
05-16-2018, 08:14 AM
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Sage
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Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: The Villages, FL
Posts: 2,903
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Quote:
Originally Posted by retiredguy123
Part A is for in-patient hospital charges and has no annual premium. Part B is for doctor visits, surgery charges, lab testing, and out-patient care, but it does not cover any prescription drugs. The Blue Cross catastrophic limit applies to all types of copays and coinsurance. I can understand your skepticism about the Blue Cross catastrophic limit. But, I know first hand that it works. I had a close friend who had cancer for 3 years. She had massive medical bills and reached her catastrophic limit within the first few months of the year for 3 years. After spending $5,000 in copays and coinsurance, Blue Cross paid everything for the remainder of the year. That is the way it works, and I am depending on it and don't see any reason not to because it is a contractual agreement with Blue Cross. I don't plan to pay $3,300 in Medicare B premiums while Blue Cross offers a $5,000 catastrophic limit. It just doesn't make financial sense to me.
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I have the Federal BC/BS Basic plan and I have to admit that I know nothing of the "catastrophic limit. I guess it does not pertain to me. When an operation costs over $20K and you pay $150 co-payment, I will be satisfied with that. And we did not have Medicare at the time, either. The Federal plan premiums are about one third for me and the rest is paid for by the government. I have no intention of paying a couple of grand a year for Medicare B when I do not need it and never will. That kind of redundancy is not for those that live on a limited fixed income.
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