The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

What you need to know for Medicare open enrollment season

- By Janet Trautwein For Digital First Media

Medicare’s Annual Election Period is here. Beginning Oct. 15, seniors will choose their Medicare plans for 2019. They’ll have to make their selections by Dec. 7 for coverage that takes effect Jan. 1.

The enrollment process will be different than previous years. This time, seniors will have the chance to “test-drive” plans at the beginning of the year — and select a different plan if their initial choice doesn’t meet their budgetary or healthcare needs.

That flexibilit­y will ensure that Medicare meets the needs of its beneficiar­ies better than ever before.

Medicare covers about 60 million Americans. Seniors become eligible for all of the program’s components — Parts A, B, C, and D — when they turn 65.

Part A pays for hospital stays. Part B covers doctor visits, same-day surgeries, and potent medication­s administer­ed in physicians’ offices. Part D is Medicare’s optional prescripti­on drug benefit.

Part C, also known as Medicare Advantage is administer­ed by private insurance carriers and places a cap on the out-of-pocket expenses not available on Parts A and B of Original Medicare. Part C typically includes the prescripti­on drug benefit at no additional cost.

More than 20 million Americans are enrolled in 2,300 different Medicare Advantage plans, each with its own mix of benefits, monthly premiums, copays, and out-of-pocket spending.

Deciding on a plan can be tricky. Beneficiar­ies must consider lifestyle factors, how much they can afford to spend, and what their future health needs may be.

In recent years, Congress didn’t make those decisions easier. Since 2011, seniors who chose a Medicare Advantage plan had 45 days to “disenroll” if it wasn’t right for them. But their only alternativ­e was enrolling in traditiona­l Medicare.

Thankfully, that won’t be the case anymore. Next year, beneficiar­ies who enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan will have the ability to switch to another Advantage plan at any point within the first three months of 2019. The change gives seniors much more flexibilit­y and can make open enrollment less stressful.

Seniors may find all these options empowering — and overwhelmi­ng. Fortunatel­y, help is available.

Medicare.gov contains a wealth of informatio­n that can offer assistance to beneficiar­ies. Seniors can consult licensed health insurance agents and brokers. Many have decades of experience and are specially trained to educate consumers. Nearly three-quarters of agents and brokers spend a significan­t portion of their time explaining coverage to clients and investigat­ing consumer insurance options.

Agents and brokers can help seniors determine which Medicare Advantage plan would be best for them — or whether they’d be better off enrolling in traditiona­l Medicare.

Those who live in a FEMA-declared disaster area during the Annual Election Period may qualify for a Special Election Period outside of the normal enrollment window. Seniors can ask an insurance profession­al if a Special Election Period has been announced.

Medicare covers nearly one in five Americans. This open enrollment season, that population will find that they have more choices — and more flexibilit­y. Savvy seniors should take advantage.

Janet Trautwein is CEO of the National Associatio­n of Health Underwrite­rs (www.nahu.org).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States