Title: Day 1 SHINE Program Certification Training
1Day 1SHINE ProgramCertification Training
2SHINEServing the Health Insurance Needs of
Everyone(on Medicare)
- Started in Massachusetts 1985
- Part of national SHIP State Health Insurance
Assistance Programs
3Program Structure
- Executive Office of Elder Affairs
- State SHINE Director Cindy Phillips
- Assistant Director Barbara Deveau
- Field Operations Manager/Trainingng Coordinator
Annie Toth - Program Coordinator TBD
- 14 Regional Programs throughout the state
- Based at ASAPS and/or Councils on Aging
- Regional Director and staff
- Counselors at local sites
4Goal
- Ensure that Medicare beneficiaries have access to
accurate, unbiased information regarding health
insurance and health care options - Educate beneficiaries about available benefit
programs - Advocate on behalf of beneficiaries to ensure
they receive benefits to which they are entitled
5SHINE Counselors
- Assist beneficiaries and their families in
understanding Medicare coverage options and
MassHealth programs and benefits - Screen for public benefit programs and assist
with applications - Advocate with and for beneficiaries to resolve
issues with Medicare, MassHealth and other
insurance-related programs
6Training
- Certification training
- Mentoring
- Monthly training meetings
- October Review and training for Medicares
annual Open Enrollment - Recertification review every spring
7Counselor Support
- Regional Office
- Regional Program Colleagues
- SHINE Counselor Website
- shinecounselor.800ageinfo.com
- Common Resources
- SHINE newsletter The Beacon
8Medicare Part A Part B
9Medicare
- Federal health insurance program for
- Individuals age 65 and over
- Individuals under age 65 with a disability
- Never intended to cover 100 of healthcare costs
- Provides coverage for services which are
reasonable and medically necessary for the
treatment and diagnosis of an illness or injury
10Eligibility
- Age 65
- U.S citizen/lawfully permitted resident for 5
years - Earned 40 credits under Social Security (10
years) - Be spouse or ex-spouse (marriage lasted at least
10 years) - Under Age 65
- On SSDI for 24 months
- Individuals with ESRD (End Stage Renal Disease)
- Individuals with ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis Lou Gehrigs Disease) - FYI Increase in age for full Social Security
benefits does NOT affect Medicare
11Enrolling in Medicare
- Enrollment through Social Security
- Medicare administered by CMS
- Need to contact SS to enroll in Medicare if not
yet collecting SS benefits - Can delay enrolling in Part B if individual or
spouse still working and covered under employer
group health plan - Once coverage ends under active employment, have
8 months to enroll in B without a penalty - Note The 8-month special enrollment period
rules do not apply if employment or Employer
Group Health Plan (EGHP) coverage ends during the
Initial Enrollment Period
12Enrollment Types
- Standard Age 65 not collecting Social Security
- Contact SS to enroll or enroll online
- 7-month window (Initial Enrollment Period)
- Automatic Already receiving SS or on SSDI
- On SS receive enrollment notice 3 mos. Before
65 - On SSDI eligible on month 25 of receiving SSDI
receive notice approximately 3 mos. prior - Voluntary Not eligible for premium-free Part A
13Enrollment Periods
- Initial Enrollment Period (IEP) 7 months
surrounding 65th birthday month (month earlier if
birthday on 1st of month) - Date of enrollment determines effective date of
Medicare - Special Enrollment Period (SEP) 8 months
following loss of coverage from active
employment (individuals or spouses) COBRA
coverage is not active coverage - General Enrollment Period (GEP) Jan 1st Mar
31st of each year (Voluntary and late enrollees)
- July 1st effective date
-
14Initial Enrollment Period When Coverage Starts
If beneficiary enrolls in this month of IEP Medicare Part A B Coverage Starts
1 The month beneficiary becomes eligible for Medicare
2 The month beneficiary becomes eligible for Medicare
3 The month beneficiary becomes eligible for Medicare
4 Folowing month after beneficiary enrolls
5 Two months after beneficiary enrolls
6 Three months after beneficiary enrolls
7 Three months after beneficiary enrolls
15Special Enrollment PeriodDelaying Part B
- Beneficiaries may choose just Medicare Part A
while ACTIVELY working or covered under a spouse
who is ACTIVELY working - Note If delay Part B and no coverage under
active employment, could only enroll during
General Enrollment Period and would be subject
to late enrollment penalty - Once ACTIVE employment coverage has ended, must
take Part B coverage within 8 months to avoid a
penalty - If employer has lt20 employees or lt100 employees
if beneficiary has a disability, then the
individual may need Part B because Medicare
should pay first and Employer Group Health Plan
(EGHP) second - Beneficiaries should confirm with their employer
if Part B is needed
16Initial Enrollment Example
- Mr. Kaplan is turning 65 on August 29th. His
first opportunity to enroll in Medicare based on
his age (not disability) is May 1st . His
initial enrollment period lasts until November
30th. The month he enrolls determines the
effective date of coverage -
17Special Enrollment Example
- Mrs. White continued working after age 65 and was
covered by an employer-related group medical
plan. She chose to enroll in Part A when she
turned 65 (because she does not have to pay a
premium) but delayed Part B enrollment. Her
Special Enrollment Period will be the 8 month
period following the month she is no longer
covered by her employers plan or her employment
ends, whichever comes first
18Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
(COBRA)
- When employment and/or EGHP ends, individual can
elect COBRA coverage which continues health
coverage through employers plan (in most cases
for only 18 months) and probably at a higher cost - If elect COBRA, should NOT wait until COBRA ends
to enroll in Medicare or will pay a late
enrollment penalty and will have to wait until
the next General Enrollment Period to enroll - Must sign up for B within the first 8 months (SEP
after ACTIVE work) of COBRA to avoid penalty - Should enroll in Part B because Medicare pays
first and COBRA pays second - COBRA may not provide coverage if individual does
not have Medicare
19Medicare Premiums
- Individuals or their spouses who have paid into
the Medicare Program and worked at least 40
quarters DO NOT pay a Part A premium referred
to as Premium-free Part A - Everyone pays a Part B premium
- Benefit programs are available to pay the premium
for eligible beneficiaries - Part B premiums are deducted from the Social
Security check - If not collecting Social Security, beneficiary
will be billed every 3 months - If collecting a federal pension and not SS, Part
B premiums can be deducted from pension - Part A B premiums may change annually
-
20Part A and B Premiums
- Part A
- People who dont qualify for premium-free
Medicare may enroll voluntarily (during Generla
Enroll and pay a monthly premium for Parts A B - Part A Premiums
- See Current Medicare Premiums Chart
- Part B
- Premiums based on annual income (past 2 years tax
returns) - Increases with higher income
- See Current Medicare Premiums Chart
21Late Enrollment Penalty
- Penalty for Part A Capped at 10 of premium
and goes away after penalized for twice the
length of time the person delayed enrollment - Only for voluntary enrollees (paying for A) who
dont enroll in Part A when initially eligible - Penalty for Part B 10 of premium for each full
12 month period the individual delayed enrollment - Penalty for Part B not capped and is a lifetime
penalty except - Under 65 beneficiaries with a penalty will have
the penalty removed and will have a clean slate
when they turn 65
22Late/General Enrollment Example
- Mr. Santos retires at age 65 and declines
Medicare Part B. At age 70, Mr. Santos wants to
purchase Part B. He must wait until the General
Enrollment Period (January 1st - March 31st ) for
coverage that begins the following July. Mr.
Santos will have a 50 penalty added to his Part
B premium (10 for each 12 month period he
delayed Part B enrollment)
23Example of Part B Penalty for Mr. Santos
ENROLLMENT YEAR MONTHLY PREMIUM PENALTY (10 penalty per year times the number of years enrollment was delayed, 5 for Mr. Santos)50 TOTAL PART B COST FOR MR. SANTOS
Year 1 104.90 (104.90 x 50)52.45 157.35
Year 2 106.00 (106.00 x 50)53.00 159.00
24Four Parts of Medicare
- FYI Part A B called Original Medicare
25Original Medicare
- Health care insurance run by the federal
government - Provides Part A and/or Part B coverage
- See any doctor or hospital that accepts Medicare
- Beneficiary pays
- Part B premium (Part A is usually premium free)
- Deductibles, coinsurance, or copayments
- Can join a Part D plan to add drug coverage
26Medicare Part A(Hospital Insurance)
27Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance)
- Part A Covers
- Inpatient hospital care
- Care in a skilled nursing facility (SNF)
- Home health care
- Hospice care
- Blood
- See Part A Benefits and Gaps for current costs
28Inpatient Hospital Coverage
- Covered days in a hospital
- 90 renewable days
- Medicare pays 100 for days 1-60 in a benefit
period AFTER beneficiary pays Part A deductible - Daily co-payment for days 61-90 in a benefit
period - 60 non-renewable days
- Daily co-payment for days 91-150 (lifetime
reserve days)
- A benefit period is a period of time that
Medicare pays for a persons care in a hospital
or SNF. It begins when a beneficiary goes into
the hospital and ends when she/he has been out of
the hospital or skilled nursing facility for 60
consecutive days
29Inpatient Hospital Coverage
- Inpatient hospital coverage requirements
- Doctor determines it is medically necessary
- Care requires being in a hospital
- Hospital participates with Medicare
- Utilization Review Committee of the hospital
approves the stay
30Inpatient Hospital Covered Services
- Some services covered during a hospital stay
- Semi-private room and all meals
- Special care units
- General nursing services
- Drugs administered in the hospital
- Lab tests
- Radiology services
- See manual for complete list
31Inpatient Hospital Services NOT Covered
- Services NOT covered during a hospital stay
- Physician services (Covered under Part B)
- Personal convenience items
- Private room (unless medically necessary)
- First three pints of blood
- Private duty nursing
32Hospital Coverage
- Other hospital coverage
- Care in a psychiatric hospital
- 190 lifetime days for Inpatient care
- Care in a foreign hospital
- Medicare usually does NOT pay for care outside
the United States - Medicare MAY pay for qualified care in a Mexican
or Canadian hospital under special conditions
33Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Coverage
- Must be a Medicare participating facility
- Physician must certify that patients needs and
receives daily skilled care from RN or therapist - Prior Inpatient hospital stay of 3 days or more
(72 hours as an admitted patient) - An overnight stay doesnt always mean an
Inpatient day (can be observation day) - Break in skilled care that lasts more than 30
days will require a new 3 day hospital stay to
qualify for additional SNF care - Admitted to SNF within 30 days of discharge from
hospital
34SNF Covered Days
- 100 renewable days
- Days 1-20 Medicare pays 100 in a benefit period
- Days 21 100 Daily co-payment
- See Medicare Part A Benefits and Gaps
35SNF Coverage
- Services covered
- Semi-private room
- Meals (including special diets)
- Nursing Rehabilitation services
- Drugs furnished by the SNF
- Use of medical equipment and supplies
- Services not covered
- Physician services
- Private room (unless required)
- Personal convenience items
36Medicare Part A Benefit Period Example
- Benefit period Example 1
- Mr. Jones has Medicare A B. He is
hospitalized as an Inpatient on January 5th and
remains in the hospital until January 12th. Mr.
Jones has used 8 of his hospital days in the
benefit period. (Day of discharge does not
count.) Mr. Jones has 82 hospital days left in
the benefit period - How much would Mr. Jones have to pay for his
hospital stay?
37Medicare Part A Benefit Period Example
- Benefit period Example 2
- Mr. Jones is discharged from the hospital on
January 12th and transferred to a SNF where he
remains until February 9th. Mr. Jones used 28
days of his SNF benefit. He has 72 days left - How much would Mr. Jones have to pay for his
Skilled Nursing Facility care?
38Home Health Benefit
- Home health benefit coverage requirements
- Must need skilled care on intermittent basis
- Home health agency must be Medicare-approved
- Physician must authorize treatment and have
face-to-face meeting with beneficiary prior to
start - Beneficiary must be homebound (see manual)
- Medicare pays 100 for all covered and medically
necessary home health services (see manual for
covered services) - EXCEPTION Medicare pays 80 of durable
equipment
39Hospice
- Hospice Coverage
- Physician must certify that beneficiary is
terminally ill and expected to live 6 months or
less - Beneficiary has elected to receive comfort and
pain relief care from Hospice instead of medical
treatment for cure - Care is provided by Medicare certified hospice
program
40Utilization Review Committee
- Reviews patient stays in hospitals and SNFs to
determine if patient meets Medicare standard for
needing care in hospital setting - Each patients doctor must satisfy the
Utilization Review Committee (URC) that patient
meets admission criteria and continues to need
acute hospital level of care - Has authority to terminate Medicares obligation
to pay for medical services in hospital or SNF - Determines patient time of discharge
41Medicare Part A Review
- Review
- What are the two major federal agencies involved
with the Medicare Program and what is each of
their roles? - Who can enroll in Medicare?
- When can someone enroll in Medicare?
- Does someone have to enroll in both parts of
Medicare (A B)? - What is a benefit period?
42Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance)
43Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance)
- Physicians Services
- Outpatient hospital services
- Durable medical equipment
- Prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies
- Ambulance
- Home health care (if not Part A)
- Blood (if not Part A)
44Medicare Part B Important Terms
- Medicare approved amount Fee Medicare sets for
Medicare covered service - Excess charges Amount owed by beneficiary above
the Medicare approved amount. In other states,
there is a limit on excess charges of 15 - Ban on Balanced Billing Massachusetts has a law
prohibiting excess charges by physicians - Accepting Assignment Accepting the Medicare
approved amount as payment in full - Participating Provider Signing an agreement
saying provider agrees to accept assignment for
all beneficiaries in all cases (non-participating
less important in MA)
45Part B Cost Coverage
- Monthly Part B Standard Premium
- See Medicare Premiums Chart
- Annual Deductible
- See Part B Benefits and Gaps
- Medical/Physician Services (See manual)
- Note No coverage for routine care with the
exception of the Welcome to Medicare Exam - and Annual Wellness Visit
-
46Sample of Medicares Preventive Benefits
- Bone mass density testing
- Annual prostate cancer screening test
- Colorectal cancer screening
- Blood sugar testing equipment and training for
managing diabetes - Immunization (flu, pneumonia and hepatitis B)
- Annual Screening Glaucoma Screening for people at
high risk - Cardiovascular Screening Blood Tests
- Diabetes Screening Tests
- See Medicare Part B Preventive Services for
complete list
47 Ambulance Coverage
- Medicares coverage for ambulance services is
limited and generally only covers when transport
in another vehicle would endanger health - Medicare does not provide coverage for
transportation in a chair car
48Durable Medical Equipment (DME)
- Medicare helps pay for DME if
- It is prescribed by a physician
- It is medically necessary
- It fills a medical need (more than convenience)
- It is appropriate for use in the home
- It can be used over and over again
49Durable Medical Equipment
- What Medicare pays for DME
- Medicare pays 80 of Medicare approved amount
- If the supplier accepts assignment, beneficiary
pays 20 - If supplier does NOT accept assignment,
beneficiary pays 20 PLUS difference between what
Medicare approves and supplier charges - Supplier is required to bill Medicare
- Beneficiary can buy or rent DME
50DMEPOS Competitive Bidding Program
- Program aims to lower payment rates for certain
medical equipment and supplies through supplier
competition - Program available in most counties in
Massachusetts with the exception of Barnstable,
Berkshire, Dukes and Nantucket counties - Original Medicare beneficiary must use Medicare
contract suppliers for certain competitive bid
items (ex. hospital beds, wheelchairs, oxygen) in
order for Medicare to pay - Beneficiaries enrolled in a Medicare Advantage
Plan are NOT affected and will continue to use
suppliers designated by the plan
51DME Counseling Tips
- Encourage clients to
- Make sure the physician fills out a Certificate
of Medical Necessity - Ask the supplier if they accept Medicare
assignment - If the item is on the DMEPOS list, make sure it
is ordered from a DMEPOS supplier - Use Medicare.gov to find a DMEPOS-CBP supplier
52Medicare Part B Review
- Review
- What kinds of services does Part B cover?
- What out of pocket expenses does a beneficiary
have for Part B services? - What does accepting assignment mean?
- What is a participating provider?
- What are excess charges?
- What is the Ban on Balanced Billing?
53Case Study 1Hal
- Hal will celebrate his 65th birthday in a couple
of months. He just received his Medicare Initial
Enrollment Package from the Social Security
Administration. While he has a general
understanding of Medicare Part A, Hal doesnt
feel well informed about Medicare Part B. - What information would you provide Hal?
54Case Study 2George Bell
- George Bell is a 64 year old man who will soon be
reaching his 65th birthday. George is so busy
with a full-time career that his plans for
retirement are far in the future. George will
continue employment with a major corporation
beyond his 65th birthday. - What should he do about Medicare enrollment and
his current group health insurance?
55Case Study 3Agnus
- Agnus is 64 years old and has been divorced for
15 years. Agnus married soon after high school
and was a full-time homemaker. Until 5 years ago,
Agnus had never worked outside the home. For the
past 5 years she has worked for the Red Dye
Company. She will be retiring in 4 months when
she turns 65. The benefits administrator of the
Red Dye Company told Agnus that she will not be
eligible for Social Security or Medicare since
she has not worked for a full 10 years. - Is this true?
- What would you tell Agnus?
56Case Study 4Sam Pan
- Sam calls for assistance with understanding
Medicare. He tells you he is 59, has been on
SSDI for 23 months and will be eligible for
Medicare in a couple of months. From what he
could figure out, he understands he can sign up
for Part A but does not need to enroll in Part B
at this time because he is covered under his
spouses coverage. His spouse, John, works
full-time and has excellent coverage for both of
them through his employer plan. John is 63 and
plans to retire in 3 years. They will then have
the option of the companys retiree coverage, so
Sam plans to pick up Part B at that time. He
wants confirmation that hes correct in his
understanding of Medicare. - What information would you provide to Sam?
57Case Study 5Leann Washington
- Leann Washington lives in Massachusetts. She goes
to see Dr. Franklin in her town who does not
accept assignment. Ms. Washington is required to
pay the entire bill of 150. When she receives
the Medicare Summary Notice (MSN), she notices
that the Medicare approved amount is 100. She
wants to know what the exact amount is that
Medicare will pay and the amount that is her
responsibility? She explains that she has already
met her Part B annual deductible. - What would Ms. Washington owe if she lived in
Florida?
58Case Study 6Mrs. Joan Carroll
- Mrs. Carroll called the SHINE office for help on
June 1st for help with a problem. Mr. Carroll,
much to his wifes dismay, refused to sign up for
Medicare Part B when he was initially eligible.
He is very proud of the fact that he has only
spent 1,000 for medical care in the last 3
years. As he repeatedly told his wife, that is
cheaper than paying the Part B premium for the
last 3 years. - Mr. Carroll now needs to have surgery. His wife
is beginning to realize some of the problems
involved as a result of an uninformed decision he
made three years ago. - List the problems he now will face
59Case Study 7Ruth Rose
- Ruth Rose comes to see you at the SHINE office.
She says that she will be 65 in 5 months. She
will continue to work and is covered by her
employer group plan. She does not want to sign up
for Medicare. However, her friend Rhoda told her
that if he does not sign up now, she will not be
able to get Medicare later. - What information would you give her?
60Medicare A/B Quiz
- Describe Medicares Enrollment Types
- List the gaps in Medicare Part B coverage
- Mr. Smith comes to see you at the Council on
Aging (COA) office. He will be retiring soon and
living on a limited income. His understanding is
that he can get by with just Medicare AB
coverage. - What would you tell him about having Medicare
AB only? - What is the current standard monthly premium for
Medicare Part B? - Medicare does cover an annual physical True or
False
61Homework Assignment
- Call Medicare (1-800-633-4227) with the
following question - I (or my client) am having day surgery. What is
my financial obligation/responsibility?