One of the Center for Medicare Advocacy’s top priorities is to
expand Medicare coverage to include oral and dental care for all beneficiaries.
The addition of a comprehensive dental/oral health benefit would go a long way
to improve the overall health and well-being of older persons and people with
disabilities. It is among the top changes that beneficiaries wish to see in the
Medicare program. Despite this, the large majority of the Medicare population
has no dental coverage. Lack of coverage and the high cost of dental care
lead many beneficiaries to delay or forgo necessary dental care
altogether. There has been a growing recognition for many years now that
the glaring lack of coverage in this area must be addressed.
Join OPEN, the Center for Medicare Advocacy, Families USA, and
Justice In Aging for a Twitter Chat this Wednesday, December 4, 2019, at 3:00
PM Eastern: Building
the Momentum: Mouths Belong in Medicare.
Follow @OPENoralhealth
to join, and use the hashtags #MouthsinMedicare
and #OralHealthEquity.
See our FAQ's, below, to get ready!
Adding a
Dental Benefit to Medicare Part B
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Who
is eligible for Medicare?
Most older adults age 65 and older,
as well as certain younger people with disabilities, are eligible for Medicare.
Today, there are approximately 60 million individuals enrolled in Medicare,
including over 9 million people with disabilities under age 65.
2. What
are the different parts of Medicare and what do they cover?
Medicare coverage and benefits are
nationwide. Unlike Medicaid, Original Medicare (Parts A & B) does not vary
from state to state. There are four parts to Medicare:
·
Part A covers
inpatient hospitalizations, limited days in skilled nursing facilities, home
health care, and hospice care.
·
Part B
covers medically necessary and preventive health services usually provided in
an outpatient setting. Examples include physician services, diagnostic tests
like mammograms and colonoscopies, specialist and primary care visits,
therapy, durable medical equipment, and ambulance services.
·
Part C,
also known as Medicare Advantage, is an optional way for beneficiaries to
receive their Medicare benefits from plans administered by private insurance
companies. Medicare Part C covers everything that Original Medicare (Part A and
Part B) covers and may cover extra benefits, such as limited dental care.
·
Part D
covers prescription drugs provided through private prescription drug plans.
3. Why
doesn’t Medicare include oral health coverage?
The Medicare statute excludes
coverage of routine preventive and restorative oral health care except in
limited circumstances during hospitalization. Further, although the dental
exclusion language in the Medicare statute is limited, the Medicare agency has
interpreted it broadly to cover only a very few medically necessary non-routine
procedures. As a result, 37 million Medicare enrollees have no oral health
coverage and only half of Medicare beneficiaries saw a dental provider in the
last year.
4. Why
add oral health coverage to Medicare Part B rather than creating a new benefit
like a Part T?
Recognizing that oral health is
integral to overall health, adding oral health coverage into Part B integrates
oral health with the delivery of other health benefits, including preventive
services. Adding oral health to Part B would also minimize administrative
complexity by using Part B’s coverage criteria, payment structure, rate
setting, appeals, and low-income beneficiary protections that are already in
place.
5. Don’t
Medicare Advantage Plans cover oral health? Why wouldn’t everyone just
sign up for one of those?
Most Medicare Advantage (MA) plans
do offer oral health coverage, but that coverage varies greatly from plan to
plan, can limit the scope of benefits, and often requires beneficiaries to pay
premiums and cost sharing. Additionally, MA plans are not the right choice for
everyone because, unlike Original Medicare, which allows enrollees to see any
Medicare provider, MA enrollees can only see providers contracted with the
health plan. If oral health is added to Medicare Part B, all Medicare Advantage
plans would be required to offer comprehensive oral health benefits to their
members. The two-thirds of all Medicare enrollees in Original Medicare
would also get the benefit.
6. What
about Medicaid coverage?
Medicaid provides health coverage
for over 8 million Medicare beneficiaries with low incomes and assets. However,
state Medicaid programs are not required to provide adult dental coverage.
Accordingly, there is wide variation of adult coverage from state to state,
with some states offering extensive benefits while others only cover dental in
emergency departments. And because it is an optional benefit, states often
choose to eliminate the benefit when they face budget constraints. Adding a
dental benefit to Medicare would mean that all Medicare beneficiaries would
have access to the same oral health benefit.
7. The
Medicare trust fund is almost insolvent, so can it afford to add another
benefit?
The Medicare trust fund finances
Part A. Part B is funded separately, so expanding Part B benefits does not
directly impact the Part A trust fund. Moreover, the Part A trust fund is not
on the verge of bankruptcy. It is projected to be able to pay 100% of Part A
costs through 2026 and there are multiple options to further extend its
solvency.
8. But
Part B is fee-for-service—shouldn’t we be creating a benefit that pays based on
health outcomes?
Including the benefit in Part B
does not preclude value-based payment approaches or lock the benefit into any
one payment model. Much innovation and experimentation in payment for health
care is taking place both in Medicare—including Medicare Part B—and in the
private health care market, and we expect payment models in Part B to evolve.
With an oral health benefit included in Part B, the unique issues in oral
health payment in Medicare would be woven into those broader models.
9. How
are payments for providers set in Medicare Part B?
Part B has established procedures
for annually determining provider fee schedules, adjusted by region and subject
to annual stakeholder comment. Though most providers in Part B are paid based
on these fee schedules, some providers and provider groups are
participating in alternate payment arrangements. Providers, such as Accountable
Care Organizations (ACOs), can receive bonuses or pay penalties based on their
performance in reaching certain quality and savings benchmarks. Medicare
Advantage plans pay providers in various ways, including capitation, depending
on the plan and provider type.
10. How
does this help my state?
If oral health is added to
Medicare, all individuals eligible for Medicare would have access to
comprehensive oral health coverage no matter which state they live in. This
would also help to reduce disparities in access and oral health outcomes based
on race, income, residence, and disability. By relieving the significant burden
of providing oral health care to low-income older adults and younger adults
with disabilities, a Medicare Part B benefit would allow state Medicaid
agencies to provide more comprehensive oral health or other benefits to other
underserved populations.
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