle under was the medical device makers. They stood for principle and wouldn’t go along with Obama’s blackmail. So the Senate Finance Committee retaliated by imposing a tax on medical devices such as automated wheelchairs, pacemakers, arterial stents, prosthetic limbs, artificial knees and hips and other necessary accoutrements of healthcare.
So these endorsements are not freely given, but bought and paid for by an administration that is intent on passing its program at any cost.
© 2009 Dick Morris & Eileen McGann

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

The Dems didn’t care what it said…as long as it passed. Just like everything else.

William asks…


Have any of you read this article today about healthcare reform?

I have copy and pasted it below. Is this accurate? If so, it does not really sound so bad like some people are thinking. I am an independent and fiscally conservative. I have always been but something REALLY needs to happen about our crazy healthcare system. I am a healthy 38 year old female and pay through the roof for health care and it is ridiculous. I am self-employed and make 100k+ per year. I am NOT a fan of Obama but something had to change and lets face it….if ALL republicans were in power I am almost sure nothing would happen.
Congress approved a major overhaul of the nation’s health care system for President Barack Obama’s signature. Here are some of the features of the legislation.

HOW MANY COVERED: 32 million uninsured. Major coverage expansion begins in 2014. When fully phased in, 94 percent of eligible non-elderly Americans would have coverage, compared with 83 percent today.

COST: $938 billion over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

INSURANCE MANDATE: Almost everyone is required to be insured or else pay a fine, which takes effect in 2014. There is an exemption for low-income people.

INSURANCE MARKET REFORMS: Starting this year, insurers would be forbidden from placing lifetime dollar limits on policies, from denying coverage to children because of pre-existing conditions, and from canceling policies because someone gets sick. Parents would be able to keep older kids on their coverage up to age 26. A new high-risk pool would offer coverage to uninsured people with medical problems until 2014, when the coverage expansion goes into high gear. Major consumer safeguards would also take effect in 2014. Insurers would be prohibited from denying coverage to people with medical problems or charging them more. Insurers could not charge women more.

MEDICAID: Expands the federal-state Medicaid insurance program for the poor to cover people with incomes up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level, $29,327 a year for a family of four. Childless adults would be covered for the first time, starting in 2014. The federal government would pay 100 percent of costs for covering newly eligible individuals through 2016.

If the Senate approves a package of changes this week, a special deal that would have given Nebraska 100 percent federal financing for newly eligible Medicaid recipients in perpetuity would be eliminated. A different, one-time deal negotiated by Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu for her state, Louisiana, worth as much as $300 million, remains.

TAXES: To make up for the lost revenue, the bill applies an increased Medicare payroll tax to the investment income and to the wages of individuals making more than $200,000, or married couples above $250,000. The tax on investment income would be 3.8 percent. If the Senate follows through, it would impose a 40 percent tax on high-cost insurance plans above the threshold of $10,200 for individuals and $27,500 for families. The tax would go into effect in 2018.

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS: Gradually closes the “doughnut hole” coverage gap in the Medicare prescription drug benefit that seniors fall into once they have spent $2,830. Seniors who hit the gap this year will receive a $250 rebate. Beginning in 2011, seniors in the gap receive a discount on brand name drugs, initially 50 percent off. When the gap is completely eliminated in 2020, seniors will still be responsible for 25 percent of the cost of their medications until Medicare‘s catastrophic coverage kicks in.

EMPLOYER RESPONSIBILITY: Employers are hit with a fee if the government subsidizes their workers’ coverage. The $2,000-per-employee fee would be assessed on the company’s entire work force, minus an allowance. Companies with 50 or fewer workers are exempt from the requirement.

SUBSIDIES: The aid is available on a sliding scale for households making up to four times the federal poverty level, $88,200 for a family of four. Premiums for a family of four making $44,000 would be capped at around 6 percent of income.

HOW YOU CHOOSE YOUR HEALTH INSURANCE: Small businesses, the self-employed and the uninsured could pick a plan offered through new state-based purchasing pools called exchanges, opening for business in 2014. The exchanges would offer the same kind of purchasing power that employees of big companies benefit from. People working for medium-to-large firms would not see major changes. But if they lose their jobs or strike out on their own, they may be eligible for subsidized coverage through the exchange.

GOVERNMENT-RUN PLAN: No government-run insurance plan. People purchasing coverage through the new insurance exchanges would have the option of signing up for national plans overseen by the federal office that manages the health plans available to members of Congress. Those plans would be private, but one would have to be nonprofit.

ABORTION: The bill tries to maintain a strict separation between taxpayer dollars and private premiums that wou
I got this news from yahoo finance.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/A-look-at-the-health-care-apf-3833703794.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=1&asset=&ccode=

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Doesn’t sound too bad? Of course it doesn’t this is only part of the bill… Where did you get this from because I would like to know where the rest of the information that is in the bill and is not mentioned in your cut and paste…

Then of course, there’s the items in the ‘reconciliation bill’ that have absolutely nothing to do with health care or insurance… But i suppose if you only focus on the piece of the ice berg sticking out of the water, all appears well – if you don’t think that is the case ask yourself how it is remotely possible to summarize 2700+ pages of legislation in roughly 2 pages?

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Your Questions About Medicare Advantage Cuts

Susan asks…

Why would AARP support health care reform if the $500 billion cut to medicare would hurt the elderly?

and why did the democrats remove the special handling of “Medicare Advantage” for Florida if the democrats thought that would cause them to lose all those Florida seniors in next presidential election?

In my opinion, the programs being cut have no advantage to seniors but is just a giveaway to insurance companies. There are better programs such as Medicare Supplemental that aren’t subsidized by the government.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

AARP is TOTALLY political and carries Medicare supplements. If seniors lose benefits, AARP hopes they will turn to them for extra coverage. This betrayal is why thousands of seniors are dropping their AARP membership.

Ruth asks…

Why do the liberals not cry about what Obamacare is going to do with Medicare?

The liberals are always claiming the Republicans are going to do away with medicare and push granny over the cliff which isn’t true. However, you don’t hear a peep out of them when under ObamaCare, physicians’ Medicare fees are supposed to be cut 21 percent and hospital reimbursements for Medicare patients chopped by $1.3-billion. How long can doctors and hospitals sustain those losses before they’re forced to pull the plug on treating Medicare patients?? Obamacare slices $528-billion from Medicare, including $136-billion carved out of Medicare Advantage. The Medicare Advantage cuts will force 4.8 million seniors off the plan by 2019. An additional $23 billion in cuts to Medicare will come from a panel charged with slashing Medicare spending. If the liberals are so concerned about Medicare why are they not crying about this?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Liberals don’t cry, they scream, and they are screaming loudly today. Obama is looking like a weakling and if he gives in to the republicans for even bigger tax breaks for the wealthy, while taking more away from the middle class. He could lose the election. Perhaps it is time for the Democratic party to prop up a new candidate. Where is Hillary?

Linda asks…

why would some people who are against “Obamacare” for medicare? Medicare is governement run, socialized?

medicine. and it is welfare once the senior’s health care cost more than he/she put into it. (the average costs are 3x as much as they put into it). so why are some people okay with this?
and why are some people okay with Ryan’s plan to cut medicare that were furious with the 500b in cuts to medicare fraud and advantage plans (take 10% more of taxpayers money than traditional medicare)
where are they now? LOL

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

I oppose both programs…history has proven that governmental involvement in the heath industry has only driven costs ever higher.

Richard asks…

whats currrently going on in Congress re medicare?

are they cutting medicare payments to MD that take basic medicare at the expense of those Medicare Advantage programs? Does that mean people who have Medicare Advantage w/a private carrier will being paying higher costs next yr?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

The House of Representatives has passed legislation that will prevent reimbursement rates for Doctors from being cut – e.g. Without this legislation doctors would see their reimbursement from medicare cut by 10 percent.

To pay for this, meaning to make the bill budget neutral or “paid for” the bill also cuts payments to the private insurance companies that provide Medicare Advantage.
People who use the Advantage program won’t see their cost increase – instead the insurance companies will just have a reduced profit.

The reason this is being done is because the government pays more for the same medical procedure under Medicare Advantage than under the traditional Medicare program. Medicare Advantage was supposed to save money but it isn’t.

Steven asks…

When did it become illegal to expose the truth about pending legislation?

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services launched an investigation into Humana Inc.’s effort to enlist beneficiaries to fight proposed cuts to Medicare‘s private plans.

The investigation, launched Friday, is looking at whether Humana, one of the largest providers of Medicare Advantage plans, violated marketing rules by sending letters to beneficiaries in Michigan, Florida and other states urging them to contact lawmakers to register their opposition to proposed cuts.

The letters state that “millions of seniors and disabled individuals could lose many of the important benefits and services that make Medicare Advantage health plans so valuable” — a claim congressional Democrats say is false.

CMS is also examining Humana’s online Partner program, which automatically drafts letters that people can send to their lawmakers opposing cutbacks. Officials on Friday requested that the company stop the mailings and shut down the Web site.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D., Mont.) — whose proposal to overhaul the health-care system would cut payments to Advantage plans by $123 billion over 10 years — pushed for the investigation.

“[Humana's] tactics do a disservice to beneficiaries by spreading false claims about such an important bill in Congress,” said Erin Shields, a spokeswoman for Sen. Baucus. “Cutting the fat from the profits of private health plans that deliver Medicare is the best way to ensure the sustainability of the program and preserve the Medicare benefits seniors depend upon.”

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

When Obama was allowed to occupy the Oval Office.

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Your Questions About Medicare Supplemental Insurance

Jenny asks…

Where can I get a legit quote on medicare supplemental insurance?

. . . without having to type in my phone number and then wait for an agent to call. There are a ton of websites claiming to have online quote information to compare companies, but they all want phone number, address, email, etc. and then still will not provide you online information. The medicare.gov site lists names of companies but when going to each individual company’s site, they require you to either navigate through a ton of links or require you to get information from an agent. The only site I found that had an actual on-line quote was StateFarm, but I wanted to check other companies.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Take the hint: Insurance is not to be shopped on the internet!

Donna asks…

If I am a member of AARP, what would its premium be for supplemental insurance to Medicare B?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

If you’re talking about the medicare D plans i think AARP’s plans start at about $25. None of AARP’s plans have the $500 deductible but you have to pay more if you don’t want to fall in the ‘doughnut hole’. If you really need help with this email me and i can walk you through finding a good plan. They vary by state but AARP and Humana both have good plans. Don’t sign up for medicare advantage whatever you do!!!

Lisa asks…

Can anyone give me an idea about which supplemental insurance is best for Medicare recipients?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

When it comes to insurance with medicare I would really base the next plan off what meds you are on because if you don’t some plans that you sign up with won’t cover them.

Carol asks…

what is the best supplemental insurance to medicare?

I am looking for a reasonable supplemental insurance to go along with medicare with not too high of premiums ..within 200.00 to 250.00 range premiums with prescription coverage .. would anyone have any advice out there.. thanks in advance..

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

$200 to $250 per month just for a Medigap policy is rather expensive when most cost around $125 to $175. You can buy a policy from any insurance carrier that sells them. All of the major insurers do. They dont all operate in every state. You have to call on the phone a local insurance agent and find out which companies offer it where you live and what types they offer.

The Medicare website offers help on choosing a Medigap policy.

George asks…

medicare supplemental insurance?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Here’s a link to a website that helped me understand the nightmare that is Medicare-

http://www.caring.com/medicare

I hope it helps! I’ve been dealing with them for over three years now (on behalf of my 85 and 90 year old grandmothers) and I still have to refer to that site regularly when I have questions. I can’t imagine how some seniors who have no one to help are able to manage this stuff on alone???

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Your Questions About Medicare Health Insurance Part A

Ken asks…

Is it hard to pass a state health insurance license exam?

I am taking on a temporary position assisting customers in signing up with medicare part d. In order to do this I have to take a week course (offered by company) plus pass the state health insurance exam (also paid by company). So I am wondering is this something that is difficult?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Many people pass the first time. Many people flunk.

It’s not something you can bluff your way through. If you study and know the materials, you will most likely pass. If you don’t study, you will most likely fail.

If you’re getting 90% on your practice exams, you’ll most likely pass. If you haven’t cracked open the book, you’ll most likely fail.

Linda asks…

If I cancel my AARP membership, will my Medicare Supplemental and Part D insurance remain in force?

If not, is there an option to continue the coverage through the United Health underwriter?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Contrary to the above answers – you must be a member of AARP to have their Medicare Supplement. You do not need to be a member for the Part D coverage or if you have the AARP MedicareComplete Medicare Advantage plans. You can possibly switch to the Secure Horizons Medicare Supplement (which is through United Healthcare) or to another company’s Supplement but they may decline to accept you if your health doesn’t meet their underwriting guidelines.

George asks…

Health insurance when there’s an age gap between spouses? Medicare or not?

My husband is 5 years older than me and plans to retire in 2011. I work part-time only so I carry no health insurance of my own. I relied on my husband’s health insurance. However, my husband is planning to retire in 6 months or so although he will receive a pension from his company when he does (although I don’t know if the company will continue to kick in to our health care or not once he retires or not). My husband is 66 and I’m 61. So, as I understand it, my husband could choose to go on Medicare or he could choose to continue paying for our Aetna insurance through his company . But my husband can’t find out the details about his company’s healthcare options until he submits his 3 month notice and his choice of a pension plan. Both of us are basically healthy except that I do have an ongoing knee problem from an injury long ago that has required surgery in the past and continues to cause me pain–I might need surgery again.

So my question is this: In a situation like ours, where the primary breadwinner/insurance carrier is 5 years older and the wife to date has been relying on her older husband’s insurance, is it usually wiser for the husband to continue with his company’s insurance plan (Aetna in PA), or is it less costly for the husband to switch to Medicare and for the wife to find a health insurance policy of her own?
Flower, Thanks. I could be wrong, but I don’t think that my husband would have to pay more for Medicare just because he chose to work to age 67 rather than retire at 65. After all, he’s paying for a PRIVATE insurance plan so long as he’s employed, which saves the gov’t money, plus he’s earning more income than he would as a retiree–and it would all be TAXABLE. And if I recall correctly people aren’t even entitled to Medicare coverage until they leave their jobs. So it wouldn’t serve the US gov’t well to reduce benefits for those who continue to work past the age 65 because then no one would bother to do it, and the state would lose revenues as a result.
Thanks, Lucy, for the referral to the AARP website, but the questioner in that case said that her mother didn’t sign up for Medicare “when she was supposed to.” The AARP answerer gave good information about penalties but he apparently assumed that the questioner’s mother had no coverage from a full-time job; he should have made clear that the situation is different when a person still has full-time employment.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Usually you will have to get individual health insurance with Aetna unless who chooses to continue his coverage with him on it.

Since you are health I would go on and apply for individual with just you before telling them anything so that you could find an absolute result about how the situation will turn out.

Most likely they will put a rider on your knee and won’t cover any surgery having to do with the knee.

Helen asks…

why shouldnt we have universal health insurance?

here are some facts:
-There are nearly 50 million Americans without health insurance
-18,000 Americans will die this year simply because they’re uninsured
-Hillary Clinton became the second largest recipient in the Senate of health care industry contributions.$100 million spent to defeat Hillary’s health care plan.
-The United States is ranked #37 as a health system by the World Health Organization.
-The CEO of health insurance comapnies win beteween 3.2 -22.2 million dollars
-Medicare Part D plan will hand over $800 billion of our tax dollars to the drug and health insurance industry.
-Canadians live three years longer than we do.
-Drugs in England only cost $10
- A baby born in El Salvador has a better chance of surviving than a baby born in Detroit.
-In the U.S., health care costs run nearly $7,000 per person. But in Cuba, they spend around $251 per person
-what happended to help our fellow neighber, big insurance companies brain wash people….know tell me why shouldt we have universal health insurance?
-would you rather die then to pay a couple of dollars more in taxes? what if you were the one dieing should we just let you die because you dont have insurance?

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

Well that’s america for ya, it sucks

Richard asks…

Why aren’t the trillions of dollars net worth health insurance companies blasting the air waves?

Maybe they found a way to crawl in bed with ObamaCare and leave “the people” left out to dry like Medicare part D?

A good point came up here:

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=ArXl3ZwETaIjEa9KinxU7X_ty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20090816133339AA3HjM8&show=7#profile-info-AA11702773

.

Medicare Insurance AZ staff answers:

The information is really alarming. I don’t know if Obama is a political genius, but the way he is manuerving this implies that he knows more of what’s going on than he’s telling the public. Obama originally try to sell the public option as one of the cornerstone of his reforms, yet recently he retracted this, saying that he was willing to sacrifice it for the sake of getting bilateral support on reform that both sides can agree on. It never occurred to me that the reason why he left it was because he already had a shady deal with industry lobbyists to cut back on medicine costs

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