PUBLISHED
SAT, OCT 3 202011:00 AM EDTUPDATED SAT, OCT 3 202011:00 AM EDT
KEY POINTS
·
Health insurers and
online brokers are boosting staffing for this year’s Medicare open
enrollment.
·
Most years seniors
seek help from brokers or agents to help them choose a health plan.
·
The average Medicare
enrollee will have 47 plans to choose from for 2021.
·
Because of rising
Covid-19 cases, most Medicare enrollees are reluctant to seek assistance in
person this year, according to a consumer survey.
A senior signing up for Medicare.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
Open
enrollment season for Medicare enrollees can sometimes be overwhelming because
of the wide variety of choices.
The
average senior will have 47 different health plans to choose from for 2021,
according to the Trump administration, up 20% from last year.
In
most years, the majority of seniors turn to independent brokers and insurance
agents for help trying to figure out which plan will work best for them.
“In
our focus groups, people said it’s kind of nice to have an agent who can walk
you through the options and steer you toward a certain plan,” said Tricia
Neuman, executive director of the Kaiser Family Foundation program on Medicare
policy. But, she adds, “it’s much harder this year just because people are
mostly home.”
With
Covid-19 cases rising across the country, seniors are reluctant to seek help in
person this year. In states with big surges, just 9% of Medicare recipients
said they plan to meet with a broker in person this year, according to a
consumer survey by health insurance consulting firm Deft
Research. Two-thirds plan to seek advice on the phone, it
said.
Medicare
insurer Humana said it will offer socially
distanced, in-person appointments with agents, “based on the guidance of local
health officials,” according to a company press release. Rival UnitedHealth
Group is moving its enrollment efforts online.
“We
hold a lot of community meetings across the country during open enrollment …
(but) we’re expecting to do many more of those in a virtual setting,” said Tim
Noel, CEO of UnitedHealthcare Medicare and Retirement plans. He said Zoom-style
meetings have been popular with brokers and seniors. “It’s similar to what
we’re seeing in telehealth.”
Online
health insurance brokerages are expecting they’ll see a surge in demand for
phone consults when Medicare open enrollment begins later this month. They have
been expanding their staffing over the summer, shifting their agents from call
centers to systems at home, and retooling their websites.
“We’re
going to try to leverage technology as much as possible to the process to make
things more efficient … with things like voice signatures for people completing
and application, and DocuSign capability in multiple languages that allow our
brokers to complete sales without having to interact in a face-to-face
environment,” said Clint Jones, co-founder and CEO of GoHealth.
To
help streamline phone discussions with its brokers, eHealth is
launching a new customer center where Medicare enrollees can create a secure
permanent profile with information about their current health plan, doctors and
medications to help make comparing new plan options easier.
“We
obviously didn’t know when we were building this that we’d be launching it
right at a time when seniors are starting to get more comfortable shopping
online and being less comfortable with physical meetings,” said eHealth CEO
Scott Flanders.
While
seniors can’t start signing up for new plans until Oct. 15, they
can browse plan options now. Like the online brokers, the Trump administration has
expanded plan finder and comparison tools on Medicare.gov to
help seniors research coverage options.
Yet,
typically, very few seniors actually change plans in any given year. A Kaiser
Family Foundation analysis found just
10% of Medicare Part D and 8% of Medicare Advantage enrollees voluntarily
switched coverage during open enrollment in 2016. They are automatically
re-enrolled in their current plan if they don’t make a choice.
“I
think this could be a year where people are even more likely to stick with what
they have than make a switch,” said Neuman. “There’s so much worry and anxiety
generally right now that I think this might be too tall an order for many
people.”
Medicare
open enrollment runs through Dec. 7.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/10/03/medicare-open-enrollment-more-seniors-to-seek-online-help-.html
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