Medical, Dental & Vision
Pacific University offers medical, dental and vision insurance coverage to benefit-eligible employees, including full-time faculty and staff and some part-time faculty and staff.
Employees may choose between two medical plans and three dental plans, each offering various levels of coverage. The cost of coverage of these plans is shared by you and the university.
New employees are eligible for insurance coverage the first of the month following their date of hire.
Existing employees may add, drop or change their coverage when they experience an eligible change of status (change in marital status, change in spouse’s health insurance coverage, etc.), or during the annual open enrollment period each Fall season.
2024 Rates (January 1 - December 31, 2024)
Presente Tarifas de Beneficios Año 2023
Tarifas de Beneficios Año 2024
Nonstop Health
The Nonstop Health program is wrapped with employees' Regence and Kaiser medical plans. Nonstop Wellness allows Pacific University to fund a portion of employees’ out-of-pocket expenses (e.g. deductibles, copays and coinsurance) by providing employees with a Visa card to pay for in-network, carrier-approved medical expenses.
Emergency Room vs Urgent Care vs Doctors Visit
A trip to the emergency room (ER) can be much more expensive* than a visit to your doctor or to urgent care, and take up more of your valuable time. And while there are times when the ER is absolutely unavoidable, it’s good to know when you should go – and when you should seek a different type of care.
Emergency rooms: You should go to the ER for life-and-death situations (e.g. chest pain, large open wounds, head injury). ERs typically have very long wait times and are the most expensive of the three options for medical care. In addition, ERs are designed to serve the most urgent and critical needs that cannot wait for urgent care or an appointment with a PCP. Knowing when to go and when to wait allows ER providers to serve those most in need in a quicker and more efficient manner.
Urgent care: When you simply need fast service for ailments such as sprains and minor infections, your best bet is urgent care. Urgent care is less expensive than the ER and often has less of a wait time. Urgent care is designed to meet the needs of patients who cannot wait for an appointment with their PCP, but are not experiencing a life-or-death situation.
Your primary care physician (PCP): By far the least expensive option (especially if you see a nurse practitioner or a physicians assistant in your PCP’s office), visits to the PCP are reserved for all non-urgent needs, preventative care, and general questions about your health. Having an ongoing and trusted relationship with a PCP can reduce your reliance on ERs/urgent care and lower your overall healthcare costs.
Medicare Part D
Medicare Part D 2024 Notification
Summary Annual Reports
2019 Pacific Welfare Benefit Plan (Kaiser, VSP, Cascade Centers and The Standard)