>Disclaimer: I work for the Internal Audit dept of an
>insurance company and Medicare subcontractor, but I am not
>here to sell insurance.
>
>With respect to Health Savings Accounts, the IRS website has
>good information --
www.irs.gov -- if you search on the site
>for "health savings", Publication 553 that explains tax law
>changes for 2004 will be the first "hit".
>
>There is quite a bit of information about the Health Savings
>Account concept. First, you have to have a "high
>deductible" health insurance policy -- which is very
>specifically defined. Then, you can put away cash in a
>trust account (again, the criteria are very specific) to use
>to pay for those first dollar amounts that your health
>insurance policy will not cover due to the high deductible.
>
>The idea of this plan is that it is a win-win...you save
>money on the policy because of the high deductible, and you
>save money on the HSA because it is done with pre-tax
>dollars. Finally, the HSA is not a "use it or lose it"
>account -- it rolls over from year to year, until you need
>it. Likewise, the plan is a win for the insurance company,
>too. They are spared processing and paying for several
>small dollar claims so they can sell you the "big dollar"
>protection for a more reasonable premium.
>
>How to figure out what you should do:
>-Shop for the insurance policy first -- use the High
>Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) buzzwords like in the IRS
>publication -- try both large and small, well-known and
>obscure health insurers (find out what the going price for
>the insurance is in your particular circumstances)
>-See if your state has an insurance pool for self-employed
>workers as a comparison
>-Consult with your bank's trust department to see if they
>have an expert on Health Savings Accounts (get advice)
>-Find out from your state's insurance commission any
>information you can get about the rating of the proposed
>insurance company...compare ratings with premiums; your
>state may also have statistics on the performance of the
>insurance company...see if that seems reasonable (do they
>pay their claims, how timely, what is the reserve
>requirement, is the company meeting that, etc?)
>
>Then, make your decision. You are trying to minimize your
>risk to tolerable levels; so is the insurance company. The
>government is trying to sweeten the pot by making your
>contributions to the savings tax free and portable.
>Remember that the Health Savings Account does not pay the
>insurance premiums themselves.
>
>Hope this is helpful to you.
>
>Jane