Thursday, June 11, 2009

SWINE FLU - IT'S BACK!!!


Well i guess it never left. The World Health Organization, better known as WHO has raised the SWINE FLU to level 6 which is Pandemic Level. This is the first flu epidemic in over 41 years. This is quite a historical moment in modern day medicine. The last pandemic — the Hong Kong flu of 1968 — killed about 1 million people according to the Associated Press. The New York Times reported the Hong Kong Flu "killed about 700 million people worldwide"
What does that mean for you? If you are traveling abroad, then be prepared for possible delays as foreign and domestic health officials screen for fever and flu symptoms. Worse case scenario is you would be quarantined and not be allowed to travel.
This could be the tip of the SWINE FLU iceberg, other possible affects are decreased global trade, local and regional panic or global hysteria.
As always keep a level head, be informed and prepared. Receive up to date Country and City Health Profiles when you apply for our Global Citizen or Travel Gap international health insurance policies.

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Monday, June 1, 2009

NEW Border Rules Begin Today, June 1, 2009


Headed to Canada, Mexico, Bermuda or the Caribbean?


Here's a tip: Take your passport to avoid a headache coming home. New Border rules require you to have a passport or passport card to enter the US.

Receive up to date and useful country, city, security and health profiles when you purchase a Global Citizen, Travel Gap or Trip Protector international travel insurance policies.

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Friday, April 24, 2009

Digital IDs Will Allow US Citizens to Clear Forign Customs Easier

For the first time, U.S. travelers flying overseas may avoid customs lines at a foreign airport by swiping a digital ID card. Read More

Advocates say this will open doors for much more..... "more of what." I hardly find Passport Control a deterent from traveling abroad or returning / visiting the USA. Will your passport picture be replaced with a digital image of your iris?

Withoug having to sacrafice a copy of your fingerprint, you can receive pre-trip information regarding customs, entry visa or city profiles for any country you are traveling to when you purchase our Global Citizen, Travel Gap and Trip Protector international health insurance policies. Call us at 800-647-4589 for your free destination profile.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Not ALL International Health Insurance is the same

Get Hip to HIPAA before heading overseas

Navigating your health plan to get the most out of your benefits can be a challenge —the administrative hurdles alone can sometimes be daunting.

But for international travelers there’s a little known trapdoor that can open large gaps in healthcare coverage that quickly spiral beyond your control, exposing world travelers to significant financial risk.

Traveling or residing outside the U.S. for six months or more often means that one of the key benefits of a health insurance plan—coverage of pre-existing conditions—is in jeopardy when you return home. How so? If you’re not hip to HIPAA, you wouldn’t know - the catch is in the fine print of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (link: http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq_consumer_hipaa.html.)

Unless you are enrolled in a well-designed international health insurance program, you can be caught up in technicalities that subject you to a 12-month waiting period for a pre-existing condition when you return home and re-enroll in a domestic group health plan. Even if you purchased another plan to fill the gap, HIPAA rules permit the group plan to institute the waiting period. That’s bad news if you have developed a serious medical condition in the meantime.

Doesn’t sound fair? Well, it’s all perfectly legal. The waiting period can be reduced or eliminated if the time you spent in your alternative health plan is viewed as “creditable coverage” and applied as an offset. But that decision is made unilaterally by the health plan.

What’s the answer? Staying healthy certainly helps. But if you want to do more than cross your fingers (and that is what this is all about) do your homework before heading out of the country, like this smart person did (at least we think she’s smart… she chose a product we offer) (link: http://francesandaustin.blogspot.com/2009/03/swiss-doctor-worldwide-health-insurance.html).

If you are employed and posted abroad, ask your employer to enroll you in an international plan that provides seamless eligibility no matter how much time you spend abroad. If group coverage is not an option, choosing the right individual plan can help you avoid similar, even larger gaps in coverage.

Most individual international plans on the market are constructed and administered to minimize coverage for pre-existing conditions. They typically feature exclusions or very low benefit limits for conditions that were treated over the past two years. To your peril, they also define pre-existing conditions much more broadly than U.S. plans, and they don’t recognize the group plan you may be leaving as “creditable coverage.” Check to see if the individual plan you are considering is filed with U.S. state insurance regulators as an “admitted” plan. Check out our Global Citizen or Travel Gap Excursion.

Lastly, ask about what happens to your eligibility when you return home. Will the plan continue to offer benefits after your assignment ends? Many plans discontinue benefits after six months at home; others will cover you all the way up to age 84. This is a critical issue: you clearly don’t want to be left out in the cold as uninsurable.

The last thing you need when going abroad or coming home is to trip over technicalities and fall through a trapdoor . Be a savvy health insurance buyer. Ask the right questions and don’t leave anything to chance.

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