Last month I received a call from a woman concerned about her
father's UHC Medicare Advantage plan. A letter came in the mail
informing her father of provider cuts, including his primary physician,
which would be occurring shortly. UHC suggested her father find new
providers, as most of his would be dropped. Upset and confused, this
woman did not know what to do, and I suggested a Medicare Supplement
versus finding another Medicare Advantage plan. Unfortunately, her
father had only recently left the hospital, leaving him medically
unqualified for the time being. Insurance carriers need only give 30
days notice to their beneficiaries, but for many this 30 day notice is
not enough.
The father would be losing 8 of his doctors in the
provider cut. By January 1st, he will not be able to afford any of his
current providers.
After learning about this phenomenon, I began
to research Medicare Advantage cuts for 2014, my thought being UHC had a
reason for giving some doctors the boot.
I was right. Due to
changes in government funding to Medicare Advantage plans, the company
has taken measures to streamline their network of providers for solely
MA plans. UHC Medicare Supplement policyholders will not be affected by
these cuts.
The "Doctor Fix" is part of a ten-year plan to strip
down the spending on Medicare Advantage plans by $156 billion. For those
who have MA plans, you know that funding is already tight. While
premiums will only increase slightly, there will be other cuts down the
road for MA plans. These include new plans concerning provider payment.
There is new legislation (well, new to me and you) that will stall
doctor cuts for now, but will contain a new formula. This formula will
be the method of which Medicare determines payment to individual
providers. Doctor's will be judged on multiple areas that are meant to
assess provider quality. Currently, doctor's make a flat rate on seeing
patients and flat rates for different services they provide.
With
less funding to their Medicare Advantage plans, UHC was "forced" to
reorganize their provider network, which means the 14 million UHC
Medicare Advantage beneficiaries might have to find new providers. In a
news article from USA Today, Susan Jaffe of Kaiser Health News
writes that Medicare officials are currently reviewing UHC provider
networks, which might result in another reconfiguration, hopefully for
the better. Jaffe also urges that "losing a doctor does not constitute
an exception" to the special enrollment period. An enrollment period
available for extraneous situations only. For example, moving from your
network or the insurance carrier filing for bankruptcy are situations in
which you would qualify for a special enrollment period outside of open
enrollment.
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