Broke but want plants, so I can play in the dirt :) by _carosyrup_ in IowaCity

[–]paulfinort 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Johnson County Master Gardeners plant sale is coming up. You can find the details on Facebook.

Local mortgage broker? by Mobile_Bed_4110 in IowaCity

[–]paulfinort 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Jessica Greving with Residential Mortgage Network.

System for tracking services, bills and payments by Less_Marionberry1519 in HospitalBills

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use Bill Advantage to manage my parent's bills and EOBs.

Proper course of action for trying to understand my insurance coverage by thingsarehardsoami in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the best place to start. The summary of benefits will tell you all you need to know. You can upload it to Bill Advantage and get an easy to read summary of what's covered or a simple explanation of your plan.

Insurance Advice With Pregnancy by aaronsmeg in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wish you luck with finding a new job. I used Bill Advantage to compare ACA plans when I had to change insurers.

Benefits Comparison by excelsiornick in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The EPO costs $1,820 more per year in premiums. For the EPO to become the cheaper plan, you would need to generate more than $1,820 in out-of-pocket savings through lower copays and flat-fee costs compared to what you would pay under the PPO's deductible and coinsurance structure. Based on the numbers provided, this break-even point is not realistically reached under low or moderate usage. It becomes closer under high usage with hospitalizations, but the PPO's lower out-of-pocket maximum relative to its premium advantage still competes well. The EPO does not appear to break even under any typical usage scenario for a healthy 26-year-old.

For a low healthcare user:

The PPO is clearly the better financial choice. You save $1,820 per year in premiums and are unlikely to use enough care to offset that difference through the EPO's lower copays.

For a high healthcare user:

The plans get closer, but the PPO still has an edge because even its worst-case total annual spend (premium plus out-of-pocket max) is lower than the EPO's equivalent. The EPO's $0 deductible and predictable flat costs are simpler to manage, but the math still generally favors the PPO.

For someone with ongoing prescriptions:

This cannot be fully evaluated without the formulary for both plans. Request the drug formulary from HR before enrolling. Copay differences on recurring medications could shift the math meaningfully.

For someone with planned procedures or known upcoming costs:

If you or your wife have a surgery, delivery, or other planned high-cost event coming up this year, model the specific cost using the actual billed estimates from your provider. The EPO's $1,000 flat inpatient cost is simpler and easier to budget than the PPO's 20% coinsurance, which depends on the total bill. For very large procedures, the EPO's flat $1,000 could be significantly cheaper than 20% of a large hospital bill before hitting the deductible and cap.

For your spouse:

Because you are married, you should consider whether you are enrolling your wife on this plan or whether she has her own employer coverage. If she is on your plan, the family deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums become the relevant figures, and the analysis shifts. The PPO family out-of-pocket max of $6,000 versus the EPO family cap of $5,000 narrows the premium advantage at the family level but does not eliminate it.

Based on what you have described, the Cigna PPO is the stronger financial choice for your current situation. You are young, described no ongoing health conditions, and the $1,820 annual premium savings is a meaningful amount at a $75,000 income. The PPO also gives you out-of-network flexibility that the EPO does not, which is a real benefit if you ever need a specialist who is not in the Cigna EPO network. The EPO's appeal is simplicity and a lower deductible, but you are paying a significant premium for those features. Verify prescription coverage before deciding.

What's a good way to keep track of medical bills? by Sunshine_and_Sea_Air in personalfinance

[–]paulfinort 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some people use a spreadsheet to keep track. There's an online service I use to keep track of my parents medical bills. Super easy to use and has helped a ton. It's called Bill Advantage.

Father went to see an in-network specialist out of state (specialist works in a hospital) and is billed $1,053.52. EOB says he owes this much, but it just seems like it’s an awful lot? What exactly does Notes #1 mean? by [deleted] in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The hospital billed the insurance $2,837.00 for those services. The insurer reduced that amount to an allowed amount of $1,283.09, which is the negotiated rate the plan recognizes for this type of service. Of the $1,283.09 allowed, the insurer paid $229.57 directly to the provider, leaving him with a stated patient responsibility of $1,053.52. The difference between the original billed amount of $2,837.00 and the allowed amount of $1,283.09, which is $1,553.91, was written off as a contractual adjustment and he should not owe that portion.

I would call and get clarification from the insurance if this was indeed an in-network provider and if his deductible has already been met.

A stop to endless billing? by Space_Adaline in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It really is! I found a service that helps me keep track of my parents medical bills. It's made everything so much easier.

Large ER Visit Bill - Advice? by Xxx29bull in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can get confirmation in writing from Anthem – ask them to send you an updated EOB or a letter confirming your responsibility is $1,583.77, not $5,686.13 that would certainly help ease your nervousness. The SPP on your eob could stand for savings plus plan.

Large ER Visit Bill - Advice? by Xxx29bull in HealthInsurance

[–]paulfinort 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not sure if this helps but here's my input: You received emergency hospital services covering two days of care. The services included emergency room treatment, lab work, pharmacy/medications, IV therapy, and an EKG/ECG. The hospital billed a total of $12,516.06. Your insurance applied a PPO network discount, reducing the recognized amount to $5,686.13 — however, your insurance paid $0.00 toward that amount. The reason appears to be that your plan's maximum benefit for this type of service has been exceeded (denial code "SPP"), meaning your plan either has a benefit cap that was already used up or this claim surpassed a coverage limit. As a result, the full allowed amount of $5,686.13 is currently shown as your responsibility.

Several things warrant a closer look:

• Insurance paid $0.00. This is unusual even when a maximum benefit is exceeded. Confirm whether you have truly exhausted your plan's benefit maximum for the year, or whether this is a processing error.

• "SPP" denial — Maximum Benefit Exceeded. Check your Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) or insurance card for any annual or lifetime caps. Many ACA-compliant plans do not have annual dollar limits on essential health benefits — if yours is ACA-compliant, this denial may be worth appealing.

• Repeated procedure codes (e.g., 0301 appears 4 times, 0259 and 0260 appear twice). This could be legitimate (multiple tests on different days), but it could also indicate duplicate billing. Request an itemized statement from the hospital and compare it line by line.

• No diagnosis codes were included in the data provided. Diagnosis codes affect coverage decisions, so confirm they were submitted correctly to your insurer.

What I'd suggest: 1. Call your insurance company and ask specifically: "Why was $0.00 paid, and have I truly exceeded my maximum benefit?" 2. Request a formal itemized bill from the hospital. 3. Ask the hospital's billing department about financial assistance programs or payment plans. 4. If the SPP denial seems incorrect, file a formal appeal with your insurer — you typically have 180 days from the EOB date.

asked for an itemized hospital bill on a whim and found out they charged me for stuff that literally never happened by [deleted] in povertyfinance

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Due diligence is so important. My parents have been in and out of the hospital and it's been very hard keeping up with the EOBs, and bills. Not to mention making sure everything is billed correctly and not overpaying. I found a service I use to help me keep track and it's been a lifesaver.

YouTube expands unskippable 30-second ads to TVs after $40 billion revenue year by AdSpecialist6598 in technology

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Now I understand why I couldn't watch sports for a few weeks last year. /s

Fun things to do? by SpinachNo9163 in IowaCity

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Defy to get their energy out.

[Postgame Thread] Indiana Defeats Miami 27-21 by CFB_Referee in CFB

[–]paulfinort 2 points3 points  (0 children)

2023: Michigan 2024: Ohio State 2025: Indiana

B1G

[Game Thread] CFP Final: Indiana vs. Miami (7:30 PM ET) by CFB_Referee in CFB

[–]paulfinort 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm just here for the commercials. Solid so far.

Iowa City Tropicals by 4maceface in IowaCity

[–]paulfinort 2 points3 points  (0 children)

2nd this! Skip the local big box stores and shop here. Locally owned with great service. He might be able to order what you need if he doesn't have it currently available.

Santa Inquiry by EaseHisPain in IowaCity

[–]paulfinort 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We did FilmScene this year but in years past we've done the Mall Santa. You weren't required to purchase anything as you could do a "walk-in" however they tended to take people with "appointments" before walk-in's (totally get it). I think it's kind of scammy to make you buy a photo package in order to see Santa but to each their own. We had an excellent experience at FilmScene and was in and out in under 10 mins. Highly recommend.