Most of us will get very sick at some point in our lives, and knowing what to do and who to call in your health plan can help you feel more prepared and less afraid. There are ways to make sure you get the care and support you need if you get very sick.
Choose a family member or trusted friend to be your health care advocate or “surrogate.” This is someone who can help you talk to your doctor and speak up for you if you are feeling too ill or upset to do the job yourself. If possible, bring this person to your doctor visits so he or she will know about your illness.
Tell your advocate about your health care and any living will, health care power of attorney, or health care advance directive you have. In a living will, you state your wishes about the type of health care you do and don’t want. For example, your living will might state that you don’t want to be kept on artificial life support. In a health care power of attorney, you name someone to make health care decisions for you when you are unable to make those decisions for yourself.
A health care advance directive combines both a living will and a health care power of attorney. It gives you more complete protection. Your advocate and your doctor should know about your wishes.
Cancer, heart disease, asthma, diabetes, and arthritis are examples of chronic illnesses. These are serious illnesses that can continue for a long period of time. If you have a chronic illness, your health plan will coordinate your care and send you to certain doctors and hospitals for care. It is especially important for you to work together with your doctor to get good care.
Here are ways to learn about your illness and the care your plan provides:
You might need to go to the hospital at some point in your life. It’s best to know about your plan’s hospital rules before you get sick. Before you go to the hospital:
You can go to any nearby hospital for emergency care even if that hospital is not part of your plan network. But know how your health plan defines an emergency. Your “emergency” has to meet your plan’s meaning of “emergency” or it may not pay.
One accepted definition of an emergency is whatever a "prudent layperson" would judge to be serious or life threatening. This means that a reasonable, non-medical person would consider the situation very serious. Many states make health plans use the "prudent layperson" rule. Find out how your health plan defines an emergency.
If you have a health emergency:
When you are out of town, be sure to let your plan know right away about any care you get from a doctor or hospital that is not a part of your plan. Generally, routine care is not covered if you are out of your plan’s service area.
Disagreements are common over what rehabilitation, nursing home, home health, and hospice care services a plan covers. If your doctor says you need any of these kinds of care but your plan refuses to pay, check your plan’s member contract and ask them to reconsider their decision. If this doesn’t work, you can file an appeal.
Your doctor might want you to try a treatment for your illness that is still being studied. This means the treatment or drug has not yet been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The treatment might be called “experimental.”
Talk with your doctor to find out if there are clinical trials, or research studies, experimental drugs or procedures to treat your illness or disease. Your doctor will want to know who is conducting the studies and whether they show some promise of helping you. Here’s some information on clinical trials:
Other things you will want to find out about a clinical trial are what tests you might have, the potential risks and benefits of being in the trial, and how the study will work.
If you are interested in a clinical trial:
AARP’s Guide to Prescription Drugs
A wide array of resources to help you wisely use medications.
Checklist:
20 Ways to Identify the Local Hospital That's Best for
You
AARP reports on how to check on the quality of care in local
hospitals.
Nursing Home Evaluation Checklist
This easy-to-use checklist helps you find a good nursing home.
End-of-Life
Issues
Find a variety of articles such as “Financial Powers of Attorney” and “Talking About Your Final Wishes.”
U.S. Agency for Health
Care Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Gives guidance on getting care in "Now You Have a Diagnosis:
What's Next?" and "Your Guide to Choosing Quality
Health Care."
MEDLINEplus
From the National Library of Medicine, abstracts from medical
journals and answers to your health questions.
ClinicalTrials.gov
The National Institute of Health provides information about
clinical research studies.