| Medicare is the national health care insurance
program for people 65 and over, certain disabled people, and people
with permanent kidney failure. Medicare is administered by the Health
Care Financing Administration. (HCFA).
The Original Medicare program has two parts. Part A
for institutional care, inpatient hospital care, skilled nursing home
care, post-hospital home health care and hospice care. Part B for
physician services, outpatient hospital care, physical therapy,
ambulance trips and medical equipment. In the newer Medicare+Choice
program, the HCFA has made contracts with a variety of fee-for-service
and managed care organizations. Medicare beneficiaries must choose
between the Original Medicare program and the Medicare+Choice program.
A beneficiary cannot have both.
Does Medicare Pay for LTC?
There is confusion in the minds of many about whether Medicare pays
for LTC or not. It gets down to a matter of definition. Medicare pays
for restorative care. It does not pay for custodial care. Restorative
Care is skilled nursing care and rehabilitative services designed to
make you better. For example, you have a stroke and you temporarily
loose your ability to talk. Medicare may pay for your daily speech
therapy that is needed to help you regain your ability to talk.
Another example, you have a stroke and you permanently loose your
ability get up out of bed and get yourself dressed. Medicare will not
pay for someone to help you up and get dressed every day. This second
example involves Custodial Care that Medicare will not pay for.
How About Medicare Supplements?
Medicare supplements are an extension of Medicare. They may help you
pay your deductibles and coinsurance. But supplements will not pay for
long-term custodial care.
In Perspective
Don't count on Medicare to pay for your long-term care. Medicare
involves providing you with temporary skilled nursing care and
rehabilitative services to help you recover from an acute injury or
sickness. LTC involves providing you with ongoing services that help
you with the activities of your daily life when you are chronically
ill and, in most cases, you won't be getting better. Your need for
assistance will, most likely, increase over time.
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