By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR November 9, 2018
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Medicare is experimenting with a new direction in health care. Starting
next year, seniors in many states will be able to get additional services such
as help with chores and respite for caregivers through private Medicare
Advantage insurance plans.
There’s
a growing recognition that such practical help can have a meaningful impact on
patients’ well-being — and reduce some costs for taxpayers. A couple of hundred
dollars to install grab bars in the shower can prevent a fall leading to a
broken hip, a life-changing injury.
That
may also help elderly people stay in their homes longer.
The
newly covered services are similar to what people might need if they required
long-term care, said Howard Gleckman, a senior researcher at the nonpartisan
Urban Institute think tank.
“It
begins to break down the wall between long-term care and Medicare, which, with
very few exceptions, has never paid for long-term care,” Gleckman said.
Map shows where some
new Medicare Advantage support services are available.
Change
is starting slowly. Policymakers have yet to figure out how to bring similar
benefits to traditional Medicare, still the choice of 2 out of 3 seniors.
The new
services will be offered by some Medicare Advantage plans in more than 20
states next year, and that’s expected to grow over time.
There
has to be a health-related reason to qualify, and costs will vary among plans.
In some plans, there’s no added cost. But limits do apply. For example, a plan
may cover one day per week at an adult day care center.
Nearly
23 million Medicare beneficiaries, or more than 1 in 3, are expected to be
covered by a Medicare Advantage plan next year. The private plans generally
offer lower out-of-pocket costs in exchange for limits on choice of doctors and
hospitals and other restrictions such as prior authorization for services. It’s
a growing business for insurers.
Medicare
Advantage open enrollment for 2019 ends Dec. 7. But it’s not easy to use
Medicare’s online plan finder to search for plans with expanded benefits, so
beneficiaries and their families will have to rely on promotional materials
that insurers mail during open enrollment.
For
years, Medicare has permitted private plans to offer supplemental benefits not
covered by the traditional program. Think free gym memberships, transportation
to medical appointments or home-delivered meals following a hospitalization.
The new
benefits take that to a higher level, with Medicare’s blessing.
“It is
a big concept, in the sense that it is officially encouraging plans to get
across the line into the many, many things that affect the health and
well-being of beneficiaries,” said Marc Russo, president of insurer Anthem’s
Medicare business. “I, for one, who have been in and around Medicare for
decades, believe it pays.”
Insurers
under Anthem’s corporate umbrella are offering different packages in 12 of 21
states where they operate Medicare plans. They can include alternative
medicine, like acupuncture, or adult day care center visits or a personal
helper at home.
Other
major insurers like UnitedHealthcare and Humana are participating. It’s a
calculated gamble for insurers, who still have to make a profit.
And the
limited new benefits are no substitute for full long-term care coverage, which
many people need for at least part of their lives and remains prohibitively
expensive. Seniors trying to get long-term care through Medicaid, the program
for low-income people, must spend down their life savings.
“Medicare
policy has not kept up with the times,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., one of the
authors of bipartisan legislation seen as a catalyst for expanded services
through Medicare Advantage.
Wyden
said he’s working to bring similar options to traditional Medicare.
“Clearly
this is going to have to be an effort that is going to have to be built out,”
he added.
The
changes represent a rare consensus at a time when health care issues are among
the most politically divisive. Republican and Democratic lawmakers, as well as
Seema Verma, the Trump administration’s Medicare chief, are pulling in the same
direction.
The
idea of broader services through Medicare Advantage was embodied in a
bipartisan Senate Finance Committee bill to improve care for chronically ill
seniors. The Trump administration issued regulations in the spring trying to
accelerate the changes.
According
to Medicare, 12 insurers will be offering expanded supplemental benefits next
year through 160 plans in 20 states. In four other states and Puerto Rico, such
benefits may be available to seniors with certain health conditions.
“The
guidance came out fairly late in the annual planning process, and that’s one
reason why some of these benefits may start out small,” said Steve Warner, head
of Medicare Advantage program development for UnitedHealthcare.
Medicare
estimates that some 780,000 beneficiaries will have access to the new benefits
next year. In-home helpers and support for caregivers are the most popular.
Consumer
advocates recommend that seniors carefully weigh whether Medicare Advantage is
best for them. If they don’t like it, they can go back to traditional Medicare,
but those with a pre-existing condition may not be able to buy a Medigap policy
to help cover out-of-pocket costs. They can also switch to another Medicare
Advantage plan.
Medicare
doesn’t pay the insurers more for offering added benefits. Under a complex
formula, they’re primarily financed out of the difference between bids
submitted by insurers and Medicare’s maximum payment to plans. If the companies
bid below Medicare’s rate, they can return some of that to beneficiaries in the
form of added benefits.
https://apnews.com/55e619262d5d455f9a9ac35900e3f3a1?_lrsc=dd5fd71b-1943-4cb3-9c62-88b97d1cf1b6&utm_source=Elevate&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=Associates
No comments:
Post a Comment