Archive for March, 2009

Get Hip to HIPAA before heading overseas

Thursday, March 26th, 2009 by Brendan Sharkey
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Employee Benefits Security Administration

Navigating your health plan to get the most out of your benefits can be a challenge -the administrative hurdles alone can sometimes be daunting.

But for international travelers there’s a little known trapdoor that can open large gaps in healthcare coverage that quickly spiral beyond your control, exposing world travelers to significant financial risk.

Traveling or residing outside the U.S. for six months or more often means that one of the key benefits of a health insurance plan-coverage of pre-existing conditions-is in jeopardy when you return home. How so? If you’re not hip to HIPAA, you wouldn’t know – the catch is in the fine print of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.

Unless you are enrolled in a well-designed international health insurance program, you can be caught up in technicalities that subject you to a 12-month waiting period for a pre-existing condition when you return home and re-enroll in a domestic group health plan. Even if you purchased another plan to fill the gap, HIPAA rules permit the group plan to institute the waiting period. That’s bad news if you have developed a serious medical condition in the meantime.

Doesn’t sound fair? Well, it’s all perfectly legal. The waiting period can be reduced or eliminated if the time you spent in your alternative health plan is viewed as “creditable coverage” and applied as an offset. But that decision is made unilaterally by the health plan.

What’s the answer? Staying healthy certainly helps. But if you want to do more than cross your fingers (and that is what this is all about) do your homework before heading out of the country, like this smart person did (at least we think she’s smart… she chose our product).

If you are employed and posted abroad, ask your employer to enroll you in an international plan that provides seamless eligibility no matter how much time you spend abroad. If group coverage is not an option, choosing the right individual plan can help you avoid similar, even larger gaps in coverage.

Most individual international plans on the market are constructed and administered to minimize coverage for pre-existing conditions. They typically feature exclusions or very low benefit limits for conditions that were treated over the past two years. To your peril, they also define pre-existing conditions much more broadly than U.S. plans, and they don’t recognize the group plan you may be leaving as “creditable coverage.” Check to see if the individual plan you are considering is filed with U.S. state insurance regulators as an “admitted” plan (HTH products are).

Lastly, ask about what happens to your eligibility when you return home. Will the plan continue to offer benefits after your assignment ends? Many plans discontinue benefits after six months at home; others will cover you all the way up to age 84. This is a critical issue: you clearly don’t want to be left out in the cold as uninsurable. 

The last thing you need when going abroad or coming home is to trip over technicalities and fall through a trapdoor . Be a savvy health insurance buyer. Ask the right questions and don’t leave anything to chance.

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Staying Fit while Traveling – iPhone apps and more…

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009 by Andy Orr

Ok, I admit it, I am not a runner.  Not really, anyway.  I was on the track team in high school, but focused on events that are over before you even realize that you are breathing hard.

For many travelers, however, getting in their run is an important way for them to maintain their daily routine.  Before the Internet, finding the best running routes was hit or miss.  There are now many web sites and mobile applications that can not only improve your chances of successfully finding the right run but also can do a whole lot more than that.

My favorite, and seemingly the most comprehensive, is MapMyRun  (part of the MapMyFitness group of sites).  The iPhone app, in a nod to the device, is named iMapMyRun.  Runners can search the huge database of international routes on the web site and then use the mobile application to track their runs.  For example, I searched for a run in Victoria Park (London) without other parameters and was presented with 119 runs. When I refined this with the term “safe” it was narrowed down to 30 runs. After further limiting it to a run 5 miles or less, 4 stars or more, I was able to choose from 9 runs.

map5

This application also has a lot of community features and comprehensive training tools. With these tools you can plan to participate in organized runs in the areas you are visiting or just get the most out of your individual run.  And as you go through the search results, look for keywords like “safe” in the description so that the route you plan is less likely to lead to a situation you need to run from.

By the way, I shouldn’t limit this to running; they have also created two other iPhone apps for other methods of locomotion, iMapMyRide and iMapMyHike, and it looks like they are working on iMapMyTri and iMapMyWalk.  All of them have companion non-mobile sites without the ‘i’ prefix.  Plus, they are all free (the web sites are free as well with a premium membership available that adds certain features).

I checked out the reviews for the iPhone apps in iTunes and saw that while most users like the features of the companion web sites and also think the app has a great interface, it seems that for now the GPS mapping is fairly buggy.  Until the MapMyFitness mobile apps get an update, you may be better off with Runkeeper Free or its Pro version, an iPhone app for $9.99.  In addition to these two, there are many other web sites and mobile applications.  Let us know what works best for you.

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Medical Tourism: Hot Topic Meets Cold Facts

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009 by Frank Gillingham, MD

 

42-16163361Ever since pilgrims to Epidaurus sought the healing powers of Asclepius, the Greek God of Medicine, people have traveled to distant destinations to obtain medical care. Today published reports suggest that a new medical migration is taking place. Some estimate that as many as one million patients worldwide leave their home countries to be treated for everything from a toothache, to liposuction to open heart surgery. Does this trend threaten U.S. doctors and hospitals? Not necessarily. According to a recent McKinsey study, the number of medical tourists who travel outside their own country to obtain inpatient medical care is 60,000 to 85,000 per year worldwide, and many of those come to the U.S. for treatment.

The primary motive for people leaving the United States is cost. Surprisingly, it is not the uninsured (43 million), but the underinsured (100 million) of Americans with large deductibles, exclusions or low benefit limits who make up the largest segment of those seeking healthcare outside the U.S. If U.S. healthcare reform efforts produce some form of universal coverage, it will likely include cost-sharing features that could continue to drive the medical tourism trend.

Even so, there are many factors that may ultimately limit the appeal of obtaining healthcare abroad:

1) U.S. hospitals will respond competitively by specializing in procedures to deliver cost- effective care by achieving high volumes

2) Natural limits on the number of procedures that can be performed on an elective basis. For instance, cardiac bypass surgery and the repair of unstable hip fractures must always be performed on a timely basis to avoid further injury

3) Difficulties in obtaining compensation for malpractice committed in a foreign country. Foreign jurisdictions are generally not sympathetic to visitors filing malpractice claims.

4) Loss of an existing physician-patient relationship

5) Perception that health care in other countries remains inferior to the United States

6) Unwillingness on the part of many to travel for healthcare, no matter the cost savings

7) Reluctance on the part of US physicians to handle complications of a surgery performed on a medical tourist. At the October, 2008 meeting of the American College of Surgeons, an overwhelming majority answered “no” to the question: “If a patient returned from surgery abroad with a complication and came to see you, would you agree to care for the patient?”

Nonetheless, the allure of inexpensive care abroad has led WellPoint, the largest health insurer in the United States, to enter into a pilot program to provide access to medical care outside the U.S in a partnership with Healthbase, a Boston-based provider of medical tourism logistics.  Healthbase will assist WellPoint members with coordination of the trip, medical appointment, scheduling, digital medical records transfer, and concierge travel service.

Before embarking on a medical tour, patients should research the proposed facility and surgeon carefully. International accreditation is in its infancy, but there are facilities who have obtained certification from agencies such as Joint Commission International the Trent International Accreditation Scheme or the International Society for Quality in HealthCare.

If American doctors and hospitals respond aggressively, they will compete effectively in the emerging international market. If not, many of today’s perceived obstacles may fade away, and medical tourism could become commonplace.

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Exploring

Thursday, March 5th, 2009 by Angelo Masciantonio

We all travel today. A lot. Adventure, business, pleasure, study– all are reasons we pack our bags. Last year travelers took 924 million trips outside their home country to all points of the globe (UNWTO World Tourism Barometer). Travel is undeniably a major part of 21st century life.

passport3In today’s post- 911 world, we also worry more about travel than any time in the past. Terrorism risks, pandemic threats, food borne illnesses, chronic illnesses (which we boomers all seem to have!), and, of course, accidents or emergencies are among the many issues we might face whether away from home for one day, one month or one year.

Today our travels are guided by new information technologies. We used to rely on a travel agent and leave home with a paper itinerary. Now we travel the world with handheld devices that connect us to the internet and function as digital assistants. We trust them for work, entertainment, instant communications, finding our way and other personal problem-solving.

In this threatening global economic climate, we also need to worry about incurring hefty medical expenses.  What happens when I am treated in another country? Will my insurance pay? People don’t realize that Medicare, the largest USA public health plan doesn’t cover you outside of the USA. Don’t believe it? Check out the first two pages of a U.S. Passport.

Travel health today is a developing discipline that touches all these dimensions. It’s much more than “emporiatrics” or travel medicine. There are plenty of sources of information to check out before you leave on your trip (CDC, World Health Organization, Int’l Society of Travel Medicine), but what do you do when something happens to you while you’re out of the country? When you get off the plane, train or boat, you are also in need of “destination health” services-information resources and healthcare providers that help you manage a chronic disease or an unexpected medical event. Where would you go if you got sick or seriously injured? Do you speak the local language? Are the doctors trained in medicine practices that you feel comfortable with? Can you find medications that you can trust?

I founded a company 12 years ago which helps people far away from home access top-flight medical care all around the world. HTH Worldwide has relationships with high quality doctors and hospitals in over 185 countries.  Driven by mega trends like globalization, the aging population, the internet, mobile communications, and the need for portable insurance services, Travel Health and especially Destination Health are subjects that HTH Worldwide addresses every day. We’d like to share our experience in this growing field and bring you the insights of others active in this discipline through this forum.  Because we help hundreds of thousands of people each year, we know what can go wrong and how to help you.  Yet, there aren’t many places for normal folks to discuss their experiences, trade stories and advice about the perils of traveling. For this reason, we’re proud to sponsor this blog.

Some of the first topics we will take up will describe the wide scope of activity that is taking place on a global scale-medical travel or tourism, medical philanthropy, the importance of wireless and internet technologies for those seeking, those providing and those paying for care. We’ll also address some of the myths that persist about getting care overseas, and we’ll invite industry authorities to share their views in this space.

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