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Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO)
Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) are prepaid health plans. As an HMO member, you pay a monthly
premium. In exchange, the HMO provides comprehensive care for you and your family, including doctors'
visits, hospital stays, emergency care, surgery, lab tests, x-rays, and therapy.
The HMO arranges for this care either directly in its own group practice and/or through doctors and
other health care professionals under contract. Usually, your choices of doctors and hospitals are
limited to those that have agreements with the HMO to provide care. However, exceptions are made in
emergencies or when medically necessary. There may be a small copayment for each office visit, such as
$5 for a doctor's visit or $25 for hospital emergency room treatment. Your total medical costs will
likely be lower and more predictable in an HMO than with fee-for-service insurance. Because HMOs
receive a fixed fee for your covered medical care, it is in their interest to make sure you get basic
health care for problems before they become serious. HMOs typically provide preventive care, such as
office visits, immunizations, well-baby checkups, mammograms, and physicals. The range of services
covered vary in HMOs, so it is important to compare available plans. Some services, such as outpatient
mental health care, often are provided only on a limited basis.
Many people like HMOs because they do not require claim forms for office visits or hospital stays.
Instead, members present a card, like a credit card, at the doctor's office or hospital. In some HMOs,
doctors are salaried and they have offices in an HMO building at one or more locations in your community
as part of a prepaid group practice. In others, independent groups of doctors contract with the HMO to
take care of patients. These are called individual practice associations (IPAs) and they are made up of
private physicians in private offices who agree to care for HMO members. You select a doctor from a
list of participating physicians that make up the IPA network. If you are thinking of switching into
an IPA-type of HMO, ask your doctor if he or she participates in the plan.
In almost all HMOs, you either are assigned or you choose one doctor to serve as your primary care
doctor. This doctor monitors your health and provides most of your medical care, referring you to
specialists and other health care professionals as needed. You usually cannot see a specialist without
a referral from your primary care doctor who is expected to manage the care you receive. This is one
way that HMOs can limit your choice.
Medicare HMO
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