By Matt Garretson & Jason Wolf
Prior to New Year’s Eve (December 31, 2005), Medicare’s interest was focused only on the reimbursement of injury-related care in the form of primary physician care and treatment in a hospital. Effective January 1, 2006, Medicare has expanded its reimbursement interests to include prescription drugs (under its Medical Part D Program). We all have been exposed to the massive media coverage over the past few months regarding the new Part D coverage. The punch line to the media message – Part D instantly will make Medicare one of the largest consumers/payee’s of prescription drugs. Undeniably, Medicare’s role continues to evolve and its complex reimbursement interests must be addressed in all liability settlements.
Medicare expanded coverage directly translates into expanded reimbursement obligations for you and your Medicare-entitled clients (creating a "bigger bite" of the proverbial apple for Medicare and thereby further eroding your clients’ net proceeds). Not only is the "substance" or scope of the Medicare’s recovery rights evolving, but the "form" of the recovery process will become more complicated as well. Medicare (via the Medicare Secondary Payer Division of CMS) recovers its past "conditional" payments for injury-related physician care and hospital treatment by outsourcing the recovery effort to the Coordination of Benefits office (COB). COB, in turn, appoints one of the approximately two dozen lead contractors (fiscal intermediaries) to your file. Most personal injury practitioners are familiar with this process.
The traditional process (COB, lead contractor) was created for the recovery of expenses related to physician care and hospital treatment. Medicare Part D, however, is covered by a new entity - Prescription Drug Plans (PDP). PDP is similar to Medicare managed plans (supplemental and replacement plans) and have a similar yet separate right of recovery than Medicare. Based upon our firm’s discussion with officials with in CMS, it appears that the reimbursement for the Part D coverage (prescription drugs) will be addressed through an additional, separate recovery effort. In other words, the PDP will share the same recovery right as Medicare managed plans and will need to seek recovery on it’s own as opposed to working in concert or inclusive with the traditional Medicare recovery effort.
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