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Should I drop other health coverage
- CapeCodBob
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OHC is from civilian employment that was a free benny until I retired from them and then I had to pay but was much lower cost at first.
OHC is supposed to be secondary but the way the system works is Medicare automatically balance bills Tricare so don't often us OHC.
OHC is now up to $407/mo.
I am concerned about longterm care in the future . Should I keep OHC just for that ?
Is anyone else in this situation ?
BUY AMERICAN KEEP AMERICANS WORKING
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I am eligible for VA but only use it for routine stuff annually. I have had surgerys with the VA but we have a good one to deal with not like the ones that are always in the news.
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- floridakamper
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CapeCodBob wrote: OHC is now up to $407/mo.
I am concerned about longterm care in the future . Should I keep OHC just for that ?
Is anyone else in this situation ?
Neither Medicare or TRICARE 4 Life cover "Long Term Care." IE, nursing home or assisted living. When you're broke Medicaid might help if it's still around. If you're OHI covers long term care then it is a personal decision and if that $400 a month is breaking the budget. For medically necessary care, you're golden with MEDICARE and TRICARE 4 Life. Most military health benefits advisors I think would tell you the OHI is an unnecessary expense in your case.
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CapeCodBob wrote: OHC is now up to $407/mo.
I am concerned about long term care in the future . Should I keep OHC just for that ?
I would double check whether your OHC covers "long term care" (assisted living, memory care,etc.), I have not seen any that do... If yours does cover that (also check how much and how long), it may be worth keeping. Check out the cost for long term care insurance at your age and I would guess it would be more than $407/mo - is that cost for both of you?
Joe & Barb
2016 Winnebago Vista 31KE
Shoreview, Minnesota
Sun City Center, Florida
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My bride and I are both retired civil service and I'm retired military. We both suspended (not cancelled) our civil service medical at age 65 when we went under Tricare for life and Medicare. We also both purchased the government offered LTC policies at age 60 (her) and age 62 (me). The LTC coverage costs us less than $100/month. I have had 4 major surgeries over the last 3 years (all orthopedic) and the cost for all of them has been $0.00. I can't remember the last time I had to pay a deductible. For us, the TFL + Medicare has taken care of all of our medical costs perfectly. I would suggest you cancel the OHC coverage you currently have and find individual LTC policies that cover just LTC. I would be very surprised if they weren't substantially cheaper than your current OHC.CapeCodBob wrote: We are both on Medicare but in good health and not on any meds. 69 and 65 yo.
OHC is from civilian employment that was a free benny until I retired from them and then I had to pay but was much lower cost at first.
OHC is supposed to be secondary but the way the system works is Medicare automatically balance bills Tricare so don't often us OHC.
OHC is now up to $407/mo.
I am concerned about longterm care in the future . Should I keep OHC just for that ?
Is anyone else in this situation ?
Bob Hicks, from Utah
I’m 76 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
“Free men don't ask permission to bear arms.” ― Glen Aldrich
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I have no idea what LTC policy is for -- or what it does, and why one needs it -- opps, just hit me Long Term Care - so if you would explain that one, and where you get it, that will be great to look into - just in case Thx
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