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Why Preventive Care is One of the Smartest Money Moves You Can Make

older couple exercising in retirement; Why Preventive Care is One of the Smartest Money Moves
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People generally treat their health and financial resources as separate entities. The reality is that they’re intertwined. Your health maintenance efforts will prove to be your most valuable financial decision.

Preventive care offers benefits beyond maintaining your physical health. Your income stays protected while you avoid large medical expenses and therefore preserve your retirement funds. Think of it as a financial strategy that just so happens to keep you alive longer.

The Financial Case for Prevention

The true expenses of chronic illness exceed what patients might expect until they experience these conditions firsthand. Medical expenses accumulate over the years. What starts out as manageable copays turns into a permanent drain on your finances.

What Chronic Disease Actually Costs

The yearly cost for diabetes treatment amounts to $12,022 for typical patients who have the disease. The annual cost of heart disease treatment is $4,900. The cost of cancer treatment during the last year of life exceeds $100,000.

The expenses associated with these conditions may persist for decades. The costs can consume all your savings while exceeding insurance coverage limits forcing people to make tough financial choices. The cost of your medications might even end up equivalent to taking out a home equity loan.

Many chronic diseases actually sneak up on folks who forget to go to checkups or miss the warning signs. Illness may take years to develop before it becomes noticeable.

The Prevention Alternative

Compare those figures to preventive care. Most insurance plans offer free annual physicals and preventive screenings. Blood pressure monitoring requires only five minutes of time. A colonoscopy examination might protect you from needing to spend six figures someday on cancer treatment expenses.

The math is simple:

  • Annual preventive visit: $0 with insurance
  • Managing diabetes over 20 years: $240,000+
  • Treating advanced heart disease: $100,000+ lifetime

Preventive care functions as a financial protection system. You’re essentially buying protection against catastrophic medical expenses at a massive discount. Every screening, checkup, and early intervention decreases your chances of facing brutal costs in the future.

Your goal goes beyond disease prevention, though. The financial upside of staying healthy compounds over time, just like interest in a savings account. You can avoid serious financial difficulties like medical bankruptcy by implementing preventive care as a form of protection.

Use Your Insurance the Smart Way

Most people pay for health insurance every month but never use one of its most valuable features. If you have a plan, it probably already covers a long list of preventive services at no cost to you. However, millions of Americans skip these annual screenings and checkups.

What Your Plan Covers for Free

Under the Affordable Care Act, most insurance plans must cover preventive services without charging you a copay or coinsurance. This includes annual physicals, cancer screenings, blood pressure checks, cholesterol tests, diabetes screenings, and vaccinations. You don’t need to meet your deductible first. You just schedule the appointment and go. These are built into your monthly premium, whether you use them or not.

The Cost of Skipping Free Care

When you skip a free colonoscopy, you might miss precancerous polyps that could be removed before they turn into a $150,000 problem. People who skip their blood pressure checks run the risk of heart damage that can develop slowly over time.

It’s ironic that people skip seeing the doctor to avoid medical bills. But then they end up with conditions that cost much more to treat. Early detection of health issues leads to simpler, less expensive treatment options later on. If you allow health issues to only be detected at a late stage, you’ll be more likely to visit emergency rooms and undergo expensive hospital stays or treatment that depletes your savings. Your insurance company knows this math and that’s why they cover prevention for free.

HSAs and FSAs Make Prevention a Wealth Strategy

Many people don’t fully understand how Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) or Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs) work, but they may at least know the accounts can be used to save for medical expenses. Actually, they’re some of the most powerful tax shelters you’ll find. Once you pair them with preventive care, you create a strategy that saves you money now and builds your wealth later.

HSAs as a Vehicle for Wealth in the Long Run

HSAs do something that is very rare in personal finance. They offer three layers of tax protection. You get a tax deduction when you put money in. Then, the funds grow tax-free. Finally, you pay no taxes when you spend it on qualified medical expenses.

Many people use their HSAs like a kind of stealth retirement account. They invest the funds in stock or bonds similar to a retirement fund. Year after year, the money can roll over. Many smart users pay medical expenses out of pocket in the moment and let the HSA sit idle, growing for decades.

FSAs for Predictable Annual Costs

The mechanism for FSAs is a bit different. These accounts get funded through pretax dollars deducted from your payroll. That money covers the medical expenses you’re expecting to pay for the year. This could include things like physical therapy, annual checkups or prescription copays.

One drawback many people struggle with is losing the money if they don’t spend it by year’s end. Therefore, the right situation for an FSA is one where you can predict your costs. For example, if you know you’ll need $1,500 in medical care this year, you put that amount in the FSA in order to save you taxes you would have paid on that income.

When you use pretax dollars for preventive care, that means every wellness visit could cost you 20 to 30 percent less than when you pay with your regular money after taxes have been taken out.

Lifestyle Habits That Cut Future Medical Costs

Expensive chronic conditions can drain your retirement funds today and force you into difficult financial decisions years or decades down the road. Prevent all that by improving your basic health habits right now. The cheapest medical intervention is the one you actually never need.

1. Exercise

People often think about joining a gym but turn away when they learn it might cost $50 a month. That’s actually nothing at all compared to the $12,000 annual cost of managing diabetes or the $100,000 someone might spend on treating heart disease over their lifetime. Moving your body on a regular basis might be the smartest investment you’ll ever make. Thirty minutes of moderate activity most days of the week will cut down your risk of heart disease, stroke, and several cancers. It costs nothing, except a little time and energy.

2. Nutrition

The bottom line is that eating well will cost you less than treating diet-related diseases. Fresh produce may cost more than processed food, but treating obesity related conditions costs infinitely more. Also, cook at home instead of eating out, so you can not only save money but also know first hand what ingredients are going into your food.

3. Sleep

Science now shows that poor sleep increases your risk of obesity, heart disease, depression, and cognitive decline. Good sleep costs nothing. It just requires getting 7 to 8 hours per night. The return on your investment means a better immune system, lower inflammation, and reduced healthcare costs.

4. Stress Management

Chronic stress damages your body in measurable ways from higher blood pressure to weaker immune responses. Free stress reduction tools include deep breathing, meditation apps, walking in nature, or talking with friends.

5. Early Mental Health Support

Depression also increases the risk of physical illness. Catching mental health issues early through therapy or medication prevents both the mental toll and the downstream medical costs. Many insurance plans now cover mental health visits the same way they cover physical care.

Protect Earning Power Through Better Health

Your health directly affects how much money you make over your lifetime. Healthier people work more years, miss fewer days, and perform better on the job. Those in poor health take more sick days than healthy colleagues. Each missed day costs you money through lost wages or burned PTO. Over a career, that can add up to tens of thousands in lost income.

Preventive care protects your cognitive function and prevents burnout, extending your career. Regular checkups catch issues like high blood pressure or diabetes that damage your brain over time. Better brain health means sharper decision making and sustained productivity as you age. Working extra years because you’re healthy enough can add hundreds of thousands or more to your lifetime earnings. That’s money you can invest instead of spending on managing preventable diseases.

The Retirement Connection: Health as Your Biggest Financial Safeguard

A market crash might cut your retirement savings by 30 percent, but poor health can drain it completely. Most retirees pay more for healthcare than anything else. Medicare may cover quite a bit, but not everything. Out of pocket medical costs for a 65 year old couple retiring today will likely exceed $300,000.

Preventive care will reduce these costs dramatically. Staying mobile and active may eventually prevent the need for nursing home care that runs more than $100,000 annually in many cases. If you catch disease early it means simpler treatment rather than managing advanced conditions for decades.

If you’ve been building up your HSA for years, it becomes very valuable in retirement. You have a dedicated fund that is still growing tax free. This protects your other retirement accounts from medical emergencies.

Overall, the quality of your life matters just as much as the quantity of years you get. You want to be healthy enough to travel and enjoy retirement. That’s the point of saving. Preventive care preserves both your health and the financial freedom to use it.

Make Preventive Care Part of Your Financial Plan

You can look at your health as a financial priority in the same way you stay disciplined to save for retirement. Many people like to set up automatic systems that work without having to make a single decision.

Automate Your Health Finances

Here is one single action that will catch problems early on while they are cheapest to fix. Schedule your annual checkup at the same time each year and put it in your calendar as a recurring appointment. As soon as you finish a physical, put the next one in the calendar before you even leave the office.

When open enrollment comes, review your benefits and compare plans not just by premium cost but also by how well they support preventive care. You could save thousands of dollars on a plan with better preventive coverage, even if the premium is higher.

Build Simple Daily Systems

There are plenty of health expenses that can be paid automatically. Prescription refills, supplement orders, or gym memberships should require zero mental energy each month. Automation removes the friction that causes people to skip things they know they should do.

Create a simple health checklist. It should include an annual physical, twice-yearly dental cleanings, an eye exam, and cancer screenings appropriate for your age. Check each item off as you complete it.

Start Earlier so You Benefit Earlier

Taking small, consistent actions now helps protect your income, savings, and long-term financial freedom. Preventive care compounds just like money does. The earlier you start, the more you benefit. Your future self will thank you for every checkup you didn’t skip and every health habit you built today.

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John Boitnott graduated from UC Santa Barbara with a Masters Degree in Education. He worked for 14 years as a broadcast news writer for ABC, NBC, and CBS News where he covered finance, business and real estate. He covered financial news for SAP for four years. Boitnott is now working as a columnist for The Motley Fool where he covers personal financial and investing strategies.
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