Groups inform students about health care law

Parents’ coverage provided to age 26

By Jen Serdetchnaia
Updated: 03/30/11 1:14am
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Tools

For 2011 university graduates

The many ways of learning more about your health insurance options post-graduation

  • The Young Invincibles — a national organization advocating for young Americans between the ages of 18 and 34 — has developed a free Graduation Toolkit that informs young adults and their families about insurance and health care options post-graduation. Information in the toolkit includes how to get back on a parent’s plan, insurance terms to know when buying an individual policy, coverage options for young people, and what the new health care law means for young adults. Get the toolkit on www.YoungInvincibles.org/Toolkit or text “Toolkit” to 69866.
  • Check out the Department of Health and Human Services Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/YoungAdultCoverage or their web-site on Young Adult Coverage: http://www.healthcare.gov/foryou/youngadults
  • The Student Public Interest Research Group and Families U.S.A. have compiled a Young Person’s Guide to Health Insurance: Graduation Edition Release. This resource was introduced by President Barack Obama. It describes how the Class of 2011 is affected by the Affordable Care Act. This is the first graduating class to benefit from new provisions that allow young people to stay on their parent’s health insurance until they are 26. The guide is available at www.studentpirgs.org/healthcareguide.
  • The exact cost-savings for young people and their families expected from the Affordable Care Act can be found in the resource, An Alternative to Unwarranted Health Care Price Hikes for Young People: A Policy Brief. It was released March 25th. Experts estimate the singular provision of allowing students to stay on their parents’ insurance plans until age 26 will save families on average approximately $1,429 per year in averted extra health insurance costs. The policy brief is available at http://studentpirgs.org/healthcarepolicybrief.
  • Watch this YouTube video on how health reform works: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1DgGzVtdMQ
  • Learn more through the Center for American Progress infographic: http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/03/health_reform_infographic.html
Possibly Related

The class of 2011 will be facing one more challenge upon graduation — transitioning to post-graduate health insurance.

This year’s graduates will be the first to immediately benefit from the provision that allows them to remain on their parents’ health insurance plans until age 26.

It is now up to the government and to advocacy agencies to ensure students are aware of their health insurance options before they graduate.

In a conference call for college journalists Friday, these agencies unveiled some of the newly available resources for graduating students.

The conference call featured the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, and the resources were jointly presented by several national advocacy groups.

“If you just haven’t purchased insurance before, you might not be familiar,” said Jen Mishory, deputy director for the Young Invincibles, a national advocacy group for young adults.

The group launched its health insurance graduation toolkit Friday, she said.

The toolkit includes flyers instructing graduating seniors how to stay on their parents’ insurance plans.

“It’s free and a great resource for students who are graduating,” Mishory said.

“We actually partnered with about 60 state and national groups to get the word out,” she said.

There is an unfulfilled need on college campuses to raise awareness of post-graduate health care options.

“Young people often have an exit interview for student loans but not on what to do with health insurance and health care,” Mishory said.

“That type of service doesn’t necessarily exist on a lot of campuses.”

As health care reform provisions continue to go into effect, there will be increasing numbers of changes, especially by 2014, said Tobin Van Ostern, the network associate for Campus Progress, an advocacy group.

The health care reform provision that allows students to remain on their parents’ insurance plans until age 26 is especially important in the current job market, said graduating UNC senior Lee Storrow.

“This gives me flexibility to decide what I need to do,” he said.

“The Democrats need to do a better job of selling the health insurance bill as a bill that really benefits everyone in America,” Storrow said.

The UNC chapter of the Roosevelt Institute, a national student policy center, is working to raise awareness about health insurance on campus by hosting public panel discussions, said Adam Jutha, director of the health policy center for the UNC chapter.

Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

Published March 28, 2011 in health insurance, State

2 comments

Adam Jutha
March 29, 2011 at 3:15 PM
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Roosevelt Institute and Young Invicibles have collaborated to provide graduating students with a national health care education campaign to make sure young people have info on how the new health care law works, and to help them get insurance and care.

Download the Toolkit for your state at http://www.gettingcovered.org/toolkit/

Read more …

The Toolkit includes information such as:

- How to stay on or go back on your parent’s plan up to age 26 – What to look for when buying individual insurance including key insurance terms – What you should know if you have a pre-existing or chronic condition – What government insurance programs, such as Medicaid, might be available in your state – Where to find a community health center near you – What you need to know about the new health care law – What to look for if you are a young woman – Facts on Young Adults and Cancer


student healthinsurance
September 24, 2011 at 7:53 AM
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Thanks for the above post on student health care law. I really like it while reading the above article. The student health insurance plans offer coverage and compensate for tragedy care, emergency surgeries and inpatient treatments.

 
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