What Would a $150,000
Medical Bill Do
to Your Retirement?
Medicare covers hospital stays and routine care. It does not cover the $47,000 average patient cost of a cancer diagnosis, the experimental immunotherapy your oncologist recommends, or the six months of income you stop drawing while you recover. This briefing explains exactly what happens to a retirement portfolio when a critical diagnosis arrives uninsured.
Medicare Parts A and B cover hospital stays and physician services. They do not cover most outpatient chemotherapy drugs, targeted therapies priced above formulary limits, or clinical trial participation. Part D closes some of the pharmacy gap — but only after you satisfy deductibles that reset annually and pay 25% coinsurance on specialty drugs that routinely cost $12,000 a month.
The practical effect: a retiree living on a $6,200 monthly portfolio withdrawal faces a $47,000 first-year shortfall on a cancer diagnosis — nearly eight months of income consumed before treatment is complete. Medicare Supplement (Medigap) plans reduce cost-sharing on covered services. They do not create new coverage where none exists.
Average Year-One Out-of-Pocket Costs ($ thousands)
How Shield Works
Shield pays a single lump sum — $50,000 to $500,000 — directly to you within 14 days of a confirmed diagnosis. No coordination with Medicare. No itemized claims. No waiting for treatment to complete. The money is yours to deploy however the situation demands.
The three diagnoses that define critical illness insurance — cancer, heart attack, stroke — each carry a financial profile that Medicare was not designed to address. The numbers below are averages. Your situation depends on diagnosis stage, treatment protocol, and what your portfolio can absorb while your attention is elsewhere.
Includes surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and follow-up. Excludes experimental immunotherapy and targeted biologics, which add $40,000–$180,000 annually.
Cardiac rehabilitation, ongoing medication, potential device implantation, and lost income during recovery are not covered under standard Medicare.
Long-term rehabilitation, speech therapy, and home modification costs extend the financial impact to $140,000 over five years for moderate-severity strokes.
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Shield is not for everyone. It is specifically useful for retirees whose financial security depends on portfolio preservation — and for the people who would otherwise absorb the financial shock of a parent's diagnosis. If you recognize yourself in one of these profiles, the coverage gap is real and quantifiable.
The Executive Retiree
Former VP of Operations. Retired 18 months ago. $1.8M portfolio, $5,400/month Social Security + pension. Medigap Plan G. No critical illness coverage.
Without Shield
A stage-II cancer diagnosis triggers $47,000 year-one out-of-pocket. Portfolio withdrawals accelerate. Sequence-of-returns risk compounds. Recovery takes three to five years of portfolio growth.
With Shield
A $200,000 Shield policy at $187/month eliminates the liquidation scenario entirely. Pays on diagnosis. No claims management required.
"I built this portfolio for 35 years. I did not build it to spend it on a hospital's billing department."
The Fixed-Portfolio Owner
Former owner of a regional HVAC company. Sold in 2019. $940,000 in a managed account generating $3,800/month. Medicare Advantage Plan. No supplemental critical illness coverage.
Without Shield
Medicare Advantage networks restrict specialist access. Out-of-network oncology at a major cancer center: $0 covered. A $90,000 treatment course is fully self-funded.
With Shield
A $150,000 Shield benefit covers the treatment course and six months of income replacement. Portfolio stays intact.
"My Medicare Advantage plan is fine for regular care. It was not designed for this."
The Concerned Adult Child
Senior director at a logistics firm. Parents are 71 and 68, both retired, both on Medicare. Neither has discussed critical illness coverage. One parent has a family history of colon cancer.
Without Shield
A critical diagnosis could require the adult child to provide $40,000–$80,000 in financial support, disrupting their own retirement savings trajectory.
With Shield
A Shield policy on one or both parents, purchased by the adult child, costs $140–$240/month and eliminates the financial dependency risk.
"I'm not worried about the medical outcome. I'm worried about what happens to their savings while they fight it."
What is your current age?
What you'll receive.
The analysis is not a sales brochure. It maps your specific Medicare coverage against the out-of-pocket costs for your highest-probability diagnoses based on age, coverage type, and family history. It tells you where the gap is, what it costs, and what a Shield policy would need to look like to close it.
Your estimated maximum out-of-pocket exposure by diagnosis
Medicare coverage gaps specific to your plan type
Recommended Shield benefit amount and estimated premium range
Comparison: portfolio liquidation scenario vs. Shield coverage
Next steps if you want to proceed — no obligation
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