What about Mayo?I'd be interested to know how many plans are in your county, and how many of them would give access to CC.
I'm sure you used the CC line with prospects...
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What about Mayo?I'd be interested to know how many plans are in your county, and how many of them would give access to CC.
I'm sure you used the CC line with prospects...
What about a podiatrist in New Mexico?What about Mayo?
The point is that OM is accepted at ALL top medical centers nationally without referral delays and potentially denials. There is not one MAP out there in any state with the same national in network list as OM and where referrals are not required. Some top centers only accept a couple of MAP's and some of them are in state only ones. Others accept far more. And, of course, if someone is lucky enough to live in a large city that has multiple top centers they have far less of an issue accessing top care than people in MS, LA, AR, etc. (the states with the worst health care in the nation) or some very rural counties where out of state decent care might be closer than in state decent care.I'd be interested to know how many plans are in your county, and how many of them would give access to CC.
I'm sure you used the CC line with prospects...
The point is that OM is accepted at ALL top medical centers nationally without referral delays and potentially denials. There is not one MAP out there in any state with the same national in network list as OM and where referrals are not required. Some top centers only accept a couple of MAP's and some of them are in state only ones. Others accept far more. And, of course, if someone is lucky enough to live in a large city that has multiple top centers they have far less of an issue accessing top care than people in MS, LA, AR, etc. (the states with the worst health care in the nation) or some very rural counties where out of state decent care might be closer than in state decent care.
I don't try to influence their choices. I view my job as one to ask questions, help them determine their priorities, look at factors that might influence their choices (family history, current health issues, potential future ones, desire to travel and be gone for weeks or months at a time, etc.), I answer questions about specific medical facilities both in state and out of state that they ask about and I talk about networks in general. I make sure they understand the rules to change their choices over time.
Their income level matters too. If they have coming in more than 400% of the poverty line they have far more disposable income to cover unexpected costs or expected MOOP in and out of network (or if it even covers out of network) health costs than those below that (those at 200-400% of the poverty line have the most problems covering health care costs). Are they dual eligible? Do they qualify for medicare "lite"...
Then it is their choice whether or not an MAP (and then which one) will better meet their needs or whether OM will do so.
I fail to understand why you are so bent out of shape that I believe that in many cases OM + supp is a better choice for someone than a MAP. It's no skin off of your teeth and doesn't affect your income. What matters is that the client makes an informed choice about what is best for them both now and potentially in the future, understanding the pros and cons of that choice so they aren't blindsided later and can avoid, as much as possible, buyer's regret at a point in time where all options may or may not be open to them. Some clients are willing to take far more risks than others. Clients have different circumstances. Again it is their choice, not mine. Of course our job would be made much easier if we all had a magic wand or a time travel machine.
I said far more than two things. You said you made your point and I made mine. What I do has no impact on you and vise versa.I didn't think this was too difficult.
You said two things.
Because of clients I have checked a number of out of state medical facilities to see which ones are in network for MAP's sold here (a fair number here want to go out of state for cancer, other major illnesses because of how poor our state's health care is and the problems with what happens locally). Some work well and give a lot of choices, others not so much so. I just present the pros and cons and let them decide what they want to do. Most, but certainly not all, of those who want to travel for health care (and would fail medical underwriting) choose OM + G. I'd rather not write MAP's despite them paying more because of limits that could potentially come back to bite clients if they no longer were reasonably healthy and would then fail medical underwriting.
While the Cleveland Clinic accepts a lot of MAP's (although some are their state only versions), MD Anderson Cancer Center only accepts, last I knew, 2. And, of course, the risk is that what is in network might change for a particular MAP someone purchased. While clients could change the MAP they are in, they may not be able to change in time for timely treatment.