Health insurance for diabetics in Wisconsin
Diabetics face difficult challenges finding and keeping
individual health insurance. For those not eligible for
Medicare, Medicaid or employer-provided group coverage, the
health plan choices are severely limited. Freedom Benefits offers a range of
reference materials to help explain the laws that govern
this area of health insurance as well as a list of specific
insurance plans and other coverage options.
This article is intended to serve
as a quick checklist of available options and not as a
detailed discussion of each possibility. While the insurance
plans listed on this page are available to
diabetics, all have some exclusions,
limitations and waiting periods for specific medical
benefits, treatments and diabetic supplies. The details for
each insurance plan will be listed separately on the
enrollment Web pages.
-
Health
insurance risk-sharing plan - major medical coverage;
premiums paid quarterly.
Average cost $648/month*
- Secure short term medical insurance
- open to non-insulin users, limited time major
medical.
Average cost $80/month*
- Core health insurance - open to all, renewable, defined limited benefits.
Average cost $179/month*
- Basic Health Insurance - open to all, renewable, defined limited benefits.
Average cost $121/month*
- Value 24 Hour Accident coverage -
this is not insurance, open to all, renewable, supplemental.
Average cost $55/month*
- PPO medical discount plan -
this is not insurance, open to all.
Average cost $30/month*
-
Health clinics in Wisconsin available to patients without
insurance - Cost may be based on income.
- OnlineAdviser
- personal help with finding insurance, available to all.
No charge.
- "Health insurance with Diabetes" - legal background and health insurance reform issues that affect diabetics
-
More information on Wisconsin health insurance and regulations
While all of these health insurances
plans do have substantial gaps in diabetes coverage due to
policy deductibles, waiting periods, benefit exclusions,
co-payments It is usually possible to overlap two or more of
the insurance choices in order to improve overall coverage
and reduce net out-of-pocket costs. Supplemental health
insurance makes direct payments, also referred to as defined
or scheduled cash benefits, directly to the policyholder in
addition to benefits that are covered by other medical
insurance. While this does not directly cover the diabetes
treatment, it does reduce the overall out-of-pocket medical
costs of the covered person. This can be useful, for
example, when a major medical policy has strong maximum
benefits but a long writing period and high deductible,
whereas a supplemental policy with lower benefits has no
deductible and a shorter waiting period. For clarification and confirmation
of stacked supplemental policy benefits, check the "Coordination of Benefits" provisions of the supplemental policy being considered.
*Average cost is provided for illustrative purposes only and will vary depending on many factors including your location, age, health, sex, family status. For our purposes, we use the lowest estimated premium for a 45 year old non-smoking single male living in the the city of the state capital selecting the most popular insurance plan with a $1,000 deductible (where available). The information on this page is
compiled from publications of third parties including the American Diabetes Association and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Because insurance information changes frequently, verify all
information with the primary health plan enrollment sources.
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