An Ohio law that allows unmarried children or stepchildren up to age twenty-eight (28) to remain or be added to their parent’s insurance coverage becomes effective July 1, 2010. As a result of the new law, parents should evaluate the opportunity and the cost of this new coverage. The Director of the Ohio Department of Insurance, Mary Jo Hudson, wrote in a release that [a]n estimated 20,000 additional young adults, who are more likely than any other age group to be uninsured, will now be eligible for coverage." The statement continued: “These changes, combined with our work to implement the recently passed federal reforms, are granting more Ohioans access to coverage and decreasing the number of uninsured Ohioans." The state reform will work in tandem with the federal law dependent age change that becomes effective September 23, 2010. Previously, only dependents up to age 19, or up to 23 years old if they were still in school, were eligible to receive coverage under their parents’ policies. |
The blog reports information of interest to seniors, their families, and caregivers. Recurrent themes are asset and decision-making protection, and aging-in-place planning.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Young Adults to Have Expanded Health Insurance Access
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