Day 4Medicare Prescription Drug Program (Part D)
Review
Medicare 4 parts of Medicare
• Part A: Hospital Insurance• Part B: Medical Insurance• Part C: Medicare Advantage Plans• Part D: Prescription Drug Coverage
Part A & B= Original Medicare• Automatic enrollment if getting SS benefits, must enroll if not• Premiums always for Part B, only for A if not enough credits• Not comprehensive coverage, has coverage gaps• Out-of-pocket costs for A & B change yearly- see chart
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Medicare Pays for reasonable and medically necessary services There are coverage gaps in Medicare including: Part A in-patient hospital deductible Part A daily co-payment for in-patient hospital days 61-90 Part A daily co-payment for in-patient hospital days 91-150 Part A daily co-payment for SNF days 21-100 Part B annual deductible Part B co-insurance (usually 20%) First three pints of blood Coverage outside the United States
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Medicare Advantage Alternative option to Original Medicare
• Offered by a private company that contracts with Medicare to provide a beneficiary with their Part A & B benefits
• One way for a beneficiary to get additional Medicare coverage to cover the gaps in Original Medicare
The plan must offer Part D drug coverage – members who want drug coverage may only take drug plan offered by the Medicare Advantage plan (except for PFFS)
• If enroll in stand alone PDP, will be dis-enrolled from Part C and returned to Original Medicare
Different plan types available• HMO, HMO-POS, PPO, SNP, PFFS
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Medigap Option for supplementing Original Medicare
• Offers coverage to fill gaps in Original Medicare• Offered by private insurance companies, not the federal
government• Prescription coverage NOT included; if a beneficiary wants
prescription drug coverage, she/he must join a Medicare Prescription Drug Plan
A Medigap policy is different from a MA plan; MA plans are ways to get Medicare benefits. A Medigap policy acts as a secondary policy to cover the costs of Original Medicare benefits
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Two Options For Supplementing Medicare
Step 1: Decide how you want to get your coverage
PART AHospital
Insurance
PART BMedical
Insurance
PART CCombines Part A, Part B
and usually Part D
ORIGINAL MEDICARE MEDICARE ADVANTAGE PLAN
OR
PART D Stand Alone PDP
PART DIncluded in Part C
Step 3: Decide if you need to add supplemental medical coverage
MEDIGAPSupplement Core or Supplement 1 plan
ENDIf you join a Medicare Advantage
Plan with drug coverage (MAPD), you cannot join another drug plan and
you don’t need and cannot be sold a Medigap policy
Step 2: Decide if you need a Prescription Drug Plan
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Medicare Prescription Drug Program
(Part D)
Part D Overview Medicare offers prescription drug coverage to everyone with
Medicare Provides outpatient prescription drug coverage Beneficiaries with Part A and/or Part B are eligible 2 ways to get prescription coverage:
1. Medicare Prescription Drug Plans (PDPs); also known as stand alone plans
2. Medicare Advantage (Part C) Plans with drug coverage
Part D is voluntary, but eligible beneficiaries who do not enroll may be subject to a penalty
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Part D Plans May differ on many levels but must meet both pharmacy
access and formulary standards set by CMS PDPs and MA-PDs may vary based on:
• Benefit Design• Monthly Premium• Co-payments• Formulary• Drug Prices• Pharmacy Network
All plans must offer the standard prescription drug benefit or its equivalent. The plans may choose to offer supplemental benefits for an extra premium 10
Formulary The prescription benefit includes a list of “covered drugs” and this
list is called the “formulary”
If the insurer is very selective about which drugs are to be covered, then it is sometimes referred to as a “closed formulary”. If the formulary is open to all drugs but places drugs into different cost sharing categories or “tiers”, it is referred to as an “open formulary”
Each plan must meet formulary standards. The formulary must include and cover certain drugs or certain classes of drugs. Medicare has established a category of excluded drugs
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Examples of Part D Excluded Drugs
Drugs for anorexia, weight loss or weight gain
Drugs for the symptomatic relief of cough and colds
Prescription vitamins and mineral products, except prenatal vitamins and fluoride preparations
Non-prescription drugs (over the counter)
Drugs that could be covered under Medicare Part A and/or Medicare Part B
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Coverage Rules Plans may have coverage rules to make sure certain drugs are used correctly and only when
medically necessary. These rules may include the following 3 restrictions: 1. Prior Authorization
• Before the plan will cover a certain drug, the prescriber must first contact the plan and show there’s a medically-necessary reason why the beneficiary must use that particular prescription drug
2. Step Therapy • Must first try certain less expensive drugs that have been proven effective for most
people with their condition before the beneficiary can move up a “step” to a more expensive drug
3. Quantity Limits • For safety and cost reasons, plans may limit the amount of prescription drugs they
cover over a certain period of time.
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Formulary Issues Beneficiaries can take the following steps when a drug they are
taking is not covered under the formulary or has restrictions
• Ask prescriber if she/he meets prior authorization or step therapy requirements or if there are generic, over-the-counter or less expensive brand name drugs
• Request a coverage determination (including an “exception”) that the plan cover the drug
• Try to find a SEP in order to switch Part D plans to one that has a formulary that covers all of the drugs
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Generic Vs. Brand Name Drugs
Massachusetts is a generic-mandated state in which all pharmacists have to dispense generic if available unless the physician indicates: no substitution
Generic drugs contain the same active ingredients, have the same strength and dosage as the brand name drug and must meet the same government quality control standards
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Four Enrollments Periods
• Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)
• Open Enrollment Period (OEP)
• Special Enrollment Period (SEP)
• Medicare Advantage Disenrollment Period (MADP)
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Initial Enrollment Period 65+: Mimics that of Medicare Part B (7 month period)
Under 65: Mimics that of Medicare Part B; beneficiaries who become eligible for Medicare due to a disability can join during period 3 months before through 3 months after 25th month of Social Security Disability Income
MassHealth members: When eligible for Medicare, primary prescription coverage under MassHealth ends. MassHealth notifies Medicare of member’s dual status and individual has 60 days to enroll in Part D plan or will be auto-enrolled in a plan chosen at random
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Open Enrollment Period October 15th - December 7th, coverage effective January 1st
During this period beneficiaries can:
• Join a plan for the first time (If late enrollee, would be subject to late enrollment penalty)
• Switch plans (including changing MA plans)• Drop a plan
To switch a plan:• Simply enroll in new plan. No need to cancel old Medicare drug
plan as the coverage will end when the new drug plan begins
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Special Enrollment Period Certain conditions make beneficiaries eligible for a SEP during which
they can enroll in a Part D plan outside of the initial enrollment period. They include:• Moving out of their plan’s service area• Involuntary loss of creditable coverage• Having dual eligible status (enrolled in MassHealth & Medicare or
enrolled in a Medicare Savings program)• Being a member of Prescription Advantage (a State Pharmaceutical
Assistance Program known as a SPAP)• Leaving creditable coverage (including COBRA coverage)• Switching to a 5-star rated plan
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Medicare Advantage Disenrollment Period
January 1st – February 14th
During this period, beneficiary CAN:• Dis-enroll from a MA plan and return to original Medicare and enroll in a stand-
alone Medicare Prescription Drug Plan (PDP)• Dis-enroll from a MA plan without drug coverage and enroll in a PDP. May be
subject to a late enrollment penalty
During this period, beneficiary CANNOT:
• Switch from Original Medicare to a MA plan
• Switch from one MA plan to another
• Switch from one Medicare Prescription Drug plan to another
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Late Enrollment If a Medicare beneficiary does not join a Medicare
Prescription Drug Plan when first eligible and didn’t have other creditable prescription drug coverage that met Medicare’s minimum standards, they could incur a late enrollment penalty
All Medicare beneficiaries (including those who are still working) must have creditable coverage to avoid the late enrollment penalty
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Creditable Coverage Coverage that is at least as good as Medicare Part D
Protects a beneficiary from the Part D penalty
Employer or retiree coverage, union coverage, VA coverage: Need proof of coverage to avoid penalty
Beneficiaries still working:• Benefits administrator has information about whether the
employer coverage is creditable
• Beneficiaries should be encouraged to ask the benefits administrator about their creditable coverage status if they have not been notified
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Late Enrollment Penalty Penalty is 1% of the national base beneficiary premium for EACH
MONTH the beneficiary:
• Did not enroll in a Medicare PDP when they were first eligible AND:
Had no prescription drug coverage OR
Had coverage that was not considered “creditable” OR
Had a lapse in creditable coverage of 2 full months (63 days)
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Late Enrollment Penalty The penalty is added to the premium at the time of enrollment and
is a lifetime penalty except for:
• A beneficiary under age 65 who is enrolled in Part D and subject to a late enrollment penalty will have the penalty waived at age 65 This waiver mirrors the “clean slate” provided to Medicare
enrollees subject to a Part B penalty prior to turning age 65
• Beneficiaries enrolled in Extra Help will have the penalty paid for by Extra Help. If the beneficiary loses her/his Extra Help, she/he would need to pay the Part D penalty
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Supplement Two(aka Medex Gold)
Considered creditable coverage
No penalty if beneficiary dis-enrolls and joins a Part D plan within 2 months (63 days)
Beneficiary can join a Part D plan during the Open Enrollment Period or if they qualify for a Special Enrollment Period • Dis-enrolling from the plan is NOT in of itself a SEP
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Part D Costs Must pay monthly premium to the plan
• Those with a Medicare Advantage Pan with drug coverage pay a monthly premium to the plan that includes the premium for their health care coverage and their Part D coverage
Premiums indexed according to income (same as Part B) Premium can be deducted directly from Social Security check Deductible amount changes yearly and varies from plan to
plan
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Co-payment VS. Co-insurance Co-payments: Set dollar amount that is paid at the
pharmacy, e.g., $8 for a 30-day supply at a retail pharmacy. Usually, generic drugs have lower co-pays than brand drugs
Co-insurance: Percentage of the retail cost, e.g., 25% for a 30-day supply. This is the amount the beneficiary would be required to pay
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2014 Standard Medicare Part D
Level DescriptionDeductible Annual deductible paid by the Beneficiary: $310.00 max
Initial Coverage After deductible, beneficiary pays 25% of the drug costs and Medicare pays 75%
Initial coverage limit is $2,850
Coverage Gap“Donut Hole”
Begins once initial coverage limit is reached
Beneficiary pays percentage of the cost for brand name (47.5%) and generic drugs (72%)
Beneficiary’s out of pocket reaches $4,550= catastrophic
Catastrophic Begins when catastrophic limit is reached
Beneficiary pays 5% of the drug costs and Medicare pays 95%
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ACA Closing the Coverage Gap The Affordable Care Act
reduces the costs to beneficiaries who reach the coverage gap. Effective January 2011 beneficiaries receive discounts on both brand and generic drugs in the gap. These discounts will increase each year until the coverage gap is eliminated in 2020
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Enrolling into Part D Review plan options
• Plan Finder Tool on www.medicare.gov• Determine PDP plan vs. MA-PD plan• Consider cost, coverage, quality, and convenience• Try to avoid drug restrictions using:
Step Therapy Prior Authorizations Quantity Limitations
Contact plan directly or call 1-800-Medicare• Enrollment can take place on the phone, online, or
through a mailed in paper application31
Extra Help /Low Income Subsidy
&Prescription Advantage
Extra Help/Low Income Subsidy (LIS)
Extra Help is a federal assistance program to help low-income and low-asset Medicare beneficiaries with costs related to Medicare Part D
Extra Help subsidizes:• Premiums• Deductibles• Copayments• Coverage Gap “Donut Hole” • Late Enrollment Penalty
Does NOT subsidize non-formulary or excluded medications Apply through Social Security Administration
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2 Levels of Extra Help
Full Extra Help• 135% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) and asset limits • Full premium assistance with no deductible• Low, capped co-payments
Partial Extra Help• 150% of the FPL and asset limits• Reduced premiums (sliding scale – between 25% -75%
assistance dependent upon income)• Reduced deductible and 15% co-payments
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Extra Help Eligibility Resources counted:
• Bank accounts (checking, savings, CDs)• Stock, bonds, savings bonds, mutual funds, IRAs• Real estate other than a primary home
Resources NOT counted:• Primary home, car• Property one needs for self-support, such as a rental
property (rent payments are considered as income)• Burial spaces owned by a beneficiary• Personal belongings
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Dual-Eligibles Medicare beneficiaries who are also enrolled in
Medicaid/MassHealth, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or a Medicare Savings Program/MassHealth Buy-in) are known as dual-eligibles
These beneficiaries do not have to apply for Extra Help as they are “deemed eligible” and will be enrolled automatically
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Extra Help Coverage Period If an individual loses their Extra Help coverage due to no
longer meeting the eligibility requirement, the end of the benefit coverage will depend upon when the individual loses their Extra Help coverage
• If the Extra Help benefit is lost PRIOR to July: Coverage will end by December 31st of that SAME year
• If the Extra Help benefit is lost AFTER July: Coverage will end by December 31st of the FOLLOWING year
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Prescription Advantage
Massachusetts’ State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP)
Provides secondary coverage for those with Medicare or other “creditable” drug coverage (i.e. retiree plan)
Benefits are based on a sliding income scale only – no asset limit!
Level of assistance provided is determined by gross income
Different income limits for under 65 and 65 and over38
Benefits for Individuals on Medicare or With Creditable Coverage
Helps pay for drugs in the gap (for most members)
May help pay all or part of the Medicare prescription drug plan's drug co-pays (All medications must be covered by primary plan)
Those in top income category (S5) must pay $200 annual fee for limited benefits
Members are provided a SEP (one extra time each year outside of open enrollment to enroll or switch plans)
Prescription Advantage does NOT pay the late enrollment penalty fee
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Benefits for Individuals NOT on Medicare
Offers members who do not qualify for Medicare, primary prescription drug coverage
Coverage has no monthly premium
Depending on income, members will pay a co-pay for prescription drugs and will have an annual out-of-pocket spending limit and quarterly deductible. Once annual out-of-pocket limit is reached, Prescription Advantage will cover drug co-pays for the remainder of the plan year
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Part D Review
Review1. What is Medicare Part D and how is it offered?
2. Who is eligible?
3. What is creditable coverage?
4. How is the late enrollment penalty calculated?
5. When is the Open Enrollment Period?
6. When does the coverage gap or “donut hole” begin?
7. What programs are available to reduce drug costs?
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Case Study 1:Ann Apolis
Ann is very distraught about the Medicare Part D program. She currently has Medicare A & B and a retiree Medicare supplement plan through her former employer. She is very happy with her retiree plan. It provides coverage for all the deductibles and copays under Medicare and also provides unlimited drug coverage with $5-$15 co-pays for a 90-day supply of her medications. Her monthly premium for the retiree plan is $145.00. Her friend told her that she should have joined the Medicare Part D program during the initial open enrollment. The friend also told her she will face a penalty if the retiree plan should stop providing coverage and she wants to join Part D in the future.• How would you help her?
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Case Study 2:Mel O. Dee
Mel is assisting his mom who has finally decided to retire at age 72. His mom visited her local Social Security office and signed up for Medicare B. (She signed up for A when she turned 65.) He understands that she also needs to sign up for a Part D plan. His mom takes few meds and he thinks her drug costs are not more than a few hundred dollars/year. Mel heard that Part D plans are expensive and don’t cover many meds. He has no idea how to go about helping her to choose a plan or whether she really needs one. He is concerned about the costs for Part D along with any other insurance/ care costs since her only income will be SS of $15,000/year. She owns her own home and has about $15,000 in assets and a $10,000 life insurance policy. • How would you help him?
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Case Study 3:Manny Phestacion
Manny meets with you at the SHINE office. He is 66 years old and still working full-time. Manny is covered by his group health plan. He enrolled in Medicare Part A when he turned 65. Manny understands that he does not need to enroll in Medicare Part B or a Medicare Prescription Drug Plan (Part D) until he stops working. He thinks he can enroll when he retires and will not have to pay a late penalty. • Is he correct?
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Case Study 4:Jean E. Ology
Jean comes to see you at the SHINE office after previously reviewing her options with you over the phone. She is retiring in 2 months and wants to get your assurance that the options she chose will work. Jean takes 3 medications — two are generic and relatively inexpensive and one is an expensive brand. After hearing about the Part D program, she has decided to go with a Medicare Advantage (Medicare HMO) plan and join a Medicare Prescription Drug Plan (Part D) that provides coverage for generics during the gap (donut hole).
• How would you help her?
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Case Study 5:Bud Jet
Bud meets with you at the SHINE office. Bud just retired last month. He has Medicare A & B and a retiree Medicare supplement plan from his former employer. He received a notice from his former employer that his drug plan coverage is not as good as the Medicare Part D drug coverage. His understanding is that he can stay with his employer plan or join Medicare Part D. After comparing the cost of his retiree plan with the Medicare Part D plan, he decided to stay with his employer plan as it fully meets his prescription needs and is less expensive.
• How would you help him?
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Case Study 6: Phil S. Steen
Phil meets with you at the SHINE office. He tells you he has Blue Cross/Blue Shield Supplement 1. He is also a member of Prescription Advantage. He has a Part D plan which had been working fine. However, his doctor just gave him a new medication that he discovered is not on the formulary of his plan. It’s an expensive medication, and he can’t afford to continue filling it.
• How would you help him?
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Case Study 7:Will U. Help
Mr. Help will be eligible for Medicare in 2 months and has already visited his local SS office to sign up for Medicare. The woman he met with at SS told him about Medicare A and B and also told him he must sign up for a Medicare Prescription Drug plan. He explained to her that he is a veteran and gets his prescriptions through the VA. She said that didn’t matter. He still needs to sign up or face a penalty. He tells you his income is a Social Security check for $1100/month and a pension of $200/month. He thought Medicare A+B and the VA would be all that he would need. He is worried about the Part D penalty and wants to know if you can help him figure out what Part D plan to join.
• How would you help Mr. Help?
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Part D Quiz1. Late enrollees in Part D will face a penalty of:
a) 10% per year c) 1% per monthb) 5% per year d) l0% per month
2. To meet the out-of-pocket requirement for catastrophic coverage Part D enrollees can (select all that are correct):
a) Pay for their drugs themselves c) Buy drugs from Canadab) Use Prescription Advantage d) Get family members to
help
3. Define “creditable coverage” 4. Why is it important that a beneficiary know if she/he has creditable coverage?
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Part D Quiz, cont.5. What does the Low Income Subsidy (LIS) help pay for?
6. Who is eligible to receive LIS?
7. Who must apply and who is “deemed eligible”?
8. Minnie Sota meets with you at the SHINE office. She read about Part D and is not sure if she needs it. She will be retiring and will have a retiree plan from her employer with prescription coverage. How would you assist Minnie with her decision?
9. Pat E. Cake meets with you on November 20th. She says she belongs to a Medicare Advantage Plan. She tells you the prescription drug plan with her MA costs more than she wants to pay, so she has decided to take the Part D plan offered by the agent she met at CVS. How would you assist her?
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Question for Medicare:
• I will be turning 65 this November. I plan to continue working until age 67 and will be covered by my employer health insurance. I will enroll in Medicare A when I turn 65 but won’t pick up B & D until I retire. I know that I have 8 months from termination of coverage under my active employment to pick up Part B. Is this also true for D? I will not face a penalty for not joining Part D as long as I’m covered under my employer plan while still actively working. Is that correct?
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