Its up to the insurance company as regulated by the state they are doing business in I believe. I have MS if I were to change jobs and insurers I could very well be denied coverage.. IT happens all the time.. Another travisty of our free market system, and special interest groups!
Answer
45 of our 50 states allow underwriting, meaning that your child will not be eligible for individual health insurance in those states. Group insurance is guaranteed issue, if you can find a job that offers it. The problem is that the employer owns the policy, and you are at the whim of that employer.
Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP should be government assisted options worth looking at.
Don
http://mtnhealthinsurance.com
If you are in the military and stationed in another state, you do not have to change your auto insurance to another state if you plan to reside at minimum of 6 months. However, if you plan to change your state driver's license and reside more than 6 months, your auto insurance must be changed.
expenses change
If you change insurance providers, your Health Savings Account (HSA) remains yours and you can continue to use it for eligible medical expenses. However, you may need to update your HSA information with your new insurance provider to ensure smooth transactions.
If you eliminate your wants and focus on your needs, your expenses will change.
Flexible Expenses
From 1967 to 1970
No, you must change your car insurance when you move
fixed expenses do not change, variable expenses do.
One has nothing to do with another.
The owner of a life insurance policy has the right to choose the beneficiary. Another person has no power to change that choice.
Fixed Costs are expenses that don't change based on production or sales volumes. They include salaries, rent, insurance, accountancy costs. Variable Costs are expenses that vary based on production volumes. They include material, labor, utilities, and delivery costs
In economics, fixed costs can be determined by identifying expenses that do not change regardless of the level of production. These costs remain constant, such as rent or insurance payments. Fixed costs can be calculated by adding up all expenses that do not vary with production levels.