Mark Zdechlik · Dec 7, 2018
A change
in federal law is forcing hundreds of thousands of elderly Minnesotans to
replace their health plans that supplement Medicare coverage.
Medicare
is the national health insurance program for people age 65 and older and some
disabled people. Many buy supplemental insurance to help pay the portion of
health costs Medicare does not cover.
About
350,000 Minnesotans are losing their Cost plans. And at an advanced age, they
now have to sort through options that would be complex and confusing for
anyone.
"Beneficiaries
that previously never did anything during open enrollment now have to make a
change for the first time in many, many years, if ever," said Minnesota
Board on Aging Health Policy analyst Kelli Jo Greiner.
The
board's Senior LinkAge line is having trouble keeping up with demand for help,
she said.
"It's
not only confusing, it's very frustrating."
Greiner
said the best way to get through is to call during specially extended hours —
Monday through Thursday between 4:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. She said a lot of people
calling the Senior LinkAge line are angry about being forced into different
coverage.
"They
love their Cost plan. They don't want to make a change. They want to stay with
it, but I think they're starting to understand that this really is a critical
time for them to make a change so they have coverage Jan. 1," Greiner
said.
Cost
plans pay for medical bills at any Medicare-approved provider — there's no
specified provider network. Medicare is trying to cut back on Cost plans to
save money. Cost plans are going away in areas where there are at least two
Medicare Advantage plans to choose from. But Advantage plans specify a provider
network.
The
Minnesota Council of Health Plans said its members are also busy helping
customers make the switch, said Jim Schowalter, president of the trade
organization that represents Minnesota's major health insurers.
"The
phones are literally ringing off the hooks because it's a big deal for seniors
in Minnesota," he said.
State
officials say insurers are automatically enrolling about half of the
Minnesotans losing their Cost plans in Advantage plans. The rest — some 175,000
seniors — are on their own to find a replacement.
"That
is the group we're most concerned with," said Greiner.
Medicare
enrollees who don't find a Cost plan replacement by the end of the year will
only have the stripped down original Medicare coverage starting Jan. 1. There won't
be a monthly supplemental premium to pay, but they'll be responsible for any
expenses Medicare doesn't cover after that.
"Come
January, they're going to go to the doctor [or] end up in the hospital and have
this huge bill," Greiner said.
People
caught in that unfortunate situation will have until the end of February to
enroll in an Advantage plan. But they'd still be on the hook for any expenses
Medicare doesn't pay before their new coverage kicks in.
There is
another option beyond an Advantage plan called a Medigap plan. It's generally
more expensive than an Advantage plan because its provider network is wide
open. That's what Kristine Lund, 53, of Savage selected. She's disabled, on
Medicare and thoroughly annoyed.
"What
I found now is still not as good as what I had with the Cost plan," she
said.
Lund said
her new plan increases her monthly premium by about 40 percent. Lund's advice
is to shop carefully.
"And
ask exactly what they cover because a lot of them have skimped on the coverage
now," she said.
Help
finding a plan is available at Medicare.gov and also regionally through
the Senior LinkAge line in Minnesota and the
various health insurance companies.
Schowalter
said Cost plan holders who need to switch and haven't done so yet should not
put it off any longer.
"Now's
the time to get some background. Make sure you have a plan and have some
conversations about what kind of Medicare you want next year," he said.
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2018/12/07/seniors-dumped-off-medicare-cost-plans-frustrated-angry
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