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Medicare 2020 | My Blue Button | What is It? What Can It Do?

Medicare 2020 MyMedicare.gov's Blue Button makes it easy for you to download your personal health information to a file. Having access to your information can help you make more informed decisions about your health care. Blue Button is safe, secure, reliable, and easy to use. By getting your information through Blue Button, you can: Download and save a file of your personal health information on your computer or other device, including your Part A, Part B, and Part D claims. Print or email the information to share with others after you’ve saved the file. Import your saved file into other computer-based personal health management tools. What's Blue Button 2.0? Medicare has released a new data service that makes it easy for you to share your Part A, Part B, and Part D claim information with a growing list of authorized applications, services, and research programs. You authorize each application individually and you can return to MyMedicare.gov at anytime to change the way an application uses your information. Once you authorize sharing of your information with an application (by using your MyMedicare.gov account information), you can use that application to view your past and current Medicare claims. How do I protect my information? Since you control access to your health information, it's your responsibility to take steps to keep it safe. Treat your personal and health information the same way you'd treat your banking or other confidential information. Here are some important things to remember: Keep your log in information private and secure. You may want to download your information to a CD, flash drive or mobile app. We recommend you use encrypted and password-protected flash drives, CDs, and mobile apps. If you want to send your information by email, encrypt the message. Keep paper copies in a safe and secure place that you can control. Blue Button and Blue Button 2.0 are optional services. You decide whether you want to share your personal information with others. Medicare reviews all of the organizations that want to connect to Blue Button 2.0. But, it's up to you to choose the apps or other services you want to use. Blue Button can access the following: your name and address Medicare number prescription drugs filled during the past 3 years name of pharmacy's you have used up to 3 years worth of Medicare claim history Medicare summary notices MSP (Medicare Secondary Payer) cases status of your Medicare deductibles identify your drug plan carrier reveal your secondary Medicare insurance plan list of your medical providers calendar of preventive services received and due Does any of this bother you? Consider the following: July 2019 Capitol One hacked - 100 million accounts potentially breached August 2019 - Users with Google Calendar installed receive spam notices and phishing threats May 2019 - Microsoft revealed hackers used malware to spy on computer users September 2019 - Google reveals Nest thermostat and security camera users were hacked by outsiders. The "pranksters" raised the temperature in the home and spoke to home owners via the camera If hackers can do all this through your computer, phone or tablet, how vulnerable are you? Using your Blue Button opens you up to all kinds of personal information breaches. #BESTGeorgiaMedicarePlans‌ ‌#GAMedicareExpert‌ ‌#GAMedicareVideos‌ Medicare has 4 parts. Your red, white and blue card is broadly accepted by doctors and hospitals alike. No networks! No referrals. No prior authorization. Medicare Part A covers hospital inpatient charges and has a per admission deductible Medicare Part B is for outpatient health care treatment. Doctor visits, labs, X-rays, MRI, CT scan (CAT scan), ambulance, ER, outpatient clinics, etc. Essentially any Medicare approved health care received outside the hospital setting. Treatment considered medically necessary under Medicare guidelines. Medicare Part B has a calendar year deductible. Once satisfied, Medicare pays 80% of the approved charge, you are responsible for the remaining 20%. When you have original Medicare, YOUR DOCTOR AND YOU decide on the care you need. You don’t need approval by an insurance carrier before can receive testing or treatment. There is NO cap on Part B charges You pay until you run out of money, get well or die. Medicare Part C is now referred to as Medicare Advantage. More on that later. Medicare Part D covers outpatient prescription drugs. Seniors often buy the wrong drug plan and spend too much on their prescription plan. Seniors on Medicare spend an average of $263 per month on prescription medications. Lower your medication bill by only using your drug card when necessary. The right drug plan will save a lot on brand names but you will almost always pay MORE for generics. Consider paying cash or using GoodRx instead for maximum savings. Also look for drug plans that have a deductible. Medicare 2020.    • How Does Medicare Drug Deductible Wor...  

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