Insurance Basics
Finding Care
Understanding Benefits
Pharmacy & Prescriptions
Being a Health Guide
100

This is the amount a Member pays each month to keep their health insurance active.

Premium


100

This type of provider is often the first stop for routine care, preventive care, and general health concerns.

Primary care provider

100

This document explains what a health plan covers, what it excludes, and what costs may apply.

SPD (Summary Plan Document)

100

This is a list of medications covered by a prescription drug plan.

Formulary

100

This is the process of helping a member understand where to go, what questions to ask, and what next steps to take.

Navigation

200

This is the amount a Member pays out-of-pocket before the insurance plan starts paying for many covered services.

Deductible

200

This type of provider focuses on a specific area of medicine, such as cardiology, dermatology, or orthopedics.

Specialist

200

These are services like annual physicals, vaccines, and screenings that may be covered before a member is sick.

Preventative care

200

These medications usually cost less because they do not use a brand name, but they have the same active ingredient as the brand-name version.

Generic

200

This skill helps confirm that the member’s concern was heard and understood before offering solutions.

Reflective listening

300

This is a fixed dollar amount a Member pays for a covered service, such as a doctor visit.

Co-pay

300

This term means a provider or facility has a contract with the member’s insurance plan.

In-network

300

This is approval from the insurance plan before a service is provided.

Prior authorization

300

This pharmacy option can be helpful for maintenance medications taken regularly over time.

Mail-order pharmacy

300

This is the safest response when benefits information is unclear, conflicting, or unavailable.

Verify before giving a final answer

400

This is the percentage of costs a Member pays after meeting the deductible.

Coinsurance

400

This type of care is for serious or sudden health issues that are not usually life-threatening, such as a sprain or minor infection.

Urgent care

400

This is a request asking the insurance plan to review and potentially reverse a denied claim or coverage decision.

Appeal

400

This requirement means the plan may ask the member to try a lower-cost or preferred medication before covering another medication.

Step therapy

400

This kind of question encourages the member to explain their situation in their own words instead of answering yes or no.

Open-ended question

500

This is the most a member should have to pay for covered in-network care during a plan year, not including premiums.

Out-of-pocket maximum

500

This is the best place to go for severe, life-threatening, or potentially disabling symptoms such as chest pain, trouble breathing, or stroke symptoms.

Emergency room

500

This happens when a member has coverage under more than one health plan and the plans determine which one pays first.

Coordination of benefits

500

This is a higher-cost medication that may require special handling, monitoring, or prior authorization.

Specialty medication

500

This is the practice of explaining the next step, who owns it, and when the member can expect follow-up.

Setting expectations