experience –
Working PRN and buying your own insurance?Rating: (votes: 0) Are you meaning health or the nurse insurance? If its health, before I got married, I bought a private policy. It was $85/mo. You were covered for catastrophic events, free physical with your PCP, and I think you got a RX discount. It did not cover maternity (that was a add on for an extra $200/mo) and I cannot recall if it covered a yearly pap. I went to a certain website, for the life of me I cannot remember, something like einsurance.com maybe? I saw it advertised and based on the questionnaire you fill out it gives you 5-10 different quotes from different companies. This was in 2009, not sure how these things have changed with the new laws. Comment:
talk to some independent insurance agents. Independent means they are not committed to one specific company. Probably can shop online, like above post mentioned.
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If you're relatively young w/o pre-existing health probs, IMHO you should be able to find an adequate policy at a reasonable cost.
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I hope the new exchanges that are supposed to be in place from next year has some decent options for decent prices. I currently work full time, but insurance takes a lot out of my paycheck. I want to buy my own eventually, so that it's not tied to a job I could lose in an instant.
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If you mean health insurance, yes, years ago. I shopped around, found a policy w/a high deductible and it worked well for me. I am healthy, take no medications so the high deductible kept the monthly cost low. I deducted the monthly premiums from my taxes. Did this for about a yr until my spouses insurance kicked in at his new job.If you mean liability nursing insurance, I have never carried this unless I was required to for a job which has been rare.
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Quote from whichone'spinkI hope the new exchanges that are supposed to be in place from next year has some decent options for decent prices. I currently work full time, but insurance takes a lot out of my paycheck. I want to buy my own eventually, so that it's not tied to a job I could lose in an instant.
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Quote from dudette10... being offered insurance, waiving the option, buying private insurance, then using the premium tax credit will be a paperwork nightmare for employers...
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The paperwork nightmare is this: if even one employee uses the premium tax credit to buy their own insurance, the IRS will require the employer to prove that insurance was offered. It adds more paperwork steps for which I'm sure there will be some growing pains.
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If it will indeed be the paperwork nightmare you are thinking then employers had best be offering the best insurance they can. I for one will take the best option available to me and my family regardless of how it effects my employer. I would really have to adore my employer to give a darn how my healthcare choices effect them. For a good many employers the $2,000 per employee fine will still be cheaper than giving us decent health coverage. I personally have not come across an employer that didn't take the cheapest route possible at least not so far.
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Quote from tabbybear68If it will indeed be the paperwork nightmare... I personally have not come across an employer that didn't take the cheapest route possible at least not so far.
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I work PRN at 2 different hospitals and pay $145 a month for insurance for my son and I thru Aetna. I went to that ehealthinsurance site and it was easy - let me search all different insurances, choose deductables and find an insurance plan that both my dr and my son's dr accepts.
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I did this for a while, a few years ago. I had quit a horrible job and wanted to take some time off from full time work. I worked per diem for a hospital clinic & a HH agency, and bought a health insurance policy for myself through Anthem, for about $90/mo. It covered ER/catastrophic, PCP visits & my birth control. I also bought a $25/mo Aflac policy that reimbursed me for preventative stuff like Pap smears, cancer screenings & immunizations. For that stuff I used a community clinic that had decent fees-for-service and paid cash. I was just fine for that 6 months, no problems, and I left the IRS out of it.
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