TRICARE
If you're a member of an active-duty military family living overseas,
you have two options for receiving health care: TRICARE Europe Prime and
TRICARE Standard. There are important differences between the two.
TRICARE EUROPE PRIME
Active Duty Members. All active duty members will be enrolled in
TRICARE Europe Prime upon assignment to the theater. Active duty members
will see military physicians primarily and most referrals will be made
to military medical facilities.
Active Duty Family Members. Family members must make
a choice between the two TRICARE options (Prime and Standard). If you
choose TRICARE Standard, no action is necessary. To obtain coverage
under TRICARE Europe Prime you must be command sponsored and complete an
enrollment form at the local TRICARE Service Center. Normally, the
enrollment for both active duty members and their families is done
during inprocessing.
There are several reasons why a family member should consider
enrolling in TRICARE Europe Prime:
- Primary Care Manager. If you enroll in TRICARE
Europe Prime you will know your Primary Care Manager (PCM) by name. A
PCM is a provider who will take care of you on a regular basis and
manage your care even when referred to a specialist.
- Priority for Care. If you choose to enroll in
TRICARE Europe Prime you will be provided the highest priority for care
in military medical facilities.
- Enhanced Preventive Medicine Benefits. You will
enjoy access to specific preventive medicine benefits. The philosophy
and focus behind TRICARE Prime is to keep you healthy and encourage you
to live a healthy lifestyle, not to simply treat diseases and conditions
when they occur.
- Preferred Provider Networks (PPN). Prime enrollees
will have access to both military medical facilities and networks of
local civilian providers put together by the commanders of military
medical facilities. Wherever possible or available, most of your care
will be provided by the PCM to whom you are assigned. When necessary,
you will have access to specialized care recommended by the PCM. Members
of the PPN are quality providers who agree to see you and to file
TRICARE claims for Prime patients. In most cases, these providers will
speak English, but when they don't, bilingual patient liaisons are
available in most locations to serve as interpreters.
- Access to Care Standards. The Department of Defense
has published access standards for you: one day for urgent care, whether
primary or specialty; one week for a routine primary visit; four weeks
for a health prevention visit (e.g., pap smear), and four weeks for
routine specialty care. Military medical facilities in Europe either
meet these access standards at their facilities or send enrollees to a
preferred provider.
TRICARE EUROPE STANDARD
Family members who choose not to enroll in TRICARE Europe Prime will
be automatically eligible for TRICARE Standard. Under TRICARE Standard,
you are responsible for deductibles and cost-shares for care obtained
from civilian facilities and providers. If you make this choice you will
have no primary care manager, will have reduced priority for access to
care in a military treatment facility, and will not receive the
preventive medicine benefits that come along with Prime.
Yet even with its increased costs and reduced benefits, TRICARE
Standard may be the right choice for you if you prefer to get your care
directly from host-nation providers. By choosing TRICARE Standard, you
retain the full freedom to choose from any provider you wish for
outpatient care.
What Do You Need To Do? If you need more information
or wish to enroll in TRICARE Europe Prime, you should simply contact the
closest TRICARE Service Center. After enrolling you will receive an
enrollment confirmation package with the TRICARE Europe Health Care
Passport and the name of your Primary Care Manager.
Persons seeking medical care in Europe may well have many healthcare
related questions. For this reason, TRICARE Service Centers have been
established at all military treatment facilities. These are the first
places for you to turn for answers.
TRAVELING WITH TRICARE
Family Members. When you are covered by TRICARE Standard or enrolled
in TRICARE Europe Prime, your TRICARE benefit is always available to
you, whether you are traveling or on vacation, whether you stay in
Europe, travel to another overseas area or head back to the states.
However, your Prime enrollment protects you even further by ensuring
priority care at all military medical facilities and prevents you from
incurring high-cost medical bills when you're away from home.
Traveling In Europe or Other Overseas Locations. As
a TRICARE Europe Prime family member, your medical benefit covers you
whenever you travel overseas. If you require emergency medical care
while on vacation, seek care at the nearest military medical facility if
possible. If you aren't certain where to go, contact the nearest TRICARE
Service Center for referral to a local national civilian doctor or seek
care at the nearest emergency room, hospital or clinic (the TRICARE
Europe Health Care Passport lists all service centers and their phone
numbers). In all cases, you must contact your servicing TRICARE Service
Center, preferably before care is rendered but at least immediately
afterward, in order to have your claims processed correctly.
Preauthorization is required for any non-emergency civilian care
received overseas. Claims submitted without an authorization will be
paid at the point-of-service rate, which includes a high cost share and
deductible. If you incur a charge for civilian medical care, retain the
itemized statement and any medical documentation and submit the claim to
Wisconsin Physician Services (WPS). (See box.) If you are referred to a
member of the preferred provider network, the physician may submit your
medical bills to WPS. Claims for authorized civilian care will be paid
100%, with no cost-shares, co-pays or deductibles for covered,
authorized services.
Traveling in the USA. If you need emergency or
urgent medical care when traveling in the USA, you are not required to
seek authorization for care. However, if you are near a military medical
facility with emergency facilities, go there first for care; otherwise,
take the following steps:
- Call the applicable toll-free number for the region in which you are
seeking care to find out if there is a TRICARE network provider located
near you (the TRICARE Europe Health Care Passport has a list of all US
regional toll free numbers);
- If there is no network provider, make sure the civilian provider
accepts the TRICARE/CHAMPUS allowable charges as payment in full.
Otherwise, you may be responsible for some additional charges above the
CHAMPUS allowable;
- The provider may file the claim for you, or you may be expected to
pay first and then file the claim for yourself. In either event, all
claims for family member care in the US should be mailed to Wisconsin
Physician Services.
Traveling Outside the Region for Over 60 Days. If
you will be traveling to the states for an extended visit that exceeds
60 days, you should contact your servicing European TRICARE Service
Center to request a transfer of your Prime enrollment to the region in
which you will be staying. When you arrive at your destination, you must
contact the gaining TRICARE Service Center to ensure your enrollment is
transferred. The TRICARE representative will provide you with an
information packet, which will include where to send your claims and
information on the local civilian network of providers. If you return to
Europe, you will again contact your TSC to ensure your Prime enrollment
is transferred.
Children Attending School in the USA. Children of
active duty members assigned overseas who attend school or college in
the USA must transfer their Prime enrollment to the region that services
the area in which they are attending school, if Prime is available. If
TRICARE Prime is not available in their area, they must disenroll from
Prime, but will be covered by TRICARE Standard. Students or other family
members may enroll in TRICARE Europe Prime if they live with their
active duty sponsor assigned overseas during periods that exceed 60
days. When they return to school in the US, they will process out with
their servicing European TRICARE Service Center and return to the
coverage they had in the states, whether Prime or Standard. Note:
Children of retirees who are enrolled in TRICARE Prime in the states but
spend their summers (over 90 days) in Europe with their retired sponsor
should have their sponsor notify their regional TRICARE Office.
CONUS Prime Family Members Visiting in Europe. If a
family member is enrolled in TRICARE Prime in a CONUS region and will be
staying in Europe for less than 60 days, they may remain enrolled in
Prime in their current region. However, they must have authorization
from their PCM for anything other than emergency care or face a
point-of-service charge for any civilian medical care.
Active Duty. Active duty members needing emergency
medical care while traveling should obtain care from the nearest medical
facility and follow parent service reporting procedures. Active duty
members must obtain routine civilian and host-nation medical care
according to policies established by their parent service. Medical bills
should be submitted according to parent service policy.
RETIREES
Overseas retirees under 65 enjoy many of the same TRICARE healthcare
options as retirees living in the states, but there are differences. The
biggest is that TRICARE prime is not available to retirees living
overseas. The type of TRICARE benefits you choose may depend on where
you live, what type of Military Treatment Facility is near you (if any),
and your own personal healthcare choices. With Standard you will also
pay deductibles and cost-shares. You will normally be required to do
your own paperwork and file your own claims. See your Benefits
Counseling and Assistance Coordinator (BCAC) at your local TRICARE
Service Center if you need assistance and guidance.
Over-65 Retirees. Over-65 retirees have TRICARE for
Life. There are no enrollment fees for it, but you are required to
enroll in Medicare Part B and pay Medicare Part B monthly fees. Check
with the Social Security Administration on line at
www.ssa.gov,
toll-free at 1-800-772-1213 or visit Medicare online at
www.medicare.gov,
for more information about enrolling in Medicare Part B and monthly fees
that will apply to you. You may also contact your closest U.S.
Embassy/Consulate Federal Benefits Unit for assistance.
Using Military Medical Facilities. Treatment may be
available at a military treatment facility if there is space available
after TRICARE Prime patients have been served. You may ask why Prime
members get preferential treatment at military Medical Treatment
Facilities (MTFs) here. It's because the number one priority of MTFs
overseas is to maintain the mission readiness of active duty people.
Maintaining this readiness means taking care of active duty personnel
and their family members first, and there are simply not that many
military clinics and hospitals here to do this.
Military hospital and clinic commanders in Europe work hard to ensure
you have access to military facilities as often as possible. In fact,
depending on where you live, you may even be able to enroll in a program
that provides you with access to a MTF and a Primary Care Manager there.
It's called TRICARE Plus.
TRICARE Plus is a military treatment facility primary care enrollment
program that is offered at select military treatment facilities around
Europe. If you are eligible for care in a military treatment facility,
you may seek enrollment for primary care at military treatment
facilities where enrollment capacity exists.
Bear in mind that this applies for overseas retirees. If you are
enrolled in TRICARE Prime or a Medicare HMO in the continental U.S. you
are not eligible. If you can't enroll or choose not to enroll in TRICARE
Plus, it does not affect TRICARE For Life benefits or other existing
programs you may be signed up for. Eligible beneficiaries with existing
relationships with primary care providers at military treatment
facilities will have the first opportunity to enroll as long as the
facility has the space and resources.
TRICARE Senior Pharmacy Program. The over-65
TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries are also eligible to receive pharmacy
benefits. This benefit also applies to overseas retirees, who will be
able to submit claims to TRICARE for their prescription drugs.
Beneficiaries may also use the TRICARE Mail Order Pharmacy if they have
an APO/FPO address. The pharmacy benefit is a substantial one, meaning
drastically reduced out-of-pocket costs for all 65 and over retirees.
If you turned 65 prior to April 1, 2001, you automatically qualify
for the benefit whether or not you have purchased Medicare Part B.
(However, you still must have Medicare Part B to be eligible for the
TRICARE for Life Benefit.)
If you turned 65 after April 1, 2001, you must be enrolled in
Medicare Part B to receive the Senior Pharmacy Benefit.
Retiree Catastrophic Cap. Another significant
benefit for the retiree population is the TRICARE Standard Catastrophic
Cap of $3,000. A Òcatastrophic capÓ is the upper limit on what must be
paid for health care. This applies to the family's annual deductibles
and cost-shares for covered medical care received in any one fiscal
year. Once the ÒcapÓ has been reached, TRICARE Standard will pay the
full billed charges for covered care provided during the rest of the
fiscal year. This can drastically reduce your out-of-pocket medical care
costs.
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WITH TRICARE
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More information is on the web at
www.europe.tricare.osd.mil
TRICARE claims from Europe should be sent to the following
addresses:
ACTIVE DUTY CLAIMS
TRICARE Europe
WPS -- Active Duty Claims Processing
P.O. Box 7968
Madison WI 53707-7968
ALL ACTIVE DUTY FAMILY MEMBERS & OVERSEAS TRICARE STANDARD
CLAIMS:
TRICARE Europe
WPS -- Claims Processing
P.O. Box 8976
Madison WI 53708-8976
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