2911 Medicare and Medicare
Buy-In - See Policy Memo 1999-10-07 Application
of Medicare Premiums to Spenddown
The federal Medicare program provides health insurance coverage to persons
who qualify (see 2911.2). Medicare is composed the
following parts.
- Part A (Hospital Insurance)
- Provides coverage of inpatient hospital care, hospice and
home health benefits. Very limited coverage of skilled nursing facility
care is also provided. Part A coverage does not have a premium for
most people.
- Part B (Supplemental Medicare
Insurance) - Provides coverage of doctors services, outpatient
hospital care. Part B also provides coverage for other services such
as clinical laboratory services, some therapies, and certain preventative
services such as prostate cancer screens and mammography. All services
must be medically necessary. Most people pay a monthly premium for
Part B coverage through a withholding from their Social Security or
Railroad Retirement benefit.
- Part C (Medicare Advantage)
- Provides coverage under a managed care model and is only
open to people who live in an area of the state where a plan is offered.
Persons receiving Medicare through an Advantage plan agree to receive
services from a contracted network of providers but may have additional
services covered (such as dental) they may also have an additional
premium for coverage.
- Part D (Prescription Drug Insurance)
- Effective January 1, 2006. Provides coverage of outpatient
prescription drugs. Medicare beneficiaries will receive Part D coverage
through a private plan, known as Prescription Drug Plan (PDP). A Medicare health plan can also provide coverage
under Part D, Medicare Advantage - Prescription Drug (MA PD). All
plans must offer prescription drugs in specified therapeutic drug
classifications, but the specific formularies may vary. Beneficiaries
eligible to enroll in Part D must do so through the private plan.
A monthly premium is charged to the beneficiary and is collected through
a reduction in the Social Security benefit or paid directly to the
PDP. Individuals who are incarcerated are not entitled to Medicare
D.
From June 1, 2004 - December 31, 2005 Medicare beneficiaries have the
option to participate in a Medicare Approved Drug Discount Card. These
cards, offered through approved sponsors, provide discounts for specified
prescription drugs to the holder of the card. An annual enrollment fee
is required. Persons receiving prescription drug coverage through Medicaid
are not eligible to enroll. In addition, a special $600 credit also called
Transitional Assistance is available to persons under 135% of poverty,
except for those participating in Medicaid and other specified forms of
prescription drug coverage (e.g., TriCare for Life and employer-based
coverage).
As part of the Medicaid plan, the state is required to provide Medicare
Part B coverage to certain groups of individuals. The state pays the standard
premium charge on behalf of each enrolled individual. This is accomplished
through the buy-in process. Through this process the state ensures entitled
individuals are enrolled in Medicare Part B and Medicaid claims are offset
by Medicare payments. The state will also pay the Medicare Part A premium
for individuals receiving QMB coverage.
Incorporated into the appropriate application form is a statement of
client consent to buy-in and for Medicare benefit payments to be made
directly to medical providers. Utilization of Medicare is required if
eligible for any medical assistance program (see 2120
for cooperation).
2911.1 Eligibility for Buy-In -
Kansas will buy-in individuals who are entitled to Medicare Part B and
are enrolled in one or more of the following eligibility groups:
- Foster Care or Adoption Subsidy
- SSI (SI)
- Medical assistance only
- Qualified Medicare Beneficiary
- Low Income Medicare Beneficiary
For persons eligible under the medically needy plan only, there is no
buy-in coverage unless the spenddown has been met. However, once accreted
to buy-in persons with an unmet spenddown will continue on buy-in until
the coverage terminates. Medically needy coverage is never to be extended
for the sole purpose of protecting buy-in status.
2911.2 Medicare Entitlement and Impact on Medical Assistance
Eligibility - Persons entitled to Medicare Part B must enroll
in Medicare Part B as a condition of eligibility. Failure to cooperate
with the enrollment process will result in ineligibility for assistance.
For instances where potential entitlement has been identified, based on
item 1 below, medical assistance eligibility continues as long as the
individual is cooperating with the enrollment process. If the enrollment
process is not successful and ineligibility for Medicare has been established,
the agency may assist in the enrollment processes through processes described
in item 3 below.
- The following individuals are eligible for Medicare Part B:
- Individuals who are age 65 or over who have Medicare Part A
(Hospital Insurance).
- All other individuals who are age 65 or over, who are United
States residents, or aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence
and have resided in the U.S. continuously during the five years
immediately preceding the month they apply for enrollment. (For
the period 6/11/73 through 3/31/76, enrollees did not have to
meet the alien residency requirement).
- Individuals under age 65 who have been receiving monthly Social
Security disability benefits under Title II or railroad disability
benefits for a certain period of time (usually 24 consecutive
months).
- Individuals who are under age 65 who are eligible for Medicare
Part A (Hospital Insurance) because they have chronic renal disease.
- Enrollment of Eligible Individuals Who Were Not Enrolled In Part
B: Persons who are entitled must enroll. The State Medicaid program
has the authority to enroll recipient in Part B if the individual
does not do so on their own. The method of state-enrollment is dependent
upon the Part A enrollment status.
- Persons enrolled in Medicare Part A shall be enrolled in Medicare
Part B through the buy-in process. This process is automated and
does not usually require manual intervention to enroll the individual.
Upon identification of Medicare Part A entitlement through the
EATSS interface, a Part B entitlement date is determined entered
in KEES.. This information is sent to the MMIS where it is processed
according to general Part B buy-in rules. A buy-in accretion request
is sent for the individual. From the buy-in file, CMS identifies
the unenrolled individual and initiates enrollment of the individual
in Part B.
- Persons who are not enrolled in Medicare A or Medicare Part
B but appear to meet eligibility requirements, are referred to
the Social Security Administration for enrollment. If SSA cannot
take an application or if the individual refuses to cooperate,
the following process is taken:
- The form, HCFA 1610-U2, Public Assistance Agency
Information Request, is sent the appropriate SSA
office. On the form, the worker indicates the form is being
sent as a lead for Medicare B enrollment and a potential Medicare
Part B entitlement date is indicated on the form. SSA will
take an application from the beneficiary, if necessary. The
results will be communicated back to the worker initially
sending the 1610.
- If the beneficiary cooperates and is eligible for Part
B, he will be enrolled and accreted to buy-in. If the beneficiary
does not cooperate, the agency is authorized to complete an
enrollment application for Medicaid. The beneficiary shall
be notified of the agencies action and may request termination
of Medicaid coverage if he does not wish to be enrolled in
Medicare Part B.
- The HCFA-4040, Request for Enrollment in Supplemental Medical Insurance,
is sent to enroll the Medicaid beneficiary in Medicare Part B. The
enrollee does not need to sign the application, the eligibility worker
completes the signature block and annotates the form to show the information
came from the case record. The following documentation must be submitted
with the application:
- Proof of age by a birth certificate or record of baptism before
age five.
- Proof of citizenship or residency. If the individual was born
in the United States, no proof of citizenship or residency is
required. If the individual was born outside of the United States,
a certification must be submitted which describes the evidence
used to establish residency or citizenship.
The completed form and related documentation should be sent to the
Social Security office which services the beneficiary's address.
After SSA establishes a Medicare claim number for the individual's
Medicare record, the individual will be entitled to buy-in. The individual
will be accreted to buy-in once KEES has been updated and a record
is sent to MMIS and eligibility is approved.
2911.3 Buy-In Effective Date - The following
establish the effective date of buy-in coverage:
- The buy-in coverage period is determined by the calendar month
of medical assistance eligibility.
- For beneficiaries of SSI or State Supplement or the buy-in coverage
period begins the first day of the month that cash eligibility begins.
Buy-in coverage is continuous for an individual who loses eligibility
for SSI or State Supplement, but whose eligibility continues without
interruption.
- For medical only beneficiaries not QMB or LMB eligible, or not
previously on Kansas buy-in, buy-in coverage begins the first day
of the month following two consecutive months of eligibility for medical
assistance, providing that there is medical eligibility on the first
day of the third month. The first and third months of medical eligibility
do not have to be full months. This also applies to ongoing recipients.
- Ongoing medical only recipients who become entitled to Medicare
are eligible for buy-in following two consecutive months of mutual
Medicare entitlement and Medicaid eligibility.
- For QMB/LMB eligibles, buy-in coverage (including coverage of Part
A premiums) begins the first month of eligibility. In addition, for
QWD eligibles, coverage of Part A premiums is effective with the month
of application.
- For individuals previously on Kansas buy-in and whose
case is reopened, buy-in coverage begins the first day of the month
of eligibility.
- State submitted accretions (enrollments) may be adjusted to a different
beginning date by SSA. Such conditions may be when:
- SSA records show that the individual does not meet all the
requirements for Part B coverage on the requested accretion date.
- The accretion date submitted falls in the middle of a period
of buy-in coverage for another state on SSA's records.
For persons meeting one or more of the above criteria, the earliest
possible effective date is used.
2911.4
Buy-In Terminations - Buy-in coverage ends when one of the following
occur:
- Death - coverage ends
on the last day of the month in which the individual died.
- Loss of Entitlement to Medicare
Coverage - If an individual is under age 65 and loses entitlement,
buy-in coverage ends on the last day of the last month for which the
individual is entitled to Medicare.
- Loss of Medical Assistance Eligibility
- If an individual loses medical assistance eligibility,
buy-in coverage ends on the last day of the last month for which the
individual is eligible for medical assistance, except when an individual
goes into spenddown status. In this case, buy-in coverage continues.
Persons who remain covered only under ADAP (KEESM 2694)
after regular medical coverage terminates are also terminated from
buy-in.
2911.5 Explanation of Social Security
Numbers, Health Insurance Claim (HIC) Number, and Medicare Beneficiary
Identifier (MBI) - It is important to distinguish
between the beneficiary's Social Security number, Health Insurance Claim
(HIC) number, and Medicare Beneficiary Identifier (MBI). The Social Security
number is the number assigned to an individual by Social Security and
is used throughout a wage earner's lifetime to identify his or her earnings
under the Social Security program.
1. Health Insurance Claim (HIC)
Number- T1. The
HIC number is the Social Security number of the individual on whose earnings
Social Security benefits are being paid. The claim number includes an
alphanumeric suffix known as the Beneficiary Identification Code (BIC),
which designates the type of benefits the individual is receiving (such
as wage earner's, spouse, or child's benefits). An example of a HIC number
is 501234567D.
The HIC number
may be obtained from SSA or RRB, the TBQ interface, BENDEX, TPQY, or SDX
records.
In
some instances, an individual may be entitled to benefits under both Social
Security and RRB. All benefits will be awarded under either the Social
Security HIC number or the RRB claim number. Eligibility staff should
verify which HIC number to use by contacting the local SSA office.
Occasionally,
a HIC number change may occur if an individual becomes entitled to benefits
on another Social Security record or when an individual's status on his
or her account changes.
2.
Medicare Beneficiary Identifier
(MBI) – The Medicare
Beneficiary Identifier (MBI) is the consumer’s Medicare claim number. It
is a unique identifier that has replaced the Health Insurance Claim (HIC)
number on Medicare cards to help combat identity theft. The MBI consists
of eleven characters, both alphabetic and numeric, and will be used instead
of the HIC number on provider transactions. An example of the MBI is 1EG4-TE5-MK73.
The MBI number may be obtained from the beneficiary’s
Medicare card, letter of notification of eligibility for Medicare, premium
notice, utilization notice (Explanation of Medicare Benefits), or the
TBQ interface.
2911.6 Buy-In Process - The buy-in process consists
of two separate file exchanges with the Centers for Medicaid Services
(CMS). The first file is also called the input file and contains a list
of all buy-in actions the state is requesting. This includes requests
for new accretions, deletions as well as changes. It is sent to CMS on
or about the 21st of each month.
The second file is also called the receiving file. It is primarily a response
file to the previously sent input file. CMS will respond to each action
requested by the state. In addition, the receiving file may also contain
changes and other informational messages initiated by CMS. This file is
received on the first Thursday following the first Monday of the month.
Both files use special codes called transaction codes to communicate the
specific action. A list of transaction codes is available online through
the MMIS. Most actions occurring within the Kansas buy-in system are automatic.
However, some actions may be manually entered on the buy-in file.
All Medicare information for an individual is contained on the KEES screen.
This information is collected from BENDEX and TPQY records provided by
SSA as well as information from RRB. The KEES record is transmitted to
the MMIS and is used to initiate buy-in as well as match incoming records
from CMS. Because the information is taken directly from SSA's records,
it is common for the identifying information contained in KEES to differ
from that in the established beneficiary file.
- Accretion Requests -
Automatic accretion requests are generated for persons meeting the
guidelines of this section and are sent to CMS on the next input file
according the previously noted cycle.
In order for an individual to be accreted to buy-in, the input record
sent much match the following elements on the Medicare master record:
- Medicare claim number
- Last name
- First name
- Sex code
- Date of birth
All state-submitted accretions
are screened by SSA to verify Medicare eligibility. In these cases
where eligibility exists, the individual's Medicare eligibility date
and the state buy-in effective date are compared. If the state buy-in
date precedes the individual's Medicare eligibility date, SSA will
automatically adjust the state buy-in date to agree with the Medicare
eligibility date.
Note: Note: If an accretion fails to occur when it appears
the beneficiary is entitled to benefits, eligibility staff should
verify the accuracy of the information in KEES with the local SSA
office. If the KEES information is inaccurate, it should be changed
to match that contained on SSA's record. If SSA's record is incorrect,
eligibility staff should notify the local or regional Social Security
Office.
- Deletion
Requests - Buy-in deletions occur automatically when a beneficiary
has appeared ineligible for medical assistance for two consecutive
months.
The retroactively of the deletion date is limited to two months
from the month in which SSA received the deletion request. For example,
the state submits a deletion action to SSA in 02-03. The deletion
date cannot be earlier than 01-03. If an earlier date is requested
by the state, it is adjusted to 01-03.
- Change Requests - Buy-in
records are also sent to request changes in certain elements on the
record, such as the Medicare claim number.
2911.7 Part A Buy In - Persons entitled to Medicare
Part A by paying a premium and who meet QMB and QWD eligibility criteria
must enroll for Part A through Social Security before the state will assume
obligation for the premium. For persons who are not currently enrolled,
Social Security will conditionally enroll the individual pending a QMB
determination by eligibility staff. Persons conditionally enrolled
are identified by the presence of a Z-99 code and effective date on the
SSA record. The Z-99 date is the earliest possible Medicare Part A entitlement
date. People conditionally enrolling after the initial enrollment period
must wait until the general Medicare enrollment period of January - March
of each year. Part A coverage is effective in July of the enrollment year
in these cases.
Part A buy-in cannot occur unless the individual is already on Part
B buy-in. It is frequently necessary to manipulate coding of the eligibility
file to ensure these requests are properly submitted to CMS to ensure
timely buy-in.
2911.8 Refunds - When an individual becomes eligible
for medical assistance and has been accreted to buy-in, the individual
will receive a refund of any premiums deducted from his or her Social
Security check, or paid for personally, since the buy-in effective date.
Such a refund of Medicare Part B premiums is not to be considered income
when determining eligibility for assistance. Refund checks are usually
not received for a period of 90 to 120 days after buy-in coverage is effective.
2911.9 Problem Situations - Situations which
may arise which will require contact with the fiscal Agent Buy-in Analyst
are:
- A request to adjust the effective date on a buy-in record.
- A complaint that an individual is on buy-in and is being billed
directly for Medicare Part B premiums, or the premiums are being withheld
from the Social Security check.
- A complaint that a claim for Part B benefits was denied due to
lack of Part B coverage, and the individual should have Part B coverage
as entitlement to buy-in. If it is determined that the beneficiary
was deleted from buy-in error because of incorrect KEES information,
the record should be corrected.
- A complaint that an individual received a Medicare Part B termination
notice and should be covered by buy-in.
- An allegation that the individual is no longer on buy-in, but the
premiums are not yet being deducted from his or her Social Security
check or has been placed in direct billing status.
The fiscal agent will attempt to resolve a problem case within three
updates (approximately 90 days). However, due to the length of time
involved in obtaining documentation and the fact that not all corrective
actions can be taken in the same update, it may require four updates
(approximately 120 days) to make all of the corrections.
- Retroactive buy-in accretions shall be limited to either the Title
XIX eligibility effective date or 6 months prior to the month that
the request is received, whichever is less.
Exceptions shall be limited to the following circumstances:
- The Medicare entitlement decision is retroactive to an earlier
date (such as a decision rendered based on an SSA appeal).
- Attempts to timely accrete an individual to buy-in have been
unsuccessful.
- The agency has failed to reflect Medicare coverage reported
to them in a timely manner, and has also failed to approve assistance
timely (other than protected filing date applications due to SSA
appeals or applications delayed by the disability determination
process).
2911.10 Medicare
Prescription Drug Coverage - Part D Medicare prescription drug
coverage is considered comprehensive coverage. Although specific formularies
may vary, all Prescription Drug Plans (PDPs) or Medicare Advantage - Prescription
Drug Plans (MA PDPs) offering coverage must offer a range of drugs in
specific therapeutic drug classifications. In addition, plans must provide
all or substantially all of the drugs available in certain classifications:
antidepressants, antipsychotic, anticonvulsant, antiretrovirals, immunosuppressant
and antineoplastics. Plans must have an appeal process in place to ensure
the beneficiary receives medically necessary drugs.
A small group of drugs cannot be covered by the Part D plan and include
the barbiturates, benzodiazepines, prescription vitamins, medications
for weight loss/gain, and over-the counter medications. These are knows
as excluded drugs.
- Effect of Medicare
Part D on Medicaid - Medicaid will not cover Part D prescription
drugs for Medicare beneficiaries as of the date the person becomes
entitled to Medicare Part D. There will be no Medicaid coverage of
drugs regardless of an individual’s enrollment status in a plan. Medicaid
payment is based on entitlement to Part D only. Unlike coverage under
Parts A and B, where the Medicaid program can supplement the Medicare
payment for a covered service, coverage under Part D is considered
comprehensive and Federal Financial Participation (FFP) is not available
for supplemental coverage of prescription drugs. In addition, there
is no Medicaid payment for drugs not covered by the individual PDP
due to formulary restrictions. Supplemental coverage under the QMB
program is not applicable to Part D and will not cover coinsurance
and deductibles for Part D drugs. However, QMB will consider expenses
of prescription drugs covered under Parts A and B.
- Medicaid may continue to cover the Excluded Part
D drugs listed above (see KMAP Provider Manuals for coverage information).
- Entitlement
to Part D - To be entitled to Medicare Part D, the individual
must be entitled to Medicare Part A or enrolled in Part B. For individuals
who appear to meet the provisions of 2911.2
(2), but have not enrolled in Part B, Medicare Part D entitlement
is effective as in (3)(b) below.
- Effective Date
- The effective date is the date the individual becomes eligible
to enroll in a Medicare drug plan. It is not the date the individual
is actually enrolled in a plan.
- For prospective Medicare determinations, the
effective date of Part D entitlement is the date the individual
is initially entitled to Medicare Part A or B, but not before
January 1, 2006.
- For individuals whose Medicare entitlement
determination is made retroactively, Part D entitlement begins
the month the individuals received the notice of the Medicare
entitlement determination.
Examples: John turns
65 in May 2006. John is notified of Medicare entitlement effective
May 2006 in February. Because John knows about Medicare entitlement
prior to the effective date, the Medicare Part D entitlement is May,
2006.
Betty is determined disabled in July 2006 with an onset date in
2002. Also in this month, she finds out she is retroactively entitled
to Medicare beginning February, 2005. Because the effective date of
entitlement is prior to the current month, Medicare Part D entitlement
is the first day of the month the individual is notified of the approval,
or July 2006.
- Enrollment -
The Medicare beneficiary enrolls directly with the PDP through an
approved method of enrollment (e.g., mail, internet). Upon receipt
of the enrollment request, the PDP will verify the individual’s eligibility
to enroll through CMS. Once completed, information on the approved
enrollment request will be sent to CMS within 30 calendar days of
receipt of the enrollment application.
Persons in an approved PACE plan (see 8300)
will not be enrolled in Medicare Part D as their PACE provider will
be responsible for all prescription medication. Persons in a Medicare
Advantage plan with an approved Part D benefit will receive drug coverage
through the MA PDP plan.
Beneficiaries may elect to initially enroll or change plans only
at certain, designated times. The Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)
for new Medicare beneficiaries is concurrent with the Part B period.
The IEP for Part B is the seven month period that begins three months
before the month an individual meets the eligibility requirements
for Part B and ends three months after the month of eligibility. An
annual open enrollment period occurs from November 15 - December 31.
In addition, plans must offer a Special Enrollment Period for special
situations. Examples include:
- The enrollment period for an individual with
retroactive Medicare begins the month the notice is received and
continues for two additional months.
- An individual who moves into, resides in, or
moves out of an institution has a special enrollment period.
- Individuals disenrolling from PACE have a special
enrollment period of two months following the effective date of
disenrollment.
- Medicaid recipients, eligible under any program,
as well as those eligible for QMB or LMB may enroll in Medicare
Part D or change plans at any time.
- Persons moving from other creditable coverage
to Medicare Part D.
- Enrollment Effective
Date - The Part D Enrollment Date is the date the individual’s
coverage begins under the plan. The PDP sponsor is responsible for
establishing the effective date of enrollment. For new Medicare beneficiaries
initially enrolling, the effective date is the first day of the month
of Medicare eligibility if the request is received prior to the month
of eligibility. Enrollment requests after the initial period or received
during the annual enrollment period are effective the month following
the month of request. Enrollment dates will vary during Special Enrollment
Periods. Initial enrollment due to the individual’s status as a dual
eligible are effective the first month of full Medicaid eligibility,
but not prior to the Medicare entitlement date, if the beneficiary
incurred drug expenses in the prior month(s) as per item (c) below.
- Auto Enrollment
Process - Automatic enrollment into an approved Part D plan
for all dual eligibles receiving full Medicaid coverage, those eligible
only for QMB, LMB only and those eligible for subsidy will be initiated
if the individual is not already enrolled in an approved plan.
This includes those who have other approved employer, union or group
based health coverage:
- For persons with Medicaid (under any program,
including Title XIX, Medically Needy with spenddown met, QMB and
LMB) who become entitled to Medicare, auto enrollment will be
the first day of Part D entitlement. This includes persons who
initially apply on or before the initial month of Medicare entitlement,
even though Medicaid eligibility may not be approved until a later
date.
Example: A person with ongoing Medicaid become entitled
to Medicare in May 2006. Auto enrollment is effective May 1, 2006
(may be retroactive if CMS fails to flag the individual timely).
- For persons with Medicare who become eligible
for full Medicaid, auto enrollment is effective the first day
of Medicaid eligibility.
Example: A Medicare
beneficiary is approved for full Medicaid on August 17, with coverage
beginning June 1. The information on the beneficiary will be sent
to CMS in the September MMA file. Auto enrollment is retroactive
to June 1.
- For persons with Medicare who become eligible
for QMB or LMB (a Partial Dual) auto enrollment is effective the
second month following the month CMS identifies the individual
on the auto-enrollment file. This process is also called Facilitated
Enrollment.
Example: A person
is approved for LMB on June 5, 2006 effective May 1, 2006. This
information will be sent on the June file to CMS. CMS notifies
the individual the following month (July) of pending auto-enrollment
to afford them the opportunity to select a plan.
Auto-enrollment is effective September 1, 2006 if the individual
hasn’t already enrolled.
- For full Medicaid beneficiaries with Medicare
who had previously enrolled in a Part D plan, but disenrolled
and failed to enroll in a new Part D plan, auto enrollment is
effect the first day of the month after the disenrollment effective
date from the part D plan.
- For persons with Medicare who are eligible
for Part D Subsidy only, auto enrollment will be effective the
first day of the month following the expiration of the beneficiary’s
next open enrollment period.
Example: A person
is approved for Subsidy only in September 2006. The next open
enrollment period is the annual election period running November
15 through December 31. Since the period ends December 31, 2006,
auto enrollment is effective January 1, 2007, if the individual
is given adequate time to change plans.
- Retroactive
Enrollment for Full Medicaid Eligibles - A special retroactive
enrollment period is available to full Medicaid eligibles who will
not be auto-enrolled because the beneficiary has voluntarily enrolled
in Medicare Part D plan. The special retroactive enrollment is only
available for months in which the beneficiary has been determine eligible
for full Medicaid and the beneficiary incurred out-of-pocket prescription
drug expenses. The retroactive period is effective with the first
month of out-of-pocket expenses in which the individual was a full
dual eligible. This special enrollment is not available to partial
duals (QMB or LMB only) or to those receiving Part D Subsidy only.
Persons must contact their current Medicare Part D PDP to request
retroactive enrollment.
Example: Bill, a Medicare beneficiary, is approved for Medicaid
coverage on May 24, effective March 1. Bill enrolls in the A-1 Medicare
PDP, with coverage beginning June 1. However, Bill incurred out-of-pocket
expenses in the months of February, March, April and May. The special
enrollment period will allow Bill to retroactively enroll in the A-1
Medicare PDP beginning March 1. Although Bill had non-coverge drugs
in February, he was not a full dual in the month of February.
- Affirmatively
Decline - Persons may refuse auto enrollment into a Part
D plan by contacting Medicare or the PDP into which auto-enrollment
has been assigned. By affirmatively declining, the individual forfeits
auto enrollment. Persons who want to preserve coverage through an
employer, union or group may wish to affirmatively decline coverage.
However, Medicaid will not provide drug coverage to persons who affirmatively
decline auto-enrollment. Persons who wish to enroll in Medicare Part
D later may do so by making an enrollment request with the Part D
plan.
- Late Enrollment
Penalty - Except for persons with approved creditable coverage
described below, individuals who do not enroll in a Medicare Part
D plan during the Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) will be subject
to a penalty fee if they later choose to enroll. The surcharge will
be compounded monthly beginning with the first month following the
expiration of the IEP. Persons eligible for Medicare Part D subsidy
may receive help with payment of the surcharge (see 2675).
- Creditable Coverage
through an Employer, Union or Group - Employers, unions or
group health plans offering approved prescription drug plans to retirees,
current employees or other Medicare beneficiaries at least as good
as the Medicare Part D plan may have such plans designated as creditable
coverage. Medicare beneficiaries may elect to receive prescription
drug coverage through a creditable plan rather than through Medicare
Part D. Beneficiaries making a formal election through CMS to receive
coverage through retiree/employer plan coverage will not be subject
to the late enrollment penalty if they later elect to receive Medicare
Part D. However, the individual will not realize any benefits through
Medicare Part D Subsidy if they elect the private health plan over
Medicare Part D.
NOTE: Persons enrolled
in a Medicare Supplemental Plan with drug coverage may continue to
receive coverage under this plan, but new enrollees will not be accepted.
In addition, it is highly unlikely that any supplemental plan will
meet the definition of creditable coverage above and the beneficiary
may be subject to a Medicare Part D surcharge if they elect to switch
coverage later. Subsidy will not provide coverage of any expenses
through a supplemental plan.
- Failure to Enroll
- Failure to enroll in a Medicare Part D plan will not impact
Medicaid eligibility or coverage. Because the exclusion of prescription
drug coverage is determined by Medicare Part D entitlement, not enrollment,
no additional benefits will be provided to those who fail to enroll
in a plan. However, a person who elects to refuse Part D coverage
may be without drug coverage.
- Termination
of Part D Coverage - Entitlement to Part D ends when an individual
loses entitlement to both Medicare Parts A and B.