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The State of Coverage Karen Davenport Director of Health Policy Stephanie Glover Health Policy Fellow Dania Palanker Senior Counsel . Presentation Outline. Findings and Violations in Qualified Health Plans State Partners Update Oversight and Enforcement
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The State of Coverage Karen Davenport Director of Health Policy Stephanie Glover Health Policy Fellow Dania Palanker Senior Counsel
Presentation Outline • Findings and Violations in Qualified Health Plans • State Partners Update • Oversight and Enforcement • Connection to Essential Health Benefits Work • Discussion
Introduction • Over 4.3 million women have enrolled in a qualified health plan • 56 percent of all Marketplace enrollees • The ACA promises improved coverage for women’s health – which must be backed up by health plans that meet women’s needs • What does women’s health coverage look like? • Are QHPs complying with the ACA? • Are QHPs meeting the needs of women?
Scope of Analysis • Reviewed plan documents from 56 issuers across ten states • CO, CT, ME, MD, NV, RI, SD, TN, WA, WI • Focused exclusively on language in plan documents • Analysis of women’s preventive services, including such as contraception, well-woman visits, and lactation supports; prenatal and other maternity care; abortion services; genetic testing; and exclusion policies.
Findings: Maternity Coverage • Limited information provided on details of maternity and newborn coverage • Major violations: • Coverage excluded for dependents • Service area restrictions • Limit on ultrasounds
Findings: Preventive Services • The vast majority of issuers reference USPSTF and HRSA guidelines in the preventive service sections. • Language elsewhere in the documents often contradicts this coverage • Major violations: • Cost sharing for preventive services • Time limits on breastfeeding support and supplies • Failure to cover brand name contraception • Genetic testing exclusion
Findings: Abortion Coverage • Issuers are not required to provide abortion coverage but as a critical area for women’s health, we reviewed to make sure the coverage policies were clear for consumers. • Problems and concerns: • Different abortion coverage for enrollees receiving a tax credit • Plans that cover abortion but don’t apply costs to the deductible • Lack of definition around “elective”
Findings: Other Major Concerns • Coverage Details Undermine ACA Requirements • Example: limited to a manual breast pump • Overly Restrictive Coverage • Example: off-label use of Rx medications excluded from coverage • Misleading or Contradictory Information • Example: excluding contraceptive drugs and devices from coverage “except as required by law”
Problematic for Women’s Health • These violations and concerns could lead to major problems for women’s health and finances. Women could: • Be denied coverage for services required to be covered by their QHP • Face unnecessary cost-sharing or pay out-of-pocket for services their plan should cover, • Or go without needed health care
Summary • Health plans must comply with the ACA and implementing regulation • State and federal regulators need to provide strong oversight to ensure plans are complying • Plans should be required to fix current problems • 2015 plans should be better • And, consumers need complete and accurate information about their coverage policies
Oversight and Enforcement • State work: • CO, MD, WA: ongoing enforcement work with state partners • WI: beginning stages of state developing strategy • CT, NV, RI, SD, TN: no current partners, NWLC will contact regulators directly • Federal work: • HHS advocacy: encouraging stronger oversight of plans in FFM states • OPM advocacy: encouraging stronger oversight of multi-state plans • OCR complaints where possible
Essential Health Benefits • Opportunity to re-visit EHB for 2016 plan year • What we’re doing: EHB workgroup • Areas for improvement: • Maternity • Prescription Drugs • Mental Health • Other?
Discussion • What coverage issues are you seeing in your state? • What is the status of oversight and enforcement in your state? • How are SBCs enforced? • What are the most important coverage areas to improve through EHB advocacy? • Are there other avenues for improving coverage (for example, state initiatives)?