MENLO PARK, Calif. (By
Phil Galewitz,
Kaiser Health News)
December 4, 2009
—
Seniors have until the end of
the year to switch Medicare drug plans to get a better deal. But many
will pass up the chance to save hundreds of dollars a year in
prescription costs.
The
reason: With dozens of drug plans on the market, many seniors get
overwhelmed at the prospect of changing plans, even if a different one
would better suit their needs and lower their costs. But with the
average premium for a Medicare drug plan increasing 11 percent in 2010,
consumer advocates say seniors have even more reason to check out the
options and consider their costs.
Robert Lowenstein, a 91-year-old retired Washington attorney, chose a
UnitedHealthcare-AARP drug plan in 2006, when the stand-alone policies
first became available. He trusted AARP, which was UnitedHealthcare's
marketing partner, and has stuck with the policy because he figured
changing would be confusing and time-consuming. But a look at the
"Prescription Drug Plan Finder" on Medicare's Web site (http://www.medicare.gov)
indicates that Lowenstein would save about $400 a year by selecting a
different UnitedHealthcare plan or a policy offered by CVS Caremark.
Similarly, his wife, Elizabeth, 82, would save $450 a year by switching
from her UnitedHealthcare plan, reducing their drug costs by more than
20 percent.
Only an
average of 7 percent of the 17 million seniors on Medicare drug plans
switch plans each year, according to the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, the federal agency that runs Medicare. Experts on
Medicare say this suggests that millions of beneficiaries could be
paying more than they should for their drug coverage.
Molly
Schuchat, 81, a District resident who has been with the same Blue Cross
and Blue Shield drug plan since 2006, said, "I know I could probably do
better, but it's what I'm used to, and it's a hassle to change." Yet,
according to the Medicare Web site, Schuchat could save as much as $744,
about 20 percent of her costs, by changing plans next year.
The
Medicare drug benefit was created by Congress in 2003 to help those
seniors — one in four at the time — who didn't have prescription-drug
coverage. Rather than giving all seniors the same coverage, Congress
decided to have private companies offer the benefit through competing
plans. As a result, insurers offer different levels of coverage for
different drugs. Some experts say the competition has held down costs,
but some seniors — and their children — say the wide array of plans can
be daunting, making it unnerving or too perplexing to change.
Dozens of
choices
The open season for selecting or changing plans
began Nov. 15 and ends Dec. 31. (For details, go to
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/center/openenrollment.asp.)
The number of Medicare drug plans varies from state to state, from a low
of 39 in Alaska to 53 in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. In the
District, there are 45 drug plans, with monthly premiums ranging from
$11.60 to $99.90. Maryland seniors can choose from 45 plans with
premiums from $11.60 to $120.20. In Virginia, there are 44 plans with
premiums from $16.30 to $97.90.
Medicare's
easy-to-use "plan finder" allows seniors to plug in their medications
and see which plan would have the lowest overall annual costs. But many
seniors are uncomfortable going online or unable to use computers to
sort through the different policies. Last year, only 688,000 seniors, or
2.5 percent, went online to enroll in Medicare drug or health plans. The
rest did it the old-fashioned way: by telephone or letter.
To help
seniors choose a plan, Howard Houghton, a coordinator at the Virginia
Insurance Counseling and Assistance Program in Fairfax, visits senior
centers and retirement communities with his laptop computer. Many
seniors, he said, think that once they join a drug plan, they should
stick with it for the rest of their lives. He said that's partly because
they generally stayed with the same private health insurance plan for
many years before enrolling in Medicare.
"But with
these drug plans, you really do have to do your homework each year," he
said. Some seniors, he added, have begun to reconsider their options in
response to the latest premium increases and the faltering economy, but
many have not.
The price
for such inaction will get higher next year as the average monthly
premium for a Medicare drug plan rises to $38.85 a month. That's 50
percent more than seniors paid in 2006.
The
average premium for the most popular drug plan — UnitedHealthcare's AARP
Medicare RX Preferred, which has nearly 3 million customers — has jumped
50 percent to $39.39 in 2010 from $26.31 in 2006, according to the
Kaiser Family Foundation. (Kaiser Health News is a part of the
foundation.) The average premium for Humana's PDP Enhanced, the second
most popular plan with 1.6 million customers — will be $41.53 next year,
182 percent higher than in 2006. The actual premiums vary by state.
For some
seniors, these premium increases will be unavoidable. But others could
save substantial amounts of money by checking out a variety of plans.
Geoffrey
Joyce, a senior economist at the Rand Corp., a nonprofit think tank
based in Santa Monica, Calif., said health plans benefit from seniors'
fear of changing plans. "If they feel like they have them locked in,
they can raise prices and get away with it," he said. Humana officials
say it is inaccurate to suggest that they initially offered artificially
low prices on their plans in a bid to grab market share. They say they
have had to raise prices to reflect the increased costs of providing the
coverage.
The large
health insurers that sell drug plans say that seniors don't switch plans
because they're satisfied with their coverage. "Many [Medicare] Part D
members are extremely or very satisfied with the Medicare prescription
plan in which they're currently enrolled," said Jonathan Stone, a
spokesman for Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHealthcare. The company, the
nation's largest private health insurer, has the largest number of
Medicare drug members, about 4.3 million seniors, or about 25 percent of
the market.
Some
smaller health insurers say it's difficult trying to persuade seniors to
switch from more-established and well-known plans such as
UnitedHealthcare, Blue Cross and Blue Shield and Humana. "It's very
challenging because I don't think most seniors are really shopping
plans," said Jaydip Dattaray, chief operating officer at New York-based
Fox Insurance Co., which has about 85,000 Medicare drug plan members.
Beyond
premiums
In figuring
out their prospective drug costs, seniors need to look beyond premiums
and also consider deductibles and co-payments, which can vary by drug.
In addition, they also have to consider whether they want to pay more in
premiums to have some coverage in the Medicare program's coverage gap,
commonly called the "doughnut hole." In 2010, this lapse in coverage
will begin after an enrollee incurs $2,830 in total drug spending and
end when an enrollee has spent a total of $4,550 out of pocket. After
that, beneficiaries are responsible for just 5 percent of their drug
costs.
The
Democrats' health-care overhaul bills in the House and the Senate could
have a major impact on the Medicare prescription-drug program. The House
bill would close the gap in coverage by 2019, although the Senate bill
wouldn't. Under both bills, starting in 2010, beneficiaries would be
able to buy brand-name drugs for half price once they're in the coverage
gap. The annual enrollment period would also be moved up a month to
start in mid-October.
Meanwhile,
the Lowensteins are considering changing plans. "I definitely think
Robert should change plans and so should I," said Elizabeth Lowenstein.