Prescription Insurance Policies
Some health insurance policies do not provide for prescription coverage and a separate policy
must be purchased for prescription medications.
Prescription coverage
insurance is not a necessity; like health insurance coverage, it is a
calculated risk, although the risk is not as high.
Usually you can buy prescription insurance at any time, so
if the doctor determines that you need an expensive maintenance drug, you may
opt in at that time.
It is important to know that
if you presently have prescription insurance you can usually only change it at
a specific time of the year, although you can add new prescriptions, you can’t
change plans.
The person who seldom takes
prescription medications probably does not need prescription insurance; however,
a person who takes maintenance drugs for high blood pressure, diabetes,
depression, heart disease or immune disorders most likely needs insurance
against the high costs of drugs.
Prescription insurance policies usually have "tiers", which
usually means that a generic drug is at a low or no co-pay, a tier 2 level may
be the brand name genuine, and a tier 3 may be a brand new expensive drug that
the co-pay could be a set high-percentage of the cost.
In choosing prescription
insurance, you should first list the prescriptions that you take and the retail
amount of them. If you chose not to purchase insurance, this would be your
monthly cost.
Find out from the provider
what the monthly premium for you would be, then what the prescription co-pay amount
would be and add these two figures together. Which is the less expensive
alternative?
Also Read : How To Store Insurance Policy
Also Read : How To Store Insurance Policy
2 Comments
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