Seniors
In reply to the discussion: It's Now Open Season on Seniors: 'Medicare Disadvantage.' Unsolicited Calls, Aggressive Ads [View all]Silent Type
(10,492 posts)here seem to believe.
Should point out, though, that except for a few states, you cannot switch back to Medicare without undergoing underwriting after the first 12 months. After that, there is no guaranteed issue of a supplement/medigap policy, so if you have a costly medical history, you might be denied a supplement or have to pay a much higher premium than normal. Traditional Medicare without a supplement and drug plan is a quick route to bankruptcy.
(There are two other ways-- You lost your Medicare Advantage plan because you moved outside the plans service area, or the plan stopped operating where you live.)
I doubt Medicare Advantage Plans will be banned, especially now that the majority of Medicare beneficiaries choose them (plus, this was not a GOPer Plan, it was signed by Clinton).
I saw a plan the other day that has a small premium (like $50/mo), $3000 in dental benefits, $400 a year for OTC meds, some hearing aid coverage, annual out-of-pocket max, etc. That's tempting for people on a low income. Most Advantage plans are not that good, but they do offer some benefits that traditional Medicare will not cover. But, that plan better than most I've seen.
Edit history
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):