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Without it his costs will be SUBSTANTIAL in age.
Traditional Medicare with a supplemental and a separate prescription plan. (Does he have dental and vision?)
Medicare advantage which covers parts A&B and prescriptions but is contracted out by Medicare. (May cover dental and vision)
You need to understand what staying in network means. Copays and deductables. Maybe Dad needs more coverage than he now has. Maybe he could qualify for Medicaid as his supplement.
Dad should be getting yearly benefit books from UH explaining what they cover. Once you can get all his cards together and that booklet (don't worry if u can't find it), call your Office of Aging and make an appt to sit down with someone who can look at what Dad has now and maybe find him better Insurance coverage.
Be aware though, when you have employers insurance, if you drop it you usually cannot pick it up again. With my DHs employer, we have 3 policies we can choose from. Medicare Advantage (PPO*), Traditional BC/BS (PPO*) and an HMO (must use their doctors)
*PPOs are where networks are involved. You stay within their network providers you save money, use a provider not in their network, you pay more out of pocket.
This all can be very complex. Talk to Office of Aging before you talk with anyone else. Those insurance brokers (I guess thats what they r called) work on commission so do not have the clients best interest.
Why are YOU spending a fortune on HIS medications and Medical expenses?
Hate to break it to you but most things in life are not "free". Someone somewhere along the line pays for things.
Is dad a Veteran? If so the VA can cover most of his Medical Expenses and Medications.
And if he is a Veteran they may pay for a lot more, and he may qualify for a few benefits or a LOT.
Check with your local Veterans Assistance Commission.
Or contact the VA in your area.
If dad has straight Medicare and no supplemental insurance, he pays for Parts B and D and there are copays. And there is a deductible to be satisfied each year.
If he has a supplement, he pays for that, but there may still be co-insurance charges.
If he has a Medicare Advantage plan, he may pay less for coverage, but the coverage may need to be only with in-network providers and institutions.
You should not be spending YOUR money on dad's medical care. That should come out of dad's funds.
"Does your cousin know what s/he's talking about?"
Many younger/inexperienced/not from the US folks think that Medical care for the elderly is free in the U.S. It's not
So, if your cousin has no experience having Medicare himself or dealing with an Elder who does, s/he may simply be making an assumption.