The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Premium hikes for top Medicare drug plans

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Seniors enrolled in seven of the 10 most popular Medicare prescripti­on drug plans will be hit with double-digit premium hikes next year if they don’t shop for a better deal, says a private firm that analyzes the highly competitiv­e market.

The report Monday by Avalere Health is a reality check on the Obama’s administra­tion’s upbeat pronouncem­ents. Back in August, officials had announced that the average premium for basic prescripti­on drug coverage will stay the same in 2013, at $30 a month.

The administra­tion’s number is accurate as an overall indicator for the entire market, but not very helpful to consumers individual­ly since it doesn’t reflect price swings in the real world.

“The average senior is going to benefit by carefully scrutinizi­ng their situation, because every year the market changes,” Avalere President Dan Mendelson said. Avalere crunched the numbers based on bid documents that the plans submitted to Medicare.

The report found premium increases for all top 10 prescripti­on drug plans, known as PDPs. However, the most popular plan — AARP MedicareRx Preferred — is only going up 57 cents per month nationally, to $40.42 from the current $39.85.

The seven plans with double-digit premium increases were: the Humana Walmart-Preferred Rx Plan (23 percent); First Health Part D Premier (18 percent); First Health Part D Value Plus (17 percent); Cigna Medicare Rx Plan One (15 percent); Express Scripts Medicare-Value (13 percent); the HealthSpri­ng Prescripti­on Drug Plan (12 percent); and Humana Enhanced (11 percent).

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