Why Aren't More People Comparison Shopping For Health Plans?
Why Arent More People Comparison Shopping for Health Plans?
Most Medicare beneficiaries dont compare plans during open enrollment season, and may be paying more, or accepting more restrictions, than they should.
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Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., learned her yearly drugs and premiums would be $301 a year if she used a CVS or Giant pharmacy, but $1,125 if she took the same prescriptions to a Walmart.
Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., learned her yearly drugs and premiums would be $301 a year if she used a CVS or Giant pharmacy, but $1,125 if she took the same prescriptions to a Walmart. Credit...Kenny Holston for The New York Times
By Paula Span
Oct. 30, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
One morning last month, Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., spent about half an hour on the phone being guided through the complexities of various plans for Medicare Part D, which covers prescription drugs.
Her current drug plan was being discontinued and the insurer wanted to move her into one with sharply higher premiums. I decided, No way, she said. But what to replace it with? She looked at the Medicare website for Part D plans available in Fairfax County and found 23, with monthly premiums ranging from $7.10 to $97.30. There are so many choices, so I wanted someone to clarify them for me, she said.
Jack Hoadley, a health policy researcher at Georgetown University, was on the other end of the call with Ms. Korsah. He has for two years volunteered with the State Health Insurance Assistance Program, or SHIP, the federally funded, free counseling service that helps Medicare beneficiaries find the coverage thats best for them.
Some very smart people just dont know how Medicare works and get confused, Dr. Hoadley said. For example, it can make a $1,000-a-year difference if youre willing to try several different pharmacies.
Why Arent More People Comparison Shopping for Health Plans? https://nyti.ms/2Y4QSSY
There are SHIP programs available in every state:
https://www.shiphelp.org/
Diamond_Dog
(34,593 posts)that negotiated prices for drugs with Big Pharma, we could all be saved lots of $, time, and aggravation.
I may as well wish for a million dollars.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)had help from an agency of some sort. When I went on it a few years later I just went with the one she had as it seemed to cover pretty much everything I needed.
enough
(13,453 posts)comparable numbers among plans. Also, Ive noticed in the past 12 years they are revealing less and less useful information. I have no doubt this is purposeful.
JustABozoOnThisBus
(23,757 posts)www.mymedicare.gov has a tool. Just enter the drugs you take, pick a few pharmacies in your area, and it presents a list of insurance companies and plans, with insurance costs, copay costs, total costs.
And, it keeps your info, so next year you only add drugs that are new to you, or delete those that you no longer take.
It's maybe the only likeable thing about Part D.
Lulu KC
(4,146 posts)I need to do that.
El Mimbreno
(782 posts)Check their formulary list and prices. My Medicare Advantage plan has zero co-pay on tier 1 & 2 meds through mail-order. They supply all of my maintenance meds. Right-away meds I get from CVS.