Chapter 6: Traditional Fee-for-Service/Private Plans
I. Traditional Fee-for-Service
- FFS (fee-for-service): traditional type of healthcare policy where the insurance company pays fees for services provided to the individuals covered by the policy
- 4 basic types of plans
- Traditional FFS/indemnity plans
- Preferred provider organizations (PPOs)
- Point of Service (POS)
- Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)
- Fees
- Premium: monthly (or quarterly) fee
- Deductible: yearly out of pocket payment before the health insurance carrier begins to contribute
- Coinsurance: percentage of healthcare expenses
- Levels of coverage
- Basic health insurance: hospital room and board and inpatient hospital care; some hospital services and supplies, such as x-rays and medicine; surgery, whether performed in or out of the hospital; some physician visits
- Major medical insurance: treatment for long, high cost illnesses or injuries; inpatient and outpatient expenses
- Comprehensive insurance: combination of the two
II. How Does it Work?
- Insurance cap: limits the amount of money the policy holder has to pay out-of-pocket for any one incident or in any one year
- Lifetime maximum cap: amount after which the insurance company would not pay anymore of the charges incurred
- Reasonable and customary fee: the commonly charged or prevailing fees for health services within a geographic area
III. Commercial or Private Health Insurance
- Who pays for commercial insurance?: an employer, a union, an employee and an employer sharing the cost, or an individual
- Self-insurance: the employer is responsible for the cost of medical services
IV. Participating vs Non-participating Providers
- PAR providers: enters into a contractual agreement with a carrier and agrees to follow certain rules involving claims and payment in turn for advantages granted by the carrier
- nonPAR providers: do not have to file patient claims; can balance the difference between their charges and BCBSs allowed charges
V. Completing the CMS-1500 Form for a Commercial Plan
- See Figure 6-3 for step-by-step guidelines
- Submitting commercial claims
- Timely filing: within 365 days for BCBS; cannot collect payment from patient if claim is denied
- Filing commercial paper and electronic claims: contact insurance company if guidelines aren’t clear
VI. Commerical Claims Involving Secondary Coverage
- Submit: to primary first, then send a new claim to secondary carrier with the EOB from primary attached