by Consumer Reports
Monday, April 8th 2019
Drugs costs vary widely even for Medicare
recipients, possibly costing seniors hundreds, even thousands of dollars.
That's one of the findings of a recent Consumer Reports investigation, a report
so eye-opening the Senate invited a CR investigative reporter to Capitol Hill
to testify about prescription pricing problems.
Consumer Reports found that what consumers pay
for their medications could vary by hundreds of dollars, even in the same city.
It looked at six cities and found stark price differences in all of them. In
Dallas, CR found that a person enrolled in a low-cost $100 deductible Medicare
Part D plan would end up paying an annual cost of $1,592. But another plan in
the area with a $415 deductible would have a total annual cost of just $574.
And worse, small mistakes during the sign-up
process could cost consumers a tremendous amount of money. Why? In 2018 the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services gave insurers more flexibility in
designing prescription drug plans. The change was supposed to give consumers
more options, but it backfired. The plans ended up being so complex they made
comparison price shopping difficult. And the plan finder tool at medicare.gov
is difficult to use and compare plans with one another.
https://katu.com/news/consumer-reports/medicare-confusion-costs-taxpayers-money-04-08-2019-150352923
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