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DiscussionFinancial discussions/tips concerning expensive treatment
Osteoporosis & Bone Health | Last Active: Feb 14 6:46pm | Replies (64)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@ans. I know how very complicated this is. I’m going to share my understanding as I..."
This forum really needs someone very knowledgeable about Medicare to step in and try to make sense about all this in a more generally helpful way. There seems to be too many variables from one person to another that makes each individual situation unique and also there seems to be quite a bit of simple misinformation.
For example, Medicare Part B pays 80% of the eligible amount (after annual deductible) and you or someone on your behalf pays the other 20%. Please consult your friend Mr. Google which will lead you to the authoritative HHS info.
IF you do not pay that other 20% then you have either a supplemental plan (private insurance or employee retirement plan) or another governmental program that does pay or a pharma program. The other governmental programs are state-specific and usually income-dependent....hence creating much of the variation about what and how much is covered. The pharma programs appear to be here today and gone tomorrow.
IF you go to an infusion center to receive your osteo treatment, there is a rather complicated formula for whether Medicare considers this a Part B benefit or whether the treatment is covered under your drug plan.....I do not recall all the specifics but one of the factors I do remember about Part B eligibility is whether you have had a previous fracture.
Medicare Advantage is required to cover the same medical benefits as original Medicare. How you pay for those medical benefits is different.
Medical providers are the absolute worst source of info about the financial picture of medical care. Inasmuch as they all seem to have a similarly vacuous response, I suspect there may be a course at med school that teaches a practitioner what to say when a patient brings this up as a consideration.
If I had the time at present, I would contact the Medicare Rights Center. In my opinion, they have the most reliable info about Medicare coverage and cost. Perhaps someone here could convince a staff member at that Center to be assigned to this forum to help sort out all the coverage and cost questions that come up. I have no available time to do this until after the new year.
On the bright side of those receiving Prolia treatment, the patent is set to expire in early 2025 so there may then be available a generic like what is available for Fosomax and Bonita.
@nature girl5-Forteo and Tymlos are injections taken everyday vs Evenity given 1x per month- it is the expectation that one would do it by themselves, and for obvious reasons that would need to be .
Thank you for the suggestion of the talk show . I will certainly try to tune in!!