Why Can't Unmarried Committed Couples Get Family Health Coverage?
The only real problem facing unmarried couples with regard to health insurance is the other partner. A family plan means just that, family. Childbirth and children can still be covere
d under a plan for either partner. It's that extra person in the house that is so difficult to define. When is the other person a partner? When you say they are? Think of the potential for unmitigated fraud.
Anyone who had a friend could say they were partners to get covered on a policy. What if that "partner" needed a liver or heart transplant? How many people would be able to be paid a sum of money to lie about the relationship to get coverage for someone who isn't insurable under private plans? This has to be a nightmare for insurance companies.
Already people fake marriages for this type of thing or to gain citizenship rights. When someone determines that they can pay a friend $10,000 to get insurance to cover $100,000 worth of treatment, the lines will start forming. Even the monthly premiums will be seen as small when compared to premiums 2 to 5 times higher for lesser insurance that excludes pre-existing conditions.
I have sympathy for legitimate couples who are struggling to find a solution to this dilemma. Without some sort of contractual agreement to protect the insurance companies from fraud, it is a problem that isn't likely to go away soon.
From the couple's perspective, whatever reasons they have for not just getting married will probably get in the way of a contract. The exception to this might be same sex couples who choose to establish a life partner contract with each other. With a contract in hand, some law should be able to be crafted to allow for these legally committed partners to get insurance coverage. Obviously, the current societal bias against same-sex unions will stand in the way of passing legislation to make this happen.
Because any law that sanctions unmarried contractual unions would give equal rights to heterosexual and homosexual couples, both will be left to continue the battle. The courts really have no basis in law to compel the insurers to extend the desired coverage.
Anyone who had a friend could say they were partners to get covered on a policy. What if that "partner" needed a liver or heart transplant? How many people would be able to be paid a sum of money to lie about the relationship to get coverage for someone who isn't insurable under private plans? This has to be a nightmare for insurance companies.
Already people fake marriages for this type of thing or to gain citizenship rights. When someone determines that they can pay a friend $10,000 to get insurance to cover $100,000 worth of treatment, the lines will start forming. Even the monthly premiums will be seen as small when compared to premiums 2 to 5 times higher for lesser insurance that excludes pre-existing conditions.
I have sympathy for legitimate couples who are struggling to find a solution to this dilemma. Without some sort of contractual agreement to protect the insurance companies from fraud, it is a problem that isn't likely to go away soon.
From the couple's perspective, whatever reasons they have for not just getting married will probably get in the way of a contract. The exception to this might be same sex couples who choose to establish a life partner contract with each other. With a contract in hand, some law should be able to be crafted to allow for these legally committed partners to get insurance coverage. Obviously, the current societal bias against same-sex unions will stand in the way of passing legislation to make this happen.
Because any law that sanctions unmarried contractual unions would give equal rights to heterosexual and homosexual couples, both will be left to continue the battle. The courts really have no basis in law to compel the insurers to extend the desired coverage.
- Who will determine when a couple are committed partners?
- The potential for insurance fraud is too great.
- Society is biased against unmarried couples qualifying as a family for insurance purposes.
