Medicare private drug plans fail to
offer accurate information to consumers; Consumer groups call for
dramatic reform before 2007 Part D enrollment opens on November 15
With the next
enrollment period for the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit
looming, California Health Advocates and the Medicare Rights Center
are demanding that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) require Medicare private drug plans to provide timely and
accurate information to people with Medicare who turn to the plans’
call centers for assistance.
According
to a new report issued today by the two consumer
organizations, call center representatives for companies
offering Part D coverage remain unable to answer basic
consumer questions regarding how the benefit works. The
report found that the call centers frequently could not
provide the information people with Medicare needed to make
appropriate enrollment decisions.
In “Getting the
Runaround: Problems with Obtaining Accurate Information from Part D
Plans,” the two advocacy groups state that plan call centers are
expected to serve as a crucial link to information about Part D
coverage, but “independent surveys and anecdotal reports from
counselors show serious lapses in the ability of Part D plans to
provide accurate and timely information and to successfully guide
people with Medicare seeking to access the benefit.”
“Good advice is the
only antidote to the convoluted prescription drug benefit that older
and disabled Americans are forced to navigate,” said Robert M.
Hayes, president of the Medicare Rights Center. “Too often a call to
one of the private drug plans does more to mislead, than to help.”
According to the
report, CMS has failed to set adequate standards for the accuracy of
information given by call centers. In preparation for the next
enrollment period, the report recommends that CMS provide detailed
requirements for the information customer service representatives (CSRs)
must be able to provide, and take action to ensure those
requirements are being met.
The report
recommends that CMS ensure that the training and scripts provided to
call center operators enables them to provide information about the
following:
Enrollment process
How the specific
plan works, including explanations of the coverage gap and important
information for people eligible for the low-income subsidy
Plan formulary,
including which drugs are covered and specifics on any coverage
restrictions and limitations.
The report also
recommends strengthening Medicare private drug plans’ capacity to
communicate with non- and limited-English speakers and designating
staff as experts in specific subject matter, such as enrollment,
premium/cost-sharing, and coverage appeals.