It’s Medicare open enrollment season,
This is a chronicle on medicine. But paying for medical care and illnesses is a crucial part of medicine. So, as neutral as possible, I’m going to give an extremely simplified comparison of the original Medicare (OM) and Medicare Advantage (MAP) plans in this short space.
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Medicare-approved private health plans have become known as Medicare Advantage Plans (MAP), or Part C, because they include both Parts A and B of OM. It also expanded Medicare to include an optional prescription drug benefit, Part D, which came into effect in 2006.
As a reminder, the fundamental structure of OM is part A for hospitalization and part B for other medical expenses excluding medication, vision, hearing and dental care. It pays 80% of the allocated amount decided and accepted by the health insurance “providers”. The benefits are the same from person to person. Almost all doctors/providers accept Medicare patients. There is therefore no limited “network” of suppliers. You must pay the remaining 20% of the fees out of pocket with no limit to this amount per year. To compensate for this, supplemental Medicare insurance plans from private companies, called Medigap plans, like
MAPs are intended to be all-in-one alternatives. They pay for parts A and B and often, but not always, have drug, dental, hearing, and vision plans. These are sold by private companies, which receive a set amount from Medicare for accepting you. These can be confusing and confusing, as private companies can set rules to set all sorts of different fees, depending on your age, pre-existing conditions and even zip code.
The advertisements broadcast by the MAPs sound VERY good. Zero monthly premiums and maximum annual disbursements of
If you sign up for a MAP, don’t like it and want to come back to OM, it may not be easy, especially finding a Medigap plan.
Keep in mind that this is exactly what private “health” insurers do, insure your health, but not so much your illnesses. They make money from your bonuses, not by paying your bills. Charities they are not. I have a skewed perspective of battling insurers when I was in full-time practice. They fight tooth and nail to avoid or delay payment. It’s not a secret. The columnist MD recalls that “health debt is the number one cause of personal bankruptcy” in