Web Winners:
How to compare. To decide on health insurance, you have to know first off what your employer, or your spouse's employer, is offering for coverage. This brief guide says "the easiest and the best options" are those provided in the workplace. It also briefly describes the differences among fee-for-service, PPO, POS and HMO insurance plans.
www.ehow.com/how_1000518_compare-health-insurance.html
Report card. Here is the American Medical Association's Health Insurer Report Card. With the report card, unveiled in June, the physicians' group says it hopes to hold insurers accountable in processing claims. The industry "needs improvement," according to the report.
www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/18660.html
Medicare central. The federal health-care service for older people is a web of public and private programs that gets especially complex when it comes to prescription-drug plans. The intricacies of these subsidized plans - we found 63 of them, with premiums from zero to $99 a month, available for residents of one of Philadelphia's suburban counties - are enough to make you sick.
Candidate plans. How do the presidential candidates compare on health-care issues? WebMD outlines the positions of Republican John McCain, Democrat Barack Obama, Libertarian Bob Barr, and Independent Ralph Nader on a few key issues, including coverage for the uninsured. Click on the candidates' photos for additional details.
www.webmd.com/election2008/comparecandidates
Medical travel. We were surprised to see the question posted here about the wisdom of an uninsured person traveling to India for heart surgery. It's not for everyone, says the good doctor.
www.drweil.com/drw/u/QAA400291/shopping-for-medical-care-abroad
Contact staff writer Reid Kanaley at 215-854-5114 or rkanaley@phillynews.com.


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