Medicare for Railroad Families
(From: The U.S.
Railroad Retirement Board)
October 2004
The Federal Medicare program provides hospital and medical
insurance protection for railroad retirement annuitants and their families,
just as it does for social security beneficiaries. Part A (hospital insurance)
is financed through payroll taxes paid by employees and employers, while Part B
(medical insurance) is financed by premiums paid by participants and by Federal
general revenue funds.
The following questions and answers provide basic
information on Medicare eligibility and coverage, Medicare premium, deductible
and coinsurance increases in 2005, as well as information on the changes in
Medicare effected by legislation enacted in 2003.
1. Who is eligible for Medicare?
- All railroad retirement beneficiaries age 65 or over,
and other persons who are directly or potentially eligible for railroad
retirement benefits, are covered by the program. Although the age requirements for some
unreduced railroad retirement benefits are rising just like the social
security requirements, beneficiaries are still eligible for Medicare at
age 65.
2. Who is eligible for Medicare coverage before age 65?
- In general, coverage before age 65 is available for
disabled employee annuitants who have been entitled to monthly benefits
based on total disability (i.e., the employee must have met the Social
Security Act's requirements for a disability benefit) for at least 24
months. Disabled widow(er)s under
65, disabled surviving divorced spouses under 65, and disabled children
may also be eligible.
- Medicare coverage before age 65 on the basis of
permanent kidney failure is also available to employee annuitants,
employees who have not retired but meet certain minimum service
requirements, spouses, and dependent children who suffer from permanent
kidney failure requiring hemodialysis or a kidney transplant. (Special rules also apply for
individuals diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.)
3. How do persons enroll in Medicare?
- If a retired employee or a family member is receiving
a railroad retirement annuity, enrollment for both Part A (hospital
insurance) and Part B (medical insurance) is generally automatic and
coverage begins when the person reaches age 65. An individual may decline Part B if so
desired, and this does not preclude him or her from applying for medical
insurance at a later date. Premiums
may be higher, however, if enrollment is delayed.
- If an individual is eligible for but not receiving an
annuity, he or she should contact the nearest Board office about three
months before attaining age 65 in order to apply for Medicare. (This does not mean that the individual
must retire if presently working.)
The best time to apply is during the three months before the month
in which the individual reaches age 65.
He or she will then have both hospital and medical protection
beginning with the month age 65 is reached. If the individual does not enroll for
Part B in the three months before attaining age 65, he or she can enroll
in the month age 65 is reached or during the next three months, but there
will be a delay of one to three months before medical insurance is
effective. Individuals who do not
enroll during their initial enrollment period may sign up in any General
Enrollment Period (January 1 - March 31 each year). Coverage for such individuals begins
July 1 of the year of enrollment.
4. How much can Medicare Part B premiums increase for
delayed enrollment?
- Premiums for Part B are increased 10 percent for each
12-month period the individual could have been, but was not,
enrolled. However, individuals who
wait to enroll in Part B because they have group health plan coverage
based on their own or their spouse's current employment may not have to
pay higher premiums because they are eligible for special enrollment
periods. Nonetheless, individuals
covered by an employer group health plan should consider how delaying
enrollment will affect their eligibility for health insurance policies,
known as "Medigap" insurance, which supplement Medicare
coverage.
- Individuals can get more detailed information about
Medigap policies from the publications Medigap Policies or Guide to Health
Insurance for People with Medicare.
To get a copy, they can call the Medicare toll-free number
1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) or
go to www.medicare.gov on the
Internet and click on "Publications."
5. What is covered by Part A (hospital insurance) of the
Original Medicare Plan?
- The hospital insurance program is designed to help
pay the bills when an insured person is hospitalized. The program also provides payments for
required professional services in a skilled nursing facility (but not for custodial
care) following a hospital stay, home health services, and hospice care.
- There is a limit on how many days of hospital or
skilled nursing care Medicare helps pay for in each "benefit
period." A benefit period
begins the first day a patient receives services in a hospital. It ends
after a person has been out of a hospital or other facility primarily
providing skilled care for 60 days in a row.
- Benefits are ordinarily paid only for services
received in the United States
or Canada.
Hospital insurance also covers hospital stays in Mexico
under very limited conditions.
6. What are the Medicare Part A deductible and coinsurance
charges in 2004 and what will they be in 2005?
- For the first 60 days in a benefit period, a Medicare
patient is responsible for paying a deductible, which for 2004 is the
first $876 of all covered inpatient hospital services. The Part A deductible will increase to
$912 in 2005. The daily coinsurance
charge that a Medicare beneficiary is responsible for paying for hospital
care for the 61st through the 90th day is $219 in 2004, increasing to $228
per day in 2005. If a beneficiary
uses "lifetime reserve" days, he or she is responsible for
paying $438 a day for each reserve day used in 2004, and $456 a day in
2005. Lifetime reserve days are an
extra 60 hospital days a beneficiary can use if illness keeps him or her
in the hospital for more than 90 days; a beneficiary has only 60 reserve
days during his or her lifetime and the beneficiary decides when to use
them.
- In addition, the daily coinsurance charge a
beneficiary is responsible for paying for care in a skilled nursing
facility for the 21st through the 100th day is $109.50 in 2004 and will be
$114 in 2005.
7. What are some of the services covered by Part B (medical
insurance) of the Original Medicare Plan?
- Medicare medical insurance helps pay for doctors'
services and many medical services and supplies that are not covered by
the hospital insurance part of Medicare, such as certain ambulance
services, outpatient hospital care, X-rays, laboratory tests, physical and
speech therapy, blood, mammograms, Pap smears, and colorectal cancer
screening.
8. Will the Medicare Part B deductible and premium change
next year and by how much?
- The annual deductible for Medicare Part B will increase
from $100 in 2004 to $110 in 2005.
After that, the deductible will be indexed and subject to annual
increases. After the deductible is
paid, Medicare will generally pay 80 percent of the approved charges for
covered services during the rest of the year; the beneficiary is
responsible for paying the remaining 20 percent of the cost.
- All beneficiaries currently pay the same basic
premium amount for Medicare Part B ($66.60 in 2004 and increasing to
$78.20 in 2005), which covers outpatient care and doctor visits. Beginning in 2007, the premium will
increase for individuals with annual incomes of more than $80,000, and for
couples with annual incomes of more than $160,000. The amount of the premium increase will
be based on a sliding income scale.
9. What is not currently covered by the Original Medicare
Plan?
- The Original Medicare Plan provides basic protection
against the high cost of illness, but it will not pay all health care
expenses. Some of the services and
supplies Part A or Part B cannot pay for are custodial care, such as help
with bathing, eating, and taking medicine; dentures and routine dental
care; most eyeglasses, hearing aids, and examinations to prescribe or fit
them; long-term care (nursing homes); personal comfort items, such as a phone
or TV in a hospital room; most prescription drugs; and routine physical
checkups and most related tests.
10. What changes to Medicare were effected by the enactment
of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003?
- Among the major features of this legislation are
provisions for Medicare coverage of prescription drugs, the establishment
of a Medicare Advantage Program to replace the previous Medicare + Choice
Program, and provisions for new preventive benefits.
11. When will Medicare coverage for prescription drugs
begin?
- The actual prescription drug benefit will begin in
2006. In the interim,
Medicare-approved drug discount cards became available in June 2004 to
help beneficiaries save on prescription drugs. Medicare contracts with private
companies to offer the drug discount cards which bear a Medicare-approved
seal. Voluntary enrollment began
May 2004 and continues through December
31, 2005.
- The discount card program is not intended to be a
prescription drug benefit, but rather a temporary discount program to help
people without outpatient prescription drug insurance until the Medicare
drug benefit takes effect on January
1, 2006.
- In June 2004, Medicare also began providing a $600
annual credit towards the purchase of prescription drugs for Medicare
beneficiaries with incomes in 2004 of not more than $12,569 for single
individuals or $16,862 for married individuals. To qualify for the credit, beneficiaries
must not be receiving outpatient drug coverage from other sources,
including Medicaid, TRICARE, group or individual health insurance
coverage, or the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. Generally, once a person qualifies for
the $600 credit, he or she is qualified until the new Medicare drug
benefit begins.
- The credit is reflected on the Medicare-approved drug
discount cards of qualified beneficiaries.
While Medicare-approved discount card programs can charge a
beneficiary an enrollment fee of up to $30 per year, Medicare will pay the
enrollment fee for beneficiaries who qualify for the $600 credit.
12. How will the Medicare prescription drug benefit work
when it takes effect?
Beginning in 2006, all people with
Medicare will be able to enroll in plans that cover prescription drugs. Plans might vary, but in general, this is how
they will work:
- Beneficiaries will choose a prescription drug plan
and pay a premium of about $35 a month.
- Beneficiaries will pay the first $250 (the
deductible).
- Medicare then will pay 75% of the costs between $250
and $2,250 in drug spending.
Beneficiaries will pay only 25% of these costs.
- Beneficiaries will pay 100% of the drug costs above
$2,250 until they reach $3,600 in out-of-pocket spending.
- Medicare will pay about 95% of the costs after the
beneficiary has spent $3,600.
- Some prescription drug plans may have additional
options to help pay the out-of-pocket costs.
- Extra help will be available for people with low
incomes and limited assets. Most
significantly, people with Medicare who have incomes below a certain limit
won't have to pay the premiums or deductible for prescription drugs. The income limits will be set in
2005. If a beneficiary qualifies,
he or she will only pay a small co-payment for each prescription needed.
- Other people with low incomes and limited assets will
get help paying the premiums and deductible. The amount they pay for each
prescription will be limited.
13. What is Medicare Advantage?
- In 2004, the health plan option known as Medicare +
Choice was replaced by the Medicare Advantage Program. Congress created the Medicare Advantage
Program to give beneficiaries more choices, and sometimes, extra benefits,
by letting private companies offer them their Medicare benefits. Persons who join a Medicare Advantage
Plan may have the following choices:
* Medicare Managed
Care Plans;
* Medicare Preferred
Provider Organization Plans, and;
* Medicare Private
Fee-for-Service Plans.
- If Medicare Managed Care Plans, Medicare Preferred
Provider Organization Plans, or Medicare Private Fee-for-Service Plans are
available in a beneficiary's area, he or she can join one and get Medicare
benefits through the plan. By
joining one of these Medicare Advantage Plans, beneficiaries can often get
extra benefits, like additional days in the hospital. The plan may have special rules that
they need to follow. They may also
have to pay a monthly premium for the extra benefits.
- Medicare Advantage Plans are available in many areas
of the country. For information
about the Medicare Advantage Plans available in a particular area,
beneficiaries should call Medicare's toll-free number 1-800-MEDICARE
(1-800-633-4227) or visit Medicare's Web site at www.medicare.gov .
14. What new preventive benefits are being offered?
- Beginning in 2005, preventive benefits coverage will
be expanded to include: a one-time
initial wellness physical examination; screening blood tests for early
detection of cardiovascular diseases; and diabetes screening tests for
people at risk of diabetes.
15. Will Medicare be putting out information about these
program changes?
- The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS), the Federal agency responsible for administering Medicare, mailed
letters to all Medicare beneficiaries in Spring 2004 to explain the
prescription drug discount cards.
In 2005, CMS plans to mail informational booklets to Medicare
beneficiaries to explain the prescription drug benefits.
- In the meantime, CMS will provide information about
the Medicare-approved drug discount cards through the Medicare toll-free
number 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), and through their Web site at www.medicare.gov.
U.S.
Railroad Retirement Board
Office of Public
Affairs 312-751-4777
844
North Rush Street 312-751-7154 (fax)
Chicago,
Illinois 60611-2092 http://www.rrb.gov
Posted: 10/14/04