The federal government says it sent
the letters after getting bad information from the health insurer.
By Christopher Snowbeck Star Tribune
SEPTEMBER 5, 2018 — 5:36AM
The
federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said Blue Cross provided the
government with bad information, which explains why CMS sent about 38,700
enrollee letters.
More
than 38,000 Medicare beneficiaries with health plans from Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Minnesota are wrongly receiving termination notices, prompting the
Eagan-based insurer to begin calling subscribers to explain the mistake.
The letters are related to the elimination of Medicare Cost health plans at the end
of the year, which will prompt true health plan terminations
for an estimated 320,000 seniors across much of Minnesota.
The
change won’t affect consumers in 21 Minnesota counties — including Duluth and
the state’s northeast corner — but those are the Blue Cross customers who were
wrongly sent the termination notices, according to statements Tuesday from Blue
Cross and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
The
federal agency said Blue Cross provided the government with bad information,
which explains why CMS sent about 38,700 enrollee letters.
“CMS
reached out to affected plans to ask them to provide information on which
enrollees should receive nonrenewal notices,” the agency said in a statement to
the Star Tribune.
“One
of the plans, Blue Cross Blue Shield of MN, inadvertently sent us incorrect
enrollment [information] for 21 counties resulting in CMS sending nonrenewal
notices to enrollees in these counties even though the counties are not being
non-renewed,” CMS said. “BCBS/MN recognized its error and we are working
together to swiftly resolve this issue on behalf of beneficiaries.”
In addition to making phone calls, Blue
Cross said Tuesday in a statement to the Star Tribune: “In the coming weeks,
these members also will receive mailed materials from Blue Cross that confirm
the availability of their same plan for next year.” The insurer has posted information on its website about the
change, as well.
Health
insurers and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) are
notifying Minnesota consumers about a big change coming for many with Medicare
health plans. For more than a year, insurers have been sizing up the shift,
with health plans as well as state and federal officials providing more
information to consumers over the past few months.
Cost
plans have been a way for beneficiaries to obtain Medicare coverage via private
health plans, much like Medicare Advantage plans that are popular across much
of the country. The two types of health plans differ in how they’re reimbursed
by the government, and Minnesota is one of the few states in the nation where a
large number of people buy Cost plans.
A
federal law passed in 2003 created a “competition requirement” for Medicare
Cost plans, which stipulated the plans could not be offered in service areas
where there was significant competition from Medicare Advantage plans. Congress
delayed implementation of the requirement several times until a law passed in
2015 that called for the rule to take effect in 2019.
Blue
Cross, Bloomington-based HealthPartners and Minnetonka-based Medica
collectively sell Medicare Cost plans that cover about 370,000 Minnesotans.
Of
those, about 50,000 live in the 21 counties where the Cost plans won’t be going
away, with the large majority buying coverage from Blue Cross.
“We
are aware that Medicare plan termination letters were sent out in error from
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to many of our members,” Blue
Cross said in a statement. The insurer says about 40,000 people in the 21
counties are enrolled in the Platinum Blue health plan.
CMS
said in a statement that it “will continue to monitor the situation and work
with Blue Cross Blue Shield of MN to ensure beneficiaries get corrected
information.”
Cost
plans from Blue Cross, HealthPartners and Medica will not be terminated in the
following 21 counties: Aitkin, Carlton, Cook, Goodhue, Itasca, Kanabec,
Koochiching, Lake, Le Sueur, McLeod, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Pine, Pipestone, Rice,
Rock, Sibley, St. Louis, Stevens, Traverse and Yellow Medicine.
In
the remaining 66 counties including the Twin Cities metro, an estimated 125,000
with Cost plans will be automatically enrolled in comparable Medicare Advantage
plans from their current insurer unless they opt for a different health plan.
HealthPartners and Medica have been notifying those subscribers about what
their conversion coverage will look like, and Blue Cross says it will do so
this month.“Different insurers have different names for their Cost Plans,” said
the state Commerce Department in a fact sheet on the transition that
includes a map of affected counties. “Seniors can call
the phone number on the back of their health plan member card to find out if
they have a Cost Plan.”
The
state estimates that another 195,000 people in counties where Cost plans are
going away will need to take action to obtain replacement coverage. That means
signing up for a Medicare Advantage plan or obtaining a Medicare Supplement
policy, often called a “Medigap plan.”
Consumers
will get full information about health plan options for 2019 on Oct. 1. The
open enrollment period begins Oct. 15.
http://www.startribune.com/38-000-plus-blue-cross-enrollees-receive-termination-notices-by-mistake/492418431/
No comments:
Post a Comment