Resources
Glossary of Terms
Click on the
first letter of the term you wish to find:
A B
C D E
F G H
I J K L
M N
O
P Q R
S T U
V W X Y Z
A
Actuary: A mathematician
working for a health insurance company responsible for determining
what premiums the company needs to charge based in large part
on claims paid verses amounts of premium generated. Their
job is to make sure a block of business is priced to be profitable.
Admitting Privileges:
The right granted to a doctor to admit patients to a particular
hospital.
Advocacy: Any activity
done to help a person or group to get something the person
or group needs or wants.
Agent: Licensed salespersons
who represent one or more health insurance companies and presents
their products to consumers.
Association: A group.
Often, associations can offer individual health insurance
plans specially designed for their members.
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B
Benefit: Amount payable
by the insurance company to a claimant, assignee, or beneficiary
when the insured suffers a loss.
Brand-name drug: Prescription
drugs marketed with a specific brand name by the company that
manufactures it, usually the company which develops and patents
it. When patents run out, generic versions of many popular
drugs are marketed at lower cost by other companies. Check
your insurance plan to see if coverage differs between name-brand
and their generic twins.
Broker: Licensed insurance
salesperson who obtains quotes and plan from multiple sources
information for clients.
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C
Capitation: Capitation
represents a set dollar limit that you or your employer pay
to a health maintenance organization (HMO), regardless of
how much you use (or don't use) the services offered by the
health maintenance providers. (Providers is a term used for
health professionals who provide care. Usually providers refer
to doctors or hospitals. Sometimes the term also refers to
nurse practitioners, chiropractors and other health professionals
who offer specialized services.)
Carrier: The insurance
company or HMO offering a health plan.
Case Management: Case
management is a system embraced by employers and insurance
companies to ensure that individuals receive appropriate,
reasonable health care services.
Certificate of Insurance: The printed description of the benefits
and coverage provisions forming the contract between the carrier
and the customer. Discloses what it covered, what is not,
and dollar limits.
Claim: A request by an
individual (or his or her provider) to an individual's insurance
company for the insurance company to pay for services obtained
from a health care professional.
Co-Insurance: Co-insurance refers to money that an individual
is required to pay for services, after a deductible has been
paid. In some health care plans, co-insurance is called "co-payment."
Co-insurance is often specified by a percentage. For example,
the employee pays 20 percent toward the charges for a service
and the employer or insurance company pays 80 percent.
Related terms: Co-Payment, Deductible
Co-Payment: Co-payment
is a predetermined (flat) fee that an individual pays for
health care services, in addition to what the insurance covers.
For example, some HMOs require a $10 "co-payment"
for each office visit, regardless of the type or level of
services provided during the visit. Co-payments are not usually
specified by percentages.
Related terms: Co-Insurance, Deductible
COBRA: Federal legislation
that lets you, if you work for an insured employer group of
20 or more employees, continue to purchase health insurance
for up to 18 months if you lose your job or your coverage
is otherwise terminated. For more information, visit the Department
of Labor.
Credit for Prior Coverage:
This is something that may or may not apply when you switch
employers or insurance plans. A pre-existing condition waiting
period met under while you were under an employer's (qualifying)
coverage can be honored by your new plan, if any interruption
in the coverage between the two plans meets state guidelines.
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D
Deductible: The amount
an individual must pay for health care expenses before insurance
(or a self-insured company) covers the costs. Often, insurance
plans are based on yearly deductible amounts.
Related terms: Co-Insurance, Co-Payment
Denial Of Claim: Refusal
by an insurance company to honor a request by an individual
(or his or her provider) to pay for health care services obtained
from a health care professional.
Dependent Worker: A
worker in a family in which someone else has greater personal
income.
Dependents: Spouse and/or unmarried children (whether natural,
adopted or step) of an insured.
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E
Effective Date: The date
your insurance is to actually begin. You are not covered until
the policies effective date.
Employee Assistance Programs
(EAPs): Mental health counseling services that are sometimes
offered by insurance companies or employers. Typically, individuals
or employers do not have to directly pay for services provided
through an employee assistance program.
Exclusions: Medical services that are not covered by
an individual's insurance policy.
Explanation of Benefits: The insurance company's written explanation
to a claim, showing what they paid and what the client must
pay. Sometimes accompanied by a benefits check.
Explanation of Benefits:
The insurance company's written explanation to a claim,
showing what they paid and what the client must pay. Sometimes
accompanied by a benefits check.
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G
Generic Drug: A "twin"
to a "brand name drug" once the brand name company's
patent has run out and other drug companies are allowed to
sell a duplicate of the original. Generic drugs are cheaper,
and most prescription and health plans reward clients for
choosing generics.
Group Insurance: Coverage
through an employer or other entity that covers all individuals
in the group.
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H
Health Care Decision Counseling:
Services, sometimes provided by insurance companies or
employers, that help individuals weigh the benefits, risks
and costs of medical tests and treatments. Unlike case management,
health care decision counseling is non-judgmental. The goal
of health care decision counseling is to help individuals
make more informed choices about their health and medical
care needs, and to help them make decisions that are right
for the individual's unique set of circumstances.
Health Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs): Health Maintenance Organizations represent "pre-paid"
or "capitated" insurance plans in which individuals
or their employers pay a fixed monthly fee for services, instead
of a separate charge for each visit or service. The monthly
fees remain the same, regardless of types or levels of services
provided, Services are provided by physicians who are employed
by, or under contract with, the HMO. HMOs vary in design.
Depending on the type of the HMO, services may be provided
in a central facility, or in a physician's own office (as
with IPAs.)
HIPAA: A Federal law
passed in 1996 that allows persons to qualify immediately
for comparable health insurance coverage when they change
their employment or relationships. It also creates the authority
to mandate the use of standards for the electronic exchange
of health care data; to specify what medical and administrative
code sets should be used within those standards; to require
the use of national identification systems for health care
patients, providers, payers (or plans), and employers (or
sponsors); and to specify the types of measures required to
protect the security and privacy of personally identifiable
health care. Full name is "The Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996."
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I
In-network: Providers
or health care facilities which are part of a health plan's
network of providers with which it has negoiated a discount.
Insured individuals usually pay less when using an in-network
provider, because those networks provide services at lower
cost to the insurance companies with which they have contracts.
Indemnity Health Plan:
Indemnity health insurance plans are also called "fee-for-service."
These are the types of plans that primarily existed before
the rise of HMOs, IPAs, and PPOs. With indemnity plans, the
individual pays a pre-determined percentage of the cost of
health care services, and the insurance company (or self-insured
employer) pays the other percentage. For example, an individual
might pay 20 percent for services and the insurance company
pays 80 percent. The fees for services are defined by the
providers and vary from physician to physician. Indemnity
health plans offer individuals the freedom to choose their
health care professionals.
Independent Practice Associations:
IPAs are similar to HMOs, except that individuals receive
care in a physician's own office, rather than in an HMO facility.
Individual Health Insurance:
Health insurance coverage on an individual, not group, basis.
The premium is usually higher for an individual health insurance
plan than for a group policy, but you may not qualify for
a group plan.
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L
Lifetime Maximum Benefit
(or Maximum Lifetime Benefit): the maximum amount a health
plan will pay in benefits to an insured individual during
that individual's lifetime.
Limitations: a limit
on the amount of benefits paid out for a particular covered
expense, as disclosed on the Certificate of Insurance.
Long-Term Care Policy:
Insurance policies that cover specified services for a specified
period of time. Long-term care policies (and their prices)
vary significantly. Covered services often include nursing
care, home health care services, and custodial care.
Long-term Disability Insurance:
Pays an insured a percentage of their monthly earnings if
they become disabled.
LOS: LOS refers to the
length of stay. It is a term used by insurance companies,
case managers and/or employers to describe the amount of time
an individual stays in a hospital or in-patient facility.
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M
Managed Care: A medical
delivery system that attempts to manage the quality and cost
of medical services that individuals receive. Most managed
care systems offer HMOs and PPOs that individuals are encouraged
to use for their health care services. Some managed care plans
attempt to improve health quality, by emphasizing prevention
of disease.
Maximum Dollar Limit:
The maximum amount of money that an insurance company (or
self-insured company) will pay for claims within a specific
time period. Maximum dollar limits vary greatly. They may
be based on or specified in terms of types of illnesses or
types of services. Sometimes they are specified in terms of
lifetime, sometimes for a year.
Medigap Insurance Policies:
Medigap insurance is offered by private insurance companies,
not the government. It is not the same as Medicare or Medicaid.
These policies are designed to pay for some of the costs that
Medicare does not cover.
Multiple Employer Trust (MET):
A trust consisting of multiple small employers in the same
industry, formed for the purpose of purchasing group health
insurance or establishing a self-funded plan at a lower cost
than would be available to each of the employers individually.
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N
Network: A group of doctors,
hospitals and other health care providers contracted to provide
services to insurance companies customers for less than their
usual fees. Provider networks can cover a large geographic
market or a wide range of health care services. Insured individuals
typically pay less for using a network provider.
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O
Open-ended HMOs: HMOs
which allow enrolled individuals to use out-of-plan providers
and still receive partial or full coverage and payment for
the professional's services under a traditional indemnity
plan.
Out-of-Plan (Out-of-Network):
This phrase usually refers to physicians, hospitals or
other health care providers who are considered nonparticipants
in an insurance plan (usually an HMO or PPO). Depending on
an individual's health insurance plan, expenses incurred by
services provided by out-of-plan health professionals may
not be covered, or covered only in part by an individual's
insurance company.
Out-Of-Pocket Maximum:
A predetermined limited amount of money that an individual
must pay out of their own savings, before an insurance company
or (self-insured employer) will pay 100 percent for an individual's
health care expenses.
Outpatient: An individual
(patient) who receives health care services (such as surgery)
on an outpatient basis, meaning they do not stay overnight
in a hospital or inpatient facility. Many insurance companies
have identified a list of tests and procedures (including
surgery) that will not be covered (paid for) unless they are
performed on an outpatient basis. The term outpatient is also
used synonymously with ambulatory to describe health care
facilities where procedures are performed.
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P
Plan Administration:
Supervising the details and routine activities of installing
and running a health plan, such as answering questions, enrolling
individuals, billing and collecting premiums, and similar
duties.
Pre-Admission Certification:
Also called pre-certification review, or pre-admission
review. Approval by a case manager or insurance company representative
(usually a nurse) for a person to be admitted to a hospital
or in-patient facility, granted prior to the admittance. Pre-admission
certification often must be obtained by the individual. Sometimes,
however, physicians will contact the appropriate individual.
The goal of pre-admission certification is to ensure that
individuals are not exposed to inappropriate health care services
(services that are medically unnecessary).
Pre-Admission Review:
A review of an individual's health care status or condition,
prior to an individual being admitted to an inpatient health
care facility, such as a hospital. Pre-admission reviews are
often conducted by case managers or insurance company representatives
(usually nurses) in cooperation with the individual, his or
her physician or health care provider, and hospitals.
Pre-existing Conditions:
A medical condition that is excluded from coverage by
an insurance company because the condition was believed to
exist prior to the individual obtaining a policy from the
particular insurance company.
Preadmission Testing: Medical
tests that are completed for an individual prior to being
admitted to a hospital or inpatient health care facility.
Preferred Provider Organizations
(PPOs): You or your employer receive discounted rates
if you use doctors from a pre-selected group. If you use a
physician outside the PPO plan, you must pay more for the
medical care.
Primary Care Provider (PCP):
A health care professional (usually a physician) who is responsible
for monitoring an individual's overall health care needs.
Typically, a PCP serves as a "quarterback" for an
individual's medical care, referring the individual to more
specialized physicians for specialist care.
Provider: Provider is
a term used for health professionals who provide health care
services. Sometimes, the term refers only to physicians. Often,
however, the term also refers to other health care professionals
such as hospitals, nurse practitioners, chiropractors, physical
therapists, and others offering specialized health care services.
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R
Reasonable and Customary
Fees: The average fee charged by a particular type of
health care practitioner within a geographic area. The term
is often used by medical plans as the amount of money they
will approve for a specific test or procedure. If the fees
are higher than the approved amount, the individual receiving
the service is responsible for paying the difference. Sometimes,
however, if an individual questions his or her physician about
the fee, the provider will reduce the charge to the amount
that the insurance company has defined as reasonable and customary.
Rider: A modification
made to a Certificate of Insurance regarding the clauses and
provisions of a policy (usually adding or excluding coverage).
Risk: The chance of loss,
the degree of probability of loss or the amount of possible
loss to the insuring company. For an individual, risk represents
such probabilities as the likelihood of surgical complications,
medications' side effects, exposure to infection, or the chance
of suffering a medical problem because of a lifestyle or other
choice. For example, an individual increases his or her risk
of getting cancer if he or she chooses to smoke cigarettes.
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S
Second Opinion: It is
a medical opinion provided by a second physician or medical
expert, when one physician provides a diagnosis or recommends
surgery to an individual. Individuals are encouraged to obtain
second opinions whenever a physician recommends surgery or
presents an individual with a serious medical diagnosis.
Second Surgical Opinion: These are now standard benefits in
many health insurance plans. It is an opinion provided by
a second physician, when one physician recommends surgery
to an individual.
Short-Term Disability:
An injury or illness that keeps a person from working for
a short time. The definition of short-term disability (and
the time period over which coverage extends) differs among
insurance companies and employers. Short-term disability insurance
coverage is designed to protect an individual's full or partial
wages during a time of injury or illness (that is not work-related)
that would prohibit the individual from working.
Short-Term Medical: Temporary
coverage for an individual for a short period of time, usually
from 30 days to six months.
Small Employer Group:
Generally means groups with 1 99 employees. The definition
may vary between states.
State Mandated Benefits:
When a state passes laws requiring that health insurance plans
include specific benefits.
Stop-loss: The dollar
amount of claims filed for eligible expenses at which which
point you've paid 100 percent of your out-of-pocket and the
insurance begins to pay at 100%. Stop-loss is reached when
an insured individual has paid the deductible and reached
the out-of-pocket maximum amount of co-insurance.
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T
Triple-Option: Insurance
plans that offer three options from which an individual may
choose. Usually, the three options are traditional indemnity,
an HMO, and a PPO.
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U
Underwriter: The company
that assumes responsibility for the risk, issues insurance
policies and receives premiums.
Usual, Customary and Reasonable
(UCR) or Covered Expenses: An amount customarily charged
for or covered for similar services and supplies which are
medically necessary, recommended by a doctor, or required
for treatment.
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W
Waiting Period:
A period of time when you are not covered by insurance for
a particular problem.
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