Posted on January 27, 2011 by Christine Crosby in Medicare

Share with your friends:

Take Charge Of Your Health: A Pound Of Medicare Prevention…


Experts tell us the key to making New Year’s resolutions is to make your goals realistic. So if walking a mile is a challenge, don’t tell yourself this is the year you’re going to run a marathon. Instead, how about something more attainable – something that will serve you better in the long run? Let this be the year you take charge of your health. Thanks to the new health care law, Medicare can now help you do just that.

As of January 1, 2011, most preventive care covered by Medicare is now free: no deductibles, no coinsurance. And Medicare is now covering a free annual physical exam, or what they’re calling a “wellness visit.” These changes are good news for your wallet – and for your health. Here’s why:

Medicare has always done a pretty good job of covering you when you get sick. But it has not focused as much on keeping you well. That’s because Medicare covered doctors’ visits when you got sick, but oddly did not pay for your doctor to take the time to assess your health and talk with you about staying healthy. That approach is finally changing.

If you have traditional Medicare, you’re now entitled to a free annual wellness visit (if you have a Medicare Advantage plan, your coverage is similar, but check with your plan for details). You can meet with your primary care doctor and go over your personal and family history. You should share with your doctor a list of all the other health professionals you see and all the prescriptions you take.

Your doctor should take your height, weight, blood pressure, other vital statistics, and check to see if you’re up-to-date with preventive screenings and services like vaccines and cancer screenings. Make sure you take time to share what’s on your mind and develop a plan with your doctor for preventing disease and improving your health.

What’s more, under the new law, you do not have to pay out-of-pocket for most of the preventive services and screenings your doctor recommends. Some of these can literally save your life: Did you know that over 40 percent of seniors do not get their recommended pneumococcal vaccine – a vaccine that prevents pneumonia, which kills about 40,000 Americans each year?

Other services have long-term benefits. Getting a mammogram or colorectal cancer screening is nobody’s idea of a good time, but it’s a small price to pay for finding cancer early when it can be treated more successfully. And with the new health care law, the price you pay for these tests and services is literally zero.

Of course, if you do get sick, Medicare will cover your doctors’ and hospital bills the same as it always has. Make sure you understand what’s covered and what’s not, and how Medicare works with any secondary coverage you have, like a Medigap policy, coverage from your former employer, or Medicaid. If you have questions, call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE. You can ask for the name and number of your local State Health Insurance Counseling and Assistance Program (SHIP), which offers free insurance counseling to everyone with Medicare.

Medicare’s improved preventive benefits under the new law might seem like a small thing. But if seniors take full advantage of them, they can mean the difference between sickness and health, and in some cases between life and death. And who knows? With the right advice from your doctor, by 2012 maybe you will be able to walk that mile – or even run that marathon.

Ron Pollack is the executive director of Families USA and a proud granddad.

Video: President Obama’s speech on January 28, 2011, at Health Action 2011, Family USA’s national grassroots meeting.

The Medicare mess: fighting the fraud
Last year a Houston doctor and medical equipment provider billed Medicare more than $1 million for wheelchairs and other medical equipment that patients didn’t even want! And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. More info from U.S. Health & Human Services.

Now for some good news:
In FY 2010 a record $4 billion was recovered in Medicare fraud, waste and abuse.  And there are ways you can help: read Family USA’s “Stopping Medicare Waste….”

Tell it to me straight
Confused about the Affordable Care Act? Here’s some help from Family USA:
“A Summary of the Health Reform Law.”
“Help in the Doughnut Hole: The Medicare Coverage Gap Discount Program,” about bridging the gap in Medicare Part D.

RON POLLACK

{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Check out these other posts You might also like