One
of Medicare’s most important benefits is helping to cover your expenses
if you need to be hospitalized. But what exactly is covered, and how
much do you pay?
Medicare
helps cover certain services and supplies in hospitals. To get the full
range of benefits, you must have both Medicare Part A, which is
hospital insurance, and
Part B, which is medical insurance.
What
you pay depends on whether you’re an inpatient or an outpatient.
Staying overnight in a hospital doesn’t always mean you’re an inpatient.
You’re an inpatient on the
day the doctor formally admits you, with a doctor’s order.
You’re
an outpatient if you haven’t been formally admitted as an inpatient,
even if you’re getting emergency department services, observation
services, outpatient surgery,
lab tests, or x-rays.
If
you aren’t sure whether you’re an inpatient or an outpatient, you or
your family should ask your doctor or the hospital staff. Or you can
call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE
(1-800-633-4227).
If
you’re admitted as an inpatient, Part A will help cover your stay. This
generally includes a semi-private room, meals, general nursing care,
drugs, and other hospital
services and supplies.
Part
A covers your care in acute care hospitals, critical access hospitals,
inpatient rehabilitation facilities, long-term care hospitals, and
psychiatric facilities.
How much you’ll pay depends partly on how long you stay.
Medicare
pays for inpatient hospital care based on “benefit periods.” A benefit
period begins the day you’re admitted to a hospital – and ends when you
haven’t had any
inpatient hospital care for 60 days in a row.
You
can have more than one hospital stay within the same benefit period.
There’s a limit on how many patient days Medicare will cover during a
benefit period, but there’s
no limit on the number of benefit periods you can have over your
lifetime.
How much comes out of your pocket when you’re in the hospital?
Part A has a deductible, which is $1,216 in 2014. You pay this deductible at the beginning of each new benefit period.
After
you’ve paid that, there’s no co-payment for days 1 through 60 of each
benefit period. For days 61through 90 of each benefit period, there’s a
co-pay of $304 per
day.
You
also have 60 “lifetime reserve days.” These can be used after day 90 of
each benefit period, and your co-pay is $608 per day in 2014. After you
use up these “lifetime
reserve days,” you must pay all costs yourself.
Keep in mind that Part A doesn’t cover doctor fees or other medical services. That’s where Part B comes in.
To get Part B, you must pay a monthly premium, which for most people is $104.90 per month this year.
You’ll
also pay 20 percent of the Medicare-approved amount for most doctor
services while you’re an inpatient. Part B also helps cover outpatient
costs, such as doctors’
fees, emergency and observation services, lab tests, and X-rays.
Finally, here are some things Medicare
doesn’t cover in the hospital:
· A telephone or television;
· Personal items like toothpaste or razors;
· A private room, unless it’s medically necessary.
To learn more about Medicare benefits, please refer to your 2014 Medicare & You handbook, go online to
www.medicare.gov, or contact our 1-800-MEDICARE customer
service professionals who can help you with specific concerns before a hospital stay.
David
Sayen is Medicare’s regional administrator for Arizona, California,
Nevada, Hawaii, and the Pacific Territories. You can always get answers
to your Medicare
questions by calling 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227).
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