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Original VS Advantage

Submitted by Guidant Planning on September 21st, 2016

Original Medicare



Original Medicare is just that: the components of the Medicare program signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 30, 1965.

 

Sometimes called “traditional Medicare,” Original Medicare is the fee-for-service program in which the government pays directly for the health care costs you incur. The coverage allows you to see a doctor anywhere in the country (as long as the doctor accepts Medicare).

When it became law, Medicare consisted of two parts – and they’re the same two parts providing coverage to millions of Americans 45 years later:

Medicare Part A – hospital insurance

Medicare Part A is called “hospital insurance” because it provides broad coverage of inpatient expenses, including not only hospital visits, but inpatient care in skilled nursing facilities, hospice care and home health services. The coverage is typically free if you’re 65 and you or your spouse paid Medicare taxes during the years you worked.

 

How to enroll in Part A.

Medicare Part B – medical insurance

While Part A basically covers inpatient services, Medicare Part B is also referred to as “medical insurance” because it covers medically necessary services – including physician and nursing fees, x-rays, diagnostic tests, blood transfusions, chemotherapy, renal dialysis, and some vaccinations – and also preventive services. Enrollees pay a monthly Part B premium, but your other costs depend on whether you’re enrolled in Medicare Part A, or in another Medicare health plan.

How to enroll in Part B.

 

 

Medicare Advantage (Part C) private health plans



Since 1997, Medicare enrollees have had the option of going beyond their Original Medicare coverage by enrolling in Medicare Advantage. As of 2016, there were 17.6 million people enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, accounting for about 30 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries. Managed care programs administered by private health insurers have been available to Medicare beneficiaries since the 1970s, but these programs have grown significantly since the Balanced Budget Act – signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1997 – created the Medicare+Choice program.The Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 changed the name to Medicare Advantage, but the concept is still the same: beneficiaries receive their Medicare benefits through a private health insurance plan, and the health insurance carrier receives payments from the Medicare program to cover beneficiaries’ medical costs.

Medicare Advantage benefits

With Medicare Advantage plans, the essential Medicare Part A and Part Bbenefits – except hospice services – are automatically covered. (If you need hospice services, that’s covered under Original Medicare, even if you’re enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan.) Advantage plans also cover urgent and emergency care services, and in many cases, the private plans cover vision, hearing, health and wellness programs and dental coverage.

Insurance companies offer six different approaches to Medicare Advantage plans, although not all of them are available in all areas: an HMO (health maintenance organization), a PPO (preferred provider organization), an HMOPOS (HMO Point of Service), a PFFS (Private Fee-For-Service), a MSA (medical savings account), or an SNP (special needs plan).

You need to choose your own primary care doctor with an SNP, HMO, or HMOPOS, but not with an MSA, a PPO or a PFFS. HMOs and SNPs are the only plans that require a referral prior to seeing a specialist; and the HMO plan is the only plan in which you must receive care from doctors in that network.

In most instances prescription drug coverage is included in Medicare Advantage plans, with the exception of the MSA plan. If you want to have prescription drug coverage and you’re choosing an HMO or PPO Medicare Advantage plan, it’s important to select a plan that includes prescription coverage (most of them do), because you can’t purchase stand-aloneMedicare Part D (drug coverage) if you have an HMO or PPO Advantage plan. SNPs are required to cover prescriptions. PFFS plans sometimes cover prescriptions, but if you have one that doesn’t, you can supplement it with a Medicare Part D plan.

What do Advantage plans cost?

Even though Advantage enrollees have rights and protections under Medicare guidelines, the services offered and the fees charged by private insurers vary widely. A thorough understanding of how these plans work is key to successful management of your personal health.

Some Advantage plans charge monthly premiums in addition to the Part B premium. Some plans have deductibles, others do not. But all Medicare Advantage plans must limit maximum out-of-pocket (not counting prescriptions) to no more than $6,700 in 2016 (unchanged from 2015). Many plans have out-of-pocket limits below this threshold however, so it’s important to consider the maximum out-of-pocket when comparing policies. The median out-of-pocket amount for Medicare Advantage plans in 2016 is $5,800. This is a 3.5 percent increase from 2015’s median out-of-pocket limit, but it’s still well below the maximum allowed by law.

 

Copayments for doctor’s visits differ dramatically, as do the actual health care services and how often enrollees receive those services. Close attention to the details is called for when assessing these plans.

Who is eligible to join Advantage plans?

If you are 65, live in the designated service area of the specific plan, and already have Part A and Part B, you may join a Medicare Advantage plan. If you have union or employer-sponsored insurance, you may be able to add an Advantage plan, but be forewarned that in some cases you may lose your employer or union coverage when you enroll in an Advantage plan.

You should know that if you enroll in a Medicare Advantage Plan, you will not need to purchase Medigap coverage (and you will not be able to buy the coverage). If you already have Medigap coverage, you can keep the coverage, although it won’t pay for Medicare Advantage plan expenses, such as copayments.

 

If you change your mind and want to switch back to Original Medicare in the future, you’ll be able to do so during the annual Medicare Advantage Disenrollment period (January 1 to February 14, annually), and you’ll have an opportunity to also enroll in a Medicare D plan at that point, regardless of how long you’ve been enrolled in Medicare Advantage. But if you’ve been on the Medicare Advantage plan for more than a year, there is no requirement that Medigap plans be guaranteed issue for people switching back from Medicare Advantage to Original Medicare, so if you’ve got health conditions, it may be expensive or impossible to get another Medigap plan.

If you’ve been in in the Medicare Advantage plan for less than a year, you’re still in your trial period and you do have the option to enroll in a guaranteed issue Medigap plan when you switch back to Original Medicare; if you enrolled in Medicare Advantage when you were first eligible and are switching back to Original Medicare within a year, you can enroll in any Medigap plan sold in your state.  If you dropped your Medigap plan to enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan and you switch back within a year, you can enroll in the Medigap plan you had before, or if it’s no longer available, you can enroll in any plan A, B, C, F, K, or L sold in your state.

Individuals with End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) are generally not eligible for Advantage plans – unless they are already in a Medicare Advantage Plan when they are diagnosed with ESRD.

How has health reform impacted Medicare Advantage?

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act has restructured payments to Medicare Advantage plans in an effort to reduce budget spending on Medicare, but for the last few years the payment changes have either beendelayed or offset by payment increases. When the law was first passed, many people – including the CBO – projected that Medicare Advantage enrollment would drop considerably over the coming years as payment reductions forced plans to offer fewer benefits, higher out-of-pocket costs, and narrower networks.

 

But that has not been the case at all. Medicare Advantage enrollment reached an all-time high in 2016 (17.6 million enrollees, which is more than 30 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries, who totaled about 55.5 million in 2015). There are more plans available nationwide in 2016 than there were in prior years (2,001 in 2016, up from 1,945 in 2015; but down from a high of 2,830 in 2009). The majority of beneficiaries still have at least one zero-premium plan available to them, and the average enrollee can still select from among 19 plans in 2016, up slightly from 18 in 2015 (but this is down significantly from 48 plans in 2009).

How will health reform affect Medicare overall?

2017 Medicare Open Enrollment is October 15th through December 7th.   If you'd like any information on Open Enrollment please contact us.

 

 

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Disclaimer: Be a smart consumer. While medicareresources.org does its best to provide accurate information, you should always consult with your insurance agent, accountant, professional tax advisor or attorney and not rely soley on information you read on the Internet.

**PLEASE NOTE: The information above being provided is strictly as a courtesy. When you link to any of the sites provided here, you are leaving this site. We make no representation as to the completeness or accuracy of information provided at these web sites. Nor is the company liable for any direct or indirect technical or system issues or any consequences arising out of your access to or your use of third-party technologies, web sites, information and programs made available through this web site. When you access one of these web sites, you are leaving our web site and assume total responsibility and risk for your use of the web sites you are linking to.  Registered Representative offering securities through First Allied Securities, Inc. A Registered Broker/Dealer (Member FINRA/SIPC).  Advisory services offered through Guidant Planning, Inc. and First Allied Advisory Services, Inc. Both Registered Investment Advisers.  Guidant Planning, Inc. is not affiliated with First Allied Securities, Inc. and/or First Allied Advisory Services, Inc.  Allen G. Yee CFP®, RFC, CA Insurance License #0747874

 

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