
04-17-2018, 08:43 AM
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Sage
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Join Date: Jul 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by billethkid
I have read the guidelines provided by medicare. They seem pretty specific (3 conditions) with lattitude on Medicare admin part.
We have cruised frequently and never gave it a thought until brought up in discussion last night with friends.
Also this summer we will be traveling throughout Nova Scotia and want to become knowledgeable about coverage while traveling in Canada.
If you have had occasion to need to use medicare away from the USA would you share your experience.
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This might help...
"Medicare usually does not cover medical care you receive when traveling outside the U.S. and its territories. However, Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage Plans must cover care you receive outside the U.S. in certain circumstances:
Medicare will pay for emergency services in Canada if you are traveling a direct route, without unreasonable delay, between Alaska and another state, and the closest hospital that can treat you is in Canada.
Medicare will pay for medical care you get on a cruise ship if you get the care while the ship is in U.S. territorial waters. This means the ship is in a U.S. port or within six hours of arrival at or departure from a U.S. port.
In limited situations, Medicare may pay for non-emergency inpatient services in a foreign hospital (and any connected provider and ambulance costs). Your care is covered if the hospital is closer to your residence than the nearest available U.S. hospital. This may happen if, for example, you live near the border of Mexico or Canada.
Traveling with Medicare - Medicare Interactive
Travel (when you need health care outside the U.S.) | Medicare.gov
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