Ask a Travel Nurse: How can I get affordable health insurance while Travel Nursing?

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Ask a Travel Nurse: How can I get affordable health insurance while Travel Nursing?

Ask a Travel Nurse Question:

The agency that I’m planning to start a contract with in January offers health insurance, but it’s expensive. How can I get affordable health insurance while Travel Nursing?

Ask a Travel Nurse Answer:

When it comes to insurance, this is an area where all companies are definitely NOT alike. Some companies will offer you seemingly great hourly rates, but that only means they have likely not allocated much money toward their benefits policy (which means crappy coverage at high rates). Look for a well-rounded company that will pay you a decent rate, but also allocates a decent amount of your compensation package from the hospital toward their insurance plan.

I was recently surprised by how decent my insurance was with what is probably THE largest travel company out there (one that also usually receives horrible reviews in the travel forums). But I have a great recruiter with them (the only reason I continue to travel with them) and my monthly cost was only $160 and their prescription plan probably saved me DOUBLE that on my Nexium.

These days, you cannot just look at great rates and jump on board with a company. You have to look at the entire compensation package, which should include a good health insurance plan. Be sure to ask questions about health insurance and how that factors into your pay package before you sign on. If it’s a priority to you, you may want to look at another company.

Hope this helps.

David

david@travelnursesbible.com

Giving Thanks to Nurses

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Giving thanks to nurses never goes out of style!

With Thanksgiving right around the corner, I thought it would be fun to revisit one of the coolest ways I’ve seen a site go about giving thanks to nurses.

In celebration of the 10th anniversary of Johnson & Johnson’s Campaign for Nursing’s Future, they created their Portrait of Thanks Mosaic. It’s a mosaic of upwards of 10,000 photos of actual, individual nurses and nursing students! In addition to celebrating their anniversary, the mosaic was created to “thank nurses for their hard work and dedication.” When you visit the page, the larger image looks like this:

Nurses_Heal_Mosaic

From there, the site allows you to zoom in on individual pics or to search by specialty, to reveal thumbnails that pop out with each person’s name, specialty, and location.

What I love most about the mosaic is how it highlights nurses as individuals. It literally puts a face on all of the hard work and professionalism contributed by nurses everywhere. It’s also really cool to see the awesome amount of diversity in nursing.

Click here to check out the Portrait of Thanks Mosaic.

Giving thanks to nurses is super important, and so is the work being done by The Campaign for Nursing’s Future. Launched in 2002, their goal is to help recruit new nurses and retain those currently working, while highlighting the importance of the nursing profession to communities and healthcare delivery in the United States.

On their website they explain the nursing shortage — which Travel Nursing is instrumental in addressing — writing:

“By 2025, it’s predicted that there will be a shortfall of over half a million nurses, and a serious shortage of nurse educators — all as the massive Baby Boom generation approaches its time of greatest healthcare need. The Campaign seeks to bring more people into this rich and rewarding career and to preserve the quality and availability of healthcare in the future.”

Travel Nursing Blogs is so very grateful for all of you hardworking, self-sacrificing nurses out there. We appreciate everything you do and are especially thankful for you this Thanksgiving season and beyond. Thank you!

Cambridge RNs ready for Nov. 20 informational picketing

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RNs at Cambridge Medical Center made final preparations for their Nov. 20 informational picketing on Tuesday night.

MNA Cambridge members and their families turned out in force to make signs and other preparations for Thursday’s picketing.

The RNs say they are frustrated with the hospital’s emphasis on profit over patient care and staff.

RNs are very concerned about the hospital’s proposals during the current contract negotiations, and recent staff layoffs.

Community members are solidly behind nurses. “I support our nurses” signs are in yards and businesses throughout Cambridge, and community residents will join the RNs on the picket line on Thursday.

Picketing is 2-6 p.m. on the public sidewalks around the hospital. A candlelight vigil starts at 5 p.m.

Jingle and Mingle @ Our Holiday Open House!

What: A Holiday Party! Come join us for merrymaking!
When: Friday, December 12th from 10 AM to 5 PM – Drop by anytime!
Where: AaNA Office – 3701 East Tudor Road, Suite 208 Anchorage, AK 99507
Who: YOU!

RSVP to Andrea Nutty – andrea@aknurse.org or 274-0827.

Big Changes For 2015 Workplace Plans: Watch Out For These Six Possible Pitfalls

You don’t get a pass this year on big health insurance decisions because you’re not shopping in an Affordable Care Act marketplace. Employer medical plans — where most working-age folks get coverage — are changing too.

Rising costs, a looming tax on rich benefit packages and the idea that people should buy medical treatment the way they shop for cell phones have increased odds that workplace plans will be very different in 2015.

“If there’s any year employees should pay attention to their annual enrollment material, this is probably the year,” said Brian Marcotte, CEO of the National Business Group on Health, which represents large employers.

In other words, don’t blow off the human resources seminars. Ask these questions.

1. Is my doctor still in the network?Some employers are shifting to plans that look like the HMOs of the 1990s, with limited networks of physicians and hospitals. Provider affiliations change even when companies don’t adopt a “narrow network.”

Insurers publish directories, but the surest way to see if docs or hospitals take your plan is to call and ask.

“People tend to find out the hard way how their health plan works,” said Karen Pollitz, a senior fellow with the Kaiser Family Foundation. “Don’t take for granted that everything will be the same as last year.” (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

2. Is my employer changing where I get labs and medications?For expensive treatments — for diseases such as cancer or multiple sclerosis — some companies are hiring preferred vendors. Getting infusions or prescriptions outside this network could cost thousands extra, just as with doctors and hospitals.

3. How will my out-of-pocket costs go up?It’s probably not a question of if. Shifting medical expense to workers benefits employers because it means they absorb less of a plan’s overall cost increases. By lowering the value of the insurance, it also shields companies from the “Cadillac tax” on high-end coverage that begins in 2018.

Having consumers pay more is also supposed to nudge them to buy thoughtfully — to consider whether procedures are necessary and to find good prices.

“It gets them more engaged in making decisions,” said Dave Osterndorf, a benefits consultant with Towers Watson.

How well this will control total costs is very unclear.

Your company is probably raising deductibles — the amount you pay for care before your insurance kicks in.  The average deductible for a single worker rose to $1,217 this year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. One large employer in three surveyed by Marcotte’s group planned to offer only high-deductible plans (at least $2,600 for families) in 2015.

Employers are also scrapping co-payments — fixed charges collected during an office or pharmacy visit.

Once you might have made a $20 copay for a $100 prescription, with the insurance company picking up the other $80. Now you might pay the full $100, with the cost applied against your deductible, Marcotte said.

4. How do I compare medical prices and quality?Companies concede they can’t push workers to shop around without giving information on prices and quality.

Tools to comparison shop are often primitive. But you should take advantage of whatever resources, usually an online app from the insurance company, are available.

5. Can I use tax-free money for out-of-pocket payments?Workers are familiar with flexible spending accounts (which aren’t that flexible). You contribute pretax dollars and then have to spend them on medical costs before a certain time.

Employers increasingly offer health savings accounts, which have more options. Contribution limits for HSAs are higher. Employers often chip in. There is no deadline to spend the money, and you keep it if you quit the company. So you can let it build up if you stay healthy.

Don’t necessarily think of HSAs as money down the drain, says Osterndorf. Think of them as a different kind of retirement savings plan.

6. How is my prescription plan set up?Drugs are one of the fastest-rising medical costs. To try to control them, employers are splitting pharma benefits into more layers than ever before. Cost-sharing is lowest for drugs listed in formulary’s bottom tiers – usually cheap generics — and highest for specialty drugs and biologics.

If you’re on a long-term prescription, check how it’s covered so you know how much to put in the savings account to pay for it. Also see if a less-expensive drug will deliver the same benefit.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

California’s Managed Care Project For Poor Seniors Faces Backlash

California’s experiment aimed at moving almost 500,000 low-income seniors and disabled people automatically into managed care has been rife with problems in its first six months, leading to widespread confusion, frustration and resistance.

Many beneficiaries have received stacks of paperwork they don’t understand. Some have been mistakenly shifted to the new insurance coverage or are unaware they were enrolled. And 44 percent of those targeted for enrollment through Oct. 1 opted out.

Harold Marshall, who has hypertension, bipolar disorder, chronic pain and bladder cancer, said he rejected the managed care program because one of his doctors said he wouldn’t see him anymore if he was enrolled. Marshall, who lives in Inglewood, gets most of his care at renowned hospitals –Cedars Sinai Medical Center and UCLA.

“If I didn’t have my doctors, I don’t know what would happen,” he said.

In fact, doctors have been among the most vocal critics of the switch, and the state admittedly is having trouble getting some of them to participate.

“The scope and the pace are too large and too rapid for what is supposed to be a demonstration project,” said Dr. William Averill, executive board member of the Los Angeles County Medical Association, which filed a lawsuit to block the project. “We are concerned that [the project] is ill-conceived, ill-designed and will jeopardize the health of many of the state’s most vulnerable population – the poor, the elderly and the disabled.”

There is a lot riding on the pilot — the largest of its kind in the nation. The patients involved are among the most expensive to treat – so-called “dual eligibles,” who receive both Medicare, the health insurance program for the elderly and disabled, and Medicaid, which provides coverage for the poor. Over the three years of the demonstration project, California is focusing on 456,000 of the state’s 1.1 million dual eligibles.

State officials acknowledge some transition problems but say the project will provide consumers with more coordinated care that improves their health, reduces their costs and helps keep them in their homes. In addition, officials estimate the program could save the state more than $300 million in fiscal year 2014-2015.

Breaking Down Silos

Until now, many of these patients have had to maneuver through two massive government bureaucracies, each with separate rules. Medicare pays for most doctor visits and hospitalizations, and Medicaid covers nursing and other long-term care.

The patients are more vulnerable than most Medicare beneficiaries, more likely to have Alzheimer’s, diabetes and mental health problems. Many see multiple doctors in different practices, sometimes receiving unnecessary medications or duplicative tests.

nder the project, patients are given a single health plan membership card and a case manager. Instead of paying doctors per visit, the government pays the managed care plan a set monthly rate to manage all of the patient’s needs, including in-home care and nursing home stays.

“This is extremely exciting how we have broken down these silos of these two programs and are really focusing on how we can bring together and better integrate medical, behavioral and long-term care,” said Toby Douglas, director of the California Department of Health Care Services, which is implementing the program. As a result, people will “get care in the right setting at the right time, which is going to improve the experience and quality and outcomes and bend the cost curve.”

In practice, however, challenges abound.

Beneficiaries have been confused by the information packets from the state and the plans– which start arriving in the mail 90 days in advance. For instance, notices say people have “new choices” about coverage that will improve their care. But if patients or their authorized representatives don’t call or send in a form opting out, they are enrolled anyway.

Little publicity preceded the shift.

“The state has not done a good job marketing the program,” said Aileen Harper, executive director of the Center for Health Care Rights, a nonprofit contracted by the state to answer beneficiaries’ questions and guide them through the process. “That is one of the reasons you have seen the pushback.”

In most — but not all– counties, patients have a choice of plans. The pilot program’s enrollment is occurring on a rolling basis and now includes five counties – San Mateo, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, San Diego and Riverside. The program will begin in Santa Clara in January and Orange County this summer but will not move forward in Alameda County as originally planned.

“This is extremely exciting how we have broken down these silos of these two programs and are really focusing on how we can bring together and better integrate medical, behavioral and long-term care,” said Toby Douglas, director of the California Department of Health Care Services, which is implementing the program. As a result, people will “get care in the right setting at the right time, which is going to improve the experience and quality and outcomes and bend the cost curve.”

In practice, however, challenges abound.

Beneficiaries have been confused by the information packets from the state and the plans– which start arriving in the mail 90 days in advance. For instance, notices say people have “new choices” about coverage that will improve their care. But if patients or their authorized representatives don’t call or send in a form opting out, they are enrolled anyway.

Little publicity preceded the shift.

“The state has not done a good job marketing the program,” said Aileen Harper, executive director of the Center for Health Care Rights, a nonprofit contracted by the state to answer beneficiaries’ questions and guide them through the process. “That is one of the reasons you have seen the pushback.”

Among more than 195,000 eligible beneficiaries as of Oct. 1, about 86,000 had opted out. State numbers released Saturday show the opt-out rate had declined to 33% as of Nov. 1. The drop is because Santa Clara residents have just begun to receive notices and only a small number have decided not to participate.

‘Taking Things Away’

Some of the rules are surprising or mystifying to beneficiaries.

Tujunga resident Joyce Lest, 62, said she received a letter saying she now has to pay for part of her prescriptions but won’t receive an extra allocation for over-the-counter medications as she did before.

“I signed up thinking they were going to help me,” said Lest, who has high blood pressure and advanced osteoarthritis. Instead, “they are taking things away from me.”

Michael Williams, a 59-year-old with cerebral palsy, said he has received several packets of information at his Altadena home, each more confusing than the last. The booklets didn’t make clear how his care would change or whether he could keep his pharmacist, physical therapist and the person who builds his leg braces, he said.

So Williams opted out, fearing he’d have to travel farther for medical care. “I’m not physically up to that,” he said. “I’m scared this is just going to turn into a big mess.”

Under the rules, people can ask for permission to continue to see their established providers for six months, then must switch to those in the managed care network. No concrete numbers are available on how many doctors are participating, although plans are required to demonstrate that they have sufficient networks of doctors.

The state has been besieged with questions. In September alone, there were nearly 50,000 calls to the state’s health care services department about the project.

Greg Knoll, executive director of the Legal Aid Society of San Diego that runs the state ombudsman office said: “The phones were ringing off the hook … The rollout has been rocky.”

The biggest issue, Knoll said, is the “disruption of care” – beneficiaries saying they have to reschedule appointments and surgeries because of the changes.

Douglas said the state is trying to address the problems quickly. Among other things, officials are expanding outreach and education, relying on a website www.calduals.org, virtual and telephonic town halls, a call center and partnerships with community groups.

Douglas said he thinks patients will be less likely to opt out when they learn more about the project and see others receiving better care.

Trying To Make It Work

Douglas said the resistance of some doctors is not surprising. Some fear their rates will be lower and others have had long experience being paid each time they treat a patient. The state is trying to get more information out to encourage greater participation, he said.

Patrick Johnston, chief executive officer of the California Association of Health Plans, said that while it is of concern that some physicians are not interested, health plans have still been able to build comprehensive networks of primary and specialty care providers for the tens of thousands of people already in the program, and they are continuing to expand those networks.

“The state decided to go big from the outset .. and now our job is to help make it work,” he said.

Inland Empire Health Plan, which covers the patients in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, has been working both to expand its network and contact providers so they won’t drop their patients, said CEO Bradley P. Gilbert. Gilbert said teams of physicians, pharmacists and behavioral health specialists working together can deliver better care. But, he said, “There are still a lot of doctors and members who aren’t sure what is really going on.”

The California project stems from the Affordable Care Act, which does not mandate managed care but promotes better integration of the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Managed care is nothing new to California, which already has extensive experience in both the public and private sectors – including in its regular Medi-Cal program.

Despite the early problems, Knoll of San Diego’s legal aid office said he is hopeful that the project will eventually result in better care for elderly and disabled people. “This is a very vulnerable population,” he said. “I believe this is the right thing to do.”

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.