Grandes ahorros en programa de Parte D de Medicare
El centro de Servicios Medicare y Medicaid (CMS por sus siglas en inglés) anuncia que el programa de la Parte D de Medicare le ha ahorrado a sus beneficiarios un promedio de $724 en medicamentos de receta durante los primeros cuatro meses del 2012. A continuación comunicado emitido por First Coast Service Options, contratista de CMS para Puerto Rico.
IN THE FIRST FOUR MONTHS OF 2012, MORE THAN 416,000 PEOPLE
WITH MEDICARE SAVED AN AVERAGE OF $724 ON PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
AND 12.1 MILLION USED A FREE PREVENTIVE SERVICE
Under the new health care law -- the Affordable Care Act -- seniors and people with disabilities in Medicare have saved a total of $3.5 billion on prescription drugs in the Medicare drug benefit coverage gap or “donut hole” from the enactment of the law in March 2010 through April of 2012. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released data on May 24 showing that, in the first four months of 2012 alone, more than 416,000 people saved an average of $724 on the prescription drugs they purchased after they hit the prescription drug coverage gap or “donut hole,” for a total of $301.5 million in savings. These savings build on the law’s success in 2010 and 2011, when more than 5.1 million people with Medicare saved over $3.2 billion on prescription drugs.
In addition, CMS announced that this year, from January through April, 12.1 million people in traditional Medicare received at least one preventive service at no cost to them -- including over 856,000 who have taken advantage of the annual wellness visit provided in the Affordable Care Act. In 2011, over 26 million people in traditional Medicare received one or more preventive benefits free of charge.
People with Medicare who hit the coverage gap “donut hole” in 2010 received a one-time $250 rebate. In 2011, people with Medicare began receiving a 50 percent discount on covered brand name drugs and 7 percent coverage of generic drugs in the “donut hole.” This year, Medicare coverage for generic drugs in the coverage gap has risen to 14 percent. Coverage for both brand name and generic drugs in the gap will continue to increase over time until 2020, when the coverage gap will no longer exist.
Prior to 2011, people with Medicare faced cost-sharing for many preventive benefits like cancer screenings and smoking cessation counseling. Now, many of these benefits are offered free of charge to beneficiaries, with no deductible or copay, so that cost is no longer a barrier for seniors who want to find and treat problems early.


