After tuition, books, and room and board, colleges' Rising health fees hit a nerve
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You've compared tuition. Reviewed on-campus housing costs. Even digested student meal plan prices.
But have you thought about how much your son's or daughter's dream school will charge for health coverage?
You might be in for a shock.
Montgomery-Downs, who lives in
"It would be nice for her to go to the student health center," she said of her daughter, "but with buying insurance to go to a primary care provider, it feels like I am paying twice."
Mandatory medical insurance and health service fees are common at universities as a condition of enrollment, said
"That's a big conundrum for our field," Beckley said.
For parents, these big payments might come as a surprise, making a barely affordable education feel even less so. After all, students can economize by choosing a skimpy meal plan and cooking their own dinners or buying used textbooks — but there is no way around the mandatory health fees.
The costs vary by school but often can amount to several thousand dollars a year — costs that health care advocates say should be carefully reviewed by parents and students to ensure they understand their options while also meeting university requirements.
Students can seek a waiver to university health insurance by showing they have their own insurance or are covered by their parent's insurance, as long as it meets specific university criteria. Schools typically want to see that a student's own insurance covers local doctors and hospitals for little out-of-pocket cost. Student health fees, however, generally can't be waived.
Other prominent colleges charge much more:
At
The easiest solution to avoid these charges would be for students to stay on a parent's health policy — which the Affordable Care Act allows until they turn 26.
But that works only if the student's parent has a policy that meets the school's comprehensive requirements and offers in-network coverage where the college is located.
Otherwise, parents may want to shop among ACA marketplace plans to see if they can find a bargain.
If their incomes are low enough, students can sometimes enroll in Medicaid or a CHIP plan in states where they go to school. But this strategy has limitations as well. Students must meet state residency requirements where they go to school, and parents cannot claim them as a dependent on tax returns. CHIP coverage also expires once a student turns 19.
Schools that charge a student health fee and require insurance coverage say the funding helps cover services at campus health clinics, which otherwise would cost students hundreds of dollars a year or more.
The
Dr.
"The student health fee," Van Orman said, "supports our public health infrastructure on campus."
Because students can get primary health services on campus at the student health center, not as many of them seek care paid for by the insurance, she said, and that helps keep the monthly premium on the
"These things are working together," Van Orman said, "and are not at all duplicative."
About half the
Other colleges have a different strategy.
The health plan premium allows students to get many free services at the student health center, including medical office visits, some prescriptions and routine screenings for sexually transmitted infections.
College rules vary on whether they allow students to choose insurance plans other than what the school offers, Beckley said.
That was unwelcome news to Montgomery-Downs.
"This is not something we budgeted for," she said of
Montgomery-Downs, a former associate professor at
And Montgomery-Downs wanted to make sure her daughter had health coverage on summer and holiday breaks when home.
Unsure of which marketplace coverage options would meet the school's rules and deadlines, she decided to go with the
A look at marketplace options on Covered California shows the
Montgomery-Downs gets her coverage on the marketplace and said she will shop for a marketplace plan for Bryn for the next school year. She said she wishes they had been aware of all the health costs at the time of admission rather than just before classes began.
"It's all nightmarish," Montgomery-Downs said, "even for someone with the privilege of time and some understanding of these bureaucracies — higher education and medical insurance."
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