- Joined
- Apr 4, 2023
- Messages
- 354
You can buy whatever insurance you want and you can pay as much as you want for the fear of something that might potentially happen.
I love that word potential
-The “...central concern in the capitated payment model used in Medicare Advantage is the potential incentive for Medicare Advantage Organizations to deny beneficiary access to services and deny payments to providers in an attempt to increase profits"
Such a strange take on this discussion-- the whole point of insurance is to engage in risk-sharing agreements to mitigate potential catastrophic outcomes.
Whether one is discussing the potential outcomes that one is insuring against, or the potential reliability of the insurance successfully covering the risks that you have paid for, the whole discussion is about potentials.
It's inherent to the conversation, yet you seem to feel that it's superfluous?
Buy what you like. 50% of the country is in Advantage plans and less that 50% in Medigap plans.
According to the video in the OP, CMS estimates that the uptake rate of MA plans will fall below 50% in 2026.
I have experience with both Plan N and Plan D plus 3 years experience with two different Advantage plans. I know many people in both and all are happy, buy what you want. I or anyone I know has not had a negative experience with either one.
Once again, are those ratings based on the early years (when MA has true advantages), or later years (when the trouble starts)?
I just can't seem to get you to stay focused on that critical distinction, which is unfortunate because it's where I believe your analysis is critically flawed.
Rather than explaining why I'm wrong, you just argue the flawed analysis over and over again.
If you feel I am an advocate for Advantage plans, that is wonderful, they are a great value and my opinion is just as valid as yours if not more so.
You express opinions based on incomplete experience (you're in the early years of MA).
I try to contain my analysis to hard data taken from the perspective of a complete picture of the entire old-age health insurance landscape.
I don't consider those approaches to be equal in value.
If you think I would tell someone who wants to pay an extra $200 to $400 a month Each (or more) for a Medigap plan, in addition to paying extra for dentists and eye care that they are crazy you are wrong.
If you think I would tell someone who wants an Advantage plan and save a boatload of money they are crazy, you are wrong again.
That's great, but more pertinent to both this discussion and proper decision-making protocols regarding insurance purchases, what do you tell them about high-cost, later-year claim coverage denials with MA?
You seem to be debating with yourself. No sense going in circles. It would be a shame to see this thread shut down.
Cleary your fear says you should be in a Medigap plan, though you don't offer what you are in but that is ok, Medigap is for you.
No, I'm clearly debating with you, but you are not really engaging the debate. You're correct that there is no point in going in circles, but the key to breaking the circle is to engage the main deficiency in MA (later-year coverage) and stop changing the subject to how great MA in early-year coverage (which is the only experience you have had).
I've explained it many times, but I'll do it again: I asked you why you gave such a ravingly positive review of a fairly standard Medicare plan explanation video because you present yourself as a very well-read student of Medicare and that video was simply nothing special.Ps, you mention over and over that the video in post #22 is accurate in your mind. Well I know it is. Yet for some reason you say those videos are a dime a dozen. So what is the point of that statement? The video HELPS people understand what is available to them. Yet you keep attacking it and my opinion.
You have basically confirmed that there was no real reason, so I maintain my conclusion that you are not all that well-read on the topic.
In BITOG terms, it would be like if someone claimed to be a huge expert on engine oil but posted a generic video (not incorrect, but very basic and nothing special about it) on how to read the viscosity rating of oil and started "raving" about how it was "FANTASTIC" and that they had NEVER EVER seen a better video on the topic. NEVER!
Would you be likely to conclude that the fact that they found such a simple video to be so great was undermining the supposed expertise the person claimed to have?
My previous posts made it very clear that I was not attacking the video, and I said it was helpful. My point is that your over the top reaction to it was telling, not that there was anything wrong with the video.
And to answer your other question-- I retired early and am not yet eligible for Medicare. But I will be in a few years, so doing my best to educate myself in order to make the most informed decision I can.
Also note that I don't rule out choosing MA. Being a "free-market capitalist" kind of guy, I'm attracted to the philosophy of it. I'm also pretty healthy, so the early cost savings might be a worthwhile tradeoff for me as there's a chance that my later-years will be medically uneventful.
If that were to be the case, then MA would be the best for me. So, I'm not an anti-MA ideologue by any stretch.
But I do think you are advocating for MA based on a badly flawed analysis, so every once in a while, I feel like presenting the opposing view.
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