Medicare and Social Security: How Social Programs Can Help You Help Your Elderly Parent
A Basic Guide to Social Security and the Medicare Program
By Wanda Leibowitz, published Jun 26, 2006
Published Content: 365 Total Views: 1,121,455 Favorited By: 59 CPs
Social Security Basics
Social security provides monthly benefit checks to senior citizens. It is possible to begin receiving checks as early as age sixty-two, but many people wait until they are sixty-five years of age to apply for social security benefits. If your elderly parent hasn't applied for social security, it is a great idea to go through the process with them, including the meeting with a social security representative. By staying in step with your parent when financial decisions need to be made, you will be sure that you end up with a situation that is advantageous for both of you.
Medicare Basics
Medicare is health insurance provided by the U.S. Government for people over the age of sixty-five. There are two types of Medicare known as Part A, and Part B. Part A is provided for free by the Federal Government to any citizen who has worked for at least ten years It covers basic hospital expenses. Part B is available at a cost of roughly sixty dollars each month, and covers a wider range of medical goods and services.
What The Medicare Parts Cover
Although Part A will help offset the cost of an emergency back surgery, only Part B will cover the cost of the back brace that the patient wears home from the hospital. Medicare A doesn't cover anything that takes place outside of a hospital, with the sole exception of a few supplies for patients with diabetes. Medicare B covers slightly more, but there are still gaps. Prescription drugs, and routine care like eye exams and dental work, are not covered by any form of Medicare.
You may also like...
- Using the Social Security Death Index for Genealogy Research
- Replacement Social Security Card's Put a Strain on US Citizens
- Social Security: Is it Time for Reform?
- Social Crisis: Impending Disaster for Social Security and How We Can Fix It
- Social Security: Will it Be There When I Retire?
- Getting Social Security Information Online
- My Social Security Spending Plan
- Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid: A Radical Proposal
- The Social Security System in Luxembourg: An Expat's Guide
- Ticket to Work: 2007 Rules for SSDI, Social Security Disability Insurance
Takeaways
- Your parent can start receiving social security as early as age 62.
- Medicare Part A covers emergencies that require hospitalization.
- Medicare Part B pays for some expenses outside the hospital.
Did You Know?
Today, about 40 million people are enrolled in Medicare. By 2011, that number is expected to grow to over 77 million.
Resources
- The official U.S. Government's Medicare Site: www.medicare.gov/
Most Commented On


PrescriptionJoe
Add a Comment
Posted on 10/05/2007 at 10:10:00 PM