Las Vegas Review-Journal

Do’s and don’ts of Medicare coverage

- MEDICARE

MEDICARE helps pay for a wide variety of medical services and goods in hospitals, doctor’s offices, and other health care settings. But it doesn’t cover everything, and it’s useful to know what is and isn’t covered.

Services and goods are covered either under Medicare Part A or Part B. If you have both Part A and Part B, you can get many Medicare-covered services whether you have Original Medicare or a Medicare health plan, such as Medicare Advantage.

Part A is hospital insurance and helps pay for:

Inpatient care in hospitals;

Inpatient care in a skilled nursing facility (but not custodial or long-term care);

Hospice care;

Home health care; Inpatient care in a religious nonmedical health care institutio­n.

Part B (medical insurance) helps cover medically necessary doctors’ services, outpatient care, home health services, durable medical equipment such as wheelchair­s and walkers, and other services.

Part B also covers many preventive-care services, such as vaccinatio­ns and cancer screenings.

You can find out if you have Parts A and B by looking at your Medicare card. If you have Original Medicare, you’ll use this card to get your Medicare-covered services. If you join a Medicare Advantage plan, in most cases you must use the card from the plan to get Medi

Under Original Medicare, if the yearly Part B deductible ($198 in 2020) applies, you must pay all costs (up to the Medicare-approved amount) until you meet the Part B deductible before Medicare begins to pay its share.

After your deductible is met, you typically pay 20 percent of the Medicare-approved amount of the service, if the doctor or other health care provider accepts assignment. (“Accepting assignment” means that a doctor or other provider agrees to be paid directly by Medicare, to accept the Medicare payment amount for the service, and not to bill you for more than the Medicare deductible and co-insurance.)

There’s no yearly limit on what you pay out-of-pocket under Original Medicare.

If you’re in a Medicare Advantage plan or have other insurance, your costs may be different.

If you need certain services that aren’t covered under Part A or Part B, you’ll have to pay for them yourself unless:

You have other insurance (including Medicaid) to cover the costs;

You’re in a Medicare Advantage plan that covers these services.

Some services and goods that Medicare Parts A and B don’t cover are: Most dental care;

Eye exams related to prescribin­g glasses;

Dentures;

Cosmetic surgery;

Massage therapy;

Routine physical exams; Long-term care;

Concierge care (also called concierge medicine, retainer-based medicine or boutique medicine);

Hearing aids and exams for fitting them.

Cate Kortzeborn is Medicare’s regional administra­tor for Arizona, California, Nevada, Hawaii and the Pacific Territorie­s. Get answers to your Medicare questions by calling 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227).

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