According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), one in five Americans age 55 years or older have some kind of mental health concern. They often suffer from anxiety, severe cognitive impairment, and mood disorders, including depression and bipolar disorder. The coronavirus pandemic has led to an increased sense of loneliness or isolation among many older adults. If you need mental health services, Medicare covers both inpatient and outpatient mental health care in a variety of settings.
Outpatient mental health care under Medicare Part B:
- What kind of care do you need? Medicare covers a wide range of outpatient mental health services, including individual and group psychotherapy, family counseling if the key purpose s to help with your treatment, psychiatric evaluation, medication management and substance abuse counseling. Medicare also covers annual screenings for depression at a primary care doctor’s office or a primary care clinic.
- Who provides your care? Medicare covers outpatient mental health care counseling and therapy services from many different mental health providers, including psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, nurse practitioners, clinical social workers, nurse specialists and physicians’ assistants.
- Where can you receive outpatient mental health services? You can receive care in a doctor’s or other health care provider’s office, a hospital outpatient department or at a community mental health center.
- What does Medicare cover? Unless you receive care from a medical doctor, Medicare will pay for 80 percent of your care only if your mental health care provider is Medicare-certified and takes assignment (accepts Medicare’s approved rate as payment in full). If you’re in a Medicare Advantage plan, you must see an in-network provider and you likely will have a copay; you may also have a deductible.
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