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Health Care Reform Overview. Introduction. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act signed into law on 3/23/2010 Date of enactment Certain effective dates are based on this date Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act signed into law on 3/30/10
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Introduction • Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act signed into law on 3/23/2010 • Date of enactment • Certain effective dates are based on this date • Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act signed into law on 3/30/10 • Amended certain provisions in first bill • We still need a lot of new regulations, guidance, and clarification from Health and Human Services (HHS), the Department of Labor (DOL), and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
Introduction • For each year, we will look at Health Care Reform in the following categories: • Benefits and insurance mandates • Employer mandates • Tax provisions • Other miscellaneous changes
Acronyms • DOL = Department of Labor • EE = employee • EHB = Essential Health Benefit • FSA = Health Flexible Spending Account • GF = Grandfathered • HHS = Department of Health and Human Services • HIPAA = Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act • HRA = Health Reimbursement Arrangement • HSA = Health Savings Account • IRS = Internal Revenue Service • OE = Open Enrollment • PPACA = Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act • SBC = Summary of Benefit and Coverage • SPD = Summary Plan Description
What Is a Grandfathered vs. a New Plan? • Grandfathered Plan = any group health plan that was in existence on 3/23/10 • Plan can add new employees and new dependents and maintain Grandfathered Plan status • Affects your plan, whether Grandfathered or not: GF
How is Grandfathered Plan status lost? • The following changes from 3/23/10 plan provisions will cause a loss of Grandfathered Plan status: • Elimination of all or substantially all benefits to diagnose or treat a particular condition • Increase to cost-sharing percentage, such as coinsurance • Increase to fixed-amount cost-sharing components, such as deductible or out-of-pocket maximum, by a total percentage that is more than medical inflation + 15% • Increase to co-pay levels by a total percentage that is more than medical inflation + 15% or by medical inflation + $5 • Decrease to employer contribution percentage of total premium by more than 5%
How is Grandfathered Plan status lost? • The following changes from 3/23/10 plan provisions will cause loss of Grandfathered Plan status, cont’d: • Establishment of new or stricter overall annual limit on the dollar value of all benefits • Grandfathered Plans must also maintain records of plan terms as of 3/23/10 and distribute a statement to all participants communicating that the plan is intended to be a Grandfathered Plan • Statement must be included with SPD and at OE for as long as plan remains a Grandfathered Plan
Plan Years on or after 9/23/2010 – Insurance Market Reforms GF • All New and Grandfathered Group Health Plans must include the following Insurance Market Reforms: • Adult dependent coverage extended up to age 26 • Exception for grandfathered plans – may exclude dependents with access to employer-sponsored coverage • No rescission of coverage, except in cases of fraud or intentional misrepresentation • No preexisting condition exclusions for children under age 19 • No “restrictive” annual limits on minimum essential benefits • No lifetime limits on minimum essential benefits • Slides 8-19 look at each of these reforms in depth
Adult Dependent Coverage Mandate • Effective for your first plan year that starts on or after 9/23/2010, medical plans that cover dependents must amend dependent eligibility to make coverage available up to their 26th birthday • May not limit eligibility by financial dependence, full-time student status, residency, or marital status • Only applies to medical plan – not stand-alone dental or vision • Required for all employer-sponsored health plans that cover dependents • Some states require fully-insured policies to cover beyond 26th birthday (e.g., Florida, Ohio, New Jersey, New York) • Exception for Grandfathered plans – may exclude adult dependents with access to employer-sponsored coverage until 2014
Tax Treatment of Health Care Benefits Provided to Adult Dependents • Eff. 3/30/2010, IRS amended tax code to allow tax-free health care benefits provided to adult dependents through end of year in which they turn 26 • No change to definition of dependent under Sec. 152 • Otherwise, employees would have to pay income tax on value of coverage provided to adult dependents • Regardless of financial dependence, full-time student status, residency, or marital status • May involve a change to Cafeteria Plan Doc
Tax Treatment of Health Care Benefits Provided to Adult Dependents, cont’d • Allows tax-free reimbursements under health FSAs and HRAs • NOT required, but many employers will want to sync these benefits with terms of Medical Plan • Look at FSA and HRA documentation to see how “dependent” is defined • Plan may amend FSA to cover adult dependents retroactively to 3/30/2010, but must be done no later than 12/31/2010; otherwise, wait until start of Plan Year in 2011
Rescissions • Plans are prohibited from rescinding coverage except in cases of fraud or intentional misrepresentation • “Rescission” defined as “a cancellation or discontinuance of coverage that has a retroactive effect” • Rescission not allowed in cases of unintentional omission on the part of the enrollee, nor in cases of administrative error on the part of the plan sponsor • Coverage may be discontinued prospectively, but never retroactively
Rescissions, cont’d • In cases of fraud or intentional misrepresentation, sponsor/carrier must provide 30 days advance notice so enrollee can appeal or find alternate coverage • Coverage must be maintained pending appeal decision
Preexisting Condition Exclusions (“PCEs”) • Plans are prohibited from excluding coverage for any preexisting condition for children under the age of 19 • For plan years starting 1/1/2014, this prohibition will extend to adults as well • An exclusion for a condition is not considered a PCE if it applies regardless of when the condition arose relative to the effective date of the coverage (i.e., if it applies to everyone equally)
Annual Limits • Plans are prohibited from imposing annual limits that are considered “restrictive” • HHS has defined “restrictive” in terms of dollar amount limits phased in over 3 years: • For Plan Years starting on or after 9/23/2010, limits may not be less than $750,000 • For Plan Years starting on or after 9/23/2011, limits may not be less than $1.25 million • For Plan Years starting on or after 9/23/2012, limits may not be less than $2 million
Annual Limits, cont’d • For Plan Years starting 1/1/2014, all annual limits on minimum essential benefits are prohibited • For both annual and lifetime limits, only limits that are expressed in terms of dollar amounts are prohibited or restricted • Non-monetary limits such as number of visits or days of treatment still allowed • Limits apply on individual basis, so if one family member reaches the limit, other family members may continue to receive benefits
Annual Limits, cont’d • HHS established a waiver program for limited benefit or “mini-med” plans that would otherwise be unable to comply with the annual limit prohibition • Plan must demonstrate that compliance would result in either a significant decrease in access to benefits (e.g., termination of the plan), or a significant increase in premiums • Applications only accepted through 9/22/2011 • Information can be found at http://www.hhs.gov/ociio/regulations/annual_limit_waivers.html • These limits do not apply to FSAs or HSAs, which have their own limits, or to retiree-only plans
Lifetime Limits • Plans are prohibited from imposing lifetime limits on the dollar value of minimum essential benefits • An exclusion of allbenefits for a condition will not be considered a prohibited limit • Any plan participant who previously reached the lifetime limit must be allowed to enroll again into any benefit package available to similarly-situated employees at initial enrollment
Lifetime Limits, cont’d • Sponsors of plans that currently have a lifetime limit must distribute a notice to all employees advising them of the elimination of the limit and the opportunity to reenroll • Notice must be provided on a one-time basis by the first day of the plan year starting on or after 9/23/2010 • May be included with Open Enrollment materials, but must remain prominent • Model Notice is available from your Account Representative
Plan Years on or after 9/23/10 – Patient Protections • All New Plans must include the following Patient Protections: • Enrollees must have the right to select any Primary Care Physician or Pediatrician that is available and participating • Emergency services must be provided without authorization and with equal cost-sharing for both in- and out-of-network providers • OB/GYN services must be available without preauthorization or referral
Plan Years on or after 9/23/10 • For All New Plans: • Provide first-dollar coverage (i.e. no deductibles, co-payments, or other cost-sharing) for evidence-based preventive care • Regs issued 7/14/2010 • Sec. 105(h) Nondiscrimination Rules will now apply to fully-insured plans, prohibiting discrimination with respect to benefits or eligibility based on salary or anything that favors higher-paid employees • Postponed indefinitely until further guidance is issued • Establish internal and external appeals processes • Regs issued 7/23/2010, most requirements postponed to 1/1/2012 • Subject to the same transparency requirements as insurance carriers • Postponed until further guidance is issued
2010 – Small Employer Tax Credit GF • Tax Credit for Small Employers with New or Grandfathered Plans: • Must have 25 or fewer employees and average annual wages of less than $50,000 • For 2010 through 2013, tax credit equals up to 35% of the employer’s contribution amount if the employer contributes at least 50% of the total premium cost or 50% of a benchmark premium • The full credit is available to employers with 10 or fewer employees and average annual wages less than $25,000; credit amount phases out as employer size and average wage increase • Tax-exempt small employers meeting these requirements are eligible for a tax credit of up to 25% of the employer’s contribution amount
2010 – Early Retiree Reinsurance Program GF • Effective 6/1/10, a $5 billion fund was created to reinsure employer-sponsored health care provided to early retirees age 55 to 64 and their dependents • Reimburses 80% of the cost of such care per enrollee between $15,000 and $90,000 • Sponsor must use funds to lower costs for the plan and/or participants • Available until funds are exhausted or 2014, whichever comes first • Applications and information found at www.errp.gov • HHS will not accept any new applications after 5/5/2011
2010 – Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan • Effective 7/1/2010, temporary national high-risk pool, called the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan, established to provide coverage for those with preexisting conditions who have been without health insurance for at least 6 months • Cost-sharing may not exceed the levels in place for HSAs • Disappears when exchanges open in 2014 • Penalty for employers who push employees off group health plan and into pool • Information found at www.pcip.gov
2011 – Medical Loss Ratios (MLRs) GF • Carriers must maintain a medical loss ratio of not less than 80% for small plans (defined as 50 or fewer employees) and 85% for large plans • Applies to fully-insured policies only • Figures based on insurer’s book of business in a region • Insurers must submit a report to HHS disclosing their loss ratio figures by June 1 • Insurers must provide rebates for coverage that does not loss ratios to policyholders or subscribers in the form of cash payment or reduced future premiums, by August 1 • For first year only, insurers must distribute notice when MLR is met • Final regs issued 12/2/2011
2011 – Cafeteria Plans GF • Tax Provisions that Affect Employers with New or Grandfathered Plans: • Effective 1/1/11, the definition of qualified medical expenses for FSAs, HSAs and HRAs will be conformed to a single definition • OTC drugs will only qualify for reimbursement with a prescription • Small employers can establish Simple Cafeteria Plans to fund coverage on a pre-tax basis • “Small” = 100 or fewer employees during either of two preceding years • Exemption from Sec. 125 nondiscrimination testing requirements applicable to highly-compensated and key employees
2011 – Medicare Part D and HSAs • Other Changes: • Medicare Part D beneficiaries are eligible for a 50% discount on all brand-name and authorized generic drugs purchased in the “donut hole” coverage gap • Discounts increase until the gap is completely phased out by 2020 • Effective 1/1/11, the tax on withdrawals from HSAs prior to age 65 that are not for qualified medical expenses will double from 10% to 20%
2012 – Benefit Disclosure to HHS GF • For All Employers with New or Grandfathered Plans: • Effective 3/1/12, sponsors must annually report to HHS and to beneficiaries at open enrollment information on benefits that improve health, such as case management, disease management, and wellness programs • HHS must develop the reporting standards first • Penalties for failure to provide
2012 – Summaries of Benefits and Coverage GF • Insurers, administrators, and employers must distribute a Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) to all employees and beneficiaries at both initial enrollment and annually at open enrollment • Effective for OE starting on or after 9/23/12 • May be provided as stand-alone or with SPD • Must conform to template published by HHS • Notice of Modification must be distributed at least 60 days before any mid-year plan changes take effect • Plans must also make Uniform Glossary of Terms available • See Technical Monograph No. 107
2012 – Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Fees GF • Insurers for fully-insured policies and plan sponsors of self-funded plans must pay a fee starting for Plan Years ending after 9/30/2012 • Fee equals $1 per covered life in the medical plan for the first year and $2 per covered life each year thereafter • Payment ends for the Plan Year ending after 9/30/2019 • Covered lives can be calculated using a number of approved methods, including averaged snapshots from each quarter and the Form 5500 reported figure • Fee is due with Form 720, Federal Excise Tax Return, by the following July 31
2012 – Form W-2 Reporting GF • Employers must report the total value of health insurance coverage on their employees’ W-2s • Applies to ALL employers, regardless of size, self- vs. fully-insured, church or government plan sponsor, or GF status • Applies to W-2s issued to each employee, incl. full-time, part-time, terminated, and seasonal • Originally required for 2011 W-2s, but IRS postponed compliance: • Until January 2013 for full 2012 tax year for employers who filed 250+ W-2s for 2011 • Until further guidance is published for employers who filed fewer than 250 W-2s for 2011 and for self-funded plans not subject to federal COBRA
2012 – Form W-2 Reporting, cont’d GF • Total value = COBRA-equivalent rate minus 2% admin fee, includes the following types of coverage: • Major medical • Any FSA value in excess of EE’s own election amount • Pre-tax or employer-paid hospital indemnity or illness coverage • EAPs, on-site clinics, and wellness programs that are subject to COBRA • Following coverage types are not reportable: • EE-only FSA elections • All HSA contributions • After-tax EE-paid hospital indemnity or illness coverage
2012 – Form W-2 Reporting, cont’d GF • Following coverage types are optional to report and subject to change in future guidance: • Stand-alone dental or vision coverage • HRA contributions • EAPs, on-site clinics, and wellness programs that are not subject to COBRA • Self-funded plans not subject to federal COBRA • Third-party sick-pay • Value is nottaxable
2013 – Tax Provisions GF • Effective 1/1/13, annual contribution amounts for FSAs will be capped at $2,500 • Increased annually for inflation • No change in $5,000 annual cap for Dependent Care accounts • Effective 1/1/13, the tax exclusion for the federal subsidy paid to employers that maintain prescription drug plans for Medicare Part D-eligible retirees is eliminated
2013 – Tax Provisions, cont’d • Employees with wage income in excess of $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (joint) are subject to an additional 0.9% Medicare tax • No change to employer Medicare tax • Employers must withhold additional tax if EE makes more than $200,000 from that particular employer; not required to consider spouse’s income • Employers who fail to withhold are subject to penalties; EE must remit unpaid tax
2014 – Essential Health Benefits (EHBs) • Non-Grandfathered small group health plans must include following 10 categories of benefits: • Ambulatory patient services • Emergency services • Hospitalization • Maternity and newborn care • Mental health, behavioral health, and substance abuse • Prescription drugs • Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices • Laboratory services • Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management • Pediatric services, including oral and vision care
2014 – EHBs, cont’d • In departure from original plan, each state will develop own list of EHBs • According to 12/16/11 HHS bulletin, states must choose single benchmark plan based on 4 alternatives: • the largest plan by enrollment in any of the three largest small group insurance products in the State’s small group market • any of the largest three State employee health benefit plans by enrollment • any of the largest three national FEHBP options by enrollment; or • the largest insured commercial non-Medicaid Health Maintenance Organization • What about state mandates?
2014 – EHBs, cont’d • What about large plans, self-insured plans, and GF plans? • For 2014 and 2015, each state may choose to define “small” as either having 50 or fewer EEs or having 100 or fewer EEs • Starting in 2016, “small” will be defined as having 100 or fewer EEs • Large, self-insured, and GF plans may not impose lifetime limits or annual limits on EHBs • Will satisfy requirement if they use same definition of EHBs as benchmark plan • Federal government will use enforcement discretion as long as plans make “good faith effort” to comply
Plan Years beginning in 2014 – More Insurance Market Reforms GF • All New and Grandfathered Group Health Plans must include the following: • Adult dependent coverage available up to age 26 regardless of availability of other employer-sponsored coverage • No preexisting condition exclusions for adults • No annual limits on minimum essential benefits • No eligibility waiting periods lasting longer than 90 days • Coverage despite participation in a clinical trial
Plan Years beginning in 2014 – Cost-Sharing • For All New Group Health Plans: • Plans may not impose cost-sharing limits (i.e., deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums) greater than those in effect for HSAs
2014? – Nondiscrimination Rules • Non-Grandfathered fully-insured group health plans will have to pass Nondiscrimination Rules found in IRC Sec. 105(h) • Rules already apply to all self-insured plans • Prohibits discrimination with respect to benefits or eligibility based on age, years or service, or compensation • Penalty for non-compliance is $100 excise tax per day per affected individual • IRS Notice issued 1/10/2011 does not require compliance until after further guidance or regs are issued • Anticipated before 2014
2014 – Wellness Programs GF • For All New and Grandfathered Group Health Plans: • HIPAA Nondiscrimination Rules for Wellness Programs are codified, and the maximum incentive amount for plan participants that achieve a health status target is raised from 20% of the premium to 30% • Option for HHS to raise to 50%
2014 – Free Rider Penalties GF • Applies to employers with 50+ full-time equivalent employees • Full-time is defined as working 30 hours/week • IRS intends to issue proposed regs re: determining full-time status and prorating part-time EEs • Penalties generally incurred for 2 reasons: • Employer does not offer full-time EEs and their dependents the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential coverage • Employer offers minimum essential coverage, but the coverage is deemed “unaffordable” or does not provide “minimum value”
GF 2014 – Free Choice Vouchers • Effective 2014, PPACA gave certain qualifying employees of employers that provide coverage and make contributions the option of either participating in the group health plan or taking the employer contribution in the form of a voucher and finding coverage on the Exchanges • In the federal funding deal signed by President on 4/15/2011, Free Choice Vouchers were eliminated
2014? – More Form W-2 Reporting GF • Effective for the 2014 tax year, employers must begin reporting additional information about their group health plan on each employee's W-2, including: • whether they offer EEs and their dependents the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential benefits • the length of any applicable eligibility waiting period • the lowest cost option in each enrollment category under the plan • the employer's share of total allowed costs of benefits under the plan
2014 – Small Employer Tax Credit GF • Tax Credit for Small Employers with New or Grandfathered Plans: • Applies to employers with 25 or fewer EEs and average annual wages of less than $50,000 • Amount of full tax credit available to qualifying small employers increases from 35% to 50% of the employer's contribution amount • Amount of full tax credit available to qualifying tax-exempt small employers increases from 25% to 35% of the employer's contribution amount • Available for 2 years
2014 – State Insurance Exchanges • States must create insurance Exchanges where individuals and employers can buy insurance • The Exchanges must include "bronze," "silver," "gold," and "platinum" actuarially-valued levels of benefits • Participation limited to individuals and small employers under 100 EEs before 2017 • Federal subsidies for the Exchanges will be available on a sliding scale for those earning between 133% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level • Individuals with incomes below 133% of the Federal Poverty Level will be entitled to Medicaid
2014 – Individual Mandate • Individuals must obtain coverage or pay an income tax penalty equal to (1) the greater of $95 or 1% of income in 2014, (2) the greater of $325 or 2% of income in 2015, and (3) the greater of $695 or 2.5% of income in 2016 • Individuals making less than the tax filing threshold are exempt from the mandate • Challenged in federal court; Supreme Court has agreed to hear case in Spring 2012
2015? – Auto-Enrollment GF • Employers with 200+ full-time employees must auto-enroll all full-time employees into the group health plan, subject to any applicable and permissible eligibility waiting period • Employers must provide adequate notice, including information about the Exchanges, and give employees the opportunity to opt-out of the automatic coverage and elect another option or opt-out of the plan altogether • No effective date published for auto-enrollment – becomes effective once HHS publishes regulations • In IRS Notice 2012-17, published 2/9/12, DOL indicated guidance would not be ready in time for 2014 implementation
2018 – “Cadillac Plan” Tax GF • Plans must pay a 40% excise tax on the value of any health plan that exceeds the threshold of $10,200 for single coverage and $27,500 for family coverage • If, by 2018, health care inflation is increasing at a higher rate than expected, the thresholds will be automatically adjusted upwards • The tax will apply to both self-insured and fully-insured group plans and will be calculated based on the amount of the premium that exceeds the threshold • The threshold amounts will be indexed for inflation at CPI-U + 1% for 2019; in 2020 and beyond, the threshold will be indexed at general inflation only