
New HMO Option for Area Seniors
SCAN Health Plan of Long Beach has begun offering supplemental
insurance to Medicare recipients in five Ventura County
cities.

By Catherine Saillant
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

April 22, 2005

Long Beach-based SCAN Health Plan is entering the Ventura County
market, offering services in limited areas for seniors looking to
supplement Medicare coverage, officials said.

More than 50,000 seniors in Camarillo, Fillmore, Oxnard, Santa
Paula and Ventura will now be able to choose between two Medicare
Advantage HMOs, potentially finding savings, said Katharine
Raley, an insurance counselor for the county's Area Agency on
Aging.

"This is a good opportunity for Medicare beneficiaries," she
said.

However, Raley cautioned people to compare services carefully
before switching coverage.

SCAN provides coverage for brand-name drugs, unlike Secure
Horizons, the other health maintenance organization, she said.

But SCAN has a limited number of doctors in its network, and
people switching from Secure Horizons may have to find new
doctors, she said.

"It all depends on what type of health plan you need and what is
most convenient for you," she said.

SCAN's plan, available since Monday, costs $30 a month; Secure
Horizons charges a $55 monthly premium.

SCAN has contracts with two physician groups in western Ventura
County: Buenaventura Medical and Valley Care. Combined, they
provide more than 60 primary care physicians, said Sherry
Stanislaw, SCAN vice president of marketing.

Hospitals affiliated with the plan are Community Memorial in
Ventura, St. John's Regional Medical Center in Oxnard and St.
John's Pleasant Valley in Camarillo.

Formed in 1977 as a nonprofit health plan serving seniors, SCAN
provides coverage for nearly 70,000 Medicare beneficiaries in Los
Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

Stanislaw said the company has been looking at Ventura County for
a couple of years, and hopes to expand services to Simi Valley
and Moorpark in the near future. The company tentatively plans to
add Thousand Oaks to its coverage area in 2006, Stanislaw
said.

Those eastern Ventura County cities already have two HMO plans
for seniors — Universal Care and Kaiser — Raley said. But more
choice is beneficial for seniors, many of whom live on fixed
incomes, she said.

The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has
processed more than 141 applications for new Medicare Advantage
HMOs this year, officials said.

Federal officials say the proliferation of plans, spurred by
Medicare reform legislation in 2003, will provide lower-cost
coverage options for millions of older Americans.

Options in Ventura County have declined in recent years. In 2003,
Blue Cross of California and Kaiser Permanente pulled out of
western Ventura County. Company officials said there were not
enough customers to justify coverage, especially with low
reimbursements and rising medical costs.

Members of the news media may contact:
Michelle Hokr
818-597-8453 x5
michelle@kevinross.net