The Grown-Up's Guide to Running Away from Home, Second Edition: Making a New Life Abroad (28 page)

We didn’t do this, but, sad to say, we’re not in a big tax bracket and weren’t intending to work overseas. However, we did talk to our accountant
about various implications of living overseas. If you’re concerned about the bottom line, take Jane’s suggestion. If it’s too difficult for you to do the projections, consult an expert in foreign taxes.

Better to investigate before your investments go traveling in a direction you don’t want them to go.

19
Safeguarding Your Health Overseas

He who has good health is young
.

—H. G. Bohn

One year, just before leaving for Mexico for a brief trip, I met with a client who had the flu. Three days later I was running a 103-degree fever, shivering uncontrollably, and wondering if my body should be buried in Mexico or shipped home. Is this any way to have fun overseas? No, but I lived to tell the tale and discovered that, while being sick away from home isn’t any more fun than being sick in the States, it is possible to get care—and often very good care.

If you run away in midlife, ensure that you will have proper medical care for any problem that can’t be cured by gallons of orange juice and aspirin. This is entirely possible overseas and shouldn’t deter you from having this adventure.

The expats I talked with were all happy with their health care. Either they chose their location well or found a network of good health-care providers. It’s largely a combination of both.

When Andrew had the car accident they helicoptered him to an excellent hospital
23
kilometers away. Of course, the car was a mess; I took the taxi, but it was outrageously expensive so our friends rallied ’round and took me back and forth
.

—Christine, France

Does Your Health Insurance Travel?

Aspirin and cough medicine are minor expenses that you can survive. You must protect yourself and your savings from the major expenses that are normally covered by medical/surgical insurance.

You probably already have health insurance, but your current coverage may not extend overseas. Don’t assume that it does. Ask your insurance carrier exactly what your health insurance covers when you’re out of the country. Ask if it makes a
difference how long you’re out of the country as well. They may cover you for an emergency on a vacation but not if you’re gone for months.

In some cases, the insurance will not provide any coverage at all. In some situations it will cover you for emergencies, but you must pay the expenses out-of-pocket first, then be reimbursed by the insurer later; more often than not, a U.S. insurer will not pay foreign hospitals directly, and you will be required to have the bills translated from a foreign language and convert the currency amounts to dollars.

I needed an electroconversion or “shock” to put my heart back into proper rhythm. It’s an outpatient procedure in the States, but when I told the cardiologist here, he was the one shocked. He couldn’t believe that U.S. hospitals wouldn’t keep the patient to prepare properly and then monitor afterwards. So I received excellent care. I was worried it would cost more due to the hospitalization, but the fee ended up being less than the outpatient treatment would have been back in the States
.

—John, France

Check your specific insurance carrier before going overseas; major insurance companies and HMOs all differ in their coverage, sometimes even within the same company, depending on the state you live in or the group with which you’re associated.

If you want to go on a sabbatical overseas but plan to return to your job, investigate taking a leave of absence, maintaining your status as an employee in order to keep your health insurance in force under the group policy. You will probably have to pay the premiums yourself, but they’ll be lower than paying for individual coverage.

Emergency Medical Evacuation

Emergency medical evacuation is the term for the transportation you would need, by air or ground transportation, if you had a medical emergency while in a remote area. You may not need this coverage if you intend to be in a cosmopolitan area with excellent medical services. But if you’re planning a trip to the Himalayas or the Sahara desert, consider it. If you ever did require emergency medical evacuation from that oasis in the desert, the cost could reach tens of thousands of dollars.

Overseas Coverage

The following are a few examples of overseas policies offered by some of the major U.S. insurance providers. This list is by no means comprehensive. In any case, it’s essential to check the coverage on your own health insurance policy before leaving. These companies have numerous groups and may vary in coverage or may change their policies and procedures in the time it takes to plan your adventure.

Blue Cross/Blue Shield
. Check your subscriber benefits to see what health care services are specified outside the United States. Most BC/BS members are eligible for the optional BlueCard Worldwide program that helps while traveling or living outside the United States, with access to credentialed hospitals and medical providers, medical evacuation, and more. For information on this program, see
www.bcbs.com/coverage/expat
or
www.blueexpat
.
bcbs.com
.

Kaiser Permanente
. Covers care in emergencies. Requires proof of payment for reimbursement. Checkups, dental care, and emergency medical evacuation are not covered.

Nationwide
. Reimburses costs if documents are in English and payments are converted to dollars. Emergency medical evacuation varies depending on the policy.
www.nationwidehealthplans.com
.

If your insurance does cover you overseas, add insurance reimbursement forms to your packing list. You can fill them out and mail them to the States from wherever you are.

It bears repeating: please check your specific insurer regarding the policy you hold before leaving. Rules change, and your health insurance is too important to leave to chance.

COBRA Coverage

If you’re leaving a job, you may be eligible to purchase insurance coverage at your group rate for up to eighteen months and later convert it to an individual policy. This solution will provide coverage and is a solution if you plan to be gone eighteen months or less and will return to the States to continue working. It would also come in handy if you’re sixty-three and a half and plan to return at sixty-five to use Medicare coverage.

Medicare Alert!

Medicare will not cover Americans overseas, except, in limited circumstances, in Canada and Mexico. If you must count on Medicare, plan your adventure before you turn sixty-five, then return to take advantage of its benefits. Or, if your budget allows, you can buy private coverage for use overseas, then use Medicare when you later return to the States. Contact AARP for information about foreign medical care coverage that offers Medicare supplement plans.

Overseas Insurance Specialists

If your current U.S. health insurance does not provide overseas coverage, investigate companies that specialize in expatriate coverage. Policies that eliminate U.S. coverage carry a much lower premium—often it’s just a third the cost—since the insurers avoid dealing with the high medical, administrative, and liability costs of the U.S. health-care system.

Several older expats cut their costs by maintaining a high deductible on their overseas policies so that they’re covered for a major emergency, but they pay for regular doctor and dentist visits themselves; as one told me, “I can afford the $17 doctor appointment; it’s the open heart surgery I wouldn’t want to pay for.”

Travel/Medical Assistance Programs

You’ll see many ads for travel health insurance, but “travel insurance” only covers trips from two weeks to seventy days. This short-term coverage is intended for vacationers, not people wanting to experience living overseas, so don’t confuse it with regular health insurance.

Just as flight insurance is more expensive than regular life insurance, travel health coverage is much more expensive than regular health insurance. However, I’ve provided some information here so you will be aware of what’s available. Such insurance may serve as a stopgap measure or work for your exploratory trips before going overseas long-term.

Typically, short-term travel insurance offers services such as trip cancellation, delay, emergency medical assistance, medical evacuation, and emergency consultation by phone or assistance in reaching the nearest hospital or English-speaking physician. These policies do not necessarily provide health insurance coverage itself, though some may.

Firms offering coverage include the following:

Access America
, 2805 North Parham Rd., Richmond, VA 23294; (800) 284-8300. Policies are available for trips up to a year.

International Association for Medical Assistance to Travelers (IAMAT)
, 1623 Military Rd. #279, Niagara Falls, NY; (716) 754-4883;
www.iamat.org
. Provides a worldwide directory of English-speaking physicians who have been screened for education and reasonable fees. Membership is free, though a tax-deductible donation is requested.

International SOS Assistance
, PO Box 11568, Philadelphia, PA 19116; (800) 523-8662;
www.internationalsos.com
. Provides emergency evacuation services, worldwide medical referrals, and optional medical insurance per trip or on an annual basis.

MEDEX Insurance Services, Inc.
, Suite 200, 8501 LaSalle Road, Baltimore, MD 21286; (800) 732-5309;
www.medexassist.com
. Provides international assistance and insurance for any length of trip via a 24×7 multilingual Emergency Response Center that ensures that each medical case is monitored by medical experts. Affordable programs offer travelers and expatriates coverage for the cost of
medical care abroad, emergency evacuations, and repatriation of remains. The MEDEX network includes 43,000 resources for physician referrals, replacement medications, and other assistance.

Travel Assistance International
, P.O. Box 668, Millersville, MD, 21108; (800) 821-2828;
www.travelassistanceinternational.com
. Offers medical assistance services and communication and emergency medical evacuation for travelers more than one hundred miles from home.

Wallach & Company, Inc.
, 107 West Federal Street, P.O. Box 480, Middleburg, VA 20118; (800) 237-6615;
www.wallach.com
. This company offers several different options, from traveler’s insurance to comprehensive medical coverage overseas, including emergency medical evacuation services worldwide. Different plans provide coverage periods ranging from ten days to a year or more with renewals.

Long-Term Health Coverage Overseas

You’ll need health insurance overseas for long-term coverage if (1) you intend to stay overseas longer than the period covered by a travelers’ policy, (2) your own U.S. policy won’t cover you overseas, or (3) you want less-expensive coverage. Health insurance is more affordable when you purchase it for use overseas through specialized companies that don’t have to deal with the high expense of the U.S. health-care system. If your policy is cost-prohibitive in the United States, that’s reason alone to run away from home.

I have a modest private health policy in England, but don’t assume your coverage will continue indefinitely until you check it carefully. I know one woman whose husband reached his sixty-fifth birthday when he was in the hospital and the policy canceled right in the middle of it!

—Judy, Athens, Greece

When choosing an insurer, take the time to understand what the plan covers. Some health insurance plans will pay for emergency medical evacuation, for example. Others will arrange it for you, but you pay for it separately.

Beware of preexisting condition exclusions. If you’ve been treated for a health problem recently, you may not be covered immediately for that condition. The usual waiting period seems to be two years. (One exception is International SOS Assistance’s evacuation coverage, which has no such exclusion; however, that is simply short-term coverage.)

Several companies offer health insurance coverage, including some that market specifically to American expatriates living in certain countries such as Mexico. A way to find them is to speak with other Americans living in your destination.
Meanwhile, here are a few of the larger companies that provide health insurance coverage to American expatriates:

AXA PPP Healthcare
, Phillips House, Crescent Road, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, TN1 2PL; UK telephone 44 (0)1892 612 080;
www.axappphealthcare.co.uk
. One of the United Kingdom’s leading medical insurance companies, with over two million members. The International Division specializes in insurance for people working or living overseas; includes full-refund emergency evacuation service.

BUPA International
, Russell Mews, Brighton, Great Britain BN7 2NR, United Kingdom; UK telephone 44 (0) 1273 208 181;
www.bupa-intl.com
. BUPA is one of the largest overseas healthcare insurers, specializing in health insurance for individuals and their families who live and work outside their home country.

ExpaCare Insurance Services
, UK telephone 44 (0) 1344 38 1650;
www.expacare.com
. Offers hospitalization and emergency transport plus more comprehensive plans for outpatient and other costs. Works with International SOS to provide twenty-four-hour-a-day multilingual assistance.

International Health Insurance
Danmark a/s. U.S. branch, 7001 SW 97th Ave., Miami, FL 33173; (305) 270-3944;
www.ihi.com
. Owned by Denmark’s largest national health insurance company, International Health Insurance insures expats of all nationalities in more than 190 countries. They offer several choices of health plans to cover hospitals, doctors, medicine, and ambulance transport.

Liaison International
,
www.worldwidemedical.com
. A marketer that specializes in medical insurance for U.S. citizens overseas as well as non-U.S. citizens here or around the globe. They offer various benefits and services in plans designed for individuals and families ranging from fifteen days to twelve months, which is renewable to provide up to three years’ coverage.

Lloyds Expatriate Protection Plans
, U.S. agent (800) 399-3904;
www.expatriateinsurance.com
. England’s oldest insurance syndicate offers health insurance specifically designed for people living outside the country for which they hold a passport. Coverage for medical expenses is based on the area of the world where you intend to use it. People to age seventy-five are eligible.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield
. See
www.blueexpat.bcbs.com
.

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