I pretty much just lurk on these boards, but I have a question.
Just found out DH and I are expecting. Probably not the best planning on our part, but we are beyond excited. Not sure if anybody can help me on this, but I am just starting a new job next week and am pretty sure the insurance won't kick in for a month. I just graduated with my doctorate and my student health insurance runs out at the end of August. Basically, I'm uninsured for a month (I think). DH is a small business owner and is in the same insurance situation - he was, and will be on my insurance.
Would it be suspicious to call about my insurance benefits with my new job (exactly when they start, etc)? Or to attempt to extend my benefits through the school for another month? I've been living in the bubble of student health insurance for so long that I am not exactly sure where to go with my issue.
Also, as far as the pregnancy itself, would it be terrible if I didn't call my doctor until after insurance kicks in? I'm 25 and healthy, if that means anything. I wouldn't expect it to be high-risk at this point. I keep thinking some women don't find out they are expecting until 8+ weeks, and some physicians don't even want to see patients until 8-10 weeks so it wouldn't be that big of a deal. At the same time, I don't want anything to be wrong because of my poor planning and lack of money.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Re: Insurance question
TTC #1 Since July 2009 slightly low progesterone, endo, kinked right tube, Clomid, Lap and Hysteroscopy, and 13 months TTC = BFP! (7/23/10) Cautiously Expecting... 8/19/10 - it's TWINS!... 11/8/10 - Boy/Girl twins! Born 37w4d
First I'd call your new companys HR dept and find out exactly when your insurance will kick in, and what kind of insurance it is, etc.
Second, it's totally fine to call your Dr now and schedule your appointment for 4-8 weeks out. Tell them when your new insurance kicks in and that you'd like to be seen at that time (a first appointment between 8-12 weeks is totally normal and reasonable). With my first child my yearly deductible reset right at 12 weeks, so I asked my Dr if I could get my first trimester bloodwork done after it reset and she was totally fine and flexible with that (it was like $800 of a $1000 deductible).
This is false. I work in HR and most companies in my area do not start coverage until after 30 or 90 days.
It is perfectly natural to want to know when your health benefits kick in. Non-pregnant people want to know that too!!!
I would try and go to your doc BEFORE your insurance runs out.