• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    No copay means no copay, what you’re describing is not no copay.

    Yes, “no copay means no copay”. Most insurance plans have BOTH a copay and a deductable on a large number of higher-end services like inpatient surgery and the diagnostics like CT. And I have had, and helped family shop for, healthcare plans that have no copay, but still have a deductable. Further, there’s a lot of PPO variants that have no copay or deductable, but have a coinsurance for everything.

    In my adult life, I have never seen a plan where your “typical” out of pocket for anything other than Primary Care or Teledoc was anywhere near zero, even if those plans approach $3000/mo.

    And you’re right. What I was describing was not a copay, but a deductable (please check the words I used, as I called it a deductable :) ). For a patient, money going out feels the same as money going out. Especially in large quantities.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      And you’re right. What I was describing was not a copay, but a deductable (please check the words I used, as I called it a deductable :) ).

      Sure but the conversation was about copay ;)

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Sometimes conversations get confused pretty quickly in thread format. I never understood why, but it IS hard to keep context in Lemmy. Let me reopen with what I was replying to:

        If you had no co pay you wouldn’t have had a $200 bill

        That’s what you opened with. The person above you didn’t use the word “copay” at all. They just complained about being charged $200 to get a note. Your reply was the quote above. My reply was “but most insurance plans have a … deductible”.

        The conversation was really about money out of pocket. I think you inadvertently thought it was about copays. It happens :)