Thank you Nan. I’ll look around to see what there is going. Maybe I can patch together something.
I admit it all seems VERY complicated. When I lived in the States it was before Obamacare, and we had great insurance through my husband’s work. I never had to call and plead for coverage, or fight to have a procedure. I had two C-sections that included three days in the hospital and it cost us $50.00 each time.
My husband and I are heathy, and always have been, (no previous or ongoing conditions)but in “the zone” age wise where things can start to go wrong.
The NHS is so poor, and taxes here so high, that if I can find the right plan it might balance out. We would like to go to NM. We almost bought a house there a few years ago but the healthcare business stopped us. I wish I had never mentioned it as potential difficulty. We would have just had to live with the situation and paid up. In the end we went to Canada, which I hated every minute I was in the Vancouver area. My husband wouldn’t entertain anywhere else. (And he said I was picky!).
Anyway, we wound up back here in the UK and I have to say the last couple of year’s weather has left me longing for America. We aren’t getting any younger and it’s difficult with all the mud, constant wind and cold . I don’t think I had even one day last year where I didn’t wear a sweater even in the house. All the mud makes me feel like I’m living in the Neolithic!
I love my house, but haven’t any close friends, and I spend my days watching my husband cut branches in the garden. My son still lives in the Vancouver area and I miss him terribly. I don’t get to see him very often. I miss the optimism and cheerfulness of Americans. Although I think maybe that has changed somewhat. Needless to say I’m dying on the vine.
So, on the sly, I’m sorta looking at the possibilities in America. I might get one more move out of the husband if it’s NM or similar.
I thought maybe being older might for once be a good thing. I didn’t work very much whilst living in America, and much of the time I was raising my kids. So most of my work history is in the UK.
Cheers
I hear ya. I was wanting to write that given the length of time people seem to have to wait for treatment over there even for serious issues, and the restrictions on what care the NHS would provide to you if you needed something really pricey that they haven't already approved.... You'd (I assume) possibly end up paying to go "private". Which could really add up.
It is complicated, I'm sorry to say. In a nutshell, generally there's three kinds of medical cover here (not counting if you're fabulously wealthy and can just pay for it):
1) Government - medicare (for "elderly" persons) or medicaid (for very low income or special disabled populations)
2) Private - you can purchase commercial plans on the marketplace. Here's the link for the healthcare marketplace in New Mexico -
https://getcovered.bewellnm.com/individual/3) Employer sponsored (which I lump the military "Tri-care" into).
Looking at employer-sponsored, it can be really really good cover (as you have experienced) or the bare minimum. It just depends on what plan the employer negotiates with an insurer for the employees. How much you pay of that premium can also vary wildly from the employer paying for everything to you paying for most of the cost. Obamacare made some issues mandatory for all plans regardless of who is providing them. Thank God.
2) Marketplace plans. Also have to meet the minimum Obamacare standards. After that, it's how much you want to pay (or can afford to pay). Deductibles can be minimal or huge. Add-on coverages (not required by Obamacare) can vary. On the good side, there are subsidies from the Federal Government to help with costs, depending on your income. Marketplaces are state-specific, and so what is on their approved plans in one state may not be on another. Ah, states' rights.....
3) I have heard people complaining for years about Medicare, but so far it's been some of the best care I've ever had. If something is deemed "medically necessary" by a provider (a procedure, a test, a medication) it's covered. But, again, I'm on traditional Medicare. The cheaper Medicare Advantage plans are HMOs and you may have to get prior authorizations or see only doctors affiliated with that plan. Medicaid is bare-bones - it actually, from my experience, is very much like the NHS, but with more pro-active "keep you healthy, not just react when you get sick" programs. You do have to have very low income and almost no resources to qualify for Medicaid, and the programs are administered independently by each state. (When I was in grad school I did a research project on medicaid in Texas, and at that time there were over three dozen different medicaid programs in Texas, each with different rules. Made a good grade, but was so thankful I never had to deal with Texas medicaid as a client!)
I can certainly understand your wanting to be near your son. If he's smart, your husband will be aware of that.
Good luck!