Information, Advice, and Resources for the Aging Community
elder man  elder woman elder woman with coffee elder woman
Logo for Mystic Valley Elder Services
elder man elder woman on phone elder woman and caregiver elder man
(781) 324-7705
spacer image
spacer image

The Advantages of the new Medicare Drug Discount Cards

Question: When are the new Medicare drug discount cards coming out? What will they do?

Answer: The federal Department of Health and Human Services has indicated that new prescription discount cards will be out this spring. The first benefit under the new Medicare Modernization law, discount cards promise to help seniors “lower their (drug) costs until the more comprehensive Medicare drug benefit comes into effect in two years.”

The government believes these discount cards will allow seniors to see savings of 10% to 15% on their total drug costs. All Medicare enrollees, except those who already get drug coverage under Medicaid, will be able to buy a discount card. Cards will be offered by drugstores, Medicare HMOs, insurance companies, and drug benefit managers. Medicare will approve a list of discount cards, and all seniors are supposed to have a choice of at least two discount card programs. Only one card can be held at any time. The cost of signing up for a card cannot exceed $30 a year. If consumers are unhappy with one card, they will be able to switch cards during an open enrollment period.

Medicare plans to create a web site that will provide a price comparison between different cards on the market. It also will help in comparing negotiated prices for drugs and other program features. The cards will publicize their negotiated prices—which are actually the drug’s maximum price in a given geographic area. Actual prices may vary, but will not be higher than the posted price. The government also plans to provide customer service workers to help elders understand the price comparisons. The “Medicare-approved” label on these cards will mean the firm offering the card is reputable. And, Medicare-endorsed discount cards come with something else: a special benefit for low-income seniors. An individual with income less than $12,124 per year ($16,363 for couples) gets a prescription subsidy up to $600 a year towards the cost of their medications. Medicare will also pay for the enrollment fee for these low-income cardholders.

 


 

 

 

 
spacer image
    About Us   |   Contact Us   |   Directions  |    Privacy Policy