HEALTH CAREMedicare plan finder likely won’t note new $35 cap on out-of-pocket insulin costs
Officials say the problem affects only 2023 plans.
To fix anticipated enrollment mistakes, Medicare officials will give beneficiaries who use insulin a chance to switch plans next year. They can make one change after
The
“We are pleased that CMS is offering the special enrollment period that will allow insulin users to change plans in 2023,” said
In some cases, a special enrollment period can be avoided, said
Medicare patients spent
The
When beneficiaries who use insulin now check the plan finder, the price could show up as thousands of dollars a year instead of the maximum
It’s extremely difficult for consumers to evaluate policy options without the plan finder. One plan might have the lowest price for one drug but not another. Or a plan might have the lowest premium but higher drug prices. Or a preferred pharmacy in one plan may be excluded in another.
Medicare officials caution consumers about the problem. “This new
doesn’t mention the option of changing plans after the
But both SHIP counselors and representatives answering the Medicare help line rely on the same flawed plan finder.
Medicare beneficiaries filled prescriptions for at least 114 kinds of insulin in 2020, and those who did not get low-income subsidies paid on average
But drug plans do not have to cover all injectable insulins, said
KHN (
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