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Does Medicare Insurance Cover Cancer Treatment?

Smiling Patient Receiving Consultation and Care For Diagnosis
Smiling Patient Receiving Consultation and Care For Diagnosis

Cancer is a terrifying diagnosis that can, and often does, affect the entire family. And this fear is entirely reasonable. Each year, more than a million new cases will be diagnosed, and hundreds of thousands will die from a form of cancer. Unfortunately, there are more concerns with a cancer diagnosis than just your health. For many, treating cancer can be financially devastating, with the average cost of treatment around $150,000.


A complex illness like cancer can require a complex web of screenings and treatments. Luckily, the Medicare program can help make watching for and potentially treating cancer a more affordable option!


How Cancer Treatment is Covered by Original Medicare


Original Medicare, or Medicare Parts A and B, often provides beneficiaries in need of cancer

treatment or screenings with a decent coverage option. Which part of Original Medicare that can provide insurance coverage for cancer screenings or treatment depends on whether you’re an inpatient or outpatient.


Medicare Part A

If you’re an inpatient (e.g., in a hospital or health care facility), Medicare Part A can help

cover your stay at the hospital, as well as many of the services required during your inpatient

stay. Part A may also cover your time at a skilled nursing facility. Specific to cancer treatment, Part A may cover chemotherapy in an inpatient setting.


If you’re not an inpatient, Part B may help to cover it (more on that later). Should you need it,

Part A can also cover inpatient mental health services and hospice care.


Medicare Part B

If you’re not staying at an inpatient facility, Medicare Part B may help cover your cancer

treatment. The most common services, doctors’ visits, are often covered by Part B. This part of Original Medicare may also cover outpatient chemotherapy and radiation treatments.

Should you need them as part of your cancer treatment, it’s worth noting that Medicare Part B additionally covers outpatient mental health services. Lastly, Part B can also cover outpatient diagnostic tests and preventative screenings like mammograms and prostate cancer screenings.


Smiling Volunteers Walking for the Cure of Breast Cancer
Smiling Volunteers Walking for the Cure of Breast Cancer

Keep in mind, both Medicare Part A and B have costs associated with them, which can change each year. At the same time, what part of Original Medicare you’re covered under can and will help to define what you owe. Remember, it’s possible to be treated in a hospital or health care facility and be considered outpatient if you’re in observation status. For this reason, it can pay to verify what part of the Medicare program you’ll be covered under ahead of time if you can.


Medicare Part D and Cancer Treatment Coverage


Along with cancer treatment comes prescription drugs. Common medications in cancer treatment are chemotherapy, anti-nausea, or pain-management drugs, to name a few. If you’re a Medicare insurance beneficiary with a Medicare Part D plan, your prescriptions drugs may be covered in some way. It’s important to check your formulary for the specific tiers and costs associated with your necessary prescriptions. Should your prescriptions not be covered, or be covered in a tier that you think is too expensive, you can request a type of coverage determination called an exception.


One benefit of coverage through Medicare Part D is that your spending is limited when you’ve met your deductible. In this initial coverage period, your plan will help pay for your covered prescription drugs. Your plan will pay some of the cost, and you will pay a copayment or coinsurance. Then, at a defined dollar figure, you’ll reach the initial coverage limit, and you’ll enter the catastrophic phase of coverage. While in catastrophic coverage, you pay $0 for covered drugs. This means that, if you’re hit particularly hard financially by your cancer treatment, your plan can help it be more affordable.


Other Medicare Insurance Coverage for Cancer Treatment


Medicare Part A, B, and D aren’t the only options for coverage. In fact, some aspects of the

Medicare program can offer extra help for cancer treatment. Medicare Part C, or Medicare Advantage, is the federally approved, privately offered Original Medicare alternative. As such, it’s required to offer you the same coverage as Original Medicare at the very least. Medicare Advantage plans may offer prescription drug coverage in the plan, as well as coverage for additional services.


Medicare Supplements, or Medigap plans, can be useful if you have Original Medicare. While they don’t directly cover cancer-specific treatments, many Medigap plans can help cover some of the out-of-pocket costs associated with Original Medicare. For example, most Medigap plans help cover Part A and B coinsurances in some way. Many plans also help with the Part A deductible or skilled nursing facility care coinsurance.


Additional Options for Cancer Coverage


For some, it may make sense to look beyond Medicare insurance to other types of cancer coverage. For example, if cancer runs in your family, but you have not had cancer or a pre- existing condition that predisposes you to cancer, two forms of ancillary insurance may be worth investigating.


One is cancer insurance. Generally, cancer insurance pays out a lump sum that you can use for medical and non-medical expenses, though the specifics depend on each plan. The second type of insurance is critical illness insurance, which can be used to cover several different types of critical illnesses, like heart attack, stroke, and cancer. This type of plan can often assist with medical costs not covered by Medicare insurance, as well as non-medical costs like transportation and childcare.


If you or a loved one receives a cancer diagnosis, the last thing on your mind is likely the price tag. Returning to good health is of the utmost concern. Fortunately, any form of Medicare insurance can be an excellent way to help pay for what you need during what is surely a difficult time. With its coverage, you can stop worrying about how to pay for your treatment and focus on getting better.


We hope you enjoyed this article. If you are interested in one of ancillary products quote, please contact Benefits-4-Retirees!


"Let us not look back in anger, nor forward in fear, but around in awareness."

~ James Thurber


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