New health insurance plans must cover preventative services and there cannot be “cost sharing” – in other words, no co-pays or co-insurance for preventative services.

From the Health and Human Services website, here are some examples of what is covered, without co-pays, co-insurance, or deductibles.

Make sure the doctor’s office bills you correctly for “Preventative” services. If you see the doctor for preventative services only, you should not see a bill. We suggest that if you go to see the doctor for preventative services, do not talk about or have any other services performed. This way, your FREE preventative service will remain free and you should not see a bill.

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Be Careful to Stay Within Your Network for Preventative Care

Those preventative services rated an A or B rating from the U.S. Preventative Services Task Force:

Children (0-17): Coverage includes regular pediatrician visits, vision and hearing screening, developmental assessments, immunizations, and screening and counseling to address obesity and help children maintain a healthy weight.

Women (18-64): Coverage includes cancer screening such as pap smears for those ages 21 to 64, mammograms for those ages 50 to 64, and colonoscopy for those ages 50 to 64, recommended immunizations such as HPV vaccination for those ages 19 to 26, flu shots for all adults, and meningococcal and pneumococcal vaccinations for high-risk adults, healthy diet counseling and obesity screening, cholesterol and blood pressure screening, screening for sexually-transmitted infections and HIV, depression screening, and tobacco-use counseling. For plan years (in the individual market, policy years) beginning on or after August 1, 2012, additional preventive services specific to women, such as well-woman visits, screening for gestational diabetes, domestic violence screening and counseling, prescriptions, FDA-approved contraception, must be covered with no cost sharing.​​

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Men (18-64): Coverage includes recommended immunizations such as flu shots for all adults and meningococcal and pneumococcal vaccinations for high-risk adults, cancer screening including colonoscopy for adults 50 to 64, healthy diet counseling and obesity screening, cholesterol and blood pressure screening, screening for HIV, depression screening, and tobacco-use counseling.

**PLEASE NOTE – If your doctor bills 2 separate bills for your one visit, you will be billed for the portion of the office visit that was not preventative. For example, if you see a doctor for a routine physical, and in the same visit you need your prescription refilled, IF the doctor bills 2 separate bills for that visit, the physical will be free, but the prescription refill portion of that visit will be charged. IF the doctor bills everything on 1 bill, you will not be charged. We suggest that if you go to see the doctor for preventative services, do not talk about or have any other services performed. This way, your FREE preventative service will remain free and you should not see a bill.

Be careful to stay within your network for preventative care.

Your Auto Insurance and the “Hit and Run”

Your Auto Insurance and the “Hit and Run”

If your car was hit by someone and they do the legal/right thing by admitting it and paying for it, all is well. The “at fault” driver’s insurance will cover it under their property damage portion of their insurance for your car to be fixed. In the case that someone hits your beautiful new car while you are in the store and drives away, what do you do?

Your Auto Insurance and the “Hit and Run”

At Fault – If You Caused an Auto Accident

The responsibility of who pays what in Nevada is contingent on who’s at-fault in an auto accident. All drivers in Nevada have an obligation to drive their automobiles safely to reduce any risks of potential accidents. In Nevada, if you are the at-fault driver (the person that caused the accident), then you are responsible to “make whole” the individual or property you hit.

Your Auto Insurance and the “Hit and Run”

I Witnessed A Car Accident; What Do I Do?

A car accident can happen in the blink of an eye and witnessing one can be scary. After an auto accident, all drivers involved are required to stay at the scene where information is exchanged for auto insurance purposes. But what should you do if you witness a car wreck?

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