Prescription Drug Plan (PDP)

A private insurance plan that offers coverage for prescription drugs under Medicare, also known as a Medicare prescription drug plan.

Premium

Regular monthly payment made to a health or prescription drug plan by beneficiaries for health care coverage. The lowest average premium for a Medicare prescription drug plan is expected to be about $32.

Limited Income

Under Medicare, limited income refers to income below 150% of the Federal Poverty Level. In 2005, the year Medicare prescription drug benefit goes into effect, this is equal to a yearly income of $14,355 for an individual and $19,245 for a couple, with other resources of no more than $11,500 for an individual and $23,000 for a couple.

Co-payment

A dollar amount that a person must pay out-of-pocket for a medication or other health service. For example, a PDP may ask for a $3 co-payment for each generic prescription and $5 for brand name prescriptions. Co-pays may be further tiered by PDPs to discourage use of more expensive drugs.

Medicaid

A joint federal and state program that provides medical coverage for people with low incomes and limited resources. Medicaid programs vary from state to state.

Medicare

The federal health insurance program for: people 65 years of age or older; certain younger people with disabilities; and people of any age with end-stage renal disease (permanent kidney failure with dialysis or a transplant), sometimes called ESRD. Part A pays for hospital care, Part B pays for doctor visits, Part C includes the managed care option, and Part D is the new prescription drug benefit.

Federal poverty level (FPL)

The FPL serves as one of the indicators for determining eligibility in a wide variety of federal and state programs.

True Out-of-Pocket Costs (TrOOP)

The government will pay most (or in some cases, all) of your drug costs for the rest of the year, once you pay $3,600 in out-of-pocket expenses (this amount may increase on a yearly basis and does not include premium payments). Out-of-pocket costs include all prescription drug costs paid by you or another person or organization, including the government (for example, Extra Help), State Pharmaceutical Assistance Programs (SPAPs), registered charities, and pharmaceutical manufacturer patient assistance programs. The out-of-pocket costs include payment of the deductible, co-insurance, co-payments, and medication costs that are not covered by other insurance. These costs do not include expenses paid by the individual with Medicare prescription drug coverage for medications that are not on a plan’s covered list of drugs or for medications excluded from the Medicare prescription drug benefit.

What Does Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage Cost?

Most people in a prescription drug plan will pay a monthly premium, co-payments for each medication, an annual deductible and co-insurance. People with Medicare and Medicaid and some people with limited incomes will have lower costs. Consumer's costs will include a monthly premium of about $32.20 and a $250 deductible, unless the consumer has very little income (about $14,000/year for an individual and about $19,000/year for a couple). In addition, you will have to pay 25% of your prescription drug costs between $250 and $2,250. Once your drug costs reach $2,250, you will be responsible for paying the full cost for your medications until your drug costs reach $5,100, or you will pay a total of $3,600 out-of-pocket. Once you reach this amount, you will only have to pay a co-payment (generally 5% of the medication cost or co-pays of $2-$5 per drug).

Status and income levels for subsidy qualification

Qualify
for subsidy

Premium

Annual deductible

Co-pay costs per prescription

Person with Medicare and Medicaid with income below 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL); $9,570 single; $12,830 married

Yes
(automatically qualify)

$0

$0

Co-pay is $1/generic, $3/brand-name

Person with Medicare with income below $12,920 single, $17,321 married, and assets $7,500/single, $12,000/married

Yes
(must apply to qualify)

$0

$0

Co-pay is $2/generic, $5/brand-name
No co-pay if in a nursing home              

No co-pay once drug expenses (TrOOP) reach $3,600/year

Person with Medicare with income below $12,920 single, $17,321 married and assets below  $11,500/single, $23,000/married

Yes
(must apply to qualify)

$0

$0

Co-pay is 15% of total drug costs        
 Once drug expenses (TrOOP) reach $3,600/year, co-pay is $2/generic, $5/brand-name

Person with Medicare with income below $14,355/single or $19,245/married, and assets below $11,500/single or $23,000/married

Yes
(must apply to qualify)

Sliding scale up to $32.20/month

$50

15% of total drug costs once drug expenses (TrOOP) reach $3,600/year, co-pay is
$2/generic, $5/brand-name

 

Questions Answered

NEW Can Community Mental Health Centers pay co-pay or premiums? What are the regulations around this practice?

Community Mental Health Centers should be able to help pay for co-payments, deductibles and premiums.  However, Medicaid cannot pay for these wraparound payments and these payments would probably not count towards an individual's True Out of Pocket Costs (TROOP).

Here is the CMS response to questions about what organizations can pay for out of pocket costs:

Out-of-pocket spending consists of costs related to the $250 deductible, the 25 percent beneficiary co-insurance (or equivalent co-pays) up to the initial coverage limit, 100 percent co-insurance during the coverage gap, and the roughly 5 percent co-insurance paid in the catastrophic coverage. By law, only cost-sharing paid by certain sources counts toward the drug benefit’s out-of-pocket limit, which defines the start of the catastrophic coverage. These sources include:

  • The enrollee (or another person on behalf of the enrollee)
  • CMS (on behalf of a low-income enrollee who qualifies for low-income subsidies), and
  • A State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP)

In the final rule, we define “person” (first bullet, above) in the legal sense of the word, to include unrelated corporations, so charities that are not connected to insurers or the beneficiary’s employer could have a role in helping beneficiaries with their out-of-pocket costs. Therefore, our broad definition of the term “person” captures not only “bona fide” charities, but other charitable organizations as well. Thus, even if a charity is not a bona fide charity for purposes of Federal fraud and abuse law, any drug payments it makes on behalf of Part D enrollees would count toward True out-of-pocket costs (TrOOP) unless otherwise excluded as payments by a group health plan, insurance or otherwise, or similar third party payment arrangement. Charities that are established, maintained, or otherwise controlled by an employer or union will likely fall under our definition of “group health plan” and will therefore be excluded from TrOOP on this basis.

The rule also outlines specific insurance and government programs that will not count toward the out-of-pocket limit. These include cost-sharing obligations subsidized in whole or in part by employers, other insurers, and government programs (for example, the Indian Health Service (IHS), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Department of Labor Federal Workers’ Compensation Program, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs); Medicaid; the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP); black lung benefits; Ryan White CARE Act funds; and State special funds that assist certain individuals with their medical costs). Congress chose to distinguish between payers of out-of-pocket costs in order to encourage current employers, other insurers, and government programs to continue offering prescription drug coverage when the Medicare drug benefit begins.

NEW For individuals caring for elderly parents or other dependents (other than spouse or children), do the federal poverty levels change? How are dependents defined?

The poverty level guidelines change by the number of people in your household, including dependents such as spouse, children, and elderly parents.  Here are the 2005 federal poverty income levels:

2005 HHS Poverty Guidelines


Persons in
Family Unit
48 Contiguous
States and D.C.
Alaska Hawaii

1

$ 9,570

$11,950

$11,010

2

12,830

16,030

14,760

3

16,090

20,110

18,510

4

19,350

24,190

22,260

5

22,610

28,270

26,010

6

25,870

32,350

29,760

7

29,130

36,430

33,510

8

32,390

40,510

37,260

For each additional
person, add

 3,260

 4,080

 3,750

SOURCEFederal Register, Vol. 70, No. 33, February 18, 2005, pp. 8373-8375.

For the Medicare prescription drug benefit, you will qualify for extra help at 150% of the federal poverty level and for additional help at 135% of the federal poverty level.  Do remember that the Medicare prescription drug benefit also has an asset test, which significantly limits the number of people who can qualify for extra help.

Claiming a Dependent
You may claim a personal exemption for yourself and for your dependents, and this will impact the number of people in your household for purposes of calculating whether you qualify for extra help under the Medicare prescription drug benefit. You are entitled to claim a person as a dependent, if that person:
  1. is your relative (if he/she is your immediate relative, he/she does not have to live with you),
  2. earns less than $3,100 (or is a full-time student and under age 24),
  3. receives over half of his or her support from you,
  4. is a citizen or resident alien of the United States, Canada, or Mexico, and
  5. does not file a joint return with his or her spouse.
For more detailed information, go to:
http://taxes.about.com/od/taxglossary/a/Dependents.htm#

NEW Does an individual’s premium payment, if paid out-of-pocket, count toward the TrOOP calculation for catastrophic coverage?

No, only out of pocket payments for the cost of medications count.

Current as of 12-27-2005

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