Hassle-Free Health Coverage: Catastrophic Medical Coverage
Catastrophic medical coverage pays hospital and medical expenses above a certain -- usually high -- deductible. You may be responsible for $15,000 or $25,000 in medical bills before a catastrophic policy begins to cover you.
Once you get there, the medical expense benefits usually have no limit -- so you are entitled to receive all necessary medical and surgical treatment to cure or relieve a condition. However, your insurance company might set certain maximums or limits for a particular type of care or a particular medical procedure. But, even in this case, overall benefits are usually unlimited.
In many ways, a catastrophic policy will function just like a major medical policy. The policies provide benefits when you have a covered condition that requires hospitalization. These benefits typically include room and board and other hospital services, surgery, physicians' nonsurgical services that are performed in a hospital, expenses for diagnostic x-rays and laboratory tests, and room and board in an extended care facility.
Benefits for hospital room and board may be a per-day dollar amount or part of the hospital's daily rate for a semi-private room. Benefits for surgery typically are listed, showing the maximum benefit for each type of surgical procedure.
Generally, smart consumers use catastrophic policies in one of several ways:
- as additional protection to combine with a limited hospital-surgical policy or a major medical policy with a lowerthan-adequate lifetime limit;
- as a last-resort policy for people who
- are in poor health and don't qualify for any other form of coverage;
- as back-up coverage for companies that self-fund health insurance benefits offered to their employeees or individuals using alternative funding tools like Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs).
Generally, a catastrophic policy is not anyone's first choice for health coverage. Extremely wealthy people may not mind paying a $25,000 deductible out of pocket. People with poor health may have no choice. Otherwise, another form of coverage -- even a stingy HMO -- will provide more coverage per dollar spent (on premiums and deductibles).

