What the Health Reform Law Does for Those on Medicare

By David Sayen, Regional Medicare Administrator for California

We hear a lot of back and forth these days about the Affordable Care Act—aka the federal health reform law—but not much about how it affects people with Medicare. When you sort through all the rhetoric, one thing is clear: the two-year-old reform law contains some real benefits for those who get their coverage through Medicare.

Good-Bye Donut Hole

Take the so-called “donut hole” in the Medicare prescription drug program, Part D.

The donut hole is a gap where you don’t have coverage even though you’re still paying premiums. After you’ve paid a certain amount out of pocket, your coverage resumes. Congress intended the hole to hold down costs in the drug program, the biggest expansion of Medicare benefits in many years.

Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the hole is being gradually closed until it completely disappears in 2020. This year, the law gives people with Medicare a 50-percent discount on covered brand-name drugs in the donut hole, and a 14-percent discount on covered generics.

In 2011, more than 319,000 Medicare beneficiaries in California saved $171 million in the donut hole. That’s an average savings of $538 per person.

Early Preventive Interventio

The ACA also helps people with Medicare by eliminating co-insurance and deductibles on vital preventive health services. Such services can help keep people healthy and detect disease in its earliest, most treatable stages.

As a result, Medicare now offers a long list of preventive health services with no out-ofpocket costs, including screenings for cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis and shots for flu and pneumonia.

The health reform law also adds new preventive screenings and counseling for obesity, alcohol abuse and depression.

More than 2 million Californians with Medicare received at least one Medicare-covered preventive health benefit in 2011.

Annual Wellness Visits

The health reform law also creates another important benefit for people with Medicare: annual wellness visits.

If you’ve had Medicare Part B for longer than 12 months, you can get a yearly wellness visit with your doctor to develop or update a personalized plan to prevent illness based on your current health and risk factors.

The annual wellness visit is in addition to the one-time “Welcome to Medicare” preventive visit when you first enroll in Medicare.

More than 165,000 Californians with Medicare took advantage of a wellness visit last year.

Improvements to Advantage Plans

Because of financial incentives in the Affordable Care Act, seniors also can expect to see better quality in their Medicare Advantage health plans. Such plans are operated by private insurers and generally require you to stay within a network of physicians and other providers or face higher out-of-pocket expenses.

Medicare Advantage plans that receive quality ratings of three stars or more under our Five-Star Rating System will get bonus payments. We believe the bonuses will motivate other plans to improve their quality as well.

Medicare Advantage plans that receive five stars—the highest rating—will be able to market to and enroll seniors year-round, not just during the open enrollment period in the fall. That means seniors can switch to the best plans at any time. [To check your plan’s rating, go to www.Medicare.gov.]

Crack Down on Fraud

Lastly, the ACA provides a variety of new tools to crack down on Medicare fraud. The law not only toughens federal sentencing guidelines for fraud (meaning crooks will spend more time in prison), it also allows us to suspend payments to providers suspected of trying to rip off Medicare.

In addition, we’re now using sophisticated predictive analytics software to identify patterns of fraud and target crooks. This is the same type of software credit card companies use to stop fraud.

David Sayen is Medicare’s regional administrator for California, Arizona, Nevada, Hawaii, and the Pacific Trust Territories. You can get answers to your Medicare questions by calling 1-800-MEDICARE (1- 800-633-4227).

This is part of the March 23, 2012 online edition of The Mountain Enterprise.

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