Market expected to be stable for
2018, but many plans go away in 2019.
By Christopher Snowbeck Star Tribune
OCTOBER 20, 2017 — 7:59PM
As
the annual shopping season begins for Medicare health plans, seniors in
Minnesota are finding more health plan options for 2018 plus premiums that in
many cases are either stable or declining.
Open
enrollment started Oct. 15, and all five insurance companies that currently
sell Medicare health plans in the state will have new offerings for next year.
The
annual shopping period ends Dec. 7, and in some ways looks to be the calm
before the storm. Most of the popular Medicare Cost plans currently used by
more than 350,000 Minnesotans are scheduled to go away in 2019 but will remain
through the end of the current open enrollment period.
“Changes
actually are going to be pretty minimal for 2018,” said Kari Benson, executive
director of the Minnesota Board on Aging. “By and large, choices that were
available this year are going to be available next year.”
About
956,000 Minnesotans receive benefits from Medicare, the massive federal health
insurance program for people age 65 and over plus certain special populations.
More than half of all beneficiaries in Minnesota are enrolled in Medicare
health plans sold by private insurance companies.
A
Star Tribune review shows that premiums in Hennepin County will be flat or
declining for 17 of 34 Medicare health plans currently on the market. Another
11 plans have percent changes that can be measured in single digits.
In
many cases, premiums in Hennepin County match those being charged elsewhere in
the state. Overall, premium trends are pretty moderate, said Tom Peterson, an
insurance agent with Twin City Underwriters.
“The
rate changes for 2018, we’re really happy with them,” Peterson said. “Clients
are not balking at the price points.”
The
Minnesota health plan market is unusual because it has been dominated by
insurance companies that sell Medicare Cost plans, as opposed to Medicare
Advantage plans that are prevalent in almost all other states. The two types of
Medicare health plans differ in how the federal government reimburses insurance
companies.
For
many years, the federal government has been taking steps to close the Cost
plans. Right now, they are expected to go away in 2019 in counties where two or
more sizable Medicare Advantage plans are being sold — a standard that would
impact about 70 of Minnesota’s 87 counties, if it were applied today.
The
expected change is one reason that national health insurers Aetna and
UnitedHealthcare plan to expand in Minnesota’s Medicare market for 2019. It’s
also why Medicare consumers shopping for 2018 are seeing new Medicare Advantage
plans in some counties from established Cost plan providers like
Minnetonka-based Medica and Bloomington-based HealthPartners.
“We
wanted to have an additional competitive product in the marketplace for what
will be a transition in the future from the Medicare Cost plans to Medicare
Advantage plans,” said Donna Zimmerman, senior vice president of government and
community relations at HealthPartners. “So, we introduced that product in the
metro area and St. Cloud.”
For
2018, Eagan-based Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota is introducing two
Medicare Advantage plans that will be available in 55 counties. Blue Cross,
which currently sells only Cost plans, has the largest share of the state’s
Medicare health plan market at 45 percent, according to data from the
California-based Kaiser Family Foundation.
Medica
will sell a new Medicare Advantage plan in nine counties centered around the
Twin Cities metro.
The
expected “sunset” for Cost plans has been repeatedly delayed over the years,
but aspects of the change scheduled for 2019 will start showing up in just a
few months. People who are newly eligible for Medicare because they are turning
65 next year will have access to Cost plans only in certain circumstances —
another reason insurers that currently sell Cost plans are rolling out Medicare
Advantage options for 2018.
“There
are a lot of people who have Cost plans who, until it happens, aren’t going to
be very aware of it,” said Tom Lindquist, the senior vice president of
government programs at Medica. “And they’re going to want to keep their Cost
plans.”
For
now, Medicare consumers should not be anxious because they can stick with their
plans for 2018, Peterson said. Over the next year, he added, seniors should
talk with their brokers about the differences in Advantage plans.
Some
consumers like Cost plans because they give seniors flexibility to pair medical
benefits from one insurance company with pharmacy benefits from another,
Peterson said. He added that Medicare Advantage plans have network limits that
could leave consumers with extra costs if they use out-of-network doctors or
hospitals.
Ghita
Worcester, the chief marketing officer at Minneapolis-based UCare, countered
that her company’s Medicare Advantage plans include a network that covers 92
percent of all health care providers in the state, plus “point-of-service”
coverage for much of the remainder. Kentucky-based Humana, with also sells
Medicare Advantage plans in Minnesota, said in a statement that its enrollees
“have access to our nationwide network of health care providers.”
UCare
for 2018 is introducing a Medicare Advantage plan that will be available in 41
counties across southern Minnesota. Humana is launching a new plan in 60
counties.
Twitter:
@chrissnowbeck
http://www.startribune.com/few-changes-in-medicare-plans-for-2018-2019-is-another-story/451940593/
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