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Magnate
Member Since Jan 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 2,456
11 86 hugs
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#1
and I want to change but I'm involved in weight loss surgery so I don't know if I can. I want to switch to ucare cause they have silver sneakers and I can get back to the gym. i requested a packet so i can review everything.
i don't even know if my providers work with them. I'm finding it hard to get information. I also looked at medica same issue can't get information. I don't want to go in blind like usual I want answers. __________________ Son: 14, 12/15/2009 R.I.P. Daughter: 20 Diagnosis: Bipolar with Psychosis. Latuda 100 mgs. |
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SprinkL3
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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 40,725
(SuperPoster!)
13 68.2k hugs
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#2
I would go on the obesity surgery website and ask there if anyone changed insurance during the process, and did they have to start over or what?
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SprinkL3
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Threadtastic Postaholic
Member Since Dec 2018
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 6,008
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5 192 hugs
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#3
Quote:
In the last Part did you mean Medicare or is medica something different? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk __________________ "I carried a watermelon?" President of the no F's given society. |
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SprinkL3
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Account Suspended
Member Since Oct 2021
Location: DELETED
Posts: 2,752
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2 10.9k hugs
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#4
I was wondering about my Medicare insurance renewal. I didn't know if this was a thread about that or something else.
I get free care at the VA, but they are not as thorough as some civilian providers might be, so I might consider paying the extra copays if that means better healthcare, which also means a better quality of life and length of life. Then again, they system where I live could all be broken, no matter where I go, so I'm probably best on keeping Original Medicare and not paying the extra costs for supplemental plans. It's all a tossup to me. |
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Account Suspended
Member Since Oct 2021
Location: DELETED
Posts: 2,752
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2 10.9k hugs
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#5
Quote:
Back in the late-1990s, I had endometriosis and an emergency (104-degree fever that lasted 4 days and landed me in the hospital). They required a DNC and laparoscopy, and still couldn't open one of my fallopian tubes, which was swollen and shut. My employer switched healthcare insurance companies on us without telling us in time, so the previous insurance approved it, but the new insurance denied it because of "preexisting conditions" that were noted from the previous insurance company, even though no other notations were made even days or years prior regarding my endometriosis. This was all within days. I was billed over $100,000. I filed bankruptcy. I had bad credit for over a decade. There were no laws. Today, all of the good laws that Obama prevented were now reinstated by Trump, so you could be facing the preexisting issue all over again, meaning that if you switch, they can deny your procedures based on preexisting conditions. It either traps you into one insurance company or leaves you with the full bill for the other. I'd ask UCare about preexisting conditions, which aren't noted on pamphlets, but in the fine print on the contracts they make you sign or PDFs, like the one I attached. It sucks all around. Given how politics have infiltrated all forms of healthcare, I'd stick with what you got and not change a thing. Consistency will be better for your stress levels overall, until more protections and political stabilization occur in the now far future - perhaps two presidents down, if we're headed into a fascist state, which many political scientists claim that we are. Unfortunately, our medical care and our bodies are all political. Nothing is our human right anymore. You have to then make decisions based on politics and your own personal place in the political playing field. If you're healthy, you're great. If you're not, you're going to be dealing with politics affecting your choices for longevity of life, for healthcare, etc. For answers, the best place you can try is directly to the healthcare insurance company. But be fairly warned that their reps have scripts, and they can't answer every question. They are more capitalized and thus more like salespersons than they are about actual healthcare coverage and the ethics of the best benefits for you. Last edited by SprinkL3; Oct 28, 2021 at 02:23 AM.. Reason: Adding links, fixing grammatical error |
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unaluna
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