South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

IN LOCAL:

Apple Watches, Fitbits and meal delivery among highlights

- By Cindy Krischer Goodman

All the cool perks you can get for signing up for specific plans.

On a Monday morning, the regular crowd shuffles into a coffee shop near Century Village in Deerfield Beach for doughnuts and discussion. Today’s topic is Medicare open enrollment and the banter is lively.

A gray-haired man with a baseball cap and newspaper tucked under his arm says he wants to pay as little as possible for his medication­s and doctors. “I just want to make sure everything is covered,” says Ramon Gardia, 80. A man with a wobbly gait and persistent cough wants a plan that will pay for transporta­tion to his doctor’s office in Miami. “It’s 80 miles round trip; that’s a really long drive,” says Robert Miller, 81.

The coffee club has more this year to mull over than the usual Medicare Advantage plan choices. For 2020, insurers are offering extra benefits in response to new flexibilit­y from the federal government that allows them to finance almost anything that affects health. Along with the usual medical and drug coverage, plans are advertisin­g perks such as bathroom grab bars, transporta­tion to doctor’s appointmen­ts, adult day care, and even in-home pest control.

During the annual open enrollment period through Dec. 7, millions of Medicare beneficiar­ies, including 4.5 million in Florida, will decide whether to keep or change their Medicare Advantage plan, or enroll in original Medicare. These supplement­al benefits — on top of low premiums and traditiona­l coverage for routine exams and hospital visits — are another way for insurers to lure new members in a competitiv­e and lucrative Medicare Advantage plan landscape.

One plan offered in South Florida, Devoted Health, will give its members an Apple Watch to track their steps and heart rate, or access to a personal trainer. CarePlus is offering a $50 monthly allowance toward the purchase of select overthe-counter pain relievers, cough and cold medicines, allergy medication­s, and first aid/medical supplies. Other plans will provide members a Fitbit health tracker or home fitness kit, an allowance to help care for a service dog, and access to acupunctur­e or massages.

“These benefits are focused on keeping people well and can save the beneficiar­y and the plan a lot of money in the long run,” said Jeff Johnson, AARP Florida State Director. “It is still incumbent on seniors to figure out what works for them, but these expansive benefits are enticing.”

Medicare Advantage plans are big business for insurers and rule changes are allowing them to up their offerings. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) first allowed insurers to offer supplement­al benefits in the 2019 plan year, but only 3% of plans took advantage. For the 2020 year, CMS said more than 500 plans are participat­ing with many going further in what they offer. In addition, more than half of all plans will offer additional telehealth benefits.

Many of the new benefits in Advantage plans are tailored to people with chronic conditions and recognize a variety of factors that affect health. With these new supplement­al benefits, a senior with diabetes could get a glucose monitor, personal nutritiona­l counseling and diabetes education. For someone with heart disease, a plan could provide heart-healthy produce, and someone with asthma could receive home air cleaners or carpet cleaning service.

Also beginning in 2020, some Advantage plans will pay for home improvemen­ts to prevent falls, such as permanent ramps or wider hallways and doors to accommodat­e wheelchair­s or walkers.

Sifting through the offerings can be complicate­d, said David A. Lipschutz, associate director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy. “Not everyone will be eligible for them and you don’t know if you get them until you are actually in the plan. That could make making an informed decision more difficult.”

Bright Health, whose Advantage plans are new to Palm Beach, Orlando and Daytona in 2020, has both an HMO and PPO. Both plans cover perks such as therapeuti­c shoes or glucose monitors for diabetic patients, transporta­tion to medical appointmen­ts, flu shots and a fitness center membership.

“We are seeing that benefits they most like is our debit card for over-thecounter medicines and transporta­tion to doctor’s appointmen­ts,” said Amy Knapp, senior vice president, markets for Bright Health.

“People in Florida are sophistica­ted purchasers,” Knapp said. “They understand their benefits and the difference­s between plans. We are carefully looking at how they value each aspect of our offerings and what motivates people to choose Bright Health.”

Knapp said Bright Health is hoping to enter the Miami-Dade and Broward county markets in 2021.

In between sips of coffee, Miller, of Deerfield Beach, says because of his bad lungs and long list of medication­s, he will consider all his choices during open enrollment.

“I got my [Medicare] book and I’m looking through it,” he said.

Alicia Core, 78, however, will stick with her current plan. “I don’t use medication­s, my doctors are on my plan … I’m happy,” she said.

Many Medicare beneficiar­ies do not seem aware of the new, extra benefits in Advantage plans this year, and not everyone will qualify to use them, said Edith Gooden-Thompson, Broward County area volunteer coordinato­r with SHINE, a statewide organizati­on to help seniors with health insurance matters.

“There are some benefits,

like a meal delivery option, that will be useful for those who can qualify,” she said.

While some of the perks are tempting, Johnson of AARP offers this advice: “Make sure whatever plan you consider has coverage in the services you know you

need.”

Cindy Krischer Goodman can be reached at cgoodman@ sunsentine­l.com, 954-356-4661, Twitter and Instagram @cindykgood­man

 ?? TAIMY ALVAREZ/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Medicare informatio­nal material is now available for the 2020 year during the open enrollment period that runs through Dec. 7.
TAIMY ALVAREZ/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Medicare informatio­nal material is now available for the 2020 year during the open enrollment period that runs through Dec. 7.
 ?? TAIMY ALVAREZ/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Nancy Kostyo, right, a SHINE counselor, helps Medicare beneficiar­y Craig from Pembroke Pines review his current benefits during open enrollment at Southwest Focal Point in Pembroke Pines.
TAIMY ALVAREZ/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Nancy Kostyo, right, a SHINE counselor, helps Medicare beneficiar­y Craig from Pembroke Pines review his current benefits during open enrollment at Southwest Focal Point in Pembroke Pines.

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