Health insurance plans: Five tips about Medicare Advantage

Health insurance plans can be complicated, and the wide array of differences in types of Medicare coverage can make it even more so. Understanding your Medicare options can help you save your money and sanity when it comes to choosing health insurance plans. 

Dr. Eric De Jonge of Washington Hospital Center conducts a Medicare house call at the home of patient Beatrice Adams, in Washington. Health insurance planning is easier (and cheaper) if you understand the basics of Medicare.

Molly Riley/AP/File

September 30, 2014

As a billing manager, I often found many senior patients were misinformed about their Medicare coverage. A lack of basic understanding would translate into delays, higher costs and added stress. Understanding five basic points could help such patients obtain appropriate and prompt care and save their money and sanity.

1. There is more than one Medicare plan.

At the beginning was Medicare. Called “straight” by those in the medical field, this Original Medicare (OM or MCR) consists of:

  • Part A: hospital, nursing and hospice care
  • Part B: physicians, labs, tests and durable medical equipment
  • Part D: prescription drugs (dispensed out of a hospital or office)

Patient involvement is minimal. Health care providers render services, send a bill and get paid quickly, a perfect example of the “Fee for Service” (FFS) process so discussed lately. The federal government administers OM.

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Created a few years ago to lower costs, Medicare Advantage (MA) plans are administered by private insurance carriers. This is also called Part C.

2. Know if you have OM or MA.

Knowing which coverage you have is essential. Assuming and telling the doctor’s office that you have Medicare is incorrect if what you have is an MA plan. In the industry, “Medicare” means Original Medicare. It never means Medicare Advantage.

Once enrolled in a Medicare Advantage (MA) plan, you turn your Original Medicare (OM) benefits over to a private insurance company, which in turn provides coverage, administers your plan and pays your claims.You now have the equivalent of a commercial policy, subject to specific guidelines, requirements and limitations. Your doctor may need a direct contract with this insurer, or authorizations required before services are rendered.

Your Medicare card (with your Social Security number, followed by a letter) is no longer valid for payment of claims; only the one issued by the private insurance carrier is.

3. Conditions of coverage vary.

MA plans are not based on the same easy “get paid easily as long as you follow basic and well-publicized guidelines” protocol used by MCR, although they are required to cover the same benefits (doctor visits, in- and outpatient services, emergency care, some preventive services, tests and labs, mental health care, some physical therapy, limited home, nursing and hospice care, some supplies and drug/alcohol treatments).

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Vision, dental and hearing coverage are not covered under OM. You may purchase these options separately if they are not included in the MA policy.

Note that MA plans may cost more than the premiums you already pay to Medicare.

There are two basic MA plans:

  • HMO patients must receive services through an exclusive network. Subscribers are assigned to a local IPA (medical group) and a PCP (primary care physician) who oversees your overall care and issues mandatory authorizations. Part D coverage must be purchased from the same HMO.
  • Non-HMO (FFS or PPO). This type of plan seems to indicate that restrictions do not apply. Beware: Your final liability may increase if your medical provider has no contract with your health plan or if an authorization was not obtained. The fact that your doctor is a PPO provider does not imply he is willing or able to accept MA patients. PPO plans are by definition commercial. Caution is warranted when using the term “PPO” or “FFS” in the Medicare context.

4. It may cost you.

Too many patients switch to a MA policy only to discover that they cannot continue seeing their physician or they have significantly higher financial liability in January. While there are great reasons to choose an MA plan—prescription discounts, no 20% copay and a limit on the yearly share of cost—other financial concerns may unexpectedly and negatively affect your bottom line.

Most MA plans carry office copays, deductibles and out-of-pocket limits, which must be met before claims are paid in full. Certain services may be subject to unlimited co-insurance liability.

5. Help is available.

To learn more about Medicare choices, costs, coverage and options, visit Medicare.gov. In California, free counseling and information on Medicare is available from HICAP.

In conclusion

MA plans work well for many seniors, but doing research prior to enrolling remains advisable, as your choice is locked in for the next year.

Remember: You can join, switch or leave an MA plan during the open enrollment period between mid-October and early December. You may only join an MA plan during the year if it has a 5-star rating or if you just qualified for Medicare coverage. You may only request disenrollment and return to OM between Jan. 1st and Feb. 14 each year.

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