December 14, 2016 By Greg Allen
COBRA, Retiree Plans, VA Benefits Don’t Alleviate Need To Sign Up For
Medicare
By Susan Jaffe
When Cindy Hunter received her Medicare card
in the mail last spring, she said she “didn’t know a lot about Medicare.” She
and her husband, retired teachers who live in a Philadelphia suburb, decided
she didn’t need it because she shared his retiree health insurance, which
covered her treatment for ovarian cancer.
“We were so thankful we had good insurance,”
she said. So she sent back the card, telling officials she would keep Medicare Part A, which
is free for most older or disabled Americans and covers hospitalization, some
nursing home stays and home health care. But she turned down Part B,
which covers doctor visits and other outpatient care and comes with a monthly
premium charge. A new Medicare card arrived that says she only has Part A.
When Stan Withers left a job at a medical
device company to become vice president of a small start-up near Sacramento,
Calif., he took his health insurance with him. Under a federal law known as
COBRA, he paid the full cost to continue his coverage from his previous
employer. A few years earlier, when he turned 65, he signed up for Medicare’s
Part A. With the addition of a COBRA plan, he thought he didn’t need Medicare
Part B.
Hunter and Withers now know they were wrong
and are stuck with medical bills their insurance won’t cover. Hunter called it
“an honest mistake” and said there was nothing in the written materials she and
her husband received indicating that if they had Medicare Part A, his retiree
coverage could not replace Medicare Part B. Withers had no idea he made a
bad choice.
Thousands of seniors unwittingly make similar
mistakes every year, believing that because they have some type of health
insurance, they don’t have to worry about signing up for Medicare Part B.
Generally, insurance other than that provided by a current employer will not
exempt them from Medicare’s strict enrollment requirements. Seniors’ advocates
and some members of Congress want to fix the problem, backed by a broad, unlikely group of
unions, health insurers, patient organizations, health care providers and even eight former
Medicare administrators.
Medicare’s Part B enrollment rules haven’t
changed since the program was created in 1965. Seniors can enroll only when
they first become eligible — usually three months before and after the
month they turn 65 — or when their job-based insurance ends. If they
miss this opportunity, they have to wait until the months of January through
March to enroll and then coverage only begins July 1. Most won’t be allowed
to buy any other health insurance policy during that time.
And if they delay signing up for 12 or more
months after becoming eligible, many will be hit with a permanent penalty added
to their Part B monthly premium. In 2014, about 750,000 beneficiaries paid late
penalties, raising their Part B premiums an average of 29 percent,
according to the Congressional Research Service.
“The rules have not changed, but our lives
have,” said Joe Baker, president of the Medicare Rights Center, an advocacy
group that is leading the effort to update the enrollment process. When
Medicare began, the government wanted seniors, especially younger and healthier
people, to sign up quickly and so the deadlines and late penalties were
incentives to get them in the program.
But these days more seniors work past the
Medicare eligibility age, get health insurance through their employer or their
spouse’s, or have coverage through the health insurance marketplaces, Baker
said. The problem isn’t that people are going without insurance. “The confusion
that we really see is with how Medicare interacts with other insurance
coverage,” he said.
Hunter, 62, became eligible for Medicare
earlier than 65 because she gets Social Security disability benefits. She’s
receiving two chemotherapy drugs to control a second reoccurrence of ovarian
cancer. This fall her oncologist’s office told her there’s “something going on
with your insurance,” she recalled. After many calls to her husband’s retiree
plan, Social Security, Medicare and even her congressman, she learned that her
insurance would only pay a share of the bills for her cancer treatment after
deducting the amount the insurer said was Medicare’s responsibility. “But
Medicare isn’t paying because I don’t have Part B,” she said. So Hunter is
probably responsible for that portion.
Withers thought the health plan he purchased
through his old employer would count as job-based coverage, but COBRA is not a
substitute for Medicare Part B, a point no one mentioned when he submitted his
paperwork. He should have signed up for Part B when he left his previous job.
“How could there be a rule that no one knows
about?” Withers asked.
In addition, the private plan has refused to
pay thousands of dollars in medical bills because the company argued that he
should have had Part B and those are Medicare’s responsibility.
Confusion over COBRA is just one of many
reasons that people miss their opportunity to enroll in Part B. Others think,
incorrectly, that getting Veterans Health Administration benefits, job-based
health insurance from a company with less than 20 workers, retiree coverage
from a former employer, or coverage from the health law’s insurance
marketplace exempts them from Part B’s lifetime late penalties and waiting
periods with no insurance.
To help seniors avoid such mistakes, bipartisan
legislation has been introduced in both the House and Senate that
would allow people who miss their initial Part B enrollment deadline to sign up
in the fall, when millions of seniors already in Medicare are choosing private
drug or medical policies. Part B coverage would begin the month after they
enroll, said Stacy Sanders, federal policy director at the Medicare Rights
Center. It would also allow most people who enroll late to apply for
retroactive coverage to their initial eligibility date and request a waiver of
the late penalties if they can prove they were misled by an employer, health
plan, insurance broker or state official (currently, an exemption may be based
only on misinformation from a federal government representative).
“Because I didn’t ask Social Security and they
didn’t give me the wrong information, there was nothing they could do,” Hunter
said. “They said if they had given me the wrong information, they might be able
to do something.”
Seniors “shouldn’t face penalties or gaps in
their Part B coverage simply due to bureaucratic snafu,” said Rep. Patrick
Meehan, R-Pa., who co-sponsored the House bill. “I’ve had seniors contact my
office and say they simply had no idea of existing deadlines — or that
they faced penalties down the road for missing them.”
The legislation also would require Medicare
officials to notify all Americans prior to their 65th birthday about signing up
for Medicare. Currently, the federal government
and some states notify only those 64-year-olds who have health
insurance though the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces.
Although the bill appears unlikely to see
action before the end of the current congressional session, Meehan said he will
reintroduce it in 2017.
Getting an official government notice before
turning 65 explaining when to sign up for Part B would “absolutely” help, said
Withers. “There should be something that tells people what they need to do.”
KHN’s coverage related to aging &
improving care of older adults is supported by The John A. Hartford Foundation.
Kaiser Health News
(KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially
independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser
Family Foundation.
This is a guest post
by Susan Jaffe of Kaiser Health News a national health policy news service that
is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.
http://senioramericansassociation.com/2016/12/14/seniors-get-destroyed-medical-bills-medicare-mistake/?utm_source=161215SAAMRLUCKYSHOT5&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=161215SAAMRLUCKYSHOT5
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