Medicare 101
Medicare 101
The Basics of Federal Health Insurance
Medicare is the health plan provided by taxpayers to everybody aged 65 and older, as well as younger people with disabilities. While the prescription-drug portion of the plan can be complicated, the basic hospital and health service plans are not that difficult to navigate once you know the basics.
What Does Medicare Cover?
- Part A is "hospital insurance."—It helps pay for hospital, limited nursing home, home health, and hospice care.
- Part B is "medical insurance."—It helps pay for doctors, ambulances, tests, outpatient therapy, and other professional services, and some medications, including certain cancer drugs. There are two kinds of Part B coverage. One kind pays for medically necessary services (what is needed to diagnose or treat your condition), and the other pays for preventive services.
- Medicare Advantage Plan (like an HMO or PPO)—This consists of plans administered by private health insurance and health maintenance organizations that add extra coverage to the basic government Medicare plans.
- Plan D is the prescription drug plan.—This actually consists of many plans administered by private companies and organizations approved by the federal government.
What Are Medicare's Limitations?
What Does It Cost?
Part A
- Receive or are entitled to Social Security or railroad retirement benefits, or
- Have worked long enough in a government job to be eligible, or
- Are entitled to Social Security benefits based on a spouse's (or ex-spouse's) work record
- Have been getting Social Security disability benefits for two years, or
- Get Social Security disability benefits and have amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease), or
- Have worked long enough in a government job to meet the requirements of the Social Security disability program
- Receive maintenance dialysis or have had a kidney transplant, and
- Are insured or are getting benefits under Social Security or the railroad retirement system, or
- Have worked long enough in government to be eligible
Part B
Medicare Advantage
Part D
Who Does the Paperwork?
How Do I Enroll?
RESOURCES
Eldercare Locator US Administration on Aging http://www.eldercare.gov/Eldercare/Public/Home.asp/
Medicare http://www.medicare.gov/
US Social Security Administration http://www.ssa.gov/
CANADIAN RESOURCES
Health Canada http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca
Healthy Alberta http://www.healthyalberta.com/
References
Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance). Medicare.gov website. Available at: http://www.medicare.gov/navigation/medicare-basics/medicare-benefits/part-b.aspx. Accessed August 6, 2012.
Medicare & you 2006. US Department of Health and Human Services. Medicare website. Available at: http://www.medicare.gov/publications/pubs/pdf/10050.pdf. Updated December 2011. Accessed August 6, 2012.



