On Medicare and need telehealth? You have 3 more months to use these services
Published in Health & Fitness
All Medicare beneficiaries will continue to have access to most telehealth services until March 31, 2025. The pandemic era program, set to shrink on Jan. 1, was extended in The American Relief Act (H.R. 10545), passed to fund the government and avoid a shutdown. So, whether you are worried about picking up a cold in your doctor’s waiting room or don’t want to drive in the nasty winter weather, you can still use the telehealth option to take care of many of your health needs.
Medicare patients in both urban and rural areas can use telehealth services at any location in the U.S., including your home, until March 31. Beginning April 1, you must be in an office or medical facility located in a rural area (in the U.S.) for most telehealth services. However, if you aren’t in a rural health care setting, there are a limited number of telehealth services you will remain eligible to get on or after April 1.
Telehealth costs and what is covered
While use of telehealth services has declined since the onset of COVID-19, it remains nearly two times higher than pre-pandemic levels, with more than one in 10 (12.7%) eligible beneficiaries receiving a telehealth service in the last three months of 2023, according to KKF. The pandemic-era flexibilities included in Medicare telehealth coverage that were due to expire on Dec. 31, 2024 were extended for three months by The American Relief Act.
Medicare Part B (medical insurance) covers certain telehealth services, and you’ll pay the same amount that you would if you received the services in person. You’re responsible to pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount for your doctor or other health care provider/practitioner’s services and the Part B deductible applies. Basically, for most of these services, you’ll pay the same amount for telehealth services as you do for in-person visits.
With telehealth, you can’t receive care that includes procedures that require a physical examination, taking blood or urine samples, performing X-rays or giving injections.
Medicare currently offers coverage for preventive health screenings, office visits, and psychotherapy. The menu of covered services was expanded in 2020 to include: physical and occupational therapy, emergency department visits and nursing facility care.
Telehealth can be used to take care of your health in a number of ways:
While telehealth won’t save you anything financially, it may save you some time and inconvenience.
The benefits of telehealth
Having a telehealth visit is just like a regular visit, but you are in one place and your health care provider is in another. Although you may need to see your doctor in person for most diagnostic tests or any diagnosis that relies on a hands-on physical assessment, telehealth has many potential benefits. As with most things health related, talk to your health care provider to see if telehealth is a good fit for you and the conditions you might seek to treat or manage through telehealth.
Some of the benefits that Medicare beneficiaries could enjoy include:
Telehealth services that will continue for all Medicare patients as of April 1 and after
You’ll still be able to get certain telehealth services without being in a rural area. While some non-mental health services may be available via telehealth depending on specific circumstances, most other telehealth services have geographic and/or originating site restrictions.
Below is a non-exhaustive list of services anyone can receive without being in a rural area. They include:
Bottom line
Prior to the pandemic-era expansion to Medicare to include patient’s homes as a permissible “originating site,” telehealth coverage was limited to rural areas (with certain exceptions), and patients were required to travel to an approved originating sites, such as a clinic or doctor’s office, when receiving telehealth services.
Currently one workaround for those enrolled in traditional Medicare is using a provider that participates in an Accountable Care Organization (ACO). An ACO is a group of doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers who work together to coordinate your health care. They are permitted to waive these requirements and may continue to provide telehealth services without geographic restrictions, and to beneficiaries in their homes, should the current flexibilities expire.
Overcoming the geographic and originating site requirements for Medicare patients to receive services is essential to a meaningful expansion of telehealth services. Unfortunately proposed legislation, such as the Telehealth Modernization Act of 2024, doesn’t include a repeal and only offers a temporary extension of the waiver of the requirements.
(Donna LeValley is a retirement writer for Kiplinger.com)
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