The 300,000
Minnesotans who lost Cost plans have a few days left to bypass health
scrutiny.
By Christopher Snowbeck Star Tribune
MARCH 1, 2019 — 7:12PM
For the 300,000
Minnesotans who lost their Medicare Cost health plans this year, these are the
final days to exercise a special option to buy a Medicare Supplement policy
without answering health history questions that might otherwise deny them
access to the coverage.
Called a
"guaranteed issue" right, the one-time chance ends after Monday and
is an important option for consumers who prefer the certainty of paying a
higher monthly premium for coverage, rather than worrying about co-payments and
out-of-pocket costs should they need care.
Also known as
"Medigap" policies, Medicare Supplements give seniors access to all
doctors who participate with Medicare, whereas the primary alternative — a
Medicare Advantage health plan from a private insurer — steers people toward
networks of physicians and hospitals.
"Without guaranteed
issue rights, in order to get into a Medigap plan, beneficiaries would have to
undergo that health screen," said Rose Leese, a quality analyst with the
Senior LinkAge Line, the state's helpline for Medicare consumers. "The
plan could then deny them coverage … [or] they could put a waiting period on
any coverage."
Medigap policies are an
option for people in the traditional Medicare program who want help with the
government program's cost-sharing requirements. Those rules can leave patients
needing to cover 20 percent of medical bills in some cases. Many who buy
Medigap coverage also purchase a stand-alone Part D prescription drug plan to
cover medication costs.
A federal law eliminated
Cost plans for more than 300,000 Minnesotans this year, forcing a choice
between original Medicare and a newer form of coverage called Medicare
Advantage. The shift, in turn, set off a competitive frenzy among health
insurers in Minnesota.
In 2017, insurers saw
about $29.9 billion in premium revenue from Medicare Supplement plans,
according to Mark Farrah Associates, a Pennsylvania-based market research firm.
The company has data on roughly three-quarters of the Medicare Advantage
market, and those insurers in 2017 saw about $171 billion in revenue, said Ryan
Wolfe, general manager at the research firm.
Health insurers can
generate more revenue per enrollee from selling a Medicare Advantage plan
compared with a Medicare Supplement policy, Wolfe said, but limited data makes
it difficult to say which line of business is more profitable.
Medigap plans typically
come with higher premiums, whereas Medicare Advantage plans bring co-payments
and other medical bills when people use care up to an annual limit. Medigap
plans can be paired with Part D plans from any of more than two dozen companies
that sell drug coverage, whereas Medicare Advantage enrollees are limited to
benefits offered by their medical insurer.
The benefits with
Medigap plans are standardized, whereas Advantage plan details can change from
year to year. And Medigap plans don't use rules like "prior
authorization" that control costs but can frustrate patients.
Some who left Cost plans
and enrolled in Medicare Advantage for 2019 have since switched to original
Medicare plus a supplement, insurance agents say, due to the high cost of
chemotherapy and certain medication treatments that are infused in medical
settings. Those medication costs can easily generate big out-of-pocket costs,
agents say, that more than swallow premium savings with the Medicare Advantage
plans.
"If a person needs
cancer treatment and they're going to go through chemotherapy, they're probably
going to hit the out-of-pocket maximum that year," said Shawnee
Christenson, an insurance agent with Crosstown Insurance in New Hope.
"Whereas on a Medicare Supplement plan, you're not going to incur those
extra expenses."
People with complex
health problems who are regular users of clinics and hospitals might be better
off financially with Medigap, said Joshua Haberman, an insurance agent with
Bloomington-based Alexander & Haberman. Medicare Advantage plans, by
comparison, can make financial sense for people who wind up not using much
health care for several years, and thereby accumulate premium savings that can
cover future out-of-pocket costs.
"It should be a
long-term bet on value" to go with Medicare Advantage, Haberman said via
e-mail. "If you think your timeline is short or your primary interest is
peace-of-mind, you may find a Medicare Supplement is more suitable."
Insurers say that it's
difficult to generalize about the suitability of Medigap vs. Medicare
Advantage, because the decision is based on personal needs and a household's
budget. Proponents note that Medicare Advantage plans often include extra
benefits such as hearing, dental and vision benefits. They also argue that patients
in Medicare Advantage plans can benefit from care coordination provided by
insurance companies.
To trigger the
guaranteed issue right, consumers will be asked to provide documentation
showing they were forced out of a Cost plan, insurers say.
Seniors who lost Cost
plans and revert to original Medicare after Monday's deadline would still have
the option of applying for a Medigap plan at a later date, said Tom Peterson,
the owner of Twin Cities Underwriters, an insurance agency based in Roseville.
However, the likelihood that seniors might be turned down at that point due to
answers they provide about their health history is unclear.
http://www.startribune.com/medicare-supplement-deadline-arrives-for-300-000-minnesotans-on-monday/506551452/
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