Vein Treatment Options That You Can Choose Today


Posted February 22nd, 2010 by No Comments »

Vein disease seems not a serious health problem but when you don’t get the right treatment, it can get worse. Today, the medical world is getting more sophisticated and you can always get treatment for the disease that you suffer. Start gathering information is a good starting point to relieve your disease.

You will be glad to know that today there is a site that specializes in presenting vein disease information. Thus, you don’t need to waste your time in searching. Vein-treatment.com is the name of the site and it comes with complete information. They explain to you start from the vein disease symptoms to vein treatments that you can choose. The medical world gives you more treatment options when you need to relieve the disease. You can choose Stocking Compression, Sclerotherapy, Endovenous Laser Treatment, and more. If you are interested in trying one of the treatments, they can help you find a vein clinic that conducts the treatment process. You only need to input your zip code and with one simple click you can find the vein center easily.

Now, the chance for you to relieve your vein disease is open wide. You only need to visit the site and find a clinic with a simple way. This portal is totally a great reference for modern and reliable vein treatments.

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Green Police, the Environment Best Friend


Posted January 17th, 2010 by No Comments »

With the healthier environment, we will life more comfortable as well. However, healthy environment is one thing that we cannot easily get these days. In this modern day, people are putting less attention to the environment and they are even having an environmentally damaging habit. The reality shows us that there are so many irresponsible people in the environment that make the environment we are living in feels uncomfortable. To avoid the environmental problem and make the environment a healthy and comfortable environment, Green Police was formed.

Green Police is not a new team. It was started in 1976 to support Save the World Club movement. In the early year, green police was able to introduced and distributed environmental friendly bags to the society. Here are some tasks of green police that are done from the early years since these modern days. The first task is to tell people who love to urinating public facilities and urinating in improper places. Since there are so many smoker and some of them love to dispose their cigarette butts in any place, then the second task is tell people to dispose their cigarette butts in the place provided. Cigarette butts seem so simple, but it can be a damaging and dangerous waste for the environment, including our water.

The third task is to make sure that the environment is clean and healthy. The Green Police in New York have a great responsibility to give the society understanding on the important of recycling and waste management. Those are some basic tasks of green police, nowadays; there are so many additional tasks to make the environment healthy. Great support is needed for our New York Green Police. With them, we can make New York a clean and comfortable city. Not only is the task of taking care of environment belonging to green police, but also the society.

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Some ways to cut your insurance costs


Posted December 22nd, 2009 by No Comments »

Medical are constantly going up every year, and if you don’t want or have the money to spend on costly healthcare services, here are some useful tips to make your expenses much lower.

1. Prevent problems before they arise

The most effective way to keep your medical costs low is to prevent any health problems from developing. Exercise regularly, maintain a healthy weight, stop smoking, follow a diet, and run through regular medical checks at your doctor’s office. It all may sound simple, but the healthier you are the lower it will cost you to visit a doctor or get insurance.

2. Comparison shop when buying insurance

In case your employer doesn’t provide group insurance plans, you will benefit from individual insurance plans. But when shopping for insurance you will definitely notice how the rates differ from one company to another. Take it as an advantage and shop around, getting quotes from as many insurance providers as possible. This way you will find the most competitive offers that will help you save money. In case you are generally quite healthy and want to be insured only from serious illnesses or accidents, you will find more use from catastrophic insurance coverage.

3. Save money on prescription drugs

The most convenient way to cut costs on prescription drugs is getting them by mail in a several-month quantity either from pharmacies or online drugstores. This will cost you considerably less than buying from your local drugstore directly. In case your plan is a bit strict on the source of medications, you should ask your doctor about cheaper generic variations of the drug you’re prescribed whenever possible. Senior people and families with low-income can also contact pharmaceutical companies for direct assistance.

4. Sign with your spouse’s insurance plan

In many cases married people have two separate policies either provided by their employers or on an individual basis. And in most cases it’s not the best thing to have cost-wise. Analyze both of your policies to learn which one has better coverage and rates, and sign with the better one. Most insurance policies allow you to include your spouse so make sure to consult with your insurance company representative about that.

6. Ask about discounts

While not always medical institutions or insurance providers offer discounts, it never hurts to ask. First learn what other companies and facilities charge for the same services and in case the costs are lower, try negotiating a discount with your plan providers. Sometimes you can succeed in it, getting a good cut in costs.

7. Learn what your policy actually covers

Your health insurance policy can have more types of coverage and larger amounts than you actually need. But sometimes you can use certain services for free if your policy provides the coverage. For example most people believe that acupuncture procedures are not covered and will pay for them on their own. Some policies actually include these types of services too, so it’s much better to learn what is included in your policy before paying for something. On the other hand, your health insurance plan may have coverage you don’t need at all, which still costs you money, so you may consider dropping some types of coverage to reduce your rates.

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If it’s cheap, will it be bad value?


Posted December 3rd, 2009 by No Comments »

One of the tried-and-tested ways of catching your attention is to announce that something is “cheap”. The trouble with this word is that it changes its meaning. Our experience tells us you get what you pay for. So, if you only pay a low price that usually means you get low quality. Although luck may be on your side and you find an inexpensive bargain, more often than not the result is bad value for money. Borrowing an example from across the pond, there once was an entrepreneur called Gerald Ratner who sold cheap jewelry. In 1991, he made a speech in which he spoke the literal truth, intending no more than a humorous take on what should have been obvious to anyone. Talking about some sherry glasses and a decanter for sale in his stores, he asked the question, “How can you sell this for such a low price?” and answered it, “Because it’s total crap.” He also described some earrings as, “…cheaper than a prawn sandwich”. The following day, £500 million was wiped off the stock market valuation and his company was forced into bankruptcy. It does not do to speak the truth about the real value of your products. You must always allow your customers to deceive themselves into buying what you offer.

Today, conventional wisdom says you can find cheap insurance online. These words are intended to encourage you to look at what’s on offer. There is, of course, never any obligation to buy. But, if no-one looks, there is no chance for the insurance company to make a sale. The marketers have to say something to provoke you into looking. So, when you see the word “cheap” applied to policies for sale through a website operated by a single insurer, read on with caution. This is an old sales technique and it fools only those who never shop around and find out what the competition quotes.

All of which brings us to the online search engines that obtain quotes from multiple health insurance companies. Here, when you see the word “cheap” it’s more real because you can compare and contrast all the different offers from the different companies. The headline premium rates quoted give you a starting point from which to judge value for money. Read the detail of the coverage offered, being clear on what is included and what is excluded. Identify what the deductible will be, how much the copayments are and whether you have to pay for your drugs or meet out-of-pocket expenses. Only when you have finished can you decide whether you have found the real bargain offer. It’s possible you will find one or more policies that are sufficiently good value-for-money to justify being called “cheap”. If you do, you calmly seal the deal and pay the low premiums. This is the cheap health insurance you were looking for. But if the quotes prove universally poor value, you move on and try somewhere else. It’s the old, “If at first you don’t succeed, try again.” all over again. The newer breeds of online only companies are offering genuinely low rates. This competition is slowing the premium increases from the traditional companies. Keep searching until you find the best deal on offer.

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Your baby’s weight and health insurance


Posted November 24th, 2009 by No Comments »

There’s an old saying that says, “the number don’t lie”. The assumption is that numbers are facts and facts are always true. So if someone counts the number of times something happens, this gives you a basis from which to estimate the probability of the same thing happening across a population. This is the basis of underwriting for insurance purposes. Teams of highly trained people called actuaries count how many traffic accidents there are every year, season and month. They break it down into the age, make and model of car, the age, gender and profession of the driver, the time of day, the weather conditions, and so on. We happily accept information that, in the first half of 2009, only 16,626 people were killed in crashes, a 7% drop as against the same period last year.

When we apply the same approach to health insurance, some people get upset. Maybe it’s more appropriate to be writing this at Halloween but the same people have been counting the number of people who die from various diseases. For the purposes of this article, one of the main areas of interest has been the question of obesity. There are detailed numbers available across the country showing that people who have a high Body Mass Index (BMI) are more likely than thin people to die of heart disease. The medical evidence proves what are called “comorbidities”, i.e. the presence of two or more conditions which, more often than not, suggests a cause and effect at work, or that there’s an underlying vulnerability to both conditions. We are not so unhappy to accept a link between drug abuse and mental illness, but mention a possible link between body weight and disease and, suddenly, people are upset. People do not want to hear a link between their lifestyles and the probability of early death.

The reality is that adults with a BMI of 30 and above are either being turned down for medical insurance or charged a higher premium. No matter how politically correct it may be to talk about obesity, insurance companies protect themselves by classifying obesity as a pre-existing condition justifying refusal or a premium loading. So welcome to baby Alex, a newcomer to Grand Junction. He’s four months old and breast-feeding. He’s a happy, bouncing baby weighing in at seventeen pounds. With a length of 25 inches, this puts him in the 99th percentile for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s height and weight charts for babies of the same age. So the health insurance company refused coverage. Their cut-off point is the 95 percentile. When you think about it, this seems very dramatic. It seems you are never too young to be overweight. This is not something to be dealt with through an increase in health insurance rates. This is a blank refusal of coverage. At four months, the actuaries have already decided this baby is too big a risk to insure. The parents are naturally upset. Even though their pediatrician has no health concerns, they are talking about putting the baby on the Atkins diet. They may joke but this may be a real sign of change in the health insurance industry. There is no sentimentality here. After all, the numbers don’t lie, except the insurers changed their mind when the publicity hit. Alex is now insured. Some good news to end on.

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Poor that are richer than the rich


Posted November 21st, 2009 by No Comments »

In modern world depression is something as common as having a headache or a hangover after a rough night out, but only few people realize how serious this problem really is. Try to find a person who has never shown signs of depression and you will realize that it’s almost impossible. Almost, but not definitely. Recent studies have shown that there is a group of people in the modern world who don’t even know what depression is all about. And surprisingly, these people are generally very poor and far from what most people would consider as good wellbeing.

While this statement will seem ridiculous to most of us, this is true and can be proven even using simple logics. You won’t see a poor man or woman worrying about their lost success, or craving for a new car they want to get so bad. The only thing they worry about is getting food and having a place to spend a cold night. These people are free from aspirations and stresses most middle and upper class individuals have to deal with. If put simple, poor people are in a dream-like state of full mental harmony with their physiological needs. They aren’t troubled by their spiritual or emotional desires, they aren’t troubled by things others might think or say about them. Of course, living below the line of poverty has its stresses and burdens but they are always stripped down to simple bodily needs. No psychological worries, no stress, no depression.

In contrast, you will find the majority of extremely rich and upper class individual taking Xanax, Prozac or Valium to calm down and get them through. Having much money or being in the spotlight has its price tag, which usually comes in the form of certain limits, responsibilities and things to worry about. People from middle and upper classes pay too much attention to they way others see them and this alone is a rich source of mental stress. And what happens when something goes slightly wrong? A homeless individual won’t bother if his or her new Bentley gets stolen, because they don’t have it. A rich mogul will hire dozens of professionals to protect his private house and spend hours (and tons of valium)on worrying about the latest news from stock exchange. And isn’t it ironic that in such a situation the poor are actually richer than the rich, if you know from what point of view to look?

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What to do when you lose both your job and your health plan


Posted November 21st, 2009 by No Comments »

Health insurance has become a hot button issue in US politics. With Washington making some progress in healthcare reform, this leaves Americans divided into three camps. Although estimates vary, it seems up to 50 million cannot afford private health insurance. The middle ground is help by those who do earn enough to pay for some private health coverage, and then there’s the comfortable group whose employers provide health coverage. Movement from one camp to another can be painful. It’s the difference between peace of mind and security on the one hand, and struggle and worry on the other. Because it can be a serious shock to a family to lose the health cover provided by an employer, Congress introduced the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) in 1986. The name may not sound important, but the Act has proved a vital reform to allow families a bridge between employer-provided and private health coverage. Almost all businesses employing 20 or more must join the scheme and tell their employees of their rights.

COBRA is available to the majority of those who lose their employer-provided insurance, whether by termination, lay-off or voluntary termination. It can also apply when people lose hours and no longer qualify under a health plan, go through divorce or lose cover through the death of a spouse or parent. The umbrella of protection lasts for up to eighteen months in the ordinary case. Where a family member is disabled, the protection can extend to twenty-nine months. If the conditions are met, ex-employees are allowed to buy health coverage at group rates. This is more than the cost of the plan run by their employers (plus a 2% administration fee), but less than the cost of private coverage. The coverage runs from the date the employment terminates. If there’s a delay in putting the COBRA policy in place, the premiums have still to be paid as from the date employment terminated. This can sometimes be quite a large lump sum to find. The COBRA policy ends when the ex-employee or family member gets another health plan, no payments are made on the COBRA policy, or the period of protection ends. The advantage? While it’s in force, the insured and family get the same basic entitlements as under the employer’s plan.

The COBRA scheme has been working well in providing a subsidized breathing space during which people may find new employment with a health plan or with a rate of pay that can support private health cover. Unfortunately, with unemployment rising towards 10%, it’s growing increasingly difficult for people to find new employment. Thus, as savings run out, families are dropping out of the group COBRA coverage and into uninsured status. It’s a sad fact of life that if a family cannot afford a COBRA premium, it cannot afford a private health insurance policy. The best place to shop around for replacement cover is online. Term health insurance can be an economic way to fill the gap until full coverage can be restored. Hopefully, the economy will pick up and more jobs will come. As the economy revives, more will be able to find affordable health insurance online.

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