| Medicare drug plan locks in high prices (4)Coverage scenarios, donut holes and high-priced medicinesNow the drug plan part of the Medicare reform act is about to go into effect.  It will lock seniors and the disabled into plans based on the  extortionate prices charged here by the drug companies. And under this act, the  federal government is specifically prohibited from negotiating with drug  companies to lower their prices. In November 2005, according to the Social Security Administration, the average monthly check for all types of beneficiaries—retirees, their survivors and the disabled—was  $879. Seniors covered by Medicare Part B would pay a $78 premium, leaving them $801, or about $9,600 per year. If  they choose a Medicare drug plan, they will pay an additional $35 a month  premium—reducing their Social Security check to $766, or $9,192 a year. There  is a deductible of $250 before the plan kicks in. After that, they pay 25  percent of all covered drug expenses up to $2,250. But what drugs are covered? It all depends on each individual private plan  in each area. So does the price of the drugs. That’s why it’s so hard to know  what all this will really cost each person out-of-pocket. Let’s assume that someone  receiving the average yearly Social Security payout—$9,192 (after Medicare  premiums are deducted)—is lucky enough to get a drug plan that covers the  medicines they need, and that the total (drug) cost for the year comes to  $2,250. They pay $250 for the deductible plus $500 (25 percent of the next  $2,000), leaving them with a yearly (net) income of only $8,442. But what if their drugs cost more than that? It’s not uncommon for someone  with a heart condition or some other  chronic ailment to spend $300 a month on drugs these days. Here’s where the  infamous “donut hole” comes in. With the next $1,350 worth of medicines  required, the Medicare drug plan covers—nothing! The plan is supposed to provide assistance for very low-income people. But  they can’t have more than a few thousand dollars in assets. By the end of  November, only one in nine of the 5.7 million low-income seniors not covered by  Medicaid had been approved for assistance. The bottom line is that the average person on Social Security who requires a  significant amount of medications will not be able to survive on this drug  plan, unless they have substantial supplemental income. For more information about Life Alert and its many services and benefits for seniors nationwide, please visit the following websites: http://www.lifealert.com http://www.seniorprotection.com http://www.911seniors.com/ |