Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Does Medicare cover preventive screening?

- JIM MILLER SAVVY SENIOR Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit Savvysenio­r.org.

To eliminate billing surprises, talk to your doctor before any preventive procedure to find out if you may be subject to a charge.

Dear Savvy Senior: How does Medicare cover preventive health screenings? I’m due to get a physical and a colonoscop­y this year, but I want to find out what I’ll have to pay for before I go in. — Just Turned 65

Dear Just Turned 65: You’ll be happy to know that Medicare covers a wide array of preventive and screening services to help you stay healthy, but not all services are completely covered. Here’s what you should know.

Free preventive benefits

Most of Medicare’s preventive services are available to all beneficiar­ies (through Part B) completely free with no co-pays or deductible­s, as long as you meet basic eligibilit­y standards.

Medicare’s lengthy list of covered services includes mammograms; colonoscop­ies; shots against flu, pneumonia, COVID-19 and hepatitis B; screenings for diabetes, depression, osteoporos­is, HIV, various cancers and cardiovasc­ular disease; and counseling to combat obesity, alcohol abuse, and smoking. But to get these services for free, you need to go to a doctor who accepts Medicare “on assignment,” which means he or she has agreed to take the Medicare-approved rate as full payment.

Also, the tests are free only if they are done at specified intervals. For example, cardiovasc­ular screening blood tests once every five years; or colonoscop­y, once every 10 years, or every two years if you are at high risk.

Medicare also offers a free Welcome to Medicare exam with your doctor in your first year, along with annual wellness visits thereafter. But don’t confuse these with full physical exams. These are prevention-focused visits that provide only an overview of your health and medical risk factors and serve as a baseline for future care.

Cost-sharing services

There are a few Medicare preventive services that do require outof-pocket cost sharing. With these tests, you will have to pay 20 percent of the cost after you have met your $226 Part B yearly deductible. The services that fall under this category include glaucoma tests, diabetes self-management trainings, barium enemas to detect colon cancer, and digital rectal exams to detect prostate cancer.

For a complete list of services and eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, visit Medicare.gov/coverage/preventive­screening-services.

If you’re enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, your policy is required to cover the same preventive services as original Medicare as long as you see in-network providers.

Hidden costs

While most of the previously listed Medicare services are free, you can be charged for certain diagnostic services or additional tests or procedures related to the preventive service. For example, if your doctor finds and removes a polyp during your preventive care colonoscop­y screening, you will pay 15 percent of the doctor’s service fee. Or, if during your annual wellness visit, your doctor needs to investigat­e or treat a new or existing problem, you will probably be charged.

You may also have to pay a facility fee depending on where you receive the service. Certain hospitals, for example, will often charge separate facilities fees when you are receiving a preventive service. And you can also be charged for a doctor’s visit if you meet with a physician before or after the service.

To eliminate billing surprises, talk to your doctor before any preventive procedure to find out if you may be subject to a charge.

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