Health Insurance Concepts You Must Know to Pass the Texas Life & Health Exam
Preparing for the Texas Life & Health insurance exam can feel overwhelming, especially the health insurance portion. Many candidates find this section the most difficult due to complex terminology, cost-sharing rules, and federal regulations. This guide focuses only on the most essential health insurance concepts you must understand to pass the Texas exam with confidence.
Why Health Insurance Is the Most Challenging Section
Unlike life insurance, health insurance involves multiple plan structures, shared costs, managed care systems, and government programs. Exam questions are often scenario-based, testing whether you understand how coverage works in real life—not just definitions. Success requires clarity, not memorization.
Types of Health Insurance Plans
Understanding plan structures is critical.
HMO (Health Maintenance Organization)
Requires members to choose a Primary Care Physician (PCP). Referrals are required for specialists, and coverage is limited to network providers (except emergencies). HMOs have lower premiums but less flexibility.
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization)
Allows members to see any provider without referrals. In-network care costs less, but out-of-network coverage is still available. PPOs offer flexibility but have higher premiums.
EPO (Exclusive Provider Organization)
Covers only in-network providers like an HMO, but does not require referrals like a PPO.
POS (Point of Service)
Requires a PCP and referrals but allows out-of-network care at higher cost.
Cost-Sharing Mechanisms
These appear frequently on the exam.
- Deductible: Amount paid before insurance begins covering services.
- Coinsurance: Percentage split after deductible (e.g., 80/20).
- Copayment: Fixed dollar amount per service.
- Out-of-Pocket Maximum: Annual cap on covered expenses.
Once the out-of-pocket maximum is reached, the insurer pays 100% of covered services.
Pre-Existing Conditions (ACA Rules)
Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA):
- Insurers cannot deny coverage
- No waiting periods
- No higher premiums for health conditions
These protections apply to major medical plans, not supplemental policies like hospital indemnity or critical illness plans.
Managed Care Concepts
Managed care controls costs while coordinating care.
- Utilization Review: Evaluates medical necessity (prospective, concurrent, retrospective).
- Case Management: Coordinates care for chronic or complex cases.
- Gatekeeping: Requires referrals from PCPs before specialist care.
Government Health Programs
Medicare
Federal program primarily for age 65+.
- Part A: Hospital
- Part B: Medical
- Part C: Medicare Advantage
- Part D: Prescription drugs
Medicaid
Joint federal-state program for low-income individuals. Texas has strict eligibility rules.
CHIP
Covers children in families who earn too much for Medicaid but can’t afford private insurance.
COBRA Continuation Coverage
COBRA allows continued group health coverage after qualifying events like job loss or divorce.
Key exam facts:
- 18-month standard coverage
- Up to 36 months in certain cases
- Beneficiaries pay 102% of premium
- Applies to employers with 20+ employees
- 60-day election period
Coordination of Benefits (COB)
When multiple policies exist, COB determines which pays first.
- Primary plan pays first
- Secondary plan pays remaining eligible costs
- Birthday rule determines dependent coverage (earlier birthday = primary)
HIPAA (Portability & Privacy)
HIPAA:
- Protects continuous coverage
- Limits pre-existing exclusions (where applicable)
- Ensures guaranteed renewability
- Protects medical privacy
Essential Health Benefits (ACA)
All individual and small-group plans must cover 10 essential benefits, including:
- Hospitalization
- Emergency services
- Maternity
- Mental health
- Prescription drugs
- Preventive care
- Pediatric dental & vision
Preventive Care & Wellness
Most preventive services are covered 100% with no deductible, including:
- Vaccines
- Screenings
- Preventive counseling
Wellness programs (gym discounts, health incentives) are optional plan features.
Medical Underwriting & Rating
- Community Rating: No health-based pricing
- Adjusted Community Rating: Age, tobacco use allowed
- Experience Rating: Based on group claims history (large employers)
Claims Process & EOB
Claims flow:
- Provider submits claim
- Insurer reviews
- Payment issued
- EOB sent to member
Explanation of Benefits (EOB) shows:
- What was billed
- What insurance paid
- What the patient owes
Grace Periods & Reinstatement
- Standard grace period: 31 days
- ACA marketplace with subsidies: 90 days
- Reinstatement may require overdue premiums
Disability Income Insurance
Replaces income due to illness or injury.
- Short-term: 3–6 months
- Long-term: Years or until retirement
- Elimination period = waiting period
- Own occupation vs Any occupation definitions are heavily tested
Long-Term Care Insurance
Covers custodial care not covered by health insurance.
- Triggered by inability to perform 2+ ADLs
- Covers nursing homes, assisted living, home care
- ADLs include bathing, dressing, eating, transferring, toileting
HSAs & FSAs
HSA (with HDHP):
- Triple tax advantage
- Portable
- 2024 contribution limits:
- $4,150 individual
- $8,300 family
FSA:
- Use-it-or-lose-it
- Employer-owned
- Not portable
Telemedicine & Mental Health Parity
- Telehealth often has lower copays
- Mental Health Parity Act requires equal treatment limits and cost-sharing for mental health and substance use disorders
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FAQS
Is the health insurance section harder than life insurance on the Texas exam?
Yes. Most candidates find health insurance more difficult due to complex plan structures, cost-sharing rules, and federal regulations like ACA, HIPAA, and COBRA.
What health insurance topics are most frequently tested?
Plan types (HMO, PPO, EPO), deductibles and coinsurance, Medicare vs Medicaid, COBRA timelines, HIPAA rules, and essential health benefits appear most often.
Do I need to memorize numbers for the exam?
Timeframes and limits such as COBRA durations, grace periods, and HSA contribution limits are commonly tested.
Are Texas-specific rules included on the exam?
Texas continuation coverage, state regulations, and the role of the Texas Department of Insurance may appear.
How quickly can I pass the Texas Life & Health exam with proper preparation?
With focused study and structured prep, many students pass within one week, especially using practice exams and instructor guidance.