Preventive care
Being able to treat a medical problem is good, but dodging it altogether is better! These days, that seems an obvious truth. Yet Medicare has only fairly recently expanded coverage for services that help prevent or stave off some of the diseases that make people very ill and — not coincidentally — cost Medicare mountains of money. Even better: Many of these preventive tests, screenings, and counseling sessions now come free (no co-pays or deductibles) thanks to the 2010 Affordable Care Act. As of 2020, some 44 million people with Medicare took advantage of these services, at no cost to themselves, according to government reports.
Now take a look at Table 2-1, which shows the range of preventive tests, screenings, and counseling sessions that Medicare covers under Part B and whether they cost you anything. It’s a pretty impressive list!
TABLE 2-1 Preventive Care Services Medicare Covers
Service | Frequency Covered | Cost to You |
---|---|---|
“Welcome to Medicare” checkup | Once only, during first 12 months in Part B. | Free, but any other tests the doctor refers you for may require a co-pay. |
Wellness checkup | Once every 12 months, after you’ve had Part B for one year. | Free as long as you ask for a wellness visit and not a “physical.” |
Abdominal aortic aneurysm screening | One-time ultrasound for people at risk. | Free. |
Alcohol misuse screening and counseling | One screening and up to four counseling sessions a year. | Free. |
Bone mass measurements | Once a year if you’re at risk for broken bones; more if medically necessary. | Free. |
Breast cancer screening (mammograms) | Once a year for women age 40 or older. | Free. |
Cardiovascular disease (behavioral therapy) | Once a year. | Free. |
Cardiovascular disease screening | Once every five years. | Free for the tests, but a co-pay is usually required for the doctor visit. |
Cervical/vaginal cancer screening | Once every 24 months, or every 12 months if you’re at high risk. | Free. |
Colorectal cancer screening — barium enema (when used instead of flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy) | Once every 48 months, or every 24 months if at high risk. | A co-pay is required. |
Colorectal cancer screening — colonoscopy | Once every 120 months, or every 24 months if at high risk. | Free for the test, but a co-pay is required if a polyp is found and removed during the test. |
Colorectal cancer screening — fecal occult blood test | Once every 12 months if you’re 50 or older. | Free. |
Colorectal cancer screening — flexible sigmoidoscopy | Once every 48 months if you’re 50 or older. | Free. |
Depression screening | Once a year in a primary-care setting. | Free screening, but a co-pay is required for doctor visit and follow-up care. |
Diabetes training | Training on how to self-manage diabetes — up to 12 hours in the first year and up to two hours every year after that. | A co-pay is required, and your Part B deductible applies. |
Diabetes screening | Up to two screenings a year if you’re at risk of developing diabetes. | Free. |
Flu shots | Once a year in flu season. | Free. |
Glaucoma (eye disease) tests | Once every 12 months if you’re at high risk. | A co-pay is required, and your Part B deductible applies. |
Hepatitis B virus (HPV) infection screening | Annually only for those considered at risk who don’t get a Hepatitis B vaccination. | Free. |
Hepatitis C screening test | One-time screening; yearly screening for people at high risk or those born between 1945 and 1965. | Free. |
HIV screenings | Once every 12 months or up to three times during pregnancy. | Free. |
Lung cancer screening | Once a year for people age 55–77, who are current or former smokers averaging one pack a day for 30 years, but without symptoms of lung disease. | Free. |
Obesity screening and counseling | Behavioral counseling sessions if your body mass index (BMI) is 30 or higher. | Free. |
Pneumococcal shot |
After age 65, one type of shot followed at least one year later
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