There were a couple of questions about these products in another thread so I thought this subject deserved a thread of its own.
Medicare Advantage Plans replace Original Medicare with a private insurance policy. The benefits must be at least on par with Medicare but copays, coinsurance and other "rules" are based upon the insurance company's plan. As an example, Medicare requires a one-time deductible for in-patient services billed by the hospital with an annual deductible and 20% coinsurance for all other covered benefits. A Medicare Advantage plan could charge as little as zero to many hundreds of dollars a day for the same hospitalization. However, most MA plans includes the Part D drug plan.
As far as premium payment, Medicare pays most if not all the premium for these plans. They generally come in either of two "flavors"; HMO and PPO. The HMO plans are the most restrictive usually requiring referrals for most non-primary services. The network can be quite restrictive. PPO plans will allow for self-referral into a much larger network and usually (at a higher cost) allow the member to go out of network.
Original Medicare has a deductible for Part A (Hospitalization) that is charged for every admission per benefit period of 60 days. Part B has an annual deductible and then covered charges are paid at 80% of the allowable. To protect oneself from these charges a Medicare Supplement can be purchased. There are 10 standardized plans but the most popular are F, G and N. All supplements of the same letter are identical regardless of the insurance company. The only difference is the premium. Don't let anyone tell you their company is the best. They are all the same.
Plan F covers 100% of your costs. Plan G is the same as Plan F except it does not pay the Part B deductible ($183 for 2017). Plan N does not pay the deductible, requires a copay of up to but never more than $20 for office visits (treatment does not raise the cost and various services such as physical therapy, chemo, etc. are not office visits), and up to $50 for emergency room visits that don't result in admission.
Plan N do not pay excess charges. This is when a doctor will not accept the assignment of your claim. The provider still must do all the billing but payments go to the patient. It is then up to the doctor to bill the patient and hope the bill is paid. For all this work the doctor winds up with 9.25% more than he/she would receive if assignment was accepted. It's not worth the trouble and 96% of all physicians accept assignment. I've helped hundreds with their Medicare supplement plans and not one has ever told me their doctor did not accept assignment. It's truly a non issue.
I hope this brief description and comparison helps. I'm always available to talk without obligation nor a sales pitch. I promise!
Rick
insure(at)greenskyins(dot)com
Medicare Advantage Plans replace Original Medicare with a private insurance policy. The benefits must be at least on par with Medicare but copays, coinsurance and other "rules" are based upon the insurance company's plan. As an example, Medicare requires a one-time deductible for in-patient services billed by the hospital with an annual deductible and 20% coinsurance for all other covered benefits. A Medicare Advantage plan could charge as little as zero to many hundreds of dollars a day for the same hospitalization. However, most MA plans includes the Part D drug plan.
As far as premium payment, Medicare pays most if not all the premium for these plans. They generally come in either of two "flavors"; HMO and PPO. The HMO plans are the most restrictive usually requiring referrals for most non-primary services. The network can be quite restrictive. PPO plans will allow for self-referral into a much larger network and usually (at a higher cost) allow the member to go out of network.
Original Medicare has a deductible for Part A (Hospitalization) that is charged for every admission per benefit period of 60 days. Part B has an annual deductible and then covered charges are paid at 80% of the allowable. To protect oneself from these charges a Medicare Supplement can be purchased. There are 10 standardized plans but the most popular are F, G and N. All supplements of the same letter are identical regardless of the insurance company. The only difference is the premium. Don't let anyone tell you their company is the best. They are all the same.
Plan F covers 100% of your costs. Plan G is the same as Plan F except it does not pay the Part B deductible ($183 for 2017). Plan N does not pay the deductible, requires a copay of up to but never more than $20 for office visits (treatment does not raise the cost and various services such as physical therapy, chemo, etc. are not office visits), and up to $50 for emergency room visits that don't result in admission.
Plan N do not pay excess charges. This is when a doctor will not accept the assignment of your claim. The provider still must do all the billing but payments go to the patient. It is then up to the doctor to bill the patient and hope the bill is paid. For all this work the doctor winds up with 9.25% more than he/she would receive if assignment was accepted. It's not worth the trouble and 96% of all physicians accept assignment. I've helped hundreds with their Medicare supplement plans and not one has ever told me their doctor did not accept assignment. It's truly a non issue.
I hope this brief description and comparison helps. I'm always available to talk without obligation nor a sales pitch. I promise!
Rick
insure(at)greenskyins(dot)com