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Thanks for both of your response. Do you see the pre ex different with STM than pre aca plans? As long as client understands he must fully disclose. Using the blood pressure issue, I spoke with an underwriter with one company and they told me that blood pressure under control with meds for 2 years that it would not be a reason to deny a claim for a heart attack. Could an agent have a form detailing the differences and have the client sign?Those are very good reasons not to buy it. You could list them as:
* Pre-Existing Conditions Exclusions - a huge issue
* No Normal Maternity coverage, but complications are covered - a very large issue
* No substance abuse treatment - not that important for a lot of folks
* No Preventive Care at 100% - not a big deal, considering the premium difference.
* Possibly other exclusions - could be a big deal
* Penalty - a big deal only if the person is not exempt, or if the premium + penalty approaches the cost of an ACA plan.
The Pre-Ex condition exclusion is a huge deal. Embedded in that issue are sub-issues, like:
* Underwriting at claim time - Most of the policies underwrite and seek medical records when a claim is issued
* Pre-ex definition - They can construe pre-ex to mean anything even remotely related to a prior condition. For instance, if you have HBP, then a stroke is pre-ex. If you had a complicated pregnancy before, a new pregnancy's complications might be construed as pre-ex. If the child had an ear infections, anything to do with that ear might be pre-ex. Of course, this depends on the policy, the pre-ex definition, and the carrier's reputation.
Now for the positive issues:
* Cost difference! - Huge issue. In Bluemarlin08's case, the ACA premium costs $1200 more monthly ($14,400) more annually, and the deductible is $3400 less. You can pay for a lot of your own maternity expenses, substance abuse, and certain Preventive Care with that kind of savings.
* More deductible & OOP choices - Could be a big issue, or a minor one. You are not limited to metal-tier, nor deductibles/OOP of $7,130 or less, which can be important for people wanting catastrophic coverage.
* PPO networks - A big issue
* Might be exempt from the penalty, or the premium difference might be worth it. - A big issue
So, it comes down to this:
1. Does it cost less? (Must include the penalty if not exempt)
2. Is the savings worth the extra benefits (lower deductible, PPO, etc.)?
3. Is the savings worth the extra benefits, plus the extra risk?
4. Do you have ANY pre-ex conditions?
As for the penalty, in BlueMarlin08's case, the household income would have to be $576,000 before they hit a penalty of $14,400. Even then, they might already hit the penalty cap of "the premium for the Lowest Cost MEC plan available to this family". For an average non-subsidized family, making, let's say $120,000, they will probably fit the unaffordable exemption in BlueMarlin's case. For a family making $250,000, the penalty would be $6250. That means their net savings would be $8,150 to take an STM and pay the penalty.
I can see lots of reasons why STM would be the choice of many folks. It's a better choice than uninsured, that's for sure. For an agent, the biggest issues are whether or not they have any pre-ex, and whether or not they fully understand what they are doing and the risks they are taking, and whether or not the client is the one that made this decision.