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Health Insurance for Small Business Owners Dallas TX

Navigating the world of small business health insurance is hard enough, don’t leave yourself behind by not knowing the lingo – we offer up a glossary to help you handle the buzzwords in health insurance for small business owners in Dallas.

Kris Maksimovich
18170 Dallas Pkwy.
Dallas, TX
Amerigroup Corp.
(214) 678-5500
2730 N Stemmons Fwy
Dallas, TX
Alcman Corp.
(214) 905-9905
7506 John W Carpenter Fwy
Dallas, TX
3 M Healthcare Consulting
(972) 450-6533
14800 Quorum Dr
Dallas, TX
Apria Healthcare
(214) 503-1103
9734 Skillman St
Dallas, TX
Affordable Health & Life Insurance
(940) 206-5583
2614 Hartman St
Dallas, TX
Aetna Inc Health Care Insurance
(214) 200-8000
2777 N Stemmons Fwy
Dallas, TX
Acumen Healthcare
(972) 385-7292
5310 Harvest Hill Rd
Dallas, TX
AFLAC
(972) 387-8800
14180 Dallas Pkwy
Dallas, TX
DSG Health Insurance
469-916-3646
11937 Denton Drive
Dallas, AK
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Health Insurance Lingo - A Glossary of Terms for Small Business Owners

Navigating the health-insurance maze is a little easier if you understand the terminology. Here’s a guide to most of the important terms you’ll need to know as a small business owner:

Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association : The national trade organization that links 38 independent regional health insurance companies in the United States. Some of the BCBS companies are not-for-profit. The association operates through a series of administratively independent franchises offering insurance plans within defined regions.

Catastrophic health insurance : It protects you against the high cost of treating severe injury or long illness. These policies usually cover some, if not all, of your medical expenses above the maximum liability limit of another insurance policy.

Co-pay : This is your out-of-pocket cost per doctor visit under the terms of your policy, often $5 to $25 for each visit.

Co-insurance : Ever hear of an 80/20 or 50/50 policy? It’s a policy with a “co-insurance” provision, and is typically less expensive than other policies.

Essentially, you pay an annual deductible, then your insurance company pays a percentage of your expenses after that (e.g. 80 percent in an 80/20 policy). You pay the difference (20 percent in an 80/20 policy). This type of policy also has a lifetime maximum, which limits the amount the insurance company pays toward health-care expenses in your lifetime.

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