Improved
Quality of Medicare
Plans and Steady Premiums
Are
Great
News as
Open Enrollment
Begins
By
Marilyn
Tavenner,
Centers
for Medicare
&
Medicaid
Services
Administrator
Fall
is a wonderful
time of
year.
Changing
leaves.
Cooler
weather.
Its
also
the season
for
people
with Medicare to
review
their
current
Medicare
coverage,
as Medicare
Open
Enrollment
begins.
As
we
prepare
for Medicare
Open
Enrollment,
which
began
on October
15
and
ends on
December
7, Medicare
wants
everyone
to know
that quality
continues
to improve both in Medicare
Advantage
and in
the Part D Prescription
Drug
Program.
Each
year,
plan
costs
and
coverage
can
change.
During
open
enrollment,
seniors and people
with disabilities
across the
country
have
the
opportunity
to review
their
current
Medicare
coverage
and see
if they
want to make
any
changes
for
the
next
year.
Its
important for
people
with Medicare
to take
the
time to make
sure
their
current
situation still meets their
health
care
needs
best.
To help
people choose
a plan,
Medicare
calculates
plan
star
ratings
for
Medicare
health
and prescription drug
plans.
Each
plan
gets
a number
of stars
on a scale of
1 to 5with
5 being
the bestbased
on quality
and performance.
These
ratings
are
designed
to help
people
with Medicare,
their
families,
and
caregivers
compare
plans,
in addition
to information
on their premiums
and benefits.
This
year,
people
with Medicare
who choose
to enroll
in a Medicare
health
or prescription
drug plan
will have
access
to more
high-rated,
four-
and
five-star
plans
than
ever
before.
Approximately
60 percent
of Medicare
Advantage
enrollees
are
in a
Medicare
Advantage
Plan
earning
four
or
more
stars
in 2015, compared to
an
estimated
17 percent back
in 2009.
Likewise,
about 53 percent
of Part D enrollees
are
currently
enrolled
in stand-alone
prescription
drug
plans
with
four or
more
stars
for
2015, compared
to just 16 percent in 2009. Since
the passage
of the
Affordable
Care
Act,
enrollment
in Medicare
Advantage
will increase
to 42 percent
to an
all- time
high
of over
16 million and Medicare
Advantage
premiums
will have decreased
by
6 percent.
For
people
with Medicare,
this is good news in how
they
receive
care.
Plans that are
higher
rated
deliver
a high-level
of
care,
such
as improving
the
coordination
of
care,
managing
diabetes
or other chronic
conditions
more efficiently,
screening
for
and preventing
illnesses,
making sure
people
get
much-needed
prescription
drugs,
or getting
appointments
and
care
quickly.
A high
rating
also means these
plans
give
better
customer
service,
with
fewer
complaints
or long waits
for
care.