November
23, 2019 2:30 pm
Medicare’s revamped prescription plan finder
can steer unwitting seniors to coverage that costs much more than they need to
pay, according to people who help with sign-ups as well as program experts.
Serving some 60 million Medicare recipients,
the plan finder is the most commonly used tool on Medicare.gov and just got its
first major update in a decade. The Trump administration has hailed the new
version and Medicare Administrator Seema Verma says it will empower
beneficiaries to take advantage of their coverage options.
But as open enrollment goes into the home
stretch Thanksgiving week, critics say the new tool can create confusion by
obscuring out-of-pocket costs that seniors should factor into their decisions.
“I want to make sure people are given the most
accurate information and they’re making the best decision — because they are
the ones stuck with it,” said Ann Kayrish, senior program manager for Medicare
at the National Council on Aging, a nonpartisan organization that advocates for
seniors and provides community services.
Government programs mixing health care and
technology have faced struggles. Despite billions spent to subsidize electronic
medical records, getting different systems to communicate remains a challenge.
The Obama administration’s launch of HealthCare.gov resulted in an embarrassing
debacle when the website froze up the first day.
The leading Democrat on the Senate Aging
Committee said he’s hearing concerns from constituents and organizations that
assist Medicare beneficiaries. Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey said he will ask
Medicare to grant seniors who’ve had problems a second chance to sign up,
called a “special enrollment period.”
“It’s obviously an effort that needs a lot
more work to meet the legitimate expectations of seniors,” said Casey.
“Especially when you launch something new, (it) can go awry. People steered in
the wrong direction should get a measure of fairness.”
The Medicare plan finder’s issue stems from a
significant change the agency made for 2020.
The plan with the lowest premium now gets
automatically placed on top, with the monthly premium displayed in large font.
Medicare’s previous plan finder automatically
sorted plans by total cost, not just premiums.
But premiums are only one piece of
information.
When out-of-pocket expenses such as copays are
factored in, the plan with the lowest total annual cost is often not the first
one shown by the plan finder.
It takes extra work for a Medicare enrollee to
discover that.
“If they pick the plan based solely on the
premium they are likely getting a plan that could cost them thousands more in a
calendar year,” said Christina Reeg of the Ohio Department of Insurance. She
heads a program that helps Medicare enrollees try to find the right plan.
In a statement, Medicare said the monthly
premium is a cost that consumers understand and will always be an important
decision factor.
But the agency also said total cost paid
out-of-pocket is at least equally, if not more important, particularly for
people who take prescription drugs — as do most seniors. Medicare said it’s
testing ways to encourage consumers to look at total costs, such as a pop-up.
The agency said it chose to prominently
display premiums because user testing showed that’s what consumers are familiar
with. The total annual cost is included, but in smaller font.
That’s puzzling to Kayrish. The lowest premium
“doesn’t necessarily translate to lowest cost over the year,” she explained.
Consumers using the plan finder first enter
their medications and dosages. To get it to find plans by lowest total annual
cost, they must take a few more steps, said Kayrish.
After the screen displays initial search
results, consumers should look for the drop-down menu on the right of the
screen. Next, she said, select the feature that lets you re-sort plans by
“lowest drug + premium cost.”
A reporter’s sample search on a list of six
medications for high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes returned 29
plans in the Washington, D.C., area, topped by a lowest-premium option for
$13.20 a month.
But after re-sorting for the lowest total
cost, the best deal was a plan with a monthly premium of $25.80.
When out-of-pocket expenses were factored in,
the second plan cost about $5,800 less a year than the initial lowest-premium
option the plan finder displayed.
Costs can vary so much because plans have
different coverage designs and they don’t pay the same prices to drugmakers.
And Kayrish said there’s another issue: The
new plan finder can return options that don’t cover all of a patient’s
medications.
If a low-premium plan has very high
out-of-pocket costs, it’s a clue that some of your drugs may not be covered.
Check plan details.
Some academic experts compared the old and new
versions of the Medicare plan finder and confirmed the problems flagged by
hands-on users.
Their review also found improvements. Among
them:
— Consumers can enter their Medicare number
and the new plan finder automatically fills in all the medications the program
paid for. (Consumer advocates recommend double-checking this list.)
— The new tool can be used more easily on
mobile devices and tablets.
— The revamped plan finder allows consumers to
compare across Part D drug plans and Medicare Advantage medical plans.
“The new plan finder is in many ways improved,
but it did take a meaningful step backward by not doing more to highlight its
most useful output— the total cost estimate,” said Brian McGarry, an assistant
professor at the University of Rochester in New York. He’s the lead author of a
recent online article about the plan finder for Health Affairs.
Seniors have until Dec. 7 to pick or switch
“Part D” prescription drug plans or, if they’re seeking comprehensive medical
care through a private insurer, a Medicare Advantage plan. Coverage takes
effect Jan. 1.
(AP)
https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/general/1803206/medicare-drug-plan-finder-can-steer-seniors-to-higher-costs.html
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