hi cattlekidi believe the term you are describing is "co-insurance". the 20% that you have to pay is your co-insurance payment. meaning you are responsible for 20% of the risk and the insurance is responsible for 80% of the risk. Risk is spread between you and the insurance provider. in my case it is 90/10. that number once it reaches 2000, same for me, the insurance picks up the entire risk of 100%. the co-pay is a set payment you have to pay for office visits. for me, it is 20 for general, 40 for specialists, 100 for ER etc. these payments are considered as co-pays and do not count towards your out of pocket maximum for the year. anyone, please correct me if i am wrong and hope this explanation helps.
Quote from: blondie1746 on February 07, 2013, 08:13:05 AMI have Medicare and private insurance. Since our private insurance is not provided by work (i.e. not a group plan) and we pay for it ourselves, Medicare is primary in my case, and my private insurance is secondary. That also has to do with the fact that I do PD at home. I was covered from the time I started training for PD. But, my social worker found a grant that helps pay my Medicare premium and my portion of my private insurance premium. Also, I have never been balance billed by my dialysis clinic for anything not paid by Medicare or private insurance. Sounds like you might need a new social worker. That is their job to help you through this, mentally, and financially.hi blondie1746, thanks a lot for writing. you buy private insurance? wow, i have always heard for people like us it costs an arm and a leg and an another additional appendage that cannot be mentioned here (medical term: gonad (male), particularly the left). that is if they are ready to take us on in the first place. pardon my intrusion, but could you please share how you managed to get personal insurance? i might have to consider this option in the future that's why. hope you are doing well and keep on doing well forever.
I have Medicare and private insurance. Since our private insurance is not provided by work (i.e. not a group plan) and we pay for it ourselves, Medicare is primary in my case, and my private insurance is secondary. That also has to do with the fact that I do PD at home. I was covered from the time I started training for PD. But, my social worker found a grant that helps pay my Medicare premium and my portion of my private insurance premium. Also, I have never been balance billed by my dialysis clinic for anything not paid by Medicare or private insurance. Sounds like you might need a new social worker. That is their job to help you through this, mentally, and financially.