NY Chapter 1- Health & Accident Insurance Flashcards
is a general way of describing insurance against loss through sickness or accidental bodily injury.
- the general term applies to many different types of insurance, not just the medical insurance that pays for doctor and hospital visits.
health insurance
(It is also called accident and health, accident and sickness, sickness and accident, or disability insurance)
Disability (income) Insurance
is a form of insurance that insures the beneficiary’s earned income against the risk that a disability creates a barrier for a worker to complete the core functions of their work.
pays benefits for nonsurgical doctors’ fees commonly rendered in a hospital; sometimes pays for home and office calls.
Medical expense insurance
Interim Coverage
is a short-term policy purchased on an interim basis typically when in between jobs or waiting for a new policy to start.
is the purest form of accident insurance. It provides the insured with a lump-sum benefit amount in the event of accidental death or dismemberment under accidental circumstances.
Accidental Death and Dismemberment
Nonpartcipating plan
is Insurance under which the insured is not entitled to share in the divisible surplus of the company.
is a plan under which the policy owner receives shares (commonly called dividends) of the divisible surplus of the company.
Participating Plan of Insurance
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)
was designed to increase health insurance quality and affordability, lower the uninsured rate by expanding insurance coverage and reduce the costs of healthcare.
- The law requires insurers to accept all applicants, cover a specific list of conditions and charge the same rates regardless of pre-existing conditions or sex.
is insurance that provides coverage for a group of persons, usually employees of a company, under one master contract.
- are available to employers, trade and professional associations, labor unions, credit unions, and other organizations.
- Insurance is extended to individuals in the group through the master contract.
- This normally does not require individual underwriting nor evidence of insurability.
- The employer or the association is the policyowner and is responsible for premium payments.
- The employer may pay the entire premium or may require some contribution from each member to cover the insurance cost.
Group Health Insurance
define the rights of the insurer to cancel the policy at different points during the life of the policy.
There are five principal classifications:
- cancellable
- optionally renewable
- conditionally renewable
- guaranteed renewable
- non-cancellable
Generally speaking, the more advantageous the renewability provisions to the insured, the more expensive the coverage.
Renewability Provisions
allows the insurer to cancel or terminate the policy at any time. This type of renewability is prohibited in most states.
Cancellable Policies
give the insurer the option to terminate the policy on a date specified in the contract. If the insurer decides to renew (not cancel) the policy, they also have the option (and usually choose to) increase the premiums on the anniversary date.
Optionally Renewable policies
policies give the insurer the option to terminate the policy only in the event of one or more conditions stated in the contract. Typically, these conditions are age related. If the insurer decides to renew (not cancel) the policy, they also have the option (and usually choose to) increase the premiums on the anniversary date.
Conditionally Renewable
specify that the policy MUST be renewed (usually until the insured reaches a specified age). However, the insurer still has the option (and usually choose to) increase the premiums on the anniversary date. Medicare supplement policies and long-term care policies are the most common types of guaranteed renewable policies.
Guaranteed Renewable Policies
state the policy cannot be cancelled nor can its premium rates be increased under any circumstances.
-Disability policies are the most common policies.
Noncancellable Policies
are for predetermined terms of a year or less (typically short-term health insurance) and are considered temporary.
Nonrenewable Policies
Cafeteria Plans
are benefit arrangements in which employees can pick and choose from a menu of benefits, thus tailoring the benefits package to their specific needs.
- Taxation is regulated by Section 125 of the Internal Revenue Code
(also referred to as a Section 125 plan)
Business Continuation Plan
provide a way to help a business continue in the event an owner or key employee dies, or in the event of a disabling sickness or injury.
Business Overhead Expense Insurance
is a form of disability income coverage designed to pay necessary business overhead expenses, such as rent, should the insured business owner become disabled.
- include things like rent or mortgage payments, utilities, telephones, leased equipment, employees’ salaries, and the like. This includes all the expenses that would continue and must be paid, regardless of the owner’s disability.
- policies do not include any compensation for the disabled owner