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- GUIDE TO HEALTH INSURANCE FOR PEOPLE
WITH MEDICARE
- * WHAT MEDICARE PAYS AND DOESN'T PAY
- * 10 STANDARD MEDIGAP INSURANCE PLANS
- * YOUR RIGHT TO MEDIGAP INSURANCE
- * TIPS ON SHOPPING FOR PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE
- Developed jointly by the National Association of Insurance
- Commissioners and the Health Care Financing
- Administration of the U.S. Department
- of Health and Human Services.
- Publication No. HCFA-02110
- -NOTICE -
-
- Listed in the back of this booklet are the addresses and
- telephone numbers of each of the state agencies on aging
and
- the state insurance departments. They are available to
assist
- you with any questions you may have about private
insurance to
- supplement Medicare.
- Suspected violations of the laws governing the marketing
- of insurance policies should generally be reported to your
- state insurance department since states are responsible
for the
- regulation of insurance within their boundaries.
- There are, however, federal penalties for certain
- violations concerning Medicare supplement insurance
("Medigap")
- policies. It is, for example, a federal offense for an
- insurance agent to indicate that he or she represents the
- Medicare program or any other federal agency in order to
sell a
- policy. It is also illegal for an insurance company or
agent to
- sell you a policy that duplicates coverage you already
have.
- The federal toll-free telephone number for filing
- complaints is:
- 1-800-638-6833
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- DEFINITIONS OF SOME MEDICARE TERMS
- SOME BASIC THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW
- WHAT IS MEDICARE?
- MEDICARE HOSPITAL INSURANCE (PART A)
- MEDICARE MEDICAL INSURANCE (PART B)
- MEDICARE BENEFIT CHARTS
- TYPES OF PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE
- Medigap
- Your Right to Medigap Coverage
- Medicare SELECT
- Managed Care Plans
- Employer Group Insurance
- Association Group Insurance
- Long-Term Care Insurance
- Hospital Indemnity Insurance
- Specified Disease Insurance
- DO YOU NEED MORE INSURANCE?
- Medicaid Recipients
- Assistance for Low-Income Elderly
- Federally Qualified Health Center Services
- TIPS ON SHOPPING FOR HEALTH INSURANCE
- LIST OF STANDARD MEDIGAP BENEFIT PLANS
- CHART COMPARING STANDARD MEDIGAP BENEFIT PLANS
- INSURANCE POLICY CHECK-LIST
- INSURANCE COUNSELING TELEPHONE NUMBERS
- STATE INSURANCE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES ON AGING
-
- DEFINITIONS OF SOME MEDICARE TERMS
-
- Actual Charge: The amount a physician or supplier actually
- bills for a particular medical service or supply.
- Approved Amount: The amount Medicare determines to be
- reasonable for a service that is covered under Part B of
- Medicare. It may be less than the actual charge. For
physician
- services the approved amount is taken from a national fee
- schedule that assigns a dollar value to all physician
services
- covered by Medicare.
- Assignment: An arrangement whereby a physician or medical
- supplier agrees to accept the Medicare-approved amount as
the
- total charge for services and supplies covered under Part
B.
- Medicare usually pays 80% of the approved amount directly
to
- the provider after the beneficiary meets the annual Part B
- deductible of $100. The beneficiary pays the other 20%.
- Benefit Period: A benefit period is a way of measuring a
- beneficiary's use of hospital and skilled nursing facility
- services covered by Medicare. A benefit period begins the
day
- the beneficiary is hospitalized and ends after the
beneficiary
- has been out of the hospital or skilled nursing facility
for 60
- days in a row. If the beneficiary is hospitalized after 60
- days, a new benefit period begins and most Medicare Part A
- benefits are renewed. There is no limit as to the number
of
- benefit periods a beneficiary can have.
- Coinsurance: The portion or percentage of Medicare's
- approved amounts for covered services that a beneficiary
is
- responsible for paying.
- Deductible: The amount of expense a beneficiary must first
- incur before Medicare begins payment for covered
service's.
- Excess Charge: The difference between the
- Medicare-approved amount for a service or supply and the
actual
- charge, if the actual charge is more than the approved
amount.
- Limiting Charge: The maximum amount a physician may charge
- a Medicare beneficiary for a covered physician service if
the
- physician does not accept assignment of the Medicare
claim. The
- limit is 15% more than the fee schedule amount for
- nonparticipating physicians. Limiting charge information
- appears on Medicare's Explanation of Medicare Benefits (EOMB)
- form.
- Medicare Carrier: An insurance organization under contract
- to the federal government to process Medicare Part B
claims
- from physicians and other health care providers. The names
and
- addresses of the carriers and areas they serve are listed
in
- the back of The Medicare Handbook, available from any
Social
- Security Administration office.
- Medicare Hospital Insurance: This is Part A of Medicare.
- It helps pay for medically necessary inpatient care in a
- hospital, skilled nursing facility or psychiatric
hospital, and
- for hospice and home health care.
- Medicare Medical Insurance: This is Pan B of Medicare.
- This pan helps pay for medically necessary physician
services
- and many other medical services and supplies not covered
by
- Part A.
- Participating Physician and Supplier: A physician or
- supplier who agrees to accept assignment on all Medicare
- claims.
-
- SOME BASIC THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW
-
- If you are like most older Americans covered by Medicare,
- there are aspects of the federal health insurance program
that
- you find complex and confusing. You may be uncertain about
what
- Medicare covers and doesn't cover and how much it pays
toward
- your medical expenses. And, like many other beneficiaries,
you
- want to know what, if any, additional health insurance you
- should buy.
- This booklet will give you a better understanding of your
- Medicare benefits, identify the gaps in your Medicare
coverage,
- and provide tips on shopping for private health insurance
to
- fill those gaps. As a Medicare beneficiary, you probably
are
- already aware that Medicare does not cover all of your
- potential health care costs. For example, you are
responsible
- for Medicare's deductibles and coinsurance and for charges
for
- services not covered by Medicare.
- Few people can afford to pay all of those expenses out of
- their own funds, so many rely on supplemental insurance to
- cover some of the costs. As you seek to limit your
- out-of-pocket costs for health care services, you will
find
- that there are three basic ways of doing so:
- 1. Through the purchase of Medicare supplement insurance,
- which is also called "Medigap" or "MedSup"
insurance;
- 2. By enrolling in a managed care plan, such as a health
- maintenance organization (HMO) that has a contract to
- serve Medicare beneficiaries; and,
- 3. By continuing coverage under an employer-provided
health
- insurance policy, if you are eligible for such protection.
- In addition, for beneficiaries who qualify, some costs may
- be covered by state Medicaid programs (see page 17).
- Each of these ways will be discussed in subsequent
- sections. Special attention will be devoted to employer
plans
- and Medigap insurance, which most Medicare beneficiaries
- purchase.
-
- Insurance Counseling
-
- Although the information in this booklet will help you to
- be a better informed and more careful purchaser, you may
wish
- to obtain additional information before buying health
- insurance. Information about insurance to supplement
Medicare
- is available from various senior citizen advocacy
organizations
- and governmental agencies.
- You first may want to turn to your state government for
- help, as all states now offer insurance counseling in
- one-on-one confidential sessions with trained counselors.
In
- these sessions, you will be able to clarify insurance
issues
- that you find confusing and receive assistance in
evaluating
- your insurance needs. These services are provided at no
charge
- to you.
- The telephone number for your state insurance counseling
- office is listed in the directory of state insurance
- departments and agencies on aging beginning on page 27.
-
- WHAT IS MEDICARE
-
- Before discussing Medigap and the other types of private
- insurance available to supplement Medicare, it will be
helpful
- to review your Medicare benefits and identify the payment
gaps.
- Medicare is a federal health insurance program for people
- 65 or older, people of any age with permanent kidney
failure,
- and certain disabled people under 65. It is administered
by the
- Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) of the U.S.
- Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The Social
- Security Administration, also a part of HHS, provides
- information about the program and handles enrollment.
-
- Two Parts of Medicare
-
- Medicare has two parts--Hospital Insurance (Part A) and
- Medical Insurance (Part B). Part A is financed through
part of
- the Social Security (FICA) tax paid by workers and their
- employers. You do not have to pay a monthly premium for
- Medicare Pan A if you or your spouse is entitled to
benefits
- under either the Social Security or Railroad Retirement
systems
- or worked a sufficient period of time in federal, state,
or
- local government employment to be insured.
- If you do not qualify for premium-free Part A benefits,
- you may purchase the coverage if you are at least age 65
and
- meet certain requirements. You also may buy Part A if you
are
- under age 65, were previously entitled to Medicare under
the
- disability provisions and you still have the same
disabling
- impairment but your disability benefits were terminated
because
- of your work and earnings. If you do not qualify for
- premium-free Part A but had at least 30 quarters of
covered
- employment, the Pan A monthly premium in 1994 is $184. If
you
- had fewer than 30 quarters or no quarters of covered
employment
- the premium is $245 per month in 1994.
- Part B is optional and is offered to all beneficiaries
- when they become entitled to Part A. It also may be
purchased
- by most persons age 65 or over who do not qualify for
- premium-free Part A coverage. The Part B premium, which
most
- Medicare beneficiaries have deducted from their monthly
Social
- Security check, is $41.10 per month in 1994.
- You are automatically enrolled in Part B when you become
- entitled to Part A unless you state that you don't want
it.
- Although you do not have to purchase Part B, it is a good
buy
- because the federal government pays about 75 percent of
the
- program costs.
- Your Medicare card shows the coverage you have [Hospital
- Insurance (Part A), Medical Insurance (Part B), or both]
and
- the date your coverage started. If you only have one part
of
- Medicare, you can get information about getting the other
part
- from any Social Security office.
-
- MEDICARE HOSPITAL INSURANCE BENEFITS (PART A)
-
- When all program requirements are met, Medicare Part A
- helps pay for medically necessary inpatient care in a
hospital,
- skilled nursing facility or psychiatric hospital, and for
- hospice care. In addition, Part A pays the full cost of
- medically necessary home health care and 80 percent of the
- approved cost for wheelchairs, hospital beds, and other
durable
- medical equipment (DME) supplied under the home health
care
- benefit.
-
- Benefit Periods
-
- Medicare Part A hospital and skilled nursing facility
- benefits are paid on the basis of benefit periods. A
benefit
- period begins the first day you receive a Medicare-covered
- service in a qualified hospital. It ends when you have
been out
- of a hospital or skilled nursing or rehabilitation
facility for
- 60 days in a row. It also ends if you remain in a skilled
- nursing facility but do not receive any skilled care there
for
- 60 days in a row.
- If you enter a hospital again after 60 days, a new benefit
- period begins. With each new benefit period, all Part A
- hospital and skilled nursing facility benefits are renewed
- except for any lifetime reserve days or psychiatric
hospital
- benefits that were used. There is no limit to the number
of
- benefit periods you can have for hospital or skilled
nursing
- facility care.
-
- Inpatient Hospital Care
-
- If you are hospitalized, Medicare will pay all charges for
- covered hospital services during the first 60 days of a
benefit
- period except for the deductible. The Pan A deductible in
1994
- is $696 per benefit period. You are responsible for the
- deductible. In addition to the deductible, you are
responsible
- for a share of the daily costs if your hospital stay lasts
more
- than 60 days. For the 61st through the 90th day, Part A
pays
- for all covered services except for coinsurance of $174 a
day
- in 1994. You are responsible for the coinsurance.
- Under Part A, you also have a lifetime reserve of 60 days
- for inpatient hospital care. These lifetime reserve days
may be
- used whenever you are in the hospital for more than 90
- consecutive days. When a reserve day is used, Part A pays
for
- all covered services except for coinsurance of $348 a day
in
- 1994. Again, the coinsurance is your responsibility. Once
used,
- reserve days are not renewed.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Inpatient Hospital Coverage:
-
- * You pay $696 deductible on first admission to hospital
in
- each benefit period.
- * You pay $174 daily coinsurance for days 61 through 90.
- * No coverage beyond 90 days in any benefit period unless
- you have "lifetime reserve" days available and
use them.
- * You pay $348 daily coinsurance for each lifetime reserve
- day used.
- * No coverage for the first 3 pints of whole blood or
units
- of packed cells used in each year in connection with
- covered services. To the extent the 3-pint blood
- deductible is met under Part B, it does not have to be met
- under Part A.
- * No coverage for a private hospital room, unless
medically
- necessary, or for a private duty nurse.
- * No coverage for personal convenience items, such as a
- telephone or television in a hospital room.
- * No coverage for care that is not medically necessary or
- for non-emergency care in a hospital not certified by
- Medicare.
- * No coverage for care received outside the U. S. and its
- territories, except under limited circumstances in Canada
- and Mexico.
-
- Skilled Nursing Facility Care
-
- A skilled nursing facility (SNF) is a special kind of
- facility that primarily furnishes skilled nursing and
- rehabilitation services. It may be a separate facility or
a
- distinct part of another facility, such as a hospital.
Medicare
- benefits are payable only if you require daily skilled
care
- which, as a practical matter, can only be provided in a
skilled
- nursing facility on an inpatient basis, and the care is
- provided in a facility certified by Medicare. Medicare
will not
- pay for your stay if the services you receive are
primarily
- personal care or custodial services, such as assistance in
- walking, getting in and out of bed, eating, dressing,
bathing
- and taking medicine.
- To qualify for Medicare coverage for skilled nursing
- facility care, you must have been in a hospital at least
three
- consecutive days (not counting the day of discharge)
before
- entering a skilled nursing facility. You must be admitted
to
- the facility for the same condition for which you were
treated
- in the hospital and the admission generally must be within
30
- days of your discharge from the hospital. Your physician
must
- certify that you need, and receive, skilled nursing or
skilled
- rehabilitation services on a daily basis.
- Medicare can help pay for up to 100 days of skilled care
- in a skilled nursing facility during a benefit period. All
- covered services for the first 20 days of care are fully
paid
- by Medicare. All covered services for the next 80 days are
paid
- by Medicare except for a daily coinsurance amount. The
daily
- coinsurance in 1994 is $87. You are responsible for the
- coinsurance. If you require more than 100 days of care in
a
- benefit period, you are responsible for all charges
beginning
- with the 101st day.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Skilled Nursing Facility, Coverage:
-
- * You pay $87 daily coinsurance for days 21 through 100 in
- each benefit period.
- * No coverage beyond 100 days in a benefit period.
- * No coverage for care in a nursing home, or in a SNF not
- certified by Medicare, or for just custodial care in a
- Medicare-certified SNF.
- * No coverage for 3-pint blood deductible (see list of
gaps
- under inpatient hospital care).
-
- Home Health Care
-
- Medicare fully covers medically necessary home health
- visits if you are homebound, including parttime or
intermittent
- skilled nursing services. A Medicare-certified home health
- agency can also furnish the services of physical and
speech
- therapists. Should you require speech-language pathology,
- physical therapy, continuing occupational therapy or
- intermittent skilled nursing services, are confined to
your
- home, and are under the care of a physician, Medicare can
also
- pay for medical supplies, necessary part-time or
intermittent
- home health aide services, occupational therapy, and
medical
- social services. Coverage is also provided for a portion
of the
- cost of wheelchairs, hospital beds and other durable
medical
- equipment (DME) provided under a plan-of-care set up and
- periodically reviewed by a physician.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Home Health Coverage
-
- * No coverage for full-time nursing care.
- * No coverage for drugs or for meals delivered to your
home
- * You pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount for durable
- medical equipment, plus charges in excess of the approved
- amount on unassigned claims.
- * No coverage for homemaker services that are primarily to
- assist you in meeting personal care or housekeeping needs.
-
- Hospice Care
-
- Medicare beneficiaries certified as terminally ill may
- choose to receive hospice care rather than regular
Medicare
- benefits for their terminal illness. Part A can pay for
two
- 90-day hospice benefit periods, a subsequent period of 30
days,
- and a subsequent extension of unlimited duration. If you
enroll
- in a Medicare-certified hospice program, you will receive
- medical and support services necessary for symptom
management
- and pain relief. When these services which are most often
- provided in your home-are furnished by a
Medicare-certified
- hospice program, the coverage includes: physician
services,
- nursing care, medical appliances and supplies (including
drugs
- for symptom management and pain relief), short-term
inpatient
- care, counseling, therapies, home health aide and
homemaker
- services.
- You do not have to pay Medicare's deductibles and
- coinsurance for services and supplies furnished under the
- hospice benefit. You must pay only limited charges for
- outpatient drugs and inpatient respite care. In the event
you
- require medical services for a condition unrelated to the
- terminal illness, regular Medicare benefits are available.
When
- regular benefits are used, you are responsible for the
- applicable Medicare deductible and coinsurance amounts.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Hospice Coverage:
-
- * You pay limited charges for inpatient respite care and
- outpatient drugs.
- * You pay deductibles and coinsurance amounts when regular
- Medicare benefits are used for treatment of a condition
- other than the terminal illness.
-
- Psychiatric Hospital Care
-
- Part A helps pay for up to 190 days of inpatient care in a
- Medicare-participating psychiatric hospital in your
lifetime.
- Once you have used 190 days (or have used fewer than 190
days
- but have exhausted your inpatient hospital coverage), Part
A
- doesn't pay for any more inpatient care in a psychiatric
- hospital. However, psychiatric care in general hospitals,
- rather than in free-standing psychiatric hospitals, is not
- subject to this 190-day limit. Inpatient psychiatric care
in a
- general hospital is treated the same as other Medicare
- inpatient hospital care. If you are a patient in a
psychiatric
- hospital on the first day of your entitlement to Medicare,
- there are additional limitations on the number of hospital
days
- that Medicare will pay for.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Inpatient Psychiatric Hospital Care:
-
- * No coverage for care after you have received 190 days of
- such specialized treatment in your lifetime (even if you
- have not yet exhausted your inpatient hospital coverage).
-
- MEDICARE MEDICAL INSURANCE (PART B) BENEFITS
-
- Part B helps pay for medically necessary physician
- services no matter where you receive them--at home, in the
- doctor's office, in a clinic, in a nursing home, or in a
- hospital. It also covers related medical services and
supplies,
- medically necessary outpatient hospital services, X-rays
and
- laboratory tests. Coverage is also provided for certain
- ambulance services and the use at home of durable medical
- equipment, such as wheelchairs and hospital beds.
- Additionally, Part B covers medically necessary physical
- therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language
pathology
- services in a doctor's office, as an outpatient, or in
your
- home. Mental health services are covered as are mammograms
and
- Pap smears. And if you qualify for home health care but do
not
- have Part A, then Part B pays for all covered home health
- visits.
- Outpatient prescription drugs generally are not covered by
- Part B. The exceptions include certain drugs furnished to
- hospice enrollees, non-self administrable drugs provided
as
- part of a physician's services, and special drugs, such as
- drugs furnished during the first year after an organ
- transplantation, erythropoetin for home dialysis patients,
and
- certain oral cancer drugs.
- When you use your Part B benefits, you will be required to
- pay the first $100 (the annual deductible) each calendar
year.
- The deductible must represent charges for services and
supplies
- covered by Medicare. It also must be based on the Medicare
- approved amounts, not the actual charges billed by your
- physician or medical supplier.
- After you meet the deductible, Part B generally pays 80
- percent of the Medicare-approved amount for covered
services
- you receive the rest of the year. You are responsible for
the
- other 20 percent. If you require home health services, you
do
- not have to pay a deductible or coinsurance. You do,
however,
- have to pay 20 percent of the Medicare-approved amount for
any
- durable medical equipment! supplied under the Medicare
home
- health benefit.
- You may also have other out-of-pocket costs under Part B
- if your physician or medical supplier does not accept
- assignment of your Medicare claim and charges more than
- Medicare's approved amount. The difference to be paid is
called
- the "excess charge" or "balance
billing." You should be aware,
- however, that there are certain charge limitations
mandated by
- federal law (discussed below) and that some states also
limit
- physician charges.
-
- Medicare-Approved Amount
-
- The Medicare-approved amount for physician services
- covered by Part B is based on a national fee schedule. The
- schedule assigns a dollar value to each physician service
based
- on work, practice costs and malpractice insurance costs.
Under
- this payment system, each time you go to a physician for a
- service covered by Medicare, the amount Medicare will
recognize
- for that service will be taken from the national fee
schedule.
- Medicare generally pays 80 percent of that amount.
- Because you cannot tell in advance whether the approved
- amount and the actual charge for covered services and
supplies
- will be the same, always ask your physicians and medical
- suppliers whether they accept assignment of Medicare
claims.
-
- Accepting Assignment
-
- Those who take assignment on a Medicare claim agree to
- accept the Medicare-approved amount as payment in full.
They
- are paid directly by Medicare, except for the deductible
and
- coinsurance amounts that you must pay.
- For example, for your first annual visit, if you go to a
- participating physician, or if you go to a
nonparticipating
- physician who accepts assignment, and the
Medicare-approved
- amount for the service you receive is $200, you will be
billed
- $120: $100 for the annual deductible plus 20 percent of
the
- remaining $100, or $20. Medicare would pay the other $80.
- Having met the deductible for the year, the next time you
used
- Part B services furnished by a physician or medical
supplier
- who accepts assignment, you would be responsible for only
20
- percent of the Medicare-approved amount.
- Physicians and suppliers who sign Medicare participation
- agreements accept assignment on all Medicare claims. Their
- names and addresses are listed in The Medicare
Participating
- Physician/Supplier Directory, which is distributed to
senior
- citizen organizations, all Social Security and Railroad
- Retirement Board offices, hospitals, and all state and
area
- offices of the Administration on Aging.
- It also is available free by writing or calling the
- insurance company that processes Medicare Pan B claims for
your
- area. Called a Medicare "carrier," the company's
name, address
- and telephone number are listed in the back of The
Medicare
- Handbook, available from any Social Security office.
- Even if your physician or supplier does not participate in
- Medicare, ask before receiving any services or supplies
whether
- he or she will accept assignment of your Medicare claim.
Many
- physicians and suppliers accept assignment on a
case-by-case
- basis. If your physician or supplier will not accept
- assignment, you are responsible for paying all permissible
- charges.
- Medicare will then reimburse you its share of the approved
- amount for the services or supplies you received.
Regardless of
- whether your physician or supplier accepts assignment,
they are
- required to file your Medicare claim for you.
- In certain situations nonparticipating providers of
- services are required by law to accept assignment. For
- instance, all physicians and qualified laboratories must
accept
- assignment for Medicare-covered clinical diagnostic
laboratory
- tests. Physicians also must accept assignment for covered
- services provided to beneficiaries with incomes low enough
to
- qualify for Medicaid payment of their Medicare
cost-sharing
- requirements (see page 18).
-
- Physician Charge Limits
-
- While physicians who do not accept assignment of a
- Medicare claim can charge more than physicians who do,
there is
- a limit as to the amount they can charge you for services
- covered by Medicare. Under the law, they are not permitted
to
- charge more than 115 percent of the Medicare-approved
amount
- for the service. Physicians who knowingly, willfully, and
- repeatedly charge more than the legal limit are subject to
- sanctions. If you think you have been overcharged, or you
want
- to know what the limiting charge is for a particular
service,
- contact the Medicare carrier for your area. Limiting
charge
- information also appears on the Explanation of Medicare
- Benefits (EOMB) form that you generally receive from the
- Medicare carrier when you go to a physician for a
- Medicare-covered service. You do not have to pay charges
that
- exceed the legal limit.
- If you think your physician has exceeded the charge limit,
- you should contact the physician and ask for a reduction
in the
- charge, or a refund, if you have paid more than the charge
- limit. If you cannot resolve the issue with the physician,
you
- can call your Medicare carrier and ask for assistance.
-
- More Charge Limits
-
- Another federal law requires physicians who do not accept
- assignment for elective surgery to give you a written
estimate
- of your costs before the surgery if the total charge will
be
- $500 or more. If the physician did not give you a written
- estimate, you are entitled to a refund of any amount you
paid
- in excess of the Medicare-approved amount. Any
nonparticipating
- physician who provides you with services that he or she
knows
- or has reason to believe Medicare will determine to be
- medically unnecessary and thus will not pay for, is
required to
- so notify you in writing before performing the service. If
- written notice is not given, and you did not know that
Medicare
- would not pay, you cannot be held liable to pay for that
- service. However, if you did receive written notice and
signed
- an agreement to pay for the service, you will be held
liable to
- pay.
-
- Gaps in Medicare Coverage for Doctors and Medical
Suppliers
- * You pay $100 annual deductible.
- * Generally, you pay 20% coinsurance.
- * You pay legally permissible charges in excess of the
- Medicare-approved amount for unassigned claims (see page
- 6).
- * You pay 50% of approved charges for most outpatient
mental
- health treatment.
- * You pay all charges in excess of Medicare's maximum
yearly
- limit of $900 for independent physical or occupational
- therapists.
- * No coverage for most services that are not reasonable
and
- necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of an illness or
- injury.
- * No coverage for most self-administerable prescription
- drugs or immunizations, except for pneumococcal, influenza
- and hepatitis B vaccinations.
- * No coverage for routine physicals and other screening
- services, except for mammograms and Pap smears.
- * Generally, no coverage for dental care or dentures.
- * No coverage for acupuncture treatment.
- * No coverage for hearing aids or routine hearing loss
- examinations.
- * No coverage for care received outside the United States
- and its territories, except under limited circumstances in
- Canada and Mexico.
- * No coverage for routine foot care except when a medical
- condition affecting the lower limbs (such as diabetes)
- requires care by a medical professional.
- * No coverage for services of naturopaths, Christian
Science
- practitioners, immediate relatives, or charges imposed by
- members of your household.
- * No coverage for the first 3 pints of whole blood or
units
- of packed cells used in each year in connection with
- covered services. To the extent the 3-pint blood
- deductible is met under Part A, it does not have to be met
- under Part B.
- * No coverage for routine eye examinations or eyeglasses,
- except prosthetic lenses, if needed, after cataract
- surgery.
-
- Medicare Benefit Charts
-
- The charts on pages 8 and 9 describe Medicare benefits
- only. The "You Pay" column itemizes expenses you
are
- responsible for and must pay out of your own pocket or
through
- the purchase of some type of private insurance as
described in
- this booklet.
- [Graphic Omitted]
- [Graphic Omitted]
-
- TYPES OF PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE
-
- Whether you need health insurance in addition to Medicare
- is a decision that only you can make. As you saw from the
- review of your Medicare benefits, Medicare does not offer
- complete health insurance protection. Private health
insurance
- can help fill many of the gaps. But before buying
insurance to
- supplement your Medicare benefits, make sure you need it.
Not
- everyone does (see page 17). In general it is advisable to
buy
- the additional protection that private health insurance
can
- provide. If you decide to buy supplemental insurance, shop
- carefully and buy a policy that offers the kind of
additional
- help you think you need most.
- A variety of private insurance policies is available to
- help pay for medical expenses, services and supplies that
- Medicare covers only partly or not at all. The basic types
of
- policies include:
- 1. Medigap, which pays some of the amounts that Medicare
does
- not pay for covered services and may pay for certain
- services not covered by Medicare.
- 2. Managed care plans [these include health maintenance
- organizations (HMOs) and competitive medical plans
- (CMPs)], from which you purchase health care services
- directly for a fixed monthly premium;
- 3. Continuation or conversion of an employer-provided or
- other policy you have when you reach 65;
- 4. Nursing home or long-term care policies, which pay cash
- amounts for each day of covered nursing home or at-home
- care;
- 5. Hospital indemnity policies, which pay only when you
need
- treatment for the insured disease.
- 6. Specified disease policies, which pay only when you
need
- treatment for the insured disease.
-
- Medigap
-
- Medigap insurance is regulated by federal and state law
- and must be clearly identified as Medicare supplement
- insurance. Unlike other types of health insurance, it is
- designed specifically to supplement Medicare's benefits by
- filling in some of the gaps in Medicare coverage.
- To make it easier for consumers to comparison shop for
- Medigap insurance, nearly all states, U.S. territories,
and the
- District of Columbia have adopted regulations that limit
the
- number of different Medigap policies that can be sold in
any of
- those jurisdictions to no more than 10 standard benefit
plans.
- The plans, which have letter designations ranging from
"A"
- through "J", were developed by the National
Association of
- Insurance Commissioners and incorporated into state and
federal
- laws. See pages 22-24 for descriptions and comparisons of
the
- 10 plans.
- Plan A of the 10 standard Medigap plans is the
"basic"
- benefit package. Each of the other nine plans includes the
- basic package plus a different combination of benefits.
The
- plans cover specific expenses either not covered or not
fully
- covered by Medicare, with "A" being the most
basic policy and
- "J" the most comprehensive. Insurers are not
permitted to
- change the combination of benefits in any of the plans or
to
- change the letter designations.
- Each state must allow the sale of Plan A, and all Medigap
- insurers must make Plan A available. Insurers are not
required
- to offer any of the other nine plans, but most offer
several
- plans, and some offer all 10. Insurers can independently
decide
- which of the nine optional plans they will sell as long as
the
- plans they select have been approved for sale in the state
in
- which they are to be offered.
- Some states have limited the number of plans available in
- the state. Delaware does not permit Plans C, F, G and H to
be
- sold in the state. Pennsylvania and Vermont do not permit
the
- sale of Plans F, G and I. (As this guide was being
prepared for
- printing, however, Pennsylvania was considering a proposal
that
- would permit the sale of all 10 plans.)
- Residents of Minnesota, Massachusetts and Wisconsin will
- find that their Medigap plans are different than those
sold in
- other states. This is because those states had alternative
- Medigap standardization programs in effect before the
federal
- legislation standardizing Medigap was enacted. Therefore,
they
- were not required to change their benefit plans. If you
live in
- Minnesota, Massachusetts or Wisconsin, you should contact
the
- state insurance department to find out what Medigap
coverage is
- available to you.
- The only areas where standardization is not in effect are
- Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern
- Mariana Islands.
- Comparing Medigap Plans: To make it easier for consumers
- to compare plans and premiums, the same format, language,
and
- definitions must be used in describing the benefits of
each of
- the plans. A uniform chart and outline of coverage also
must be
- used by the insurer to summarize those benefits for you.
- As you shop for a Medigap policy, keep in mind that each
- company's products are alike, so they are competing on
service,
- reliability and price. Compare benefits and premiums and
be
- satisfied that the insurer is reputable before buying. And
in
- selecting the benefits that meet your needs, remember that
- Medicare pays only for services it determines to be
medically
- necessary and only the amount it determines to be
reasonable.
- Medigap policies pay most, if not all, Medicare
- coinsurance amounts and may provide coverage for
Medicare's
- deductibles. Some of the 10 standard plans pay for
services not
- covered by Medicare and some pay for charges in excess of
- Medicare's approved amount. Look for the plan that best
meets
- your needs.
- All standard Medigap plans must have a loss ratio of at
- least 65 percent for individual policies and 75 percent
for
- group policies. This means that on average either 65 cents
or
- 75 cents of each premium dollar goes for benefits.
- Unlike some types of health coverage that restrict where
- and from whom you can receive care, Medigap policies
generally
- pay the same supplemental benefits regardless of your
choice of
- health care provider. If Medicare pays for a service,
wherever
- provided, the standard Medigap policy must pay its regular
- share of benefits. The only exception is Medicare SELECT
- insurance, discussed on page 13.
- Besides the standardized benefit plans, federal law
- permits states to allow an insurer to add "new and
innovative
- benefits" to a standardized plan that otherwise
complies with
- applicable standards. Any such new or innovative benefits
must
- be cost-effective, not otherwise available in the
marketplace,
- and offered in a manner that is consistent with the goal
of
- simplification. Check with your state insurance department
to
- find out whether such benefits are available in your
state.
- Your Right To Medigap Coverage: If you are 65 or older,
- state and federal laws guarantee that for a period of 6
months
- from the date you first enroll in Medicare Part B, you
have a
- right to buy the Medigap policy of your choice regardless
of
- your health conditions.
- During this 6-month open enrollment period, you have the
- choice of any of the different Medigap policies sold by
any
- insurer doing Medigap business in your state. The company
- cannot deny or condition the issuance or effectiveness, or
- discriminate in the pricing of a policy, because of your
- medical history, health status, or claims experience. The
- company can, however, impose the same preexisting
condition
- restrictions (see page 19) that it applies to Medigap
policies
- sold outside the open enrollment period.
- Many individuals are enrolled automatically in Pan
- B as soon as they rum 65, or they sign up during an
initial
- 7-month enrollment period that begins 3 months before they
turn
- 65. If you are in this group, your Part B coverage
generally
- starts in the month you turn 65 or shortly thereafter,
- depending on when you applied for Part B. Your Medigap
open
- enrollment period starts as soon as your Part B coverage
- starts.
- Others may delay their enrollment in Part B. For example,
- if after turning 65, you continue to work and choose to be
- continuously covered by an employer insurance plan, or if
you
- are continuously covered under a spouse's employment
related
- insurance instead of Medicare Part B, you will have a
special
- 7-month enrollment period for Part B. It begins with the
month
- your or your spouse's work ends or when you are no longer
- covered under the employer plan, whichever comes first.
Your
- 6-month Medigap open enrollment period starts when your
Part B
- coverage begins.
- If you are covered under an employer group health plan
- when you become eligible for Part B at age 65, carefully
- consider your options. Once you enroll in Part B the
6-month
- Medigap open enrollment period starts and cannot be
extended or
- repeated.
- If you cannot defer Part B enrollment as described above,
- but are 65 or older and are eligible for Part B but never
- signed up for it, you may buy Part B during Medicare's
annual
- general enrollment period. It runs from January 1 through
March
- 31. If you sign-up during an open enrollment period, both
your
- Part B coverage and Medigap open enrollment period begin
the
- following July 1.
- Your Medicare card shows the effective dates for your Part
- A and/or Part B coverage. To figure whether you are in
your
- Medigap open enrollment period, add 6 months to the
effective
- date of your Part B coverage. If the date is in the future
and
- you are at least 65, you are eligible for open enrollment.
If
- the date is in the past, you are not eligible.
- If you are under age 65, disabled, and enrolled in
- Medicare Part B, you are not eligible for Medigap open
- enrollment unless your state requires open enrollment for
- persons under 65 who qualify for Medicare because of a
- disability. Moreover, unless your state requires
otherwise, you
- will not be eligible for the Medigap open enrollment
period
- when you turn 65 because you will not be enrolling in Part
B
- for the first time.
- Older Medigap Policies: Current federal requirements
- generally do not apply to Medigap policies in force in a
state
- before the requirements which took effect in that state in
- 1992. Depending on which state you live in, you will not
have
- to switch to one of the 10 standard plans if you have an
older
- policy that is guaranteed renewable.
- Some states, however, have specific requirements that
- affect existing non-standard policies. For example, some
states
- require or permit insurers to convert older policies to
the
- standardized plans. Check with your state insurance
department
- to find out what state-specific requirements are in force.
Even
- if you are not required to convert an older policy, you
may
- want to consider switching to one of the standardized
Medigap
- plans if it is to your advantage and an insurer is willing
to
- sell you one.
- If you do switch, you will not be allowed to go back to
- the old policy. Before switching, compare benefits and
- premiums, and determine if there are waiting periods for
any of
- the benefits in the new policy. Some of the older policies
may
- provide superior coverage, especially for prescription
drugs
- and extended skilled nursing care.
- If you had the old Medigap policy at least 6 months and
- you decide to switch, the new policy is not permitted to
impose
- a waiting period for a preexisting condition if you
satisfied a
- waiting period for a similar benefit under your old
policy. If,
- however, a benefit is included in the new policy that was
not
- in the old policy, a waiting period of up to 6 months
unless
- prohibited by your state may be applied to that particular
- benefit.
- Because it is unlawful for anyone to sell you insurance
- that duplicates coverage you already have, and because you
do
- not need more than one Medigap policy, you must sign a
- statement that you intend to replace your current policy
and
- will not keep both policies. Do not cancel the old policy
until
- the new one is in force and you have decided to keep it
(see
- "Free Look," page 20).
- Medigap Insurance Defined: Under state and federal laws,
- Medigap policies are policies designed to supplement your
- Medicare benefits. They must provide specific benefits
that
- pay, within limits, some or all of the costs of services
either
- not covered or not fully covered by Medicare. The
definition
- does not include all insurance products that may help you
cover
- out-of-pocket costs. For example, neither a health plan
offered
- by a company for current or former employees, nor by a
labor
- organization for current or former members, is Medigap
- insurance. Nor are limited benefit plans such as hospital
- indemnity insurance. They do not qualify because they are
not
- required. to provide the same benefits that the 10
standard
- Medigap plans must provide.
- Similarly, coverage provided to individuals enrolled in
- managed care plans, such as health maintenance
organizations
- (HMOs) under contracts or agreements with the federal
- government, does not meet the definition of Medigap
insurance
- even though some of the coverage may be similar. On the
other
- hand, an HMO's supplemental insurance product sold to an
- individual Medicare beneficiary who is not enrolled under
- either an employer plan or a federal contract or
agreement,
- does qualify as Medigap insurance.
- Medicare SELECT. A Medicare supplement health insurance
- product called "Medicare SELECT" is permitted to
be sold in
- Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana,
- Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Noah Dakota,
- Ohio, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin. Medicare SELECT,
which
- may be offered in the designated states by insurance
companies
- and HMOs, is the same as standard Medigap insurance in
nearly
- all respects. If you buy a Medicare SELECT policy, you are
- buying one of the 10 standard Medigap plans (see page 22).
- The only difference between Medicare SELECT and standard
- Medigap insurance is that Medicare SELECT policies will
only
- pay or provide full supplemental benefits if covered
services
- are obtained through specified health care professionals
and
- facilities. Medicare SELECT policies are expected to have
lower
- premiums because of this limitation. The specified health
care
- professionals and facilities, called "preferred
providers," are
- selected by the insurance company or HMO. Each issuer of a
- Medicare SELECT policy makes arrangements with its own
network
- of preferred providers.
- If you have a Medicare SELECT policy, each time you
- receive covered services from a preferred provider,
Medicare
- will pay its share of the approved charges and the insurer
will
- pay or provide the full supplemental benefits provided for
in
- the policy. Medicare SELECT insurers must also pay
supplemental
- benefits for emergency health care furnished by providers
- outside the preferred provider network. In general,
Medicare
- SELECT policies deny payment or pay less than the full
benefit
- if you go outside the network for non-emergency services.
- Medicare, however, will still pay its share of approved
charges
- if the services you receive outside the network are
services
- covered by Medicare.
- Medicare SELECT will be evaluated through 1994 to
- determine if it should be continued and made available
- throughout the nation. Companies selling Medicare SELECT
- policies are required to provide for the continuation of
- coverage if the policies are discontinued. If the program
is
- not extended, Medicare SELECT policyholders will have the
- option to purchase any standard Medigap policy that the
- insurance company or HMO offers, if in fact it issues
Medigap
- insurance other than Medicare SELECT. To the extent
possible,
- the replacement policy would have to provide similar
benefits.
- Carrier Filing of Medigap Claims. Under certain
- circumstances, when you receive medical services covered
by
- both Medicare and your Medigap insurance, you may not have
to
- file a separate claim with your Medigap insurer in order
to
- have payment made directly to your physician or medical
- supplier. By law, the Medicare carrier that processes
Medicare
- claims for your area must send your claim to the Medigap
- insurer for payment when the following three conditions
are met
- for a Medicare Part B claim:
- 1. Your physician or supplier must have signed a
- participation agreement with Medicare to accept assignment
- of Medicare claims for all patients who are Medicare
- beneficiaries:
- 2. Your policy must be a Medigap policy: and
- 3. You must instruct your physician to indicate on the
- Medicare claim form that you wish payment of Medigap
- benefits to be made to the participating physician or
- supplier. Your physician will put your Medigap policy
- number on the Medicare claim form.
- When these conditions are met, the Medicare carrier will
- process the Medicare claim, send the claim to the Medigap
- insurer and generally send you an Explanation of Medicare
- Benefits (EOMB). Your Medigap insurer will pay benefits
- directly to your physician or medical supplier and send
you a
- notice that they have done so. If the insurer refuses to
pay
- the physician directly when these three conditions are
met, you
- should report this to your state insurance department. For
more
- information on Medigap claim filing by the carrier,
contact the
- Medicare carrier. Look in The Medicare Handbook for the
name
- and telephone number of the carrier for your area.
-
- Managed Care Plans That Contract With Medicare
-
- Managed care plans, also called coordinated care and
- prepaid plans, include health maintenance organizations
(HMOs)
- and competitive medical plans (CMPs). They might be
thought of
- as a combination insurance company and doctor/hospital.
Like an
- insurance company, they cover health care costs in return
for a
- monthly premium, and like a doctor or hospital, they
arrange
- for health care.
- As a Medicare beneficiary, you can choose how you will
- receive hospital, doctor, and other health care services
- covered by Medicare. You can receive them either through
the
- traditional fee-for-service delivery system or through a
- managed care plan that has a contract with Medicare. If
you
- choose fee-for-service care, you should consider
purchasing
- Medigap insurance.
- If you enroll in a Medicare-contracting HMO or CMP, you
- will not need a Medigap policy. In fact, insurers are
- prohibited from issuing you one because it would duplicate
your
- HMO or CMP benefits. If you have a Medigap policy and
decide to
- enroll in a plan, you will be asked to provide an
assurance
- that you will give up the Medigap policy.
- Should you enroll in a managed care plan and later
- disenroll and return to fee-for-service care, you likely
will
- be able to buy a Medigap policy, but you may not get the
- policy; of your choice, especially if you have a health
- problem. On the other hand, both disabled and aged
Medicare
- beneficiaries generally may enroll in a
Medicare-contracting
- HMO or CMP without regard to any health problems they may
have.
- For this and other reasons, managed care can be an
attractive
- option for many beneficiaries.
- A managed care plan generally arranges with a network of
- health care providers (doctors, hospitals, skilled nursing
- facilities, etc.) to offer comprehensive, coordinated
medical
- services to plan members on a prepaid basis. If you enroll
in
- an HMO or CMP with a Medicare contract; services usually
must
- be obtained from the professionals and facilities that are
part
- of the plan, except in a medical emergency.
- The plan must provide or arrange for all Part A and B
- services (if you are covered under both parts of
Medicare).
- Some plans also provide benefits beyond what Medicare
covers,
- such as preventive care, prescription drugs, dental care,
- hearing aids and eyeglasses.
- Medicare makes a monthly payment to the plan to cover
- Medicare's share of the cost of the services you receive.
- Additionally, most plans charge enrollees a monthly
premium and
- nominal copayments as services are used. Usually there are
no
- other charges--no matter how many times you visit the
doctor,
- are hospitalized, or use other covered services.
Medicare's
- deductibles and coinsurance do not apply to beneficiaries
- enrolled in plans with Medicare contracts.
- If you enroll in an HMO or a CMP that has a
"risk"
- contract with Medicare, Medicare will not pay for
non-emergency
- services you receive from providers outside of the HMO or
CMP.
- That is, you must receive all your health care benefits
(except
- in an emergency) from the HMO or CMP in order to be
covered.
- If you enroll in a plan that has a "cost"
contract with
- Medicare, you can receive covered services either through
the
- plan or outside the plan. If you go outside the plan for
- non-emergency services, Medicare will still pay but the
plan
- will not. You would be responsible for the same charges
that
- you would be liable for if you were only covered by
Medicare,
- but you would no longer have a Medigap policy to cover
those
- charges.
- You are eligible to enroll in a managed care plan with a
- Medicare contract if you live in the plan's service area,
are
- enrolled in Medicare Part B, do not have permanent kidney
- failure, and have not elected the Medicare hospice
benefit. The
- plan must enroll Medicare beneficiaries in the order of
- application, without health screening, during at least one
open
- enrollment period each year.
- Before joining a plan, be sure to read the plan's
- membership materials carefully to learn your rights and
the
- nature and extent of your coverage. If you live in an area
that
- is served by more than one managed care plan, compare
benefits,
- costs and other features to determine which plan meets
your
- needs. Also, determine which type of contract the plan has
with
- Medicare.
-
- Group Insurance
-
- There are two principal sources of group insurance:
- employers and voluntary associations.
- Employer Group Insurance for Retirees. Many people have
- private insurance when they reach age 65 that often is
- purchased through their or their spouse's current employer
or
- union membership. If you have such coverage, find out if
it can
- be continued when you or your spouse retires. Check the
price
- and the benefits, including benefits for your spouse.
- Group health insurance that is continued after retirement
- usually has the advantage of having no waiting periods or
- exclusions for preexisting conditions, and the coverage is
- usually based on group premium rates, which may be lower
than
- the premium rates for individually purchased policies. One
note
- of caution, however. If you have a spouse under 65 who was
- covered under the prior policy, make sure you know what
effect
- your continued coverage will have on his or her insurance
- protection.
- Furthermore, since employer group insurance policies do
- not have to comply with the federal minimum benefit
standards
- for Medigap policies, it is important to determine what
- coverage your specific retirement policy provides. While
the
- policy may not provide the same benefits as a Medigap
policy,
- it may offer other benefits such as prescription drug
coverage
- and routine dental care.
- Special Rules for Working People Age 65 or Over. If you
- are 65 or over and you or your spouse works, Medicare may
be
- secondary payer to any employer group health plan (EGHP)
- coverage you have. This means that the employer plan pays
first
- on your hospital and medical bills. If the employer plan
does
- not pay all of your expenses, Medicare may pay secondary
- benefits for Medicare-covered services to supplement the
amount
- paid by the employer plan.
- Employers who have 20 or more employees are required to
- offer the same health benefits, under the same conditions,
to
- employees age 65 or over and to employees' spouses who are
65
- or over, that they offer to younger employees and spouses.
EGHP
- coverage of employers of 20 or more employees is primary
to
- Medicare.
- You may accept or reject coverage under the EGHP. If you
- accept the employer plan, it will be your primary payer.
If you
- reject the plan, Medicare will be the primary payer for
- Medicare-covered health services that you receive. If you
- reject the employer plan, you can buy supplemental
insurance
- but an employer cannot provide you with a plan that pays
- supplemental benefits for Medicare-covered services or
- subsidize such coverage. An employer may, however, offer a
plan
- that pays for health care services not covered by
Medicare,
- such as hearing aids, routine dental care, and physical
- checkups.
- Special Rules for Certain Disabled Medicare Beneficiaries.
- Medicare is also secondary for certain people under age 65
who
- are entitled to Medicare based on disability (other than
those
- with permanent kidney failure) and who have large group
health
- plan (LGHP) coverage. An LGHP is a plan of, or contributed
to
- by, an employer or employee organization that covers the
- employees of at least one employer with 100 or more
employees.
- This requirement applies to those who have LGHP coverage
- as an employee, employer, self-employed person, business
- associate of an employer, or a family member of any of
these
- people. An LGHP must not treat any of these people
differently
- because they are disabled and have Medicare.
- The term "employee" here includes both those who
are
- actively working despite their disability (such as
disabled
- Medicare beneficiaries engaged in a trial work period) and
- those who are not actively working, but whom the employer
- treats as employees. Medicare determines whether an
individual
- is considered to be an employee.
- Disabled persons also have the option of accepting or
- rejecting LGHP coverage. If they reject the plan, Medicare
- becomes their primary payer and the employer may not
provide or
- subsidize supplemental coverage, except for items and
services
- not covered by Medicare.
- Special Rules for Medicare Beneficiaries with Permanent
- Kidney Failure. Medicare is secondary payer to EGHPs for
18
- months for beneficiaries who have Medicare solely because
of
- permanent kidney failure. This requirement applies only to
- those with permanent kidney failure, whether they have
their
- own coverage under an EGHP or are covered under an EGHP as
- dependents. EGHPs are primary payers during this period
without
- regard to the size of the EGHP or the number of employees.
The
- 18-month period begins with the earlier of:
- * The first month in which the person becomes entitled to
- Medicare Part A or
- * The first month in which an individual would have been
- entitled to Part A if he had filed an application for
- Medicare benefits.
- However, EGHPs may be primary for an additional 3 months,
- or a total of up to 21 months: the first three months of
- dialysis (a period during which an individual generally is
not
- eligible for Medicare benefits) plus the first 18 months
of
- Medicare eligibility or entitlement. After the period of
up to
- 21 months expires, Medicare is primary payer for entitled
- individuals and the EGHP is secondary.
- The Health Care Financing Administration pamphlet entitled
- Medicare Coverage of Kidney Dialysis and Kidney Transplant
- Services contains more information about Medicare and
kidney
- disease. You can get a free copy from the Social Security
- Administration or the Consumer Information Center,
Department
- 59, Pueblo, CO 81009.
- Association Group Insurance. Many organizations, other
- than employers, offer group health insurance coverage to
their
- members. Just because you are buying through a group does
not
- mean that you are getting a low rate. Group insurance can
be as
- expensive as or more costly than comparable coverage under
- individual policies. Be sure you understand the benefits
- included and then compare prices. Association group
Medigap
- insurance must comply with the same rules that apply to
other
- Medigap policies.
- The following types of coverage are generally limited in
- scope and are not substitutes for Medigap insurance or
managed
- care plans.
-
- Long-Term Care Insurance
-
- Nursing home and long-term care insurance are available to
- cover custodial care in a nursing home. Some of these
policies
- also cover care in the home, and others are available to
pay
- for care in a skilled nursing facility (SNF) after your
- Medicare benefits run out (see page 3 for an explanation
of the
- Medicare benefit for skilled nursing facility care).
- If you are in the market for nursing home or longterm care
- insurance, be sure you know which types of nursing homes
and
- services are covered by the different policies available.
And
- if you buy a policy, make sure it does not duplicate
skilled
- nursing facility (SNF) coverage provided by any Medigap
policy,
- managed care plan, or other coverage you have.
- It is important to remember that custodial care (the type
- of care most persons in nursing homes require) is not
covered
- by Medicare or most Medigap policies. The only care of
this
- nature that Medicare covers is skilled nursing care or
skilled
- rehabilitation care that is provided in a
Medicare-certified
- skilled nursing facility.
- For more information about long-term care insurance,
- request a copy of A Shopper's Guide to Long-Term Care
Insurance
- from either your state insurance department or the
National
- Association of Insurance Commissioners, 120 W. 12th
Street,
- Suite 1100, Kansas City, MO 64 105-1925. You may also
obtain a
- copy of the Guide to Choosing a Nursing Home by writing to
- Medicare Publications, Health Care Financing
Administration,
- 6325 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21207.
-
- Hospital Indemnity Insurance
-
- Hospital indemnity coverage is insurance that pays a fixed
- cash amount for each day you are hospitalized up to a
- designated number of days. Some coverage may have added
- benefits such as surgical benefits or skilled nursing home
- confinement benefits. Some policies have a maximum number
of
- days or a maximum payment amount. Generally, a hospital
- indemnity policy will pay the specified daily amount
regardless
- of any other health insurance coverage you have, but other
- group health insurance may coordinate benefits with
hospital
- confinement indemnity insurance sold on a group basis.
-
- Specified Disease Insurance
-
- Specified disease insurance, which is not available in
- some states, provides benefits for only a single disease,
such
- as cancer, or a group of specified diseases. The value of
such
- coverage depends on the chance you will get the specific
- disease or diseases covered. Benefits are usually limited
to
- payment of a fixed amount for each type of treatment.
Benefits
- are not designed to fill gaps in Medicare coverage.
-
- DO YOU NEED MORE INSURANCE?
-
- Before buying insurance to supplement Medicare, ask
- yourself whether you need private health insurance in
addition
- to Medicare. Not everyone does.
-
- Medicaid Recipients
-
- Low-income people who are eligible for Medicaid usually do
- not need additional insurance. They also qualify for
certain
- health care benefits beyond those covered by Medicare,
such as
- long-term nursing home care. If you become eligible for
- Medicaid, and you have Medigap insurance purchased on or
after
- November 5, 1991, you can request that the Medigap
benefits and
- premiums be suspended for up to two years while you are
covered
- by Medicaid. Should you become ineligible for Medicaid
benefits
- during the two years, your Medigap policy will be
reinstated if
- you give proper notice and begin paying premiums again.
You do
- not, however, have to suspend your Medigap policy, and
- suspension is not always to a Medicaid recipient's
advantage.
- You may want to discuss your options with your state
Medicaid
- representatives.
-
- Qualified Medicare Beneficiary Program: Assistance for
-
- Low-Income Elderly
-
- Limited financial assistance is available through Medicaid
- for paying Medicare premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance
- amounts for certain low-income elderly and disabled
- beneficiaries. If your annual income is at or below the
- national poverty level and your cash and savings are very
- limited, you may qualify for state assistance in paying
- Medicare's monthly premiums, deductibles and coinsurance.
This
- is called the "Qualified Medicare Beneficiary"
(QMB) program.
- To have qualified in 1993, your income could not have been
- more than $601 per month for one person or $806 per month
for a
- couple, except in Alaska and Hawaii. In Alaska the income
- limits were $745 per month for one person and $1,002 per
month
- for a couple. In Hawaii they were $690 per month for one
person
- and $925 per month for a couple. The limits for 1994 will
be
- announced in February 1994. Financial resources such as
bank
- accounts, stocks, and bonds cannot exceed $4,000 for one
person
- or $6,000 for a couple.
- Financial assistance also is available for Medicare
- beneficiaries under the "Specified Low-Income
Medicare
- Beneficiary" (SLMB) program. This program is for
beneficiaries
- whose incomes exceed the poverty level by not more than 10
- percent and who meet certain resource limitations. To have
- qualified for this program in 1993, your income could not
have
- been more than $659 a month for one person or $884 a month
for
- a couple, except in Alaska and Hawaii. In Alaska the
income
- limits were $818 per month for one person and $1,100 per
month
- for a couple. In Hawaii they were $758 per month for one
person
- and $1,016 per month for a couple. Individuals in this
category
- are eligible only for Medicaid payment of their Medicare
Pan B
- premium, which is $41.10 per month in 1994. If you think
you
- qualify for state assistance in paying your Medicare
expenses
- under either of these two programs, contact your state or
local
- social service agency. If you cannot find a telephone
number
- for the state agency, call 1-800638-6833 for assistance.
-
- Federally Qualified Health Center
-
- Medicare pays for some health services, including
- preventive care, when provided by a federally qualified
health
- center (FQHC). These facilities are typically community
health
- centers, migrant health centers and health centers for the
- homeless. They are generally located in inner-city and
rural
- areas. The services covered by Medicare at FQHCs include
- routine physical examinations, screenings, and diagnostic
tests
- for the detection of vision and hearing problems and other
- medical conditions, and the administration of certain
vaccines
- for immunization against influenza and other diseases.
- When those services are furnished at a FQHC, the $100
- annual Part B deductible does not apply (see page 5).
However,
- if other services are provided, such as X-rays or
screening
- mammograms, the FQHC may bill the Medicare carrier. In
that
- case, you would be responsible for any unmet portion of
the Pan
- B annual deductible of $.100. As for the 20 percent Part B
- coinsurance, it is applicable for all FQHC services but
Public
- Health Service guidelines allow the FQHC to waive it in
some
- instances. Any Medicare beneficiary may seek services at
an
- FQHC.
- To find out whether one of these centers serves your area,
- call 1-800-638-6833.
-
- TIPS ON SHOPPING FOR HEALTH INSURANCE
-
- Shop Carefully Before You Buy. Policies differ as to
- coverage and cost, and companies differ as to service.
Contact
- different companies and compare the premiums before you
buy.
- Don't Buy More Policies Than You Need. Duplicate coverage
- is expensive and unnecessary. A single comprehensive
policy is
- better than several policies with overlapping or duplicate
- coverage. Federal law prohibits issuing duplicative
coverage to
- Medicare beneficiaries even if both policies would pay
full
- benefits. The law generally prohibits the sale of a
Medicare
- supplement policy to a person who has Medicaid or another
- health insurance policy that provides coverage for any of
the
- same benefits.
- Similarly, the sale of any other kind of health insurance
- policy is generally prohibited if it duplicates coverage
you
- already have. When you buy a replacement Medigap policy,
the
- insurer is required to obtain your written statement that
you
- intend to cancel the first policy after the new policy
becomes
- effective. If you are on Medicaid, insurers may not sell
you a
- Medigap policy unless the state pays the premium. Anyone
who
- sells you a policy in violation of these anti-duplication
- provisions is subject to criminal and/or civil penalties
under
- federal law. Call 1-800-638-6833 to report suspected
- violations.
- Consider Your Alternatives. Depending on your health care
- needs and finances, you may want to consider continuing
the
- group coverage you have at work; joining an HMO, CMP or
other
- managed care plan; buying a Medigap policy; or buying a
- longterm care insurance policy.
- Check For Preexisting Condition Exclusions. In evaluating
- a policy, you should determine whether it limits or
excludes
- coverage for existing health conditions. Many policies do
not
- cover health problems that you have at the time of
purchase.
- Preexisting conditions are generally health problems you
went
- to see a physician about within the 6 months before the
date
- the policy went into effect.
- Don't be misled by the phrase "no medical examination
- required." If you have had a health problem, the
insurer might
- not cover you immediately for expenses connected with that
- problem. Medigap policies, however, are required to cover
- preexisting conditions after the policy has been in effect
for
- 6 months.
- Beware of Replacing Existing Coverage. Be careful when
- buying a replacement Medigap policy. Make sure you have a
good
- reason for switching from one policy to another--you
should
- only switch for different benefits, better service, or a
more
- affordable price. On the other hand, don't keep inadequate
- policies simply because you have had them a long time. If
you
- decide to replace your Medigap policy, you must be given
credit
- for the time spent under the old policy in determining
when any
- preexisting conditions restrictions apply under the new
policy.
- You must also sign a statement that you intend to
terminate the
- policy to be replaced. Do not cancel the first policy
until you
- are sure that you want to keep the new policy.
- Prohibited Marketing Practices. It is unlawful for a
- company or agent to use high pressure tactics to force or
- frighten you into buying a Medigap policy, or to make
- fraudulent or misleading comparisons to get you to switch
from
- one company or policy to another. Deceptive "cold
lead"
- advertising also is prohibited. This lactic involves
mailings
- to identify individuals who might be interested in buying
- insurance. If you fill in and return the card enclosed in
the
- mailing, the card may be sold to an insurance
- agent who will try to sell you a policy.
- Be Aware of Maximum Benefits. Most policies have some type
- of limit on benefits. They may restrict either the dollar
- amount that will be paid for treatment of a condition or
the
- number of days of care for which payment will be made.
Some
- insurance policies (but not Medigap policies) pay less
than the
- Medicare-approved amounts for hospital outpatient medical
- services and for services provided in a doctor's office.
Others
- do not pay anything toward the cost of those services.
- Check Your Right to Renew. States now require that Medigap
- policies be guaranteed renewable. This means that the
company
- can refuse to renew your policy only if you do not pay the
- premiums or you made material misrepresentations on the
- application. Beware of older policies that let the company
- refuse to renew on an individual basis. These policies
provide
- the least permanent coverage.
- Even though your policy may be guaranteed renewable. the
- company may adjust the premiums from time to time. Some
- policies have premiums which increase as you grow older.
- Be A ware That Policies to Supplement Medicare Are Neither
- Sold Nor Serviced by the State or Federal Governments.
State
- insurance departments approve policies sold by insurance
- companies but approval only means the company and policy
meet
- requirements of state law. Do not believe statements that
- insurance to supplement Medicare is a government-sponsored
- program.
- If anyone tells you that they are from the government and
- later tries to sell you an insurance policy, report that
person
- to your state insurance department or federal authorities.
This
- type of misrepresentation is a violation of federal and
state
- law. It is also unlawful for a company or agent to claim
that a
- policy has been approved for sale in any state in which it
has
- not received state approval, or to use fraudulent means to
gain
- approval.
- Know With Whom You're Dealing. A company must meet certain
- qualifications to do business in your state. You should
check
- with your state insurance department to make sure that any
- company you are considering is licensed in your state.
This is
- for your protection. Agents also must be licensed by your
state
- and may be required by the state to carry proof of
licensure
- showing their name and the company they represent. If the
agent
- cannot verify that he or she is licensed, do not buy from
that
- person. A business card is not a license.
- Keep Agents' and/or Companies' Names, Addresses and
- Telephone Numbers. Write down the agents' and/or
companies'
- names, addresses and telephone numbers or ask for a
business
- card that provides all that information.
- Take Your Time. Do not be pressured into buying a policy.
- Principled salespeople will not rush you. If you are not
- certain whether a program is worthy, ask the salesperson
to
- explain it to a friend. Keep in mind, however, that there
is a
- limited time period in which new Medicare Part B enrollees
can
- buy the Medigap policy of their choice without conditions
being
- imposed (see page 11). Once this open enrollment period
- elapses, you may be limited as to the Medigap policies
- available to you, especially if you have a preexisting
health
- condition.
- If You Decide To Buy, Complete the Application Carefully.
- Do not believe an insurance agent who tells you that your
- medical history on an application is not important. Some
- companies ask for detailed medical information. If you
leave
- out any of the medical information requested, coverage
could be
- refused for a period of time for any medical condition you
- neglected to mention. The company also could deny a claim
for
- treatment of an undisclosed condition and/or cancel your
- policy.
- Look For an Outline of Coverage. You must be given a
- clearly worded summary of the policy... READ IT CAREFULLY.
- Do Not Pay Cash. Pay by check, money order or bank draft
- made payable to the insurance company, not to the agent or
- anyone else. Get a receipt with the insurance company's
name,
- address and telephone number for your records.
- Policy Delivery or Refunds Should be Prompt. The insurance
- company should deliver a policy within 30 days. If it does
not,
- contact the company and obtain in writing the reason for
the
- delay. If 60 days go by without a response, contact your
state
- insurance department.
- Use the "Free-Look" Provision. Insurance
companies must
- give you at least 30 days to review a Medigap policy. If
you
- decide you don't want the policy, send it back to the
agent or
- company within 30 days of receiving it and ask for a
refund of
- all premiums you paid. Contact your state insurance
department
- if you have a problem getting a refund.
-
- For Your Protection
-
- As noted above, federal criminal and civil penalties can
- be imposed against anyone who sells you a policy that
- duplicates coverage you already have unless you sign a
- statement declaring that the first policy will be
cancelled, or
- unless you have Medicaid and the state Medicaid agency
pays the
- premium for your Medigap policy. Penalties may also be
imposed
- for claiming that a policy meets legal standards for
federal
- certification when it does not, and for using the mail for
the
- delivery of advertisements offering for sale a Medigap
policy
- in a state in which it has not received state approval.
- Additionally, it is illegal under federal law for an
- individual or company to misuse the names, letters,
symbols or
- emblems of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services,
- the Social Security Administration, or the Health Care
- Financing Administration. It also is illegal to use the
names.
- letters, symbols or emblems of their various programs.
- This law is aimed primarily at mass marketers who use this
- information on mail solicitations to either imply or claim
that
- the product they are selling whether it be insurance or
- something else--has either been endorsed or is being sold
by
- the U.S. government. The advertising literature used by
these
- organizations is often designed to look like it came from
a
- government agency.
- If you believe you have been the victim of any unlawful
- sales practices, contact your state insurance department
- immediately. If you believe that federal law has been
violated,
- you may call 1-800-638-6833. In most cases, however, your
state
- insurance department can offer the most assistance in
resolving
- insurance related problems.
-
- Standard Medigap Plans
-
- Following is a list of the 10 standard plans and the
- benefits provided by each:
-
- PLAN A (the basic policy) consists of these basic
benefits:
-
- * Coverage for the Part A coinsurance amount ($174 per day
- in 1994) for the 61st through the 90th day of
- hospitalization in each Medicare benefit period.
- * Coverage for the Part A coinsurance amount ($348 per day
- in 1994) for each of Medicare's 60 non-renewable lifetime
- hospital inpatient reserve days used.
- * After all Medicare hospital benefits are exhausted,
- coverage for 100% of the Medicare Part A eligible hospital
- expenses. Coverage is limited to a maximum of 365 days of
- additional inpatient hospital care during the
- policyholder's lifetime. This benefit is paid either at
- the rate Medicare pays hospitals under its Prospective
- Payment System or another appropriate standard of payment.
- * Coverage under Medicare Parts A and B for the reasonable
- cost of the first three pints of blood or equivalent
- quantities of packed red blood cells per calendar year
- unless replaced in accordance with federal regulations.
- * Coverage for the coinsurance amount for Part B services
- (generally 20% of approved amount; 50% of approved charges
- for mental health services) after $100 annual deductible
- is met.
-
- PLAN B includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A inpatient hospital
- deductible ($696 per benefit period in 1994).
-
- PLAN C includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care
coinsurance
- amount ($87 per day for days 21 through 100 per benefit
- period in 1994).
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part B deductible ($100 per
- calendar year in 1994).
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
-
- PLAN D includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for at-home recovery. The at-home recovery
- benefit pays up to $1600 per year for short-term, at-home
- assistance with activities of daily living (bathing,
- dressing, personal hygiene, etc.) for those recovering
- from an illness, injury or surgery. There are various
- benefit requirements and limitations.
-
- PLAN E includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for preventive medical care. The preventive
- medical care benefit pays up to $120 per year for such
- things as a physical examination, flu shot, serum
- cholesterol screening, hearing test, diabetes screenings,
- and thyroid function test.
-
- PLAN F includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part B deductible.
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for 100% of Medicare Part B excess charges. *
-
- PLAN G includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * Coverage for 80% of Medicare Plan B excess charges.*
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for at-home recovery (see Plan D).
-
- PLAN H includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for 50% of the cost of prescription drugs up to
a
- maximum annual benefit of $1,250 after the policyholder
- meets a $250 per year deductible (this is called the
- "basic" prescription drug benefit).
-
- PLAN I includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * Coverage for 100% of Medicare Part B excess charges. *
- * Basic prescription drug coverage (see Plan H for
- description).
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for at-home recovery (see Plan D).
-
- PLAN J includes the basic benefits plus:
-
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part A deductible.
- * Coverage for the skilled nursing facility care daily
- coinsurance amount.
- * Coverage for the Medicare Part B deductible.
- * Coverage for 100% of Medicare Part B excess charges. *
- * 80% coverage for medically necessary emergency care in a
- foreign country, after a $250 deductible.
- * Coverage for 50% of the cost of prescription drugs up to
a
- maximum annual benefit of $3,000 after the policyholder
- meets a $250 per year deductible (this is called the
- "extended" drug benefit).
- * Plan pays a specified percentage of the difference
between
- Medicare's approved amount for Part B services and the
- actual charges (up to the amount of charge limitations set
- by either Medicare or state law).
- [Graphic Omitted]
- Basic Benefits pay the patient's share of Medicare's
- approved amount for physician services (generally 20%)
after
- $100 annual deductible, the patient's cost of a long
hospital
- stay ($174/day for days 60-90, $348/day for days 91-150,
- approved costs not paid by Medicare after day 150 to a
total of
- 365 days lifetime), and charges for the first 3 pints of
blood
- not covered by Medicare.
-
- Two prescription drug benefits are offered:
-
- 1. a "basic" benefit with $250 annual
deductible, 50%
- coinsurance and a $1,250 maximum annual benefit (Plans H
- and I above), and
- 2. an "extended" benefit (Plan J above)
containing a $250
- annual deductible, 50% coinsurance and a $3,000 maximum
- annual benefit.
- Each of the 10 plans has a letter designation ranging from
- "A" through "J". Insurance companies
are not permitted to
- change these designations or to substitute other names or
- titles. They may, however, add names or titles to these
letter
- designations. While companies are not required to offer
all of
- the plans, they all must make Plan A available if they
sell any
- of the other 9 in a state.
-
- INSURANCE POLICY CHECK-LIST
-
- After reading this guide, you may find this check-list
- useful in assessing the benefits provided by a Medigap
policy
- or in comparing policies.
- POLICY I POLICY 2 POLICY 3
- Does the policy cover: YES NO YES NO YES NO
- Medicare Part A hospital deductible?
- *Medicare Part A hospital daily coinsurance?
- *Hospital care beyond Medicare's 150-day limit?
- Skilled nursing facility (SNF) daily coinsurance?
- SNF care beyond Medicare's limits?
- Medicare Part B annual deductible?
- *Medicare Part B coinsurance?
- Physician and supplier charges in excess
- of Medicare's approved amounts?
- *Medicare blood deductibles?
- Prescription drugs?
-
- Other Policy Considerations
-
- Can the company cancel or non-renew the policy?
- What are the policy limits for covered services?
- How much is the annual premium?
- How often can the company raise the premium?
- How long before existing health problems are covered?
- Does the policy have a waiting period before any
- benefits will be paid? How long?
-
- * Most states now require that these benefits be included
in
- all newly issued Medigap policies.
-
- NOTES
-
- DIRECTORY OF STATE INSURANCE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES ON
AGING
-
- Each state has its own laws and regulations governing all
- types of insurance. The insurance offices listed in the
left
- column of this directory are responsible for enforcing
these
- laws, as well as providing the public with information
about
- insurance. The agencies on aging, listed in the right
column,
- are responsible for coordinating services for older
Americans.
- The middle column of the directory lists the telephone
number
- to call for insurance counseling services. Calls to an 800
- number listed in this directory are free when made within
the
- respective state.
- [Table Omitted]
-
-
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
- Health Care Financing Administration
- 6325 Security Boulevard
- Baltimore, Maryland 21207
- HCFA ICN 003622
- SSA ICN 002795
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