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If your doctors stop accepting your plan, you may need to switch plans during an enrollment period, find new doctors within your network, or pay higher out-of-network costs, depending on your plan type.
Almost certainly yes. Medicare Advantage plans are sold by service area, usually based on county. If your current plan doesn't operate in Utah, it won't cover you there as a permanent resident, and you'll need to find a new plan.
Network size varies by plan type and carrier. PPO plans generally offer broader access than HMO plans, but what counts as broad depends on where you live and which doctors you want to keep.
Not necessarily. Intermountain Health is a large system with many providers, and whether a specific doctor, clinic, or facility is in-network depends on your individual plan's contract. Always verify before assuming.
Medicare Advantage provider networks can change every year. Doctors and hospitals are not required to stay in a plan's network, and plans can add or remove providers at any time, though major changes typically take effect at the start of a new plan year.
Whether your hospital is included depends on which Medicare Advantage plan you choose and whether that hospital has contracted with it. You need to verify this directly before enrolling, because hospital participation changes and directories aren't always current.
Peter Abilla is a licensed Utah Medicare agent. He can walk you through this plan's costs, coverage, and whether your doctors are in-network.