Health Insurance Basics - Policy Puzzles
- Health Insurance: Risk pooling & prepayment for healthcare. Protects against high medical costs.
- Core Terms:
- Premium: Regular payment for coverage.
- Deductible: Out-of-pocket sum before insurance pays.
- Co-payment: Fixed fee per service (e.g., consultation).
- Co-insurance: % of costs insured pays after deductible.
- Sum Insured: Max insurer payout per policy period.
- Exclusions: Services/conditions not covered by policy.
- Waiting Period: Duration before specific coverage begins.
- Policy Puzzles:
- Moral Hazard: Insured may use more services or take more risks.
- Adverse Selection: High-risk individuals more likely to buy insurance.
⭐ Adverse selection: Higher-risk individuals disproportionately seek insurance, potentially increasing overall premium costs.
Indian Health Schemes - Bharat's Health Shield
- Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY (Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana):
- World's largest government-funded health assurance scheme.
- Provides health cover of ₹5 lakh per family per year.
- For secondary and tertiary care hospitalization.
- Targets over 12 crore poor and vulnerable families (approx. 55 crore beneficiaries).
- Cashless and paperless access to services; portable across India.
- Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY):
- Earlier scheme for BPL families, largely subsumed by PM-JAY.
- Smart card-based, offered cashless health insurance of ₹30,000.
- Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS):
- Comprehensive healthcare for Central Govt. employees, pensioners, and their dependents.
- Covers Allopathy and AYUSH systems of medicine.
- Employees' State Insurance Scheme (ESIS):
- Social security for organized sector employees and their dependents.
- Provides medical care, plus cash benefits for sickness, maternity, disablement.
⭐ PM-JAY uses Socio-Economic Caste Census (SECC) 2011 data to identify beneficiaries.
Insurance Mechanics - Premium Ponderings
- Risk Pooling: Spreads financial risk among a large group.
- Premium: Periodic payment by insured; based on risk profile.
- Key Challenges:
- Moral Hazard: Insured takes more risks/overuses services. 📌 My Health, My Habits change.
- Mitigation: Co-payments, deductibles.
- Adverse Selection: High-risk individuals likelier to enroll. 📌 All Sick ones Sign up.
- Mitigation: Group policies, mandatory coverage.
- Risk Selection (Cream Skimming): Insurers enroll healthier individuals.
- Moral Hazard: Insured takes more risks/overuses services. 📌 My Health, My Habits change.
- Cost-Sharing:
- Deductible: Initial out-of-pocket amount by insured.
- Co-payment: Fixed fee per service.
- Co-insurance: % of cost paid by insured.
⭐ Moral hazard occurs when insurance coverage leads to increased utilization of healthcare services because the insured party does not bear the full cost.
Regulation & Roadblocks - System's Check-Up
- Governance & Regulation:
- IRDAI (Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India): Apex body.
- Key Acts: Insurance Act, 1938; IRDAI Act, 1999.
- Focus: Policyholder protection, insurer solvency, market conduct.
- Major Roadblocks:
- Low penetration; high Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE).
- Moral hazard & adverse selection.
- Fraud, abuse, & information asymmetry.
- Lack of standardization in claims & treatment protocols.
- Operational hurdles & poor consumer awareness.
- Rising healthcare costs impacting affordability.
⭐ IRDAI periodically reviews and mandates guidelines for standardization of health insurance products (e.g., Arogya Sanjeevani Policy).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Health insurance pools risk, offering financial protection against catastrophic health expenditure.
- Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY is the largest government-funded health assurance scheme globally.
- PM-JAY offers ₹5 lakhs per family per year for secondary and tertiary care.
- ESIS covers organized sector workers; CGHS serves central government employees.
- Key challenges include moral hazard (overuse) and adverse selection (high-risk enrollment).
- RSBY was a key precursor to PM-JAY, targeting BPL families.
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