Depending on your income, and given the fact that you are in a low-risk age bracket as well as the fact that you do not participate in any high-risk behaviors (smoking, driving etc.), you might want to opt for a higher deductible plan that will cost less monthly rather than vice-versa (i.e., low/no deductible, high monthly premium).
The insurance company would likely have one of the physicians in their network perform a physical on you so they can get a more thorough assessment of your general health as well as various risk factors that will aid them in setting their rates for you. That being said, a "high deductible" plan might be on the order of $1000-2000 out of pocket per year before the insurance kicks in, so if you need, say, an MRI, you'll likely have to pay for it in full (~$900); if that sounds unpalatable to you (or if you just wouldn't be able to afford it), then you'd likely have to opt for the higher monthly premiums and lower out-of-pocket deductibles. However, it all ultimately comes down to a cost-benefit analysis: whether you end up spending more "up front" under the deductible system, or over the course of time under the higher premium system, is for you to figure out based on your own health and financial situation.
Still, if you're in relatively good health and could afford to swallow an unexpected one-time cost (e.g. minor surgery or a few diagnostic tests), I'd say to try to find a higher-deductible plan within your financial constraints. It's what I'd do, since I generally get sick only once per year and it's usually just a head cold; perhaps you're like me, perhaps not, which is what you have to examine.
This is of course assuming that you won't have benefits at your eventual job, which is something you can't know at the moment. I'd say to see how the job hunt goes and what sort of benefit packages are being offered before you start freaking out over coverage-- at most, assuming you find a job relatively quickly, you'll only be uninsured for a small window of time during which nothing is likely to happen. Still, if you're
that worried (or maybe your parents are worried that they'd foreclose on the house if you got laid up in the hospital, like mine were when I went w/o coverage for one year
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), you can always just get a transitional plan for a few months until you see what's up on the job front. In that case, I'd advise that you opt for a "bare bones" plan, since you'd really only be concerned about the "major" expenses that would result in the event of a catastrophe; further, many of the more expensive plans tend to try to lock you in for a year or have you pay up front for the first 3-6 months, which, depending on your financial situation, you might want to avoid doing.
Hope this helps some.
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I'm sure others have more info, since I really only know the basics, and not much about specific companies' packages etc.