Private Medicare Advantage program is costly and unfair.
WHEN "ADVANTAGE" ISN'T - Private Medicare Advantage program is costly and unfair. Now we can do something about it.
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It sounded so, well, so "something-for-nothing,
what-have-you-to-lose?"
The Medicare "Advantage" program would provide Carolyn and
me with "more benefits than traditional Medicare, more
predictable costs," even worldwide coverage.
"A smart investment in your health coverage," the salesman
assured us.
But right off, our new Advantage HMO got our primary
doctor's name wrong. A simple mistake, they said, easily
corrected.
Yet, when I saw an "insurer approved" specialist,
recommended by my "insurer approved" primary physician, our
insurer wouldn't approve it. The phantom doctor whose name
was on my insurance card hadn't authorized it.
That was back in January. By the end of that month, we'd
called the insurance company five times asking that they
correct their mistake.
They didn't.
Apparently, they couldn't. By June, after 17 phone calls
I'd documented each with date, time, and name of the "emervice
representative" I threatened to go public with the snafu.
Immediately, they rectified the madness.
Demented Dummies
And it all sounded so good last December when the salesman
explained how much better his Advantage program was over
"plain old Medicare." Eye care, hearing aids, dental,
international coverage, you name it. It was ours.
Practically free for nothing!
But as the months rolled by, it seemed we were insured by a
band of demented dummies.
They'd
pay for medicine one month, not the next. Forced to buy my
Nexium in Canada on my dime while my doctor cajoled, I
pleaded, and even my pharmacy pushed, the HMO would
eventually okay my prescription. But then we'd go through
the same stonewalling routine the following month. Each
time, they profited $150 or so by denying me a month's worth
of drugs.
Soon I realized: These folks were dumb like foxes.
I went to VisionWorks where the salesman had said Advantage
would "save up to 50 percent." My price for two pair of
glasses: $723. "How much with my big HMO discount," I asked.
"That's with the discount," I was told.
I called HearX to learn what hearing aids already on sale
would cost me with my "deep Advantage allowance." Four calls
later and I still hadn't received a straight answer.
Then
Carolyn was diagnosed with bone cancer. All her
doctors advised that she get treatment covered by Medicare
at the Moffitt Cancer Center. What Mayo is to Rochester,
what the Cleveland Clinic is to Cleveland, Moffitt is to the
Tampa Bay area where we live.
But do you think our "smart investment" HMO would cover it?
Hell no!
$54-Billion Bonus! For What?
Multiply
our grievances times the complaints of so many of the
8.7-million seniors now insured by private Medicare
Advantage HMOs, and you see why Congress is under pressure
to scrutinize the annual $75-billion taxpayers pay these
private insurance companies for treating us so dishonorably.
Just today, my local paper reported about a woman who found
herself in an Advantage program she neither wanted nor
requested. Repeated calls to disenroll went unheeded. Then,
in April she broke her hip. Now, neither the HMO nor
Medicare will pay the $30,000 tab.
She's not alone. Eager for a piece of the $54-billion
subsidy taxpayers will give Advantage programs as a
bonus over the next four years just for participating,
seniors everywhere have been fraudulently switched without
their knowledge or consent.
Congress has also learned that hundreds of thousands of
seniors were promised their "Advantage" plans wouldn't
replace traditional Medicare, that they could stay with
their own doctors, and that the plans would require no
co-pays. [See below.]
All lies.
And
what's the bonus for? Lying to us? Nickel-and-diming us,
occasionally to death? That $54-billion could be used to
better our nation's health, not simply to better profits for
private insurance companies.
Why, I wonder, if private plans are so efficient at
delivering healthcare while holding down costs, do they need
generous taxpayer subsidies to participate? Let's put both
on a level playing field and see which provides the best
care.
As I have
written so often, Medicare "Advantage" is
nothing but a device to kill a national treasure Medicare
replacing it with private insurers that, as we've already
seen:
Put profits before people. It's the law;
Will, in spite of bonuses to HMOs ranging from 12
percent to 50 percent more than we pay traditional
Medicare, charge far more for services ranging from home
health care, hospital stays and chemotherapy drugs to
medical equipment;
Will continue to lie about and arbitrarily change
coverage;
Will eventually "cherry pick," insuring only the
healthiest of us; and
Do anything to continue #1 and the resulting
annual windfall salaries of 10s of millions to HMO
executives.
Boy, was I wrong!
Washington must stop Medicare cuts and preserve our access
to care by eliminating bonuses to private health insurers.
Just last night, Congress took the first step. Against
strong Republican opposition,
HR 3162,
the "Children's Health and Medicare Protection Act of 2007,"
passed out of committee. This bill would expand spending on
both children's health and Medicare by about $47-billion in
the next five years, getting the money by equalizing
payments between Medicare Advantage plans and traditional
Medicare.
In other words, no more free money for "Advantaged"
insurance companies!
Already, HMOs are launching a huge advertising campaign to
stop the bill, much like
Bill Novelli's Harry and Louise helped
derail Clinton's universal health plan a decade ago. This
time, fictional characters Sandi, Alvin, and Charlotte
complain that cuts to the Medicare Advantage plans will cost
them more and lead to disruption in care.
Congress,
beholden to the HMOs for millions in legal bribes,
must be told, clearly, that enough is enough. Those billions
are ours not a gift to the insurance companies and
should be used for our healthcare.
Congress must bite that bullet. You can help sharpen teeth
by calling your Congressperson toll-free at (877) 331-2000,
(800) 828-0498, (800) 869-3150, or (866) 699-9243. Tell them
to support HR 3162.
Let's stop disadvantaging Medicare. This is our opportunity
to "Just say no" to privatization, waste, and billion-dollar
giveaways.
Want to Switch Back from Your Advantage Program to
Medicare?
Basically, you're screwed, and must suffer until the end
of the year. Remember: The insurance and drug companies
wrote this bill. According to
the Medicare Rights Center (MRC),
however, an internal memo circulated recently within the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services allows
disenrollment if you were signed up without your consent.
Grounds for disenrollment also include statements by an
agent that imply the plan is a Medicare supplement or
Medigap policy, statements suggesting that the plan is
accepted by all Medicare providers, or statements saying
that you can switch back to Medicare any time you want.
Call 1-800-Medicare. Tell them you qualify for a special
enrollment period because you were misled into an unwanted
plan. If you are dual-eligible, you can switch back within a
month just by calling Medicare. Know, too, that a state has
no obligations to pay for cost sharing for dual-eligibles
enrolled in an Advantage plan. Questions? Call MRC at (800)
333-4114.
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