PUBLISHED TUE, OCT 22 201910:18 AM EDTUPDATED WED, OCT 23
20199:08 AM EDT
KEY
POINTS
·
In addition to plans
adding or dropping drugs from coverage, they also can change cost-sharing
aspects such as deductibles and co-pays.
·
Among people age 65
and older, 89% take a prescription medicine and more than half (54%) take four
or more.
·
You can get drug
coverage as a standalone Part D plan that is paired with original Medicare
(Part A hospital coverage and Part B outpatient coverage) or as part of a
Medicare Advantage Plan.
If you’re on Medicare, now’s the time to closely
evaluate your 2020 prescription drug coverage.
The program’s annual open enrollment period,
when you can make changes that take effect Jan. 1, is under way and closes Dec.
7. With plans varying from year to year — including the drugs they cover and
the amount you pay for them — you could be setting yourself up for financial
woes if you don’t review your options.
“Even if you think the plan you have right now
is great, you might have a rude surprise when you get to the pharmacy in
January and find out your drug is no longer covered,” said Danielle Roberts,
co-founder of insurance firm Boomer Benefits in Fort Worth, Texas.
With Medicare prohibited by law
from negotiating drug prices, retirees — whose budgets often already
are stretched thin — can face big differences in drug prices among plans. If a
particular medicine isn’t included on a plan’s formulary — how it prices the
drugs it covers — the cost could reach thousands of dollars, according to an
analysis from The Senior Citizens League, an advocacy group.
Plans can add or drop medicines from their
formulary — or change the pricing — from one year to the next. They also can
change cost-sharing aspects such as deductibles and co-pays.
Among people age 65 and older, 89% take a
prescription medicine, according to a recent survey from
the Kaiser Family Foundation. More than half (54%) of that age group take four
or more.
Getting prescription drug coverage through Medicare
is optional, although about 70% of beneficiaries have it. (If you fail to sign
up when you first qualify for coverage and change your mind later, you could
face a life-lasting penalty unless you meet an exclusion.)
You can get it as a standalone Part D plan that
is paired with original Medicare (Part A hospital coverage and Part B
outpatient coverage) or as part of a Medicare Advantage Plan.
During the current open enrollment period, you
can change your drug coverage for next year by going either route. If the move
would involve either adding or dropping a Medicare supplemental plan —
aka Medigap —
be sure you understand the separate rules that apply to those policies.
For 2020 the average monthly premium for
standalone prescription drug plans is projected to drop to $30, from $32.50 this
year. However, a lower premium doesn’t necessarily mean your total
out-of-pocket cost would be less.
Don’t just go with the
cheapest plan that pops up. It might have the most restrictions.
Elizabeth Gavino FOUNDER OF LEWIN
& GAVINO
You can compare plans through Medicare.gov’s
Plan Finder, although be aware that some of the information it spits out might
be incomplete. You might have to look separately at the particular plan’s
formulary for details on whether you’d have to try out cheaper alternatives first
(so-called step therapy) or if there are quantity limits on the medicine you
take. Some plans also require preauthorization for certain medications.
“Don’t just go with the cheapest plan that pops
up,” said Elizabeth Gavino, founder of Lewin & Gavino in New York and an
independent broker and general agent for Medicare plans. “It might have the
most restrictions.”
Also be aware that for 2020 the amount that Part
D enrollees must pay out of pocket before qualifying for “catastrophic
coverage” will jump to $6,350 from $5,100 this year, due to the expiration of
an Affordable Care Act provision that had constrained that threshold’s growth.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/22/tips-for-getting-your-medicare-drug-plan-right-during-open-enrollment.html
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