THE DONUT HOLE EXPLAINED FALLING INTO THE ‘GAP’
Many people have heard of the Medicare Donut Hole, but even those on Medicare are not familiar with what the donut hole really means unless they fall into it. When you are in the Medicare Donut Hole, you know it and quickly learn what it means. Clients call me every week asking, “What’s going on? My medication jumped from $45 to $145!” I say, “Oh, you’re probably in the Medicare Gap, or the more popular name is the ‘donut hole.”’ They ask, “What’s that?” Even clients I have warned ahead of time usually still call with distressed and perplexed voices. People don’t really grasp what’s happening until it happens to them. How to explain the Medicare Donut Hole? There is nothing logical about the Medicare Donut Hole (or gap). The government actuaries devised this idea to deal with the large number of Medicare beneficiaries who are on lots of extremely expensive medications. Think about it this way: We all pay for auto insurance. Most of us do not get into accidents or kill anyone, thankfully. Over a long driving career, there may be some fender benders, but nothing major. We pay our monthly premium. We complain a little, but we know it is the price of doing business. We understand that more people need to pay in than people take out for accidents and injuries. Medicare Part D prescription drug insurance is similar. We need more people paying in than taking out. When we were working, we and our employers paid a lot of health insurance premiums, including medication copays. The age group for employer plans is 18-64. Not many people were on Eliquis, Toujeo, Xarelto, Jardiance, Ventolin Inhalers, etc.
However, when it comes to Medicare, you have people ages 65-100, and the percentage of persons on expensive medications is enormous. If the cost and risk were evenly distributed among all participants without distinction, Medicare Part D prescription drug plans would be significantly more expensive — so expensive that those who aren’t on medications or very few would never buy a Medicare Part D plan. Remember, you need more people paying into the insurance plan than taking out. The magical actuaries at Medicare came up with an idea. Voila, the donut hole! The Medicare Part D prescription drug program is broken down into four phases. The first phase is the deductible. The deductible for 2023 will be $505. The purpose of any deductible is to ensure that people do not charge recurring and minor costs to the insurance plan. The consumer needs to foot the bill for those low-cost expenditures. All insurance policies have some type of deductible. Otherwise, the premium would be astronomical. In the case of Part D plans, the deductible is usually only for the more expensive Tier 3 medications. The plan entirely or mostly covers minor and inexpensive medications. The second phase is the initial stage. The Medicare Initial Stage is how insurance generally feels to the consumer. There is a claim, and the insurance pays most of the claim. The insured pays a fourth or a fifth of the actual cost. Most people on Medicare never get out of the Medicare Initial Phase. They may even be on a lot of medications, but their cost is not that substantial to drive them into the gap.
when you and the plan have paid at least $4,660 in the insurance company’s cost of the medications. You’ve paid about a fourth of the cost out of your pocket. The insurance companies paid the rest. You have now thoroughly and completely crossed over into the Medicare Gap or Medicare Donut Hole. In the gap, pharmaceutical companies discount the medication cost by 75%. You pay 25% of the actual cost. The reasoning is that now the persons who most benefit directly from the medications should bear the burden of the cost. Again, if it were evenly split among participants, those with no or few medications would opt out of Part D plans and significantly reduce the premium paid into the pool. The final phase is catastrophic. Like it sounds, the costs are catastrophic for most people by this point. You have paid $7,400 out of your pocket. This amount is based on the actual costs of the medications. You need to pay the $7,400 amount out of your pocket to descend to the next level — catastrophic. This phase is probably called catastrophic because you have paid out a lot of money for medications, which is catastrophic for your budget. In this stage, instead of paying the actual cost of the medications, the insurance company and Medicare come back in. Medicare significantly subsidizes the cost. Beneficiaries pay copays of $4.15, $10.35, or 5%, whichever is higher. The cost and tier determine the copay.
Then, the whole process starts over again on Jan. 1.
Because of recent legislation in Congress, this entire system may be significantly altered starting in 2024. Hopefully, for the good, but as it stands, this is what and how the Medicare Donut Hole works.
The third phase is the Medicare Gap (or donut hole). You cross this threshold
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