Profit-driven Tactics of Insurance Companies

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Insurance companies exist to make money. They are not concerned with your needs which include great coverage at an affordable price. Their agenda consists of offering superfluous offers, causing you as a customer to lose money on frivolous items that won’t ever benefit you. Health insurance companies are experts in setting traps for consumers to entice them into handing over a vast amount of money and not receive a single valuable service. After all there isn’t an entity available to regulate them. Since Obamacare and his demand that everyone have insurance or get fined, several health insurance companies have been jumping on the band wagon. They offer customers who now have to have insurance unprofitable deals that they must purchase …show more content…

This is because offers and plans are candy coated during a first view of a presentation. Words like affordable, full coverage, and keep your own doctor are incorporated in their advertisements. These terms are misleading to the general public because most of the time those three words mentioned are not incorporated together. Yes, affordable because perhaps you are a single person, don’t have any existing health conditions, and coverage is way below basic. This in laments terms means you get absolutely nothing for what you’re paying for. And…full coverage, of course they offer full coverage, but nowhere does affordable and full coverage exist in the same sentence. Plus, full coverage could mean, that yes it could be covered, but we at the insurance company intend to find a loop hole to get out of it. What they didn’t mention, except for in the very small print, is that if you end up in the hospital, you must call the insurance company for authorization prior to getting treatment or you will be denied. Finally, a trap you didn’t see coming; keep your own doctor. Yes, you can go to your own doctor and they will cover the charges, but if your doctor is not listed as a preferred provider on their list than you will be paying either a higher deductible or co-pay for the

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