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  #11  
Old 09-05-2007, 03:40 PM
ckboddic ckboddic is offline
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Im at the Red Lobster and I\'m eatin\' all the shriiimp!
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

Ok, I checked rates on for Blue Cross and Blue Shield. I have two options. Blue Care Co-Pay and Blue Care Co-Insurance.

For the Co-Pay one with a $10,000 deductible I would be $25 to see a doctor and 20% of the cost of the visit. This plan costs $56.03.

For the Co-Insurance Plan I would pay for everything below $10,000. This plan costs $34.07.

The Co-Insurance sounds like what was recommended here. Just making sure which I should pick since the Co-Pay isn't outrageously expensive.

Also, does anyone here have an HSA? If so, what do you think about it?
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  #12  
Old 09-05-2007, 05:15 PM
Fishhead24 Fishhead24 is offline
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

Good luck man.......$34 a month is a bargain!
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  #13  
Old 09-05-2007, 06:24 PM
dbirider16 dbirider16 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Donkit
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

I've been paying $376/month, which covers pretty much all doctor and hospital visits and some dental. There's no deductible to worry about, so I just have to pay the $20 copay and sometimes some small fees.

II'm always getting injured (ride BMX), so it's nice not having to worry about deductibles. I'm not sure yet if i'm losing out in the long run.
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  #14  
Old 09-06-2007, 02:17 AM
JuntMonkey JuntMonkey is offline
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Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,655
Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

I currently pay a lot for COBRA from the job I left in November. It will be good until next June, it's over $450 a month. Great coverage and I have some problems, I've been in the hospital for over a week twice this year.

I'm in NY where I believe there's a law that you cannot pay a higher rate due to pre-existing conditions as long as you don't let your coverage lapse more than 60 days or something. This is a crappy law for everyone as a whole, but great for me personally. NY also has Healthy NY, which is subsidized health insurance that looks excellent (several different reputable companies and plans), for about half of what I pay now.

The problem is, I might be moving out of state soon and am wondering what will happen. If I move to a state that doesn't have the pre-existing condition law I'm assuming I can keep my COBRA, but don't know what I will do when that runs out and/or if I switch health plans now. Does anyone have any insights on this?
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  #15  
Old 09-06-2007, 11:46 PM
Jimbo Jimbo is offline
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Location: Planet Earth but relocating
Posts: 4,376
Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

[ QUOTE ]
I currently pay a lot for COBRA from the job I left in November. It will be good until next June, it's over $450 a month. Great coverage and I have some problems, I've been in the hospital for over a week twice this year.

I'm in NY where I believe there's a law that you cannot pay a higher rate due to pre-existing conditions as long as you don't let your coverage lapse more than 60 days or something. This is a crappy law for everyone as a whole, but great for me personally. NY also has Healthy NY, which is subsidized health insurance that looks excellent (several different reputable companies and plans), for about half of what I pay now.

The problem is, I might be moving out of state soon and am wondering what will happen. If I move to a state that doesn't have the pre-existing condition law I'm assuming I can keep my COBRA, but don't know what I will do when that runs out and/or if I switch health plans now. Does anyone have any insights on this?

[/ QUOTE ]

It is a Federal law, part of COBRA itself. Feel free to move but keep in mind that if your former employer changes insurance (or their rates increase upon renewal) for it's current employees you will fall under the new plan as well and your rates may go up. One reason for them to change to a higher deductible of more costly plan would be because of excessive claims which it appears you seem to add into the likelihood of that occurance.

Jimbo
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  #16  
Old 11-20-2007, 10:24 PM
Python49 Python49 is offline
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Borgata baby
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

[ QUOTE ]
I'm an independent web developer and get my insurance through "Golden Rule". It could be a decent alternatively if you wanted a little bit more. I pay about $100 per month, have a $2500 deductable, get some dental/eye coverage, and get like a 50% discount on doctors visits and medicine. (the discount varries doc to doc, medicine to medicine)

If you are as healthy as you say, this is probably not the route to go. But if you go to the dentist twice a year, have eye glasses, and go to the doc once a year, this is a good plan.

[/ QUOTE ]
I am looking to sign up for probably this same plan with Golden Rule myself. I am 21 years old and in the market for health insurance.

I was going to start a new thread about this but figured it's better to just run a search and post in an already existing thread.

Is it worth it to get health insurance at my age? 21 and not engaging in high risk activities? If I don't get health insurance now can I still get it later in life when I become more of a health risk without any consequences? Also does anyone else use Golden Rule? The plan i'm getting on will have a $100 premium and covers dental, eye, annual physicals, etc with a $1000 deductable for brand name medications.

Can someone more knowledgable chime in with comments about this plan with golden rule from their site... http://www.goldenrule.com/health_ins...lth/index.aspx

The co-play plan is detailed like a bit less than halfway through the page.
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  #17  
Old 11-20-2007, 10:27 PM
Messiahkid Messiahkid is offline
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Location: NYC
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

I advise, and most poker players use www.ehealthinsurance.com
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  #18  
Old 11-20-2007, 10:51 PM
RikaKazak RikaKazak is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2005
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Posts: 5,535
Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

Mine is $22 a month with a $7,500 deductible and $25 per doctor visit.
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  #19  
Old 11-20-2007, 11:07 PM
Messiahkid Messiahkid is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: NYC
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Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

I don't want to start a new thread if I do not have to but...

I have a question about "zip code" when applying for health insurance.

I own a house in Maryland
I rent in NY (currently reside here)
The majority of my income is documented in NYC

Obviously an input of NY zip code health insurance is 3times as much/month as in Maryland. My license/ID is Maryland, is there any law/requirement that says I have to apply for health insurance in NY or vise versa?

Thanks
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  #20  
Old 11-21-2007, 12:42 AM
mo42nyy mo42nyy is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 1,360
Default Re: Health Insurance For A Poker Player

just use maryland
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