Healthcare Technology Featured Article

May 09, 2012

Even the Wealthy Worried About Healthcare Costs in Retirement


We’ve all heard about the one percent – those making more money in a week than most make in a year. Maybe not for them, but healthcare costs still have many of the wealthy worried.

Jeffrey Young at the Huffington Post wrote that, according to a new survey by Nationwide Financial and conducted by Harris Interactive, “46 percent of people 55 or older who have assets of at least $250,000 and plan to retire by 2020 say they are ‘terrified’ that healthcare costs will foul up their retirement plans, and 30 percent of those already retired reported the same anxiety.”

As someone who has already had her share of astronomical healthcare bills, and as a result, an equally astronomical health insurance premium, I totally understand. My monthly premium is close to $1,000, and even when we switched to a slightly cheaper premium with a $5,000 deductible, we still got killed. Not only did we have the almost $900 premium to pay every month anyway, but we had to pay all our medical expenses on top of that.

Add a few small procedures and we watched our IRAs float away.

A story in The New York Times today quoted Dr. Otis Webb Brawley, chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society, as sadly and angrily berating politicians for constantly claiming that American healthcare is the best in the world. Tara Parker-Pope maintains that the statement may be true for the rich, but “it’s not a great place to be sick if you are poor and uninsured and want consistent basic care.”

But even if you have the money, for how long will you be covered? What if you live to 90 or 100, possible today with healthier life styles?  Medical costs go up as you age.

Young’s story points out that “a smaller proportion of soon-to-be-retired Americans, 18 percent, is ‘fearful of bankruptcy because of health care costs,’ as are 6 percent of retired people, according to the survey.”

Many retirees are just not prepared for the high cost of medical care in retirement when the company plan is gone. And too many people believe that Medicare covers most or all expenses. Wrong. Medicare only covers a percentage of your medical bills (hence, all the commercials for supplemental care).

What will healthcare cost us when we’re retired? It’s anyone’s guess but plan on  average, Medicare beneficiaries 65 to 74 spend $2920 a year in out-of-pocket expenses, according to newretirement.com, and those 75 to 84 spend $3,815, a year. Those 85 and older spend an average of 30 percent of their income.

“Americans – even those who have diligently saved for their golden years – are not prepared for the reality of health care costs in retirement, and don’t really understand how Medicare works,” John Carter, president of Nationwide Financial Distributors, told Young.

And yet there are still ways to rein in medical costs. New clinics like Nowclinic allow patients to get medical advice and prescriptions over the phone and through texts around the clock for just $45.




Edited by Braden Becker
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