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Are You a “Dual Eligible”? If so, your prescription drug benefits are enhanced.

Pilot Health Advocates

The collision of Medicare, Medicaid/MediCal, and Part D Prescription Drug Plans makes for a cosmic tangle of different rules and regulations. There are very few people in the United States that have taken the time to learn and understand the interaction of these programs like Claudia Kim Nichols of Pilot Health Advocate in San Francisco. Here is her brief over view of some of the basics…When Government Health Programs Collide. – Kevin

Are You a “Dual Eligible”? If so, your prescription drug benefits are enhanced.

If you live in, say, New York and are on Medicaid, then you become Medicare eligible, do you use Medicaid’s prescription plan, Medicare’s prescription plan, or both? 

Short answer: Both. But – once eligible for Medicare, Part D is the primary payor for dual eligibles for prescription medication and Medicaid is always the insurer of last resort. To complicate matters, Medicaid covers certain medications not covered by Part D, such as benzodiazepines, barbiturates, medications for eating disorders, certain OTC medications not covered by Part D, and some prescription vitamins.

Further, one must be enrolled in a Medicare prescription drug plan to continue receiving Medicaid benefits, except under very limited circumstances. Enrollment is automatic, but the beneficiary may switch to a different Part D plan at any time and still retain Medicaid as secondary coverage.

Medicaid provides a “wrap-around” benefit for medications such as: antidepressants, atypical antipsychotics, antiretrovirals used in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, and immunosuppressants used in the treatment of tissue and organ transplants. However, benefits must first be denied by Part D. Despite the existence of the wrap-around benefit, beneficiaries are expected to appeal to their insurance program and/or Part D to obtain alternative coverage for those medications which Medicaid covers at the time claims are denied by other insurers. “Prescribers are expected to continue to work with their patient’s Medicare Part D plans utilizing the exception and appeal process in order to obtain coverage for necessary medications.” More information is available at http://www.health.ny.gov/health_care/medicaid/program/medicaid_transition/faq.htm.

 To ensure continuity of care and in an attempt to simplify obtaining benefits, the Affordable Care Act established a Medicare-Medicaid Coordination Office for dual eligibles. More information about this is available at www.cms.gov/medicare-medicaid-coordination/.

Information about public health insurance eligibility screening is here.

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