Published:Saturday, April 1, 2006 11:19 AM PST
Serving the South Coast of Oregon

New phase of drug benefits, and new worries
Saturday, April 1, 2006 11:19 AM PST

WASHINGTON (AP) - A safeguard designed to ease elderly patients' transition into the Medicare drug program ended Friday, and that means some people will find they have to pay for their medicine out-of-pocket.

The government had told insurers they must cover a 90-day supply of a drug, even if that drug is not on the plan's list. Beginning today, they won't have to.

During the past three months, plans were supposed to be notifying pharmacists and their customers when a prescription was being covered temporarily. However, it's not clear how often they have done so.

“I haven't had a single person come to me with notice from a plan warning them that a drug is transitional,” said Buffie Sassvedra, director of New Mexico's State Health Insurance Program, which advises seniors about insurance coverage.

Some consumer groups worry that many elderly and disabled patients will try to get a prescription refilled, only to find that the drug is no longer covered. Some, they say, may not have the money to pay for their medicine.

Mark McClellan, the Bush administration's chief Medicare official, told reporters Friday that insurers must cover a drug until they rule on a customer's appeal, or until that customer switches to a comparable medicine.


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