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Jenn's avatar

I’m on original Medicare, with a supplemental private policy (Medigap). The monthly premiums are affordable if you are able to manage a higher deductible-which is still quite modest compared to what we had to cover prior to turning 65.

We don’t have vision or dental coverage—we just pay out of pocket. Our dentist offers a program that for $120 per year we get a preventative exam and a hefty discount on services..the numbers work out to be roughly equivalent to having dental insurance, which is pretty useless in that the annual caps are so low. Vision coverage hasn’t really been an issue—maybe we aren’t average but at this age your prescription doesn’t change that often. I get new glasses every couple of years not because my vision changes, but because my lenses are usually scratched up and it drives me crazy to not have absolutely pristine lenses.

We live in a rural area with limited providers and never even considered MA because of the risk of not being able to find an in-network provider. My mother, who was in the Portland, OR service area for Kaiser, had a Kaiser MA plan that was excellent. They covered her extensive and expensive needs, no questions asked. They covered hearing aids and vision. She had a heart attack followed by a long hospitalization until she could be stable for surgery, and it cost her nothing other than a bill for the ambulance ride to the hospital. I saw the itemized statement from Kaiser and the cost was about $375K.

I don’t know if there are other providers like Kaiser nationally, but I would consider MA but only from a wraparound system like they offer. Traditional Medicare requires more administration from me (buying and managing separate policies), and an ability to cover routine expenses and about $2500-$3000 in out of pocket costs, but if you can manage that the trade off is not being denied care when something serious happens.

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Anne Murray Falcone's avatar

You can go to any provider that you want with original medicare. No benefit of MA comes close to that. I am 73 and not sick, on medicare. [1] But I had a fairly serious fractured proximal humerus two years ago and I was able to get the best surgeon. I ended up staying in the hospital for a day and they had a woman in a suit hand me a letter saying that my doctor had decided to hold me for "observation" and that was the best for medicare. [paraphrase - I was on drugs]. The hospital sent an itemized bill, charging the 20%. CMS said no, this is one hospital admission and it is all covered under the PART A deductible. It was less, I can't remember by how much. [massachusetts] [2] I was in a van accident when I was still a tour guide in Florida. They have a weird no fault law that charges your personal insurance as the secondary insurer after the auto insurance. Naples Community Hospital kept sending a bill for $2500. I called and told them to send it to medicare. It was a big deal to get them to bill medicare but they finally did. CMS said NO, you have already been paid enough. CMS reviews the bill and adjusts it regularly. You get statements that say - this is what they billed - this is what we paid - this is the most you can be billed [if you have no other insurance]. There are some rules for MA but not enough. I lobby my fellow seniors to get regular medicare because I think MA is a path to take our medicare away. I think medicare will be improved, especially if we all have it. MA is for profit.

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