Medicare and drugs
Medicare and drugs
Did you know Medicare helps pay for prescription medications?
Even if you don’t take many prescriptions now, you should consider joining a Medicare drug plan. There are two ways to get Medicare prescription drug coverage:
1. Medicare standalone drug plans, also known as Part D plans, add drug coverage to original Medicare, as well as to some Medicare Cost Plans and Medicare Private Fee-for-Service plans. You must have Medicare Part A or Part B to join a standalone Part D plan.
2. Medicare Advantage plans and other Medicare health plans often include prescription drugs. Medicare Advantage plans are managed care plans, similar to HMOs or PPOs. Many, but not all, Medicare Advantage plans offer prescription coverage. To join such a plan, you must have Medicare Part A and Part B.
You can sign up for either type of drug plan when you first become eligible for Medicare or during Medicare’s open enrollment season, which runs Oct. 15-Dec. 7 each year.
Beware: If your Medicare Advantage plan includes prescription benefits and you join a Part D plan, you’ll be unenrolled from your Medicare Advantage plan and returned to original Medicare.
How much does a Medicare drug plan cost? It varies depending on what plan you choose, which drugs it covers, which pharmacy you use and whether you’re eligible for the Extra Help program (more about that later).
Most standalone, or Part D, plans charge a monthly premium that you must pay in addition to your Part B premium. If you’re in a Medicare Advantage plan, the monthly premium for that plan might include an amount for drug coverage.
Most Medicare drug plans also have a yearly deductible, an amount you must pay before the plan begins paying for its share of your drugs. Once the deductible is met, you’ll also pay a co-payment or co-insurance amount at the pharmacy counter.
In addition, most Medicare drug plans have a coverage gap, also known as the “doughnut hole.” The gap begins after you and your drug plan together have spent a certain amount for your drugs. For more details about the gap, see the “Medicare &You” handbook, mailed to every Medicare beneficiary annually and also available at www.medicare.gov/Pubs/pdf/10050.pdf.
Once you’re out of the gap, you get “catastrophic coverage,” meaning you only have to pay a co-payment or co-insurance amount for your drugs for the rest of that calendar year.
However, not everyone will enter the coverage gap because their drug costs won’t be high enough. The gap is scheduled to be eliminated by 2020.
Keep in mind not every Medicare drug plan covers every drug. You’ll need to check with the plan to make sure the drugs you need are covered. Also, plans might have restrictions such as prior authorization, quantity limits and step therapy, which requires that you try a lower-cost drug before the plan will cover a high-priced medication.
You or your prescriber has the right to appeal if you think such a rule should be waived.
I also want to mention the Extra Help program, which assists low-income folks in paying for their prescriptions. If you qualify, Extra Help can save you thousands of dollars annually on your drugs.
For more details, see the “Medicare &You” handbook.
David Sayen
Medicare regional administrator,
Hawaii, Arizona, California and Nevada