Co-pay means one thing when it comes to paying for health care benefits and no pay means another. The differences are often not that well understood.<\/p>\n
A co-pay situation usually arises with an employer\/employee relationship, in that the employer is offering co-pay benefits to the employee. That is what co-pay means, a benefit versus having to fork out dollars to pay the doctor for each visit. This is where things get a bit confusing for those who have been used to having co-pay insurance benefits. Co-pay people are used to only paying a portion of their doctors expenses, etc., and are consequently shocked when they are paying full freight.<\/p>\n
The first reaction to paying the total doctor’s bill, aside from disbelief at how high it is, is a fervent wish to revert to how things were when co-pay was in effect. It’s not that there isn’t a type of insurance called co-pay out (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Co-pay means one thing when it comes to paying for health care benefits and no pay means another. The differences are often not that well understood. A co-pay situation usually arises with an employer\/employee relationship, in that the employer is…<\/span><\/p>\n