An impasse over carriage rights fees may result in a blackout of Comcast SportsNet Chicago for Dish Network subscribers beginning next month, potentially cutting off Chicago Bulls and Blackh...
Unfortunately, it's too late for me to add her to my employer's insurance. They have a bullshit 31 day window within the life event to add someone or something to the policy. Its been 50 days now, so I have to wait until open enrollment in May for insurance to kick in July... I'm not waiting that long, it's too risky. The reason I didn't do it right away is we were initially not sure how long she would be here and we were going around to immigration lawyers for weeks to figure out our options as far as residency/immigration goes. By the time we had our plan, it was too late, and I wasn't aware of the 31 day window either way... I guess that part is on me. I'm sure it's in the handbook somewhere. We're looking online at travelers insurance for the time being. Anyone have experience with that? Is it a good option for holding us over for now? Anything else we can consider? Thanks in advance!
Hi all, My wife (U. S. citizen) and I (Irish citizen) will be moving to NYC in 8 days after living in Dublin for the last 3 years. She has a job lined up in the city, but doesn't start until late April which means her health insurance cover with them won't kick in until then. This leaves her with a month in NYC with no health insurance cover. We've not been able to find a provider for short-term health insurance in NYC and travel insurance companies won't cover her because she's a U. citizen returning to her home country. Has anyone had this problem and are there any providers who would provide emergency short-term health insurance cover for a U. citizen living in NYC? Thanks for your help! Update: My wife has been looked after by Journeyman services, on the recommendation of @x3medude. Thanks a million to you all for your help. The power of reddit!
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Your regular insurance should cover you anywhere in the US. Not much more to say about it. Depending on the specific insurance, you may need to ask which specific medical provider to go to that they support, other than that, of course you are covered. The only "only in state" insurance providers are usually the ones that are specifically run by the state governments (such as Medi-Cal in California) which provide emergency service anywhere, but regualr stuff only in state. -- This is the very rare exception, if you have a plan like this you know it.
Yes, I mean you need it no matter where you go. You're usually insured in some way, check with your national/regional/local social security administration (Krankenkasse/caisse maladie/aseguradora médica/cassa malattia/疾病保险机构/больни́чная ка́сса/caixa de assistência médica/caixa de assistência médica or whatever THE FUCK it is called, and with your parents in case you're co-signed with their insurance (works like that up to your mid-twenties in some countries). Have fun traveling ☺!