CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, Oct. 12, 2007

Insurance Without The Premium?

High-Deductible Health Insurance Is Gaining Importance — But Does It Work?

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(CBS)  To aerospace engineer Cale Stephens, his health insurance policy is a bargain - mostly because he pays no premiums.

“It’s been a good plan for us,” he said. “Good service.”

How's that possible?

He and his wife Patty have chosen what's called a "high-deductible" health plan, offered through their company, Rockwell Collins, CBS News correspondent Wyatt Andrews reports.

The basic deal is this; the Stephens pay zero in premiums - but then pay all of the first $2,500 worth of medical expenses every year. That's their deductible. More than three million workers have these policies now as more companies offer them.

You can imagine how this plays out. When workers start paying all the costs, they start making fewer trips to the doctor.

“But now we think, 'gosh, is it worth $100 to go to the doctor?' and we may make the decision not to go,” Patty Stephens said.

Still, the nation's pediatricians, including Dr. Julianne Thomas, are wary of high deductibles.

“I’m very concerned,” she said.

The Academy of Pediatrics this year warned that "families (with high deductible policies) are likely to delay or avoid seeking care..."

“We know people aren't coming in for regular checks and we think that they are delaying care,” Thomas said. “They are waiting longer.”

Kimberly and Mike McGuire, who have a high-deductable plan different from Rockwell Collins's, say they've cut back in seeing their doctor. They are saving on costs because they know 6-year-old Sara will need ear surgery this year.

"I think it all boils down to money," Kimberly McGuire said. "Can you afford to go? Sometimes you can. Sometimes you can't."

Back at Rockwell Collins, vice president Ron Kirchenbauer calls the concerns overblown.

“We've seen no evidence that they are avoiding the doctor at all in any of our statistics,” Kirchenbauer said. But is he looking?

“We absolutely are looking,” he said.

High-deductible polices do pay off for healthy families who don't need the doctor, and the policies do save money for the companies. Everyone else, like the McGuires, has to guess whether the upfront savings on premiums are worth the risk.

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by whispyseas October 13, 2007 4:26 PM EDT
'' ... most disciplinary action is targeted at kids age five and less as they commit most crimes, though they are most likely to suffer injury or death as a result of disciplinary action ... ''
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by whispyseas October 13, 2007 4:12 PM EDT
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by nativewoman October 13, 2007 8:09 AM EDT
Hmmm. I really AM getting ripped off then!

I pay premiums.

I have a humongo deductible.

AND the insurance company NEVER pays what the doctor or facility charges so I also get to pay the remaining balance after the insurance company decides what they feel like paying today.

I''ve only been to the doctor once in the last 5 years and I only went then because it was a broken arm. If I knew how to set a broken arm and cast it, I would not have gone then.

I wonder if those types of instructions are available on the Internet somewhere.
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by kansas1946 October 13, 2007 2:36 AM EDT
I think it sounds pretty good. I think people are probably going to the doctor too much anyway. I know there are probably some examples, where somone has waited too long and gotten into trouble, but I would be willing to bet that the opposite is true the vast majority of the time.
We took my grandson to an emergency room one night with an earache. He was crying in pain. Of course when we got there, he was fine, but he did have a red inner ear. The Doc said the reason he was better was because he was up moving around. He said I can give him an antibiotic if you want, or give him some Tylenol and wait and see how he is tomorrow. We opted to wait, and he was fine. The doctor said most ear aches will resolve, it is fluid and irritation, but if they persist, or any *** discharge, to then come in. So a lot of things can wait, it is just that we have gotten used to going for everything because of good insurance.
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