TODAY IS MARCH 26, 2017, and in the interests of “full disclosure” (which almost never happens in the real world), be warned that I have not had a change of heart.
I am going to continue to describe the view, from 30,000 feet, of the Medicare Machine.
I am doing this to us for two reasons.
The first reason is that an awful lot of people are closing in on the age of Medicare maturity and have more than a passing interest in understanding how this thing works.
And the second reason is an awful lot of people who are already on Medicare, and had deluded themselves (as did I) into thinking that they understand it, don’t.
I know this to be true because an awful lot of you have said to me in the past week, “I didn’t know that.”
Note the repetitive use of the descriptor “awful,” then we’ll move on.
What we’ve already covered
Last week, we were all about Part A, Part B, Part B penalties, COBRA coverage, tra la, and I have no intention of repeating all of that because I presume that you were paying attention and I like you, so I’m jumping right in where we left off.
Unless you’ve been on Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) for 23 months, you qualify for Medicare when you turn 65. If you’re still working, please go back and have a look at last week’s column.
If you’re not still employed, you have a seven-month “Initial Enrollment Period” (IEP) surrounding that 65th birthday: three months before your 65th birthday, the month of that birthday and three months after.
So, if you turn 65 in May, you can enroll in Part B in February, March or April, and if you do, it will become effective May 1st.
If you enroll in May, it’ll kick in June 1; in June, on Aug. 1; in July, on Oct. 1; and in August, on Nov. 1 — because, that’s how it is.
Now, take a deep breath because I’m going to vault over Part C and go straight to Part D, which you can think of as standing for “drugs” — prescription drugs. Prescription drug coverage.
Part D plans are “private,” meaning that they are offered by private insurance companies, not the federal government.
Like Part B, Part D has a penalty. Actually, you will have The Penalty if you don’t sign up for Part D when you’re eligible, and that penalty will never go away.
If you are still employed at age 65 and have coverage through your employer, or you get prescription drug coverage through a retiree health insurance or the VA or wherever, and if it is “creditable” (which is an unnecessarily fancy word for “equal to or better than the Medicare Part D standard plan”), you can evade the dreaded penalty.
How to prove coverage
The way that you can prove that you had “creditable coverage” is that each year (usually in the fall), your company, plan, whoever will send you a letter saying so.
Keep these letters, and put them someplace where you can actually find them.
If you don’t have said prescription drug coverage, or if it isn’t “creditable,” consider enrolling in a Part D plan because 1) it might help you pay for prescription drugs and 2) you will sidestep the penalty ad infinitum.
Time out: No, you don’t have to do this. In fact, you don’t have to do any of this.
There is no law that says that you have to enroll in Medicare or any parts thereof.
You can go your own way, roll the dice and take your chances.
You only care about penalties if you change your mind down the way and decide to enroll in Medicare, then BOOM! Oops … but it’s up to you. Most of us cave in and enroll.
There are two ways to get Part D coverage. One is through a private Part D plan, as noted above, and the other is through a Medicare Advantage plan.
Advantage Plans are another moniker for “Part C,” which I vaulted over earlier and will come back to later. (Hey, I never told you this was easy).
Here’s a test: Remember what “IEP” is? Go look a few paragraphs up and cheat. I did.
Right — “Initial Enrollment Period.”
So, the IEP for Part D works exactly the same way as the IEP for Part B. (Note: Reread that last sentence. You actually understood it, didn’t you? Scary, huh? I know.)
The “AEP” (Annual Enrollment Period) for Part D runs from Oct. 15 through Dec. 7, so yes, you missed it.
Game begins when you enroll
However, when you’re new to Medicare, you don’t care because the whole game begins when you first enroll.
We do the Part D AEP thing every year (meaning review our Part D plans) because formularies and premiums change often.
We do this every year because most of us can’t afford not to.
Some of us don’t do it because we’re _____ (fill in the blank).
Whatever changes we do or don’t make to our Part D plans become effective Jan. 1 of the next year.
Get used to it.
I had hoped to do this all in two columns; I also thought that Rome was built in a day.
There’s a fine line between optimism and delusion, so we’ll carry on next week, but consider this: We’re through the worst of it!
Which sounds a lot like what the oral surgeons say during oral surgery. And that doesn’t make me feel any better either.
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Mark Harvey is director of Clallam/Jefferson Senior Information & Assistance, which operates through the Olympic Area Agency on Aging. He is also a member of the Community Advocates for Rural Elders partnership. He can be reached at 360-452-3221 (Port Angeles-Sequim), 360-385-2552 (Jefferson County) or 360-374-9496 (West End), or by emailing harvemb@dshs.wa.gov.