Alicia PhD

Alicia PhD
Location
New Hampshire, United States
Birthday
September 08
Bio
Alicia has a PhD in Experimental Pathology and, after having worked in a genetics lab for her dissertation, now edits scientific manuscripts full-time from the comfort of the White Mountains. Alicia is also a writer, contributing health commentary and articles on disease and anatomy to many online publishers. She upkeeps a number of blogs devoted to her interests in public health and science.

MY RECENT POSTS

APRIL 11, 2010 5:42PM

A National Health Care Lie

Rate: 3 Flag

Dollar Sign

Illustration credit: Svilen Milev

I just saw another commercial about signing up for a National Health Care Plan. They use clips of Obama talking about insuring more Americans and warn "only 2000 new enrollments allowed daily!" That it is setup to cover all uninsured! Noone turned down!

The problem? It's all a lie!

Why do I think it's a scam?

1) There is no national health care plan setup by the Obama legislation.

2) The site the commercial directs you to (or call the 800 number to be scammed in person!) is run by HealthcareOne, which is not an insurance company or a government agency (if you'd like to see for yourself, I'm not going to give them the benefit of a live link, it's hcobiz [dot] com)

3) The small print on the website says: "HealthcareOne is NOT HEALTH INSURANCE AND IS NOT INTENDED TO REPLACE INSURANCE. Plan not available in: IL, KS, MD, MT, NH, NV, and VT. Plan provides discounts at participating healthcare providers for medical services. Discounts vary based on provider type and service provided. Plan members are obligated to pay the discounted rate for all healthcare services at time of service."

4) It's one of those pay now and maybe you'll get something later deals. Also in the fine print: "Member can cancel membership within first 30 days after receipt of membership kit for full refund of membership dues less the non-refundable enrollment fee."

So basically, a discount prescription program only available in some states due to commerce laws is advertising itself as a national health plan, even using Obama's image, speeches, and recent legislation, to get more customers. Isn't this selling under false pretenses? How many people have been scammed, thinking that they're getting legitimate insurance under the current legislative changes, only to find out when the "membership kit" arrives that they're not really getting anything they wanted (check out RipOff Report). Their parent corporation, Careington International, also seems to have a number of subsidiaries that do similar advertising if online complaints are any indication.

Yes, prescription discount plans have their place (and HealthcareOne runs a health discount service in their network of providers for ~$70 a month, which may also have a place for some people). But they should be sold for what they are, not scammed for what they aren't. People who call the 800 number don't get the benefit of the small print or big pictures saying it's prescription discounts. Instead they're stuck paying the nonrefundable enrollment fee (though the site says it's free!!) and have their phone number and information on record with a company that doesn't seem to have any problem twisting the truth to sell more.

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Comments

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Yes this is a scam, and Obama care is a scam as well. All that nonsense about not getting turned down because of preexisting conditions is nonsense. It doesn't take effect till 2014. Whoopee!
Basically, he'll go down in history as the president who got a health care bill passed, but it's not really a health care plan. Just a bunch of BS like the ads on TV.
Poppi, it wasn't a health care bill, it was health insurance reform. And yes, it is being implemented over several years, like most other legislation involving new regulations and programs. But it is hardly BS - you're talking to someone who's family will benefit from parts being implemented this year (my sis can stay on my dad's insurance until she's 26, my mom can't be dropped from hers if her work continues re-shuffling positions)
What can I say, Alicia...we try. I always expect to be informed when I come to your blog. Yes the commercial is a lie. Unfortunately, there are several of them. You would think it would be a violation of "truth in advertising" or something!

Go read my new post and tell me what you think. I respect your fine mind. You get what so many others miss.
I forgot to tell you not to get discouraged. Keep speaking the truth. Personally, I appreciate all of the information you share.
Do you think they'd accept my old gold jewelry in lieu of a membership fee? If not, I'm holding out for a plan from Care Bears International!
This sounds like a scam to me. They are using a legit program that is not theirs into their ads hoping to attract more customers or at least scam some of them out of the enrollment fee in case they catch up to the scam. I am even more surprised that this kind of ads make it through the media channels, aren't there people who should check if the ads hold some truth in them or not?
Langdon Jonathon - www.drug-rehab.org