![]() | When the final sounds of "Pomp and Circumstance" have faded away, your child is not a child anymore but a hopefully college bound almost-adult. She or he will no longer qualify for inclusion under... |
When the final sounds of “Pomp and Circumstance” have faded away, your child is not a child anymore but a hopefully college bound almost-adult. She or he will no longer qualify for inclusion under your medical plan, unless there is a clause that provides for the insurability of currently enrolled, active college students. During the interim, or if your child is thinking of taking off a year, there is a good chance that alternative means of insurance need to be purchased. Fortunately there are a number of different options open to you and it is a wise choice to discuss the various options not only as a family but also with your child.
Since you are most likely more concerned about your child’s wellbeing than she or is going to be in the budding of youth, you want your offspring to have access to an osteopath and since this is most likely the year that the transition from pediatrician to a physician treating adults must be made, there is no better time than to buy student health insurance to covers osteopathic care and also finding that osteopathic primary care provider that will see after your child’s health when she or he is away at college.
It is true that it is a buyer’s market for those seeking to find good deals from the insurance industry, but finding that absolutely perfect plan that not only permits for osteopathic healthcare but will continue healthcare coverage seamlessly without costing an arm and a leg is still something that requires some shopping around. Many student health insurance policies factor in the individual’s likelihood of traveling abroad, but for the student who does not actually foresee this kind of move there might be some savings associated with declining this kind of policy.
Shopping with brokers for the big insurers is the student’s best bet with respect to finding policies that cover holistic healthcare, osteopathic preventive care, chiropractic relief, and also massage therapy, and then compare the health plans that the various insurers have to offer. Consumers should also remember that getting life insurance now is a good idea. Sure, at the age of 18 or thereabouts nobody is actually thinking of dying, but it pays to get the policy written when you are healthy than wait until you are getting older and the preexisting conditions threaten to choke out your eligibility.
If all else fails and funds are a serious consideration, there is the option of purchasing temporary health insurance that may span the gap between high school graduation and college matriculation. This should be a last ditch effort, however, since it puts you in the position of having to repeat the shopping around you are currently doing when the temporary policy lapses. Ideally, a permanent policy is the best solution all the way around. Some temporary policies also do not fit the bill with respect to covering osteopathic care even though they are deceptively easy on the pocket book. Once again it pays to shop around carefully and also enlist the help of insurance brokers.