Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op's gonna be a grand mother! woo-hoo. Think of all the parents on dcum who probably won't become grand mothers, given the birth rate trends that are occuring presently.
Here we go again, we get it, you had your children young. Blah, Blah, Blah, let it go...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If, for some obscure and little-known insuance rule, the pregnancy isn’t covered, why doesn’t she go get a policy now? Pregnancy is not a pre-existing condition. Obamacare changed the rules on this.
I really don’t understand why this insurance “problem” couldn’t be resolved with a simple google search.
Only ACA plans (and Medicaid and some employer-sponsored) offer maternity coverage for pregnancies that pre-exist the effective coverage date. She missed the signup deadline for Obamacare plans.
All new plans are ACA-compliant plans. ACA is a law, not a plan. Having a baby, or losing current health insurance allows someone to sign up outside the usual enrollment period. Again, this is all easily found via a google search.
https://www.healthcare.gov/glossary/qualifying-life-event/
Anonymous wrote:Is is possible for your daughter to talk with some younger single moms and get the straight dope on what it is like. It will destroy her life and you will end up with the child. Lots of young women try this as a way to make a guy commit to something. Bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you mean Medicaid. I would really encourage adoption. It would be so much better for the child.
Jeff Bezos and Barack Obama are both children of 18 year old mothers who raised them. Careful about how you generalize. It’s not all like the MTV teen mom show.
I kind of agree with this. Also she should 100% be able to choose to terminate if she wishes on her own. BUT, that said- while this is far from the ideal scenario, its not entirely unheard of to make this work, especially if the families of the mother have the resources to help get the mother through an education that will pay her bills/give her job security to raise the child on her own sooner rather than later. If the grandparents don't, or come from a place of "whatever, no big deal" and don't care about perpetuating a cycle of teen pregnancies, well, that is I think where things get difficult. The few families I know where this happened did the best they could- one became a nurse, one an accountant (not CPA, more like admin finance for a university) the 3rd a teacher- things with more concrete paths after undergrad and the grandparents (in some cases 2 sets in one case 1 set) helped BIG TIME with child care and childcare expenses so that the moms could stay in school and get their degree in 4-5 years and work part time.
One of these women is my colleague, its weird how her daughter is 20 and my oldest is 4 even though are the same age but she made it work, and also has kids in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:op's gonna be a grand mother! woo-hoo. Think of all the parents on dcum who probably won't become grand mothers, given the birth rate trends that are occuring presently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you mean Medicaid. I would really encourage adoption. It would be so much better for the child.
Jeff Bezos and Barack Obama are both children of 18 year old mothers who raised them. Careful about how you generalize. It’s not all like the MTV teen mom show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 18 year old daughter is she's pregnant.
Any advice? She's in college (NVCC) and I'm concerned it will go to the wayside with all the new responsibility. Health issuance will not cover it, Would we have to pay out of packet?
She works 20 hours a week and earns 8 an hour.
Problem with medicare is government assistant and I always thought it was for the lazy, but accidents happen but I don't want to tell people that the baby might have to be on it..
Your daughter is about to be a teen mom. If anyone is going to think poorly of her THAT will be why, not because she needs Medicare, which the average person wouldn't even know.
This is so American. I just came from Stockholm, and there are tons of moms who are 29-25 with 2-3 kids. They are young, stylish and happy. In America it is almost a crime to have a kid at 18. She is an adult, she is highly capable to raise a child.
Since she doesn't have a job "highly capable" is quite the stretch.
And yes, teen motherhood isn't celebrated in America, which is where the OP lives and where this message board is based. So I feel pretty comfortable being "so American" here in America.
Anonymous wrote:I got married at 18 and had my first child at 19. My H joined the army so he could support us and we would have health insurance. We were successfully married for 25 years.
My sister got pregnant at 20, had the baby and then a few months later married the father. She's been successfully married for 35 years.
Just being 18 is no reason for an abortion or an adoption, although there are some valid reasons for both.
Anonymous wrote:Kick her off your insurance and make her get insurance through the marketplace.
Also, FIY, your insurance WILL cover her pregnancy. It will NOT cover the baby once it's born. But the baby will automatically qualify for Medicaid.
Also, for those saying "who will know the baby is on Medicaid?" I don't know where you live, but where I live in the suburbs, most doctor's offices have notices that they no longer accept Medicaid. The doctor's that do accept it in my town are few and far between, so if you're going to Dr. Smith on main street, it's because you're on Medicaid, not because he's a fantastic doctor.
Anonymous wrote:I think you mean Medicaid. I would really encourage adoption. It would be so much better for the child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 18 year old daughter is she's pregnant.
Any advice? She's in college (NVCC) and I'm concerned it will go to the wayside with all the new responsibility. Health issuance will not cover it, Would we have to pay out of packet?
She works 20 hours a week and earns 8 an hour.
Problem with medicare is government assistant and I always thought it was for the lazy, but accidents happen but I don't want to tell people that the baby might have to be on it..
Your daughter is about to be a teen mom. If anyone is going to think poorly of her THAT will be why, not because she needs Medicare, which the average person wouldn't even know.
This is so American. I just came from Stockholm, and there are tons of moms who are 29-25 with 2-3 kids. They are young, stylish and happy. In America it is almost a crime to have a kid at 18. She is an adult, she is highly capable to raise a child.