2026 ELITE CERTIFICATION PROTOCOL

Medicare and Healthcare Costs in Retirement Practice Test 20

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Q1Domain Verified
Medicare Part A's inpatient hospital deductible applies per:
Benefit period, which resets after a period of non-hospitalization.
Month, ensuring consistent cost for short stays.
Lifetime episode of care, regardless of hospitalization frequency.
Calendar year for all Part A covered services.
Q2Domain Verified
Under Medicare Part A, what is the primary distinction between "inpatient hospital care" and "outpatient hospital care" for cost-sharing purposes?
Outpatient care is covered by Part A, and inpatient care is covered by Part B, with distinct deductible and coinsurance structures for each.
Inpatient care is subject to a deductible and daily coinsurance, while outpatient care has copayments based on specific services.
Both inpatient and outpatient care are covered under Part A, but inpatient care has a single annual deductible, and outpatient care has a per-visit copay.
Inpatient care is entirely covered by Part A with no cost-sharing, whereas outpatient care requires a separate Part B deductible and coinsurance.
Q3Domain Verified
probes the fundamental cost-sharing differences between inpatient and outpatient services under Medicare, a key aspect of understanding Part A's scope. Inpatient hospital care under Part A typically involves a deductible for each benefit period and daily coinsurance amounts that increase after a certain number of days. Outpatient services, while sometimes covered by Part A if they are "incident to" inpatient care, are more broadly covered by Medicare Part B, which has its own deductible and coinsurance structure, often involving copayments or coinsurance based on the specific procedure or service. Option B is incorrect because inpatient care does have significant cost-sharing (deductible and coinsurance), and Part B covers outpatient services. Option C reverses the primary coverage roles of Part A and Part B for inpatient vs. outpatient care. Option D is incorrect because outpatient care is primarily covered by Part B, not Part A, and the deductible structure is per benefit period for inpatient, not annual, and outpatient cost-sharing is more complex than a simple per-visit copay. Question: A Medicare beneficiary is admitted to a skilled nursing facility (SNF) following a qualifying hospital stay. For Medicare Part A to cover the SNF stay, what is the maximum number of consecutive days the beneficiary can be *without* Part A-covered SNF or inpatient hospital care for the benefit period to end?
60 days
30 days
90 days
100 days

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This domain protocol is rigorously covered in our 2026 Elite Framework. Every mock reflects direct alignment with the official assessment criteria to eliminate performance gaps.

This domain protocol is rigorously covered in our 2026 Elite Framework. Every mock reflects direct alignment with the official assessment criteria to eliminate performance gaps.

This domain protocol is rigorously covered in our 2026 Elite Framework. Every mock reflects direct alignment with the official assessment criteria to eliminate performance gaps.

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