back to spring 2025 newsletter
In January 2024, the long-awaited admission of
Marriage and Family Therapists into the Medicare system as Medicare providers
finally went into effect. Fifteen months into this effective date, many MFTs
are still deer-in-headlights, frozen-into-paralysis on how to really make an
informed decision of whether to enroll, opt-out, or stay un-enrolled. There are
a lot of sources online and as with many topics, so much misinformation is
tangled in the mix. As both Barbara
Griswold and Susan Frager point
out, not taking any action or making uninformed hasty decisions can lead to significant financial and legal consequences, like having to refund
payments or being sanctioned for billing errors.
Gia:
Medicare can be intimidating and confusing, and it does have a bad rap of being
full of red tape, paying on the lower end of the scale and requiring even more
documentation than usual. MFTs are now eligible to be Medicare providers but
deciding on whether one should enroll, or opt-out and or choose not to do
anything is very confusing.
Barbara: I would say you have three choices when it
comes to Medicare. Your first option is to
“enroll” as a Medicare provider.
This means you can serve the Medicare population and get reimbursed by
Medicare. To enroll, you have to go through a very rigorous application
process.
Your second
option is to “opt out,” wherein you are
basically telling Medicare in a very formal way that you don’t want to work
with them. And this is something I want to clarify - unlike private insurance plans, if you don’t
want to be involved withMedicare, you have to submit and sign a formal “opt-out” affidavit. (link to Opt Out Affidavit
- https://med.noridianmedicare.com/documents/10525/2052366/Opt-Out+Affidavit.pdf)
The third
option is you do nothing (we’ll talk more about this option later).
Gia: What are the ramifications of enrolling vs.
opting out?
Barbara: If you enroll with Medicare,
you are able to provide services for the over-age-65 and disabled population,
but you have to accept the Medicare discounted rate. The good news is that Medicare publishes
their rates so you can see how much they pay for your services in your city to
help make this choice. You can opt out
but you might not realize that you just closed a door that really could be a
significant source of income for you – Medicare clients..
Every
potential client who walks in your door has to be asked if they have Medicare.
If they do, and you are a Medicare provider, you must bill Medicare. If you’re opted out, you have to make them
sign a Medicare Private Pay Agreement that basically says “I know that Medicare
is not going to cover this service but I still want to see you.” (https://med.noridianmedicare.com/documents/10525/2052366/Opt-Out+Contract+Sample/5deeee5c-8e25-46a0-b90d-34ba5ef4fb2b)
It’s
basically informing your client and getting their consent that they understand
they could go see a Medicare provider but are choosing not to, and that they
understand they will be paying out-of-pocket.
The
signed Private Pay Agreement protects you if that client ever files a
complaint, because you have proof that you informed the client that this is not
going to be reimbursed by Medicare, and you informed them of the ability to go
elsewhere.
Here’s
where it gets complex: Medicare doesn’t want you to see Medicare clients in
your private practice if you haven’t opted out, and haven’t gotten that Private
Pay Agreement from your client. But a lot of clinicians are choosing not
to enroll, but also choosing not to opt out, because they're afraid the health
plan might kick them off the provider panel. So they're weighing the danger and
the risk, and doing nothing. They are just flying under the radar, by seeing
private pay Medicare clients, and hoping that Medicare doesn't find out.
Susan: If you are credentialed with, say Kaiser
Medicare Advantage or one of the platforms like Rula or Grow, they may require
you to NOT opt out. They may say “you don’t need to
ENROLL as a provider in Original Medicare, but you CAN’T opt out because we
want you to be able to see our Medicare Advantage clients.” In the many
webinars and workshops I have given regarding enrolling or not as a Medicare
provider, I often hear “ I feel stuck because my managed care contracts
are saying I can't opt out.” And when you participate with some managed care plans, you can't opt out.
Or they work for other jobs where they can't opt out because “my job has to be
able to bill Medicare for me.” https://psychbillingcoach.com/product/opting-out-of-medicare/
Gia: Can a MFT just do nothing, not enrolling
and not opting-out?
Barbara: Here’s where it gets complex: Medicare doesn’t want you to see
Medicare clients in your private practice if you haven’t opted out, and haven’t
gotten that Private Pay Agreement from your client. But a lot of clinicians are
choosing not to enroll, but also choosing not to opt out, because they're
afraid the health plan might kick them off the provider panel. So they're
weighing the danger and the risk, and doing nothing. They are just flying under
the radar, by seeing private pay Medicare clients, and hoping that Medicare
doesn't find out.
Susan: It is okay to stay
unenrolled as long as you follow the rules and don’t see Medicare clients in
your private practice. But if a therapist isn’t formally opted out and takes
cash from a Medicare client, they're going to be made to give it to Medicare.
If you
are not enrolled, you need to make sure that every client you see does not have
Medicare. Even more than that, though, you should look at their insurance
cards. I mean, I can't tell you how often a client isn’t clear. . They may say
they have Aetna, but you could get their card and you see it says ‘Medicare Advantage.’ Just about all
of the commercial insurance companies
offer Medicare Advantage plans. https://psychbillingcoach.com/i-dont-want-to-enroll-in-medicare/
Gia: What are the basic differences
between Medicare and Medicare Advantage?
Susan: In this country, when you turn 65, you become eligible for Medicare. You
get a choice - sign up for Original Medicare or you can choose to enroll in a
Medicare program administered by a private health plan, such as United
Healthcare Medicare Advantage, Humana Medicare Advantage, Anthem Medicare
Advantage, Kaiser Medicare Advantage, etc.
Original
Medicare provides the same benefits for everybody, which is a small deductible
each year and then it’s. a 20% copayment. With Original Medicare, there's no such thing as verifying
benefits for mental health because they're always the same. All you have to do
is verify eligibility and you look at deductible status. Only about 48% of
people with Medicare are enrolled in Original Medicare.
Meanwhile, Medicare Advantage is a
hybrid, basically commercial insurance grafted onto Medicare and if your client
has a Medicare Advantage plan, you need
to find that out because that means you bill the Advantage plan, not Original
Medicare.
Gia: What are the basic factors to consider in
making an informed decision on whether to become a Medicare provider?
Susan: I don't believe there's one right answer.
I really don't. Because what kind of community do you practice in? Who are your
clients? Are your clients seniors? Are they disabled? And when we say disabled, we're not just
talking about physically disabled, but mentally disabled too. We're talking
about anybody who receives Social Security disability and gets Medicare through
SSDI.
If these are your clients, you kind of have no choice. If you don’t take
Medicare, how are they going to be able to afford your services?
Now if you work with kids, you might as
well just opt out, right? Because most kids aren't going to have Medicare until
they're old enough to age out into where they can get disability on their own.
So as long as they're able to be carried under their parents’ policies until
age 26, you're not going to have to worry about Medicare.
If you're in a really wealthy community,
like parts of the Bay Area, you may have clients able and willing to pay your
full fee on a cash basis. But in areas where clients depend on Medicare
reimbursement, Medicare may actually pay comparably to managed care. Their
reputation for being the lowest of the low isn’t always justified. The
reimbursement for master-level clinicians in the Bay Area is $133.17 for a
90837. That may be comparable or even better than what would be paid by private
plans like Anthem, Blue Shield, or
Cigna. So you should really consider your geographic location and the
demographic you serve.
Barbara Griswold is a Licensed Marriage
and Family Therapist who has been in private practice for the last 33 years and
has parlayed her experience with numerous insurance providers into 20 years of
consultancy and training other professionals. The author of Navigating the Insurance Maze: The
Therapist’s Complete Guide to Working with Insurance – And Whether You Should, now in its
10th edition, Barbara is a consultant to therapists nationwide with questions
about insurance, progress notes, or practice building. For answers to your
questions about Medicare and insurance, check out Barbara’s book and her other
insurance courses at www.theinsurancemaze.com/store.
Susan Frager started as a clinician
about three decades ago and eventually found herself learning the
often-confusing procedures of private insurance and Medicare credentialing and
billing. Although becoming a biller was not her intent, she found herself
helping work colleagues obtain authorizations, navigate billing and keeping
abreast of changes in the system. Today, Susan is a nationally recognized
figure in the Medicare maze and walks people through the complex enrollment
process. For answers to your questions
on Medicare enrollment, check out Susan’s website at www.psychbillingcoach.com to schedule a
consultation.