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2 Million Eager For Health Care On Parents' Plans

Mom

CARLA K. JOHNSON   04/ 1/10 05:15 PM ET   AP

CHICAGO — Congress voted to overhaul the health care system on a Sunday. On Monday, Patti Lawson e-mailed her employer's human resources office to ask how soon she could get her 22-year-old daughter back on her health insurance.

In about six months, the new law will allow at least 2 million young adults to be covered under their parents' policies. These are the "millennials," those who came of age in the new century and now are struggling to get on their feet during the worst slump since the Depression.

Many can't find jobs, and many who are employed don't have health coverage from their employers.

The law will allow young adults to stay on or return to their parents' insurance until age 26. To qualify, young people must be "dependents" of their parents. They don't necessarily have to live under the same roof.

Lawson, a Gettysburg College administrator in Pennsylvania, said she is hoping to get her daughter back on her health plan because she is tired of playing "a roulette game." Her daughter has just a temporary job that doesn't provide insurance.

"You're banking on your child staying well," said Lawson, who has been a single parent since her husband died of cancer three years ago.

Regulations still have to be written, but here are some of the crucial specifics of the new law, based on a reading of the measure and interpretation by various experts:

_It applies to young adults up to their 26th birthday who don't have access to insurance through their employer.

_There is no dispute the measure applies to young people away at college. It is widely assumed the law also covers other young people living on their own.

_It will include married children but not their spouses or their kids.

_It is unclear whether parents must wait until their health plan's next open enrollment period to sign up their uninsured older children.

_Young adults who live in a different state from their parents should check to see if their parents' health plan covers medical services where they live.

This is the first time the federal government has forced insurance companies to let young adults stay on their parents' policies. More than half the states already have laws that extend the age of dependent coverage. New York and New Jersey push it all the way to age 30 and 31 and would be allowed to keep those provisions.

The new federal law "provides a minimum, not a maximum," said law professor Timothy Jost of Washington and Lee University. Also, while many state laws do not apply to coverage from self-insured employer plans, the federal law will, experts say.

Much will depend on regulations to be written by federal health officials.

Among other things, Health and Human Services will have to decide what constitutes "dependent," and the definition will not necessarily be the same one used by the Internal Revenue Service for tax purposes. Also, HHS will have to clear up the issue of whether young people who live far from home can stay on their parents' plans.

Young adults in their 20s are the most likely age group to be uninsured, and nearly 30 percent of them lacked insurance in 2008.

"Given the downturn in the economy and the unemployment rate among young adults, it's a really important provision in the bill," said Sara Collins of the nonpartisan Commonwealth Fund.

Since 2003, the group has written a report titled "Rite of Passage?" about uninsured young adults and how they often lose health coverage at age 19 or upon high school or college graduation.

"It's a problem that spans the income spectrum," Collins said.

Before the law takes effect, some young adults who are graduating from college or otherwise becoming ineligible to stay on their parents' plans may want to buy insurance through COBRA to bridge any gap in coverage. But that can be expensive; there are also short-term plans that can be found through Web sites like . http://www.ehealthinsurance.com

The law will help Portland, Ore., mother Jessie Edwards sleep better at night. The nurse practitioner will be able to get both her young adult children covered as dependents on her insurance. Her 23-year-old son is losing his insurance this month, and her 25-year-old daughter has been uninsured for two years.

What frightens Edwards most is the possibility of one of them getting into an accident, she said. "What would we do? How would we cover that?"

Pat and John Curry of Augusta, Ga., have two daughters, ages 23 and 21. Without the new law, the older daughter would lose coverage on the family health plan at her next birthday.

"It would be a tremendous relief to us if we could keep them on our insurance," Pat Curry said. "This is something that would give them just a little more time to get their feet under them with the economy the way it is."

Lawson bought her college graduate daughter, Katie Byrne, catastrophic coverage on the independent market, so she wouldn't be completely uninsured while she searches for a job with benefits. But the $100-a-month plan does not include doctor visits. Meanwhile, Lawson's 19-year-old son is still covered.

"My son can go to a doctor if he twists his knee playing soccer and it's a $15 copay," Lawson said. "Then I have a daughter who does not have the same benefits. It illustrates for me what a lot of Americans face."

Under Pennsylvania law, Lawson's employer could choose to offer coverage for dependents up to age 30, but her employer has decided not to do so.

In the meantime, Lawson plans to fill an Easter basket with dental floss, medications and other health items for her daughter.

She is encouraging her daughter to stay healthy while they wait to get her back on Lawson's plan.

___

On the Net:

FAQs on young dependent coverage:

http://www.younginvincibles.org/cover.html

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CHICAGO — Congress voted to overhaul the health care system on a Sunday. On Monday, Patti Lawson e-mailed her employer's human resources office to ask how soon she could get her 22-year-old daug...
CHICAGO — Congress voted to overhaul the health care system on a Sunday. On Monday, Patti Lawson e-mailed her employer's human resources office to ask how soon she could get her 22-year-old daug...
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11:29 PM on 04/05/2010
Tell me about it! I can't even explain how excited and relieved I am that I can stay on my parents plan for five more years. If anyone wants more info on health care reform and its effects on the everyday American, I would recommend checking out this blog

http://blog.greensherpa.com/index.php/personal-finance/what-will-the-health-care-reform-do-for-you/

I found it useful and interesting!
03:36 PM on 04/04/2010
If you are facing your own colonscopy, hearing about mine will make you feel better. Go to:

www.daneallred.com and listen to "Double Preparation";
or read and hear it at www.daneallred.podbean.com
or www.1001thanks.blogspot.com. I'll try a link here, but I don't know if it will work.


Double Preparation
Listen to this episode
02:35 PM on 04/02/2010
And single-payer could be phased in gradually via. an enlarged Medicare system.
08:53 PM on 04/03/2010
I think that is the plan...... you like it?

Go sit at your local DMV for a day, then imagine having the flu or what ever and this being your doctors office........ Also keep in mind thad medicare's denial of services is almost twice what most private insurance is.

Thats what you are going to end up with....... the government has never come in under or at budget nor done anything better than the private sector with the possible exception of the military
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09:18 AM on 04/04/2010
The military?? You like how the military budget functions?? Sorry, can't even start to hear the rest of your argument.
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02:34 PM on 04/02/2010
Get rid of all the waste in the system. I once had a woman make a left turn into my driver's side in front of two cops. I went to a chiropractor and there were charges to see the doctor who recommended me to the chiropractor and suggested I file a lawsuit against the woman, then the tests started. I was scheduled for a bunch of tests one morning that took over five hours. It turned ridiculous fast. The guy who gave me the tests was located upstairs from the doctor who scheduled the tests--surprise his testing facility. I don't remember how much the test actually cost, but I had to sign a statement that if I missed the test appointment I would pay $475 out of my own pocket. This was about 1992; that was a lot more money than it is today. The person who administered the test had a heavy British accent and he turned out to be from Newcastle, and during this five hour marathon we started talking.
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02:34 PM on 04/02/2010
I asked him why he came here from England, and he explained to me that had he stayed in England he would have been out of work. In his words more or less. "In England we have national health care and if you got injured in a car wreck or for any other reason you would just go to the clinic and they would do whatever you needed to have done and there would be no reason to take all these tests to justify treatment to the insurance company so that they would eventually pay for your chiropractic care that you need for your back." The total bill for all the consultations and tests and about one month's twice weekly chiropractic sessions and messages was $38,000. And this was in 1992. True Story!
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jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
01:59 PM on 04/02/2010
According to conservatives, adding 2 million customers to doctors is going to kill the economy.

I guess "trickle down" states the last thing a business wants is more customers.
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johntheredstate
engineer
02:06 PM on 04/02/2010
Not enough hours in the day. DUH!
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jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
03:03 PM on 04/02/2010
Right, because we can't make more doctors.
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01:49 PM on 04/02/2010
healthcoat57 wrote:

Democrats never figure in the cost of all the tests that doctors do to cover their butt. Democrats just count savings in the reduced pay out in court.

I love this part: "all the tests that doctors do to cover their butt." Do you know how many doctors own other aspects of the health care industry. It works like this: a urologist gets together with four other urologists and opens a lab that does urology tests and lo and behold the number of urine samples that she begins sending to the lab she owns suddenly explodes. She starts sending all kinds of urine samples to his new lab to make more money off of each patient who enters her office. And this my friend is a far more common reason why doctors do so many tests in America than the silly tort reform argument ever was. Do some research on Texas and Missouri, are the doctors in those states doing any fewer tests, is medicine there any cheaper, is insurance any cheaper, is the cost of health care any cheaper. NO, no, no, no and no! It might behoove you as an American citizen to know something about how the American health care system that you going to eventually be a victim of works.
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hrc04
put on your pants and go home.
01:11 PM on 04/02/2010
Too late. The pundits and pollsters already said that the young people have soured on Obama. I wonder why they never called me...
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jenna2929
Keep On Keepin' On
01:08 PM on 04/02/2010
case in point. i was in the hospital for 6 weeks, pregnant with twins. one had to have heart surgery an hour after he was born. guess how much i paid....$0.00. guess how the doctors treated me-with respect and compassion, and not just during this trauma, throughout my time in the military.
civilian docs are too greedy to want universal healthcare. go figure.
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tj101
Hata ukinichukia la kweli nitakwambia
03:24 PM on 04/02/2010
This Army brat knows that most MD's in The Service end up in private practice - like my father....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeftRight
TANSTAAFL
01:04 PM on 04/03/2010
Of course they do, because under the system that we have now they can make FAR more money than they can in the service, just like most OTHER people who serve end up leaving before retirement and make more money in private industry....
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jenna2929
Keep On Keepin' On
01:02 PM on 04/02/2010
i had universal health care. it is GREAT, it works, its effective, and its not anywhere near as horrible as rethugs want you to believe because they are in bed with the greedy corporations.
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johntheredstate
engineer
12:26 PM on 04/02/2010
There is a problem that fell through the cracks, There are not enough Doctors to treat the millions added to the health system. Probably like Canada wait 6 months before you can see a Doctor.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Sepulchre
A neutron walks into a bar...
12:30 PM on 04/02/2010
You can directly thank the AMA for that.
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Phreaked
In Brightest Day, In Blackest Night
12:35 PM on 04/02/2010
Heres a vid clip from the 9/12 rally and i would like to point to the guy with the same argument and ask just what your answer would have been

We're gonna be 200k doctors short with the people he's bringing on"
What should people without healthcare do?
"uhhhh a different plan"
Could a different plan produce more doctors
"uhhh no"
11:57 AM on 04/02/2010
Will feel better when HHS defines dependent. IRS dependent definition is 19 and under, full time college student or disabled.

Many kids would not meet the IRS definition /
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11:47 AM on 04/02/2010
I'm 45 and I want to get on my parents' health care plan, too. Medicare. Open the damn thing up.
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09:26 AM on 04/04/2010
LOL! Excellent post!
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julie1215
10:39 AM on 04/02/2010
I hope that billing gets cleaned up soon. I settled a bill with a hospital, now I've got bills come in from all over and I don't know what the heck they are for. And the collections agencies can't tell me what they are for either. I don't know if they are from physicians or for labs or what! I'm not going to pay them until someone tells me what they are. There is no reason for the process of purchasing health services to be so opaque.
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AppleJuiceJunkie316
10:34 AM on 04/02/2010
Scratch my last comment, I meant to say Katie Byrne is kinda cute, not her mother. Someone get me Katie's digits.
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jenna2929
Keep On Keepin' On
10:38 AM on 04/02/2010
wow, creepy
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AppleJuiceJunkie316
10:33 AM on 04/02/2010
patti lawson's kinda cute. someone get me her digits