Shanna-like-Banana
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 21, 2009
- Messages
- 1,641
we once had a high-deductable plan, after about 3-4 months we cancelled it.
We were paying the $500 a month premium and then paying 100% OOP to all the docs and Rx's.
It was insane. we were hemorraging moneyleft and right. We cancelled it and notified our docs that we had no insurance. They automatically gave us a 30%discount for being a "cash" patient. Also, magically out of no-where we would regularly get free samples to start the treatment.
no more monthly premium and paying 30% less than before. we took adventage of a lot of the free Rx's and the low-cost rx's from wal-mart/target/etc.
I had printed out the low cost Rx types from 3 stores and always took it with us, the docs had no problem picking one from those lists and it wasn't just a way to keep costs down, it's not like we were cutting corners on getting better.
now, we only did this for 6 months or so, it wasn't a long term life-style, at the time it was a right-now decision.
We were paying the $500 a month premium and then paying 100% OOP to all the docs and Rx's.
It was insane. we were hemorraging moneyleft and right. We cancelled it and notified our docs that we had no insurance. They automatically gave us a 30%discount for being a "cash" patient. Also, magically out of no-where we would regularly get free samples to start the treatment.
no more monthly premium and paying 30% less than before. we took adventage of a lot of the free Rx's and the low-cost rx's from wal-mart/target/etc.
I had printed out the low cost Rx types from 3 stores and always took it with us, the docs had no problem picking one from those lists and it wasn't just a way to keep costs down, it's not like we were cutting corners on getting better.
now, we only did this for 6 months or so, it wasn't a long term life-style, at the time it was a right-now decision.