HHS Urged To Plug Medicare Gap That Doesn’t Pay For At-Home Covid Tests
Lawmakers and advocates want the Biden administration to find a way to cover the rapid antigen tests. The laws governing Medicare currently don’t reimburse for self-administered diagnostic tests.
Modern Healthcare:
Democrats Push Biden On Medicare Coverage Of At-Home COVID-19 Tests
President Joe Biden's administration is facing pressure from lawmakers and advocates to close a major gap in its COVID-19 strategy, which leaves Medicare beneficiaries without coverage of at-home tests. Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Plan enrollees are eligible for no-cost at-home COVID-19 tests under the American Rescue Plan Act. Households with private health insurance now can be reimbursed for at-home tests under a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services policy that took effect this month. (Hellmann and Goldman, 1/24)
Fierce Healthcare:
Senators Want Medicare To Reimburse At-Home COVID-19 Tests Just Like Commercial Insurers
A group of Democratic senators is happy the Biden administration is requiring commercial insurers to cover at-home COVID-19 tests for customers but questions why Medicare isn’t doing the same thing for seniors. The group of 19 Democratic senators wrote to Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) leadership Monday seeking answers on the lack of testing reimbursement. (King, 1/24)
In Medicare news from Rhode Island —
The Providence Journal:
Leaked Findings From Federal Inspection Of State Hospital Expose Deficiencies: What We Know
Leaked findings of a federal inspection of the state-run Eleanor Slater Hospital reveal a mountain of "deficiencies," including a "failure to ensure" infection control and surveillance and a failure to meet the requirements of Medicare dollars. The deficiencies cited within the report extend from infection control to patient safety to the condition of the facilities. They include hospital management's failure to start the process to renew its expired operating license until it was called out on the lapse. (Gregg, 1/24)
In other Medicare news —
Modern Healthcare:
How Startup Insurers Captured Medicare Advantage Market Share
Startup health insurers grew their Medicare Advantage membership during the annual enrollment period, with some capturing market share from larger competitors like UnitedHealth Group, Humana and Cigna. Among the larger insurtechs, Devoted Health increased its membership the most, nearly doubling its beneficiary base to 63,046 from the start of December to beginning of January, according to federal data. The majority of the company's growth and members came from Florida and Texas, states where more than 80% of Devoted's members reside. Devoted is the last of the large insurtechs to remain private and, after raising a Series D round late last year, represents the most valuable of the health insurer upstarts with a valuation of $11.5 billion. (Tepper, 1/24)
CNBC:
Here's How To Navigate Medicare If You Return To Work After Retiring
Sometimes, retirement doesn’t end up sticking. If the workforce is luring you back after you retired and you’re already on Medicare, you may be able to choose whether to drop your coverage in favor of an employer health plan and then re-enroll down the road. However, there are a lot of rules and deadlines to know if you go this route. For starters, the size of the employer offering the health plan matters. While workers at companies with fewer than 20 employees generally need to be enrolled in Medicare once they reach age 65 to avoid paying extra later, people at larger companies may have choices. (O'Brien, 1/24)
KGET 17:
How To Find The Perfect Medicare Agent For You
Studio 17’s Ilyana Capellan talks to Ben Gomez from Romy & Associates about how finding the right Medicare agent can help alleviate headaches caused by the confusion that is Medicare. Gomez says it’s important to know the difference between a captive agent and a broker/independent agent. “Captive agents work for one company and can offer products from that company only. A broker or independent agent can represent several different companies giving their customers more options,” said Gomez. (Capellan, 1/24)