Preferred provider organization (PPO) - The Board of Pensions of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (2024)

To better understand the coverage provided under the PPO, it’s important to know these key terms.

Deductible

The deductible is a specified annual dollar amount you must pay for covered medical services before the plan begins to pay benefits.

  • PPO deductibles are based on a percentage of your effective salary, as shown on the PPO Deductibles and Medical Out-of-Pocket Maximums chart.
  • If you enroll any family members, you are responsible for two medical deductibles, one for yourself and one for all your family members combined.
  • You can reduce your deductible(s) by completing Call to Health, a well-being initiative that focuses on the four dimensions of wholeness: spiritual, health, financial, and vocational.

Copay

A copay is a flat dollar amount that you pay upfront for certain services when using network providers.

  • Except for preventive care, you pay a copay for each network office visit (in-person or virtual): $25 for primary and behavioral health care visits, $45 for visits to a specialist or when seeking care at an urgent care center, and $10 when using the telemedicine benefit.
  • Copays do not count toward the plan deductible or medical out-of-pocket maximum.
  • There is a $25 copay for the vision exam benefit.
  • There are separate copay amounts for prescription drugs. Read more details.

Coinsurance

Coinsurance is the percentage of the cost for covered services that you pay after you pay the deductible:

  • Your coinsurance for network services is 20 percent.
  • Your coinsurance is 40 percent for out-of-network care (50 percent with no deductible for doctor’s office visits).

Medical out-of-pocket maximum

The PPO includes a medical out-of-pocket maximum, which is the most you will pay in the form of coinsurance in a given year. Once you reach the medical out-of-pocket maximum, the plan pays 100 percent of allowable costs for the rest of the year. Office visit copays and deductibles do not count toward the medical out-of-pocket maximum.

Total maximum out-of-pocket

The total maximum out-of-pocket is the most you will pay in a year in the form of deductibles, copays, and coinsurance. If your covered out-of-pocket expenses reach the total maximum out-of-pocket amount, the plan will pay 100 percent of allowable costs for the rest of the year.

  • Expenses that count toward the PPO total maximum out-of-pocket include your network deductible(s), medical out-of-pocket maximum, prescription drug out-of-pocket maximum, office visit copays, coinsurance, and prescription drug copays (excluding non-formulary drugs and certain non-essential specialty pharmacy drugs).
  • The PPO individual and family total maximum out-of-pocket amounts are shown on the Key Provisions chart.
Preferred provider organization (PPO) - The Board of Pensions of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (2024)
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