by JudyJB » Tue Oct 18, 2016 2:24 pm
There are 2 main ways to get your Medicare coverage— Original Medicare (Part A and Part B) or a Medicare Advantage Plan (Part C). Some people get additional coverage, like Medicare prescription drug coverage or Medicare Supplement Insurance (Medigap). Use these steps to help you decide what coverage you want:
Medicare Advantage Plans handle all parts of Medicare. They contract with the government to cover, in one package, A, B, C, and D. You pay one fee directly to them and they handle everything. Usually, this also means that in return for a slightly lower cost, you have to use their systems of doctors and hospital. If you out of their service area, except for true emergencies, you have to pay more of a co-pay and might have to get advance permission to use other services.
With the "original" Medicare, you pay through a SS deduction for Part A and B, and then you buy a supplemental policy, Part C, from a provider such as United Health Care through AARP. (That is what they are calling a Medigap policy.) You can also buy prescription coverage through an outside provider. I pay for that through automatic checking account payment each month. The advantage to me is that I can use any provider anywhere, at no extra cost. No need also to get pre-approvals, also, gives me a lot of flexibility.
So these ARE choices: Advantage Plan OR original Medicare and a supplement (Medigap) plan.
Also, I take a ton of prescription drugs, some of them pretty expensive, and have never hit the donut hole. I think it would apply only if you were taking some really, really unusual stuff like cancer treatments. And the donut hole is getting smaller each year, so some day it will disappear.