Which of the following describes the part d senior savings model (ssm) cigna quizlet

How much are my Part D premiums?

Your premiums will depend on which plan you choose and where you live. Most people will pay the standard monthly Medicare Prescription Drug Plan (Part D) premium, but you may have to pay extra if you didn’t sign up for Part D when you first became eligible and you have a late enrollment penalty. You will receive a notice if this penalty applies to you.

If you receive Extra Help, the table below does not show your premiums. For more information, contact us at (TTY toll-free 711), 7 days a week from 8 am - 8 pm, ET.

Note: You may have an additional fee calculated based on your yearly earnings. If this applies to you, the Social Security Administration (not your Cigna Medicare Part D plan) will send you a letter telling you what the amount will be and how to separately pay it. It cannot be paid with your monthly Part D premium.

Medicare Part D Prescription Drug Plan Types

Cigna Saver Rx (2023 plan)/Cigna Essential Rx (2022 plan)

Offers modest coverage and great value. This plan has a very low monthly premium and very low cost for many generics.

Cigna Extra Rx

Offers a very high level of coverage. This plan has a higher monthly premium, more robust drug coverage, low out-of-pocket costs, and gap coverage for some medications.

Cigna Secure Rx

Offers basic coverage and is a good fit if you receive financial assistance (Extra Help). This plan has a low monthly premium, low copays, and low costs for many generics and insulins.

Cigna Helps Medicare Customers Manage Diabetes with Predictable, Affordable Copays

As the U.S. population continues to age, the number of adults over 65 living with diabetes is also increasing. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) estimates that more than 22 million people – one in three Medicare beneficiaries – have diabetes. 

For some, type 2 diabetes can be managed through proper diet and exercise. For others, however, access to affordable insulin is critical to being able to effectively manage their condition and lead vibrant lives. 

That’s why Cigna is volunteering to participate in the Part D Senior Savings Model in 2021, which was established by CMS to help keep insulin costs predictable. 

“Insulin is essential to the health and well-being of those Medicare beneficiaries who live with diabetes, and Cigna is committed to ensuring they can access it with affordable, predictable costs,” said Todd Rooker, president, Cigna Government Pharmacy. “Giving customers the confidence that they can afford every refill will not only help them manage their diabetes – it helps them avoid the long-term health consequences of skipping doses, such as vision loss, kidney failure, and heart attacks.” 

Cigna’s participation in this model will include three nationwide Prescription Drug Plan (PDP) offerings:

  • Cigna Secure-Extra Rx and Express Scripts Medicare – Choice, both of which offer a $0 copay option for select insulins through the coverage gap at preferred pharmacies.
  • Express Scripts Medicare – Saver, which offers a $35 copay option for select insulins through the coverage gap at any network pharmacy. 

Customers who qualify for Extra Help will be able to obtain insulin at $0 copays through the Cigna Secure Rx and Express Scripts Medicare – Value plan offerings. 

All six plans also offer $0 copay options for select medications purchased through preferred home delivery. 

“We’re committed to helping Medicare customers manage chronic conditions like diabetes by offering easy to understand, high-quality options,” said Rooker.

“Especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s more important than ever for people to take medications as prescribed to avoid unnecessary trips to the hospital. Our range of prescription drug plans gives Medicare customers affordable options for drugs like insulin so they can stay healthy.” 

To learn more about Cigna’s Prescription Drug Plans, click here.

To learn more about the Express Scripts Medicare plan options, click here

Express Scripts Medicare’s pharmacy network includes limited lower-cost, preferred pharmacies in rural areas in Alaska; and the Choice plan also includes limited lower-cost, preferred pharmacies in rural areas in Oklahoma. The lower costs advertised in our plan materials for these pharmacies may not be available at the pharmacy you use.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is announcing a new Model, the Part D Senior Savings Model (or the “Model”), and the corresponding Request for Application (RFA) process for participation from eligible pharmaceutical manufacturers and Part D sponsors in all states and territories.

One in every three Medicare beneficiaries has diabetes, and over 3.3 million Medicare beneficiaries use one or more of the common forms of insulin.  For some of these beneficiaries, access to insulin can be a critical component of their medical management, with gaps in access increasing risk of serious complications, ranging from vision loss to kidney failure to foot ulcers (potentially requiring amputation) to heart attacks.  Unfortunately, sometimes the cost of insulin can be a barrier to appropriate medical management of diabetes. CMS’s Part D Senior Savings Model is designed to address President Trump’s promise to lower prescription drug costs and provide Medicare patients with new choices of Part D plans that offer insulin at an affordable and predictable cost where a thirty-day supply of a broad set of plan-formulary insulins costs no more than $35.

The voluntary Model tests the impact of offering beneficiaries an increased choice of enhanced alternative Part D plan options that offer lower out-of-pocket costs for insulin. CMS is testing a change to the Manufacturer Coverage Gap Discount Program (the “discount program”) to allow Part D sponsors, through eligible enhanced alternative plans, to offer a Part D benefit design that includes predictable copays in the deductible, initial coverage, and coverage gap phases by offering supplemental benefits that apply after manufacturers provide a discounted price for a broad range of insulins included in the Model. The Model aims to reduce Medicare expenditures while preserving or enhancing quality of care for beneficiaries, and to provide beneficiaries with additional Part D prescription drug plan (PDP) choices, for beneficiaries who receive Part D coverage through both standalone PDPs and Medicare Advantage (MA) plans that provide Part D prescription drug coverage (MA-PDs). These Model-participating plan benefit packages (PBPs) will provide stable, predictable copays for insulins that beneficiaries need throughout the different phases of the Part D benefit.

Specifically, CMS is enabling health plan innovation to offer beneficiaries lower prescription drug out-of-pocket costs by waiving a current programmatic disincentive for Part D sponsors to design prescription drug plans that offer supplemental benefits to lower beneficiary cost sharing in the coverage gap phase of the Part D benefit for insulin.

While Part D sponsors may currently offer prescription drug plans that provide lower cost sharing for brand and other applicable drugs in the coverage gap, if a Part D sponsor chooses to design its benefit that way, the sponsor would accrue costs that pharmaceutical manufacturers would normally pay. Those costs are then passed on to beneficiaries in the form of higher supplemental premiums.

Because Part D sponsors compete to offer Medicare beneficiaries affordable prescription drug coverage, only a few sponsors design a benefit that has supplemental benefit coverage for brand or other applicable drugs in the coverage gap. Since brand and other applicable drugs are the set of medications that often cost beneficiaries the most, beneficiaries end up paying 25 percent of the negotiated price in the coverage gap, which may closely mirror the list price of the medication. That amount is often a significantly higher than in the initial coverage phase and can represent a financial burden for Medicare beneficiaries.

Through the CMS Innovation Center, beginning January 1, 2021, CMS is testing a change where Part D sponsors that participate in the Model offer beneficiaries prescription drug plans that provide supplemental benefits for insulin in the coverage gap phase of the Part D benefit. Participating pharmaceutical manufacturers will pay the 70 percent discount in the coverage gap for the insulins that are included in the Model, but those manufacturer discount payments would now be calculated before the application of supplemental benefits under the Model.

Part D sponsors participating in the Model will offer beneficiaries plan choices that provide broad access to multiple types of insulin, marketed by Model-participating pharmaceutical manufacturers, at a maximum $35 copay for a 30-days’ supply in the deductible, initial coverage, and coverage gap phases of the Part D benefit. As a result, beneficiaries who take insulin and enroll in a plan participating in the Model should save an average of $446 in annual out-of-pocket costs on insulin, or over 66 percent, relative to their average cost-sharing today. This predictable copay will provide improved access to and affordability of insulin in order to improve management of beneficiaries who require insulin as part of their care.

To encourage broad Part D sponsor participation, CMS is providing Part D sponsors the option of additional risk corridor protection for Calendar Year (CY) 2021 and CY 2022 for plan benefit packages (PBPs) that have higher enrollment than average from insulin-dependent diabetic patients, when the PBP meets qualifying criteria. Through the Model, CMS is also testing how participating Part D sponsors may best encourage healthy behaviors and medication adherence through Part D Rewards and Incentives programs. 

CY 2021 Requests for Applications

As part of the Model’s announcement, CMS has released two Request for Applications (RFAs) one for Part D sponsors and one for pharmaceutical manufacturers, and both are invited to apply to participate beginning January 1, 2021.

CMS is releasing an RFA for pharmaceutical manufacturers that market covered Part D drugs that are applicable drugs, as defined in section 1860D-14A(g)(2) of the Social Security Act, that are, or contain, a drug classified as insulin in the American Hospital Formulary Service (AHFS) Drug Information or the DRUGDEX Information System compendia.

Eligible pharmaceutical manufacturers may volunteer to participate in the Model by responding to the RFA and executing a Model-specific contract addendum to the Manufacturer Coverage Gap Discount Program. Pharmaceutical manufacturers will have through March 18, 2020 to apply to participate in the Model.

On or around March 20, 2020, CMS will make available to Part D sponsors the list of pharmaceutical manufacturers participating in the Model for CY 2021.

CMS is also releasing an RFA for Part D sponsors who may submit a letter of intent by April 10, 2020 and must apply by May 1, 2020 to participate in the Model. Part D sponsors are encouraged to review the Model’s RFA for all Model eligibility criteria and other requirements.

While this Model is voluntary, CMS will make readily available, through multiple avenues, the list of participating Part D sponsors and pharmaceutical manufacturers that are innovating to provide beneficiaries lower out-of-pocket costs and improved access, affordability, and adherence to the prescription drugs their health relies on.

CMS will also require participating pharmaceutical manufacturers report any increases in the list price of insulins in the Model, which CMS will make available publicly through the Model website.

For more information on the Part D Senior Savings Model, please visit: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/part-d-savings-model.

Please email with any questions related to the Model.

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