Tag Archives | Medicare

Medicare Annual Wellness Exam

Below is a great flyer about the Annual Wellness Exam now covered under Medicare.

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Medicare Coverage of a CPAP

Original Medicare will cover an initial three-month trial of your CPAP device if you have been diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea. At the end of the trial, Medicare will continue to pay for the device if your doctor certifies that you have benefited from the device and used it properly.

Before the three-month trial, your physician and supplier must submit paperwork to Medicare to justify your need for a CPAP device. Although it is their job to know these requirements, familiarizing yourself with them can help to avoid errors and navigate any challenges that arise.

To qualify for coverage of a three-month CPAP trial, Original Medicare requires certain steps:

  1. Your doctor must diagnose you with obstructive sleep apnea based on an examination and subsequent sleep test. This test can be performed in your home or at an approved facility.
  2. Your doctor must certify that you had a face-to-face exam with him/her or another health professional within the six-month period before the CPAP was ordered.
  3. You must use a Medicare-approved supplier who provides you and/or your caregiver with instructions about proper use and care for the CPAP device. Many areas including Chesapeake, Virginia are called competitive bidding regions, which means Medicare will usually only pay for most durable medical equipment (DME) from a select group of suppliers, known as contract suppliers.
  4. Lastly, for continued coverage of your CPAP device following the three-month trial, your provider must re-evaluate you during those initial three months. He or she must certify that the CPAP device is helping you and that you are using it as recommended.

If these conditions are met, Medicare will cover 80 percent of the rental fees for a CPAP device for 13 months, once the Part B deductible is met. After that you will own the device. Note that these 13 months include the three-month trial. Medicare will also pay 80 percent of the cost of CPAP supplies, such as masks and tubing.

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MI Health Link

Below is a link to the MI Health Link Webinar for Wayne and Macomb County.

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/recording/1681337263344110082

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Medicare Durable Medical Equipment (DME) policy tips

Here are some pointers for qualifying for a lift chair, and for replacing old DMEs. As you probably know already, Medicare can pay 80% and Medicaid can pay the remaining 20% for qualifying members. But, for lift chairs, there is an added cost for the chair itself.

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Medicare and ACA Presentation by MMAP Regional Coordinator

The Medicare enrollment period is approaching and Lisa Fuller will come to Washington Square, next Tuesday, to answer member’s questions about Medicare.  She will also address the Affordable Care Act.  Members had an opportunity to list their questions and concerns, and the list has been provided to Ms. Fuller.  Check out the attached Fall theme flyer!

Sept 2013 Medicare ACA

 

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CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKERS WHO MAKE HOME CALLS

CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKERS WHO MAKE HOME CALLS

FOR MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING REIMBURSED

THROUGH MEDICARE

 

Karen Amber: 248-765-1501

Southern Oakland County; Western Wayne County

 

Susan Belaney: 248-568-3643

Southern Oakland & Macomb Counties and Grosse Pointes

 

Melissa Bishop: 248-802-6038

Detroit; Downriver; Western Oakland County; Pontiac

 

Jamie Bodenhafer: 248-259-3527

Detroit; Downriver; Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne Counties

 

Francis Dutoit: 313-590-1947

Macomb and Wayne Counties; Southeast Quarter Oakland County

 

James Karagon: 313-962-4075

Detroit; Macomb County South of 59; Eastern Wayne County

 

Erica Thompson: 313-740-4739

Detroit; Macomb, Oakland and Wayne Counties

 

Jan. 2013

Information provided by Lindsay.

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Educational Series for Caregivers

Turner Geriatric ClinicThe Turner Geriatric Clinic Social Work department (a part of the University of Michigan Health System) will provide an informational/educational 4-week series for those caring for aging relatives; June 5th – June 26th, 2013, Wednesday Evenings from 6PM – 8PM.

Topics that will be covered include:

  • Medication Management
  • Dementia, Delirium, and Depression
  • Legal Concerns
  • Medicare/Medicaid
  • Communication
  • Community Resources
  • Physical Changes of Aging

The series will be held at the Turner Senior Resource Center, 2401 Plymouth Rd., Ann Arbor MI.

Refreshments will be provided.

 

Registration is required. Space is limited. Please register by May 24th, 2013.

$50/person – $75/couple/family – Scholarships are available.

Please call (734) 764-2556 for more information.

 

If you could please forward this information to others that may be served by this, I would be grateful.

 

Best,

Deanna Cho

Social Work Intern

Turner Geriatric Clinic Social Work

(734) 764-2556

 

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QMB/SLMB/ALMB

According to information from my October MMAP presentation, here are the income limits for the Medicare Savings programs. The amounts are for 2012, but still can be used as a general reference.

QMB (Qualified Medicare Beneficiary): monthly income limit is $930, assets of $2000 for single, $1260 income, $3000 assets  for married. QMB pays for Medicare B premium, A&B co-pays and deductibles

SLMB (Specified Limited Medicare Beneficiary: single monthly income $931 to $1117; assets $6940. Married income $1261-1513, assets $10,410. SLMB pays for Medicare B premium

ALMB (Additional Low Income Medicare Beneficiary): single monthly income $1118-$1256, assets $6940. Married income $1514-1702, assets $10,410. ALMB pays for Mecidare Part B premium

 

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Medicare “Improvement Standard” Settlement

A New Law of the Land – Judge Approves Medicare ‘Improvement Standard’ Settlement

 

Medicare coverage of skilled nursing and therapy services “does not turn on the presence or absence of an individual’s potential for improvement” but rather depends on whether or not the beneficiary needs skilled care.

A federal judge has approved the settlement to end Medicare’s longstanding practice of requiring beneficiaries to show a likelihood of improvement in order to receive coverage of skilled care and therapy services.  (See “Medicare to End Practice of Requiring Patients to Show Progress to Receive Nursing Coverage” and “More Details on the Proposed ‘Improvement Standard’ Settlement.”)

The Center for Medicare Advocacy, along with its co-counsel Vermont Legal Aid announced that the settlement in the case, Jimmo v. Sebelius, was approved on January 24, 2013, during a scheduled fairness hearing, “marking a critical step forward for thousands of beneficiaries nationwide,” according to the Center.

With only one written comment received, and no class members appearing at the fairness hearing to question the settlement, Chief Judge Christina Reiss of the United States District Court for the District of Vermont granted the motion to approve the Settlement Agreement on the record, while retaining jurisdiction to enforce the agreement in the future, as requested by the parties.

For decades, home health agencies and nursing homes that contract with Medicare have routinely terminated the Medicare coverage of a beneficiary who has stopped improving, even though nothing in the Medicare statute or its regulations says improvement is required for continued skilled care.  Advocates charged that Medicare contractors have instead used a “covert rule of thumb” known as the “Improvement Standard” to illegally deny coverage to such patients. Once beneficiaries failed to show progress, contractors claimed they could deliver only custodial care, which Medicare does not cover.

 

In January 2011, the Center and Vermont Legal Aid filed a class action lawsuit, against the Obama administration in federal court, aimed at ending the government’s use of the improvement standard.  After the court refused the government’s request to dismiss the case, and the administration lost in similar individual cases in Pennsylvania and Vermont, it decided to settle.

Now that the settlement has been approved, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will revise its Medicare Benefit Policy Manual and numerous other policies, guidelines and instructions to make clear that Medicare coverage of skilled nursing and therapy services “does not turn on the presence or absence of an individual’s potential for improvement” but rather depends on whether or not the beneficiary needs skilled care, even if it would simply maintain the beneficiary’s current condition or slow further deterioration.  In addition, CMS must develop and implement a nationwide education campaign for all who make Medicare determinations to ensure that beneficiaries with chronic conditions are not denied coverage for critical services because their underlying conditions will not improve.

Noting that it is hearing from beneficiaries who are still being denied Medicare coverage based on an Improvement Standard, the Center stressed that “coverage should be available now for people who need skilled maintenance care and meet any other qualifying Medicare criteria. This is the law of the land – agreed to by the federal government and approved by the federal judge.  We encourage people to appeal should they be denied Medicare for skilled maintenance nursing or therapy because they are not improving.”

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Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly

Attached you will find the link to the National PACE website.  There you can look at all of the services provided by PACE plus all of the national PACE sites.  PACE already exists in the Detroit area (Center for Senior Independence (CSI), 7800 W. Outer Drive, Detroit, MI  48235) with areas extending out to zip codes in Highland Park, Grosse Pointes, Hamtramck, Lincoln Park, Redford, and Dearborn Heights.   In January 2013, the Detroit PACE site will be opening a second center on the eastside at the Rivertown Neighborhood (see SCoop post on Rivertown Neighborhood).  UMRC is looking to open a new PACE site which their catchement area will bump up to the current catchement area of CSI in Wayne County and cover the whole downriver community, including Belleville.  This is expected to occur within the next year or so.  In addition, there is a PACE site currently open in Battle Creek, MI, with their second site set to open in Kalamazoo in early 2013.  This is a wonderful opportunity for those seniors committed to aging in place!

The website is:  www.npaonline.org

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