Title: Health Care Reform and Legislative Updates
1Health Care Reform and Legislative Updates
- Fringe Benefits Consortium - Board Meeting
- January 23, 2009
- Presented by Maggie Beauchamp
- FBC Programs Manager
2Agenda
- Update on Health Care Reform Reality Check
- Legislative Updates
- Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA)
- Michelles Law (Required coverage for Dependent
Students) - Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA)
- What is a Disability on or after January 1, 2009?
- Family Medical Leave Act Amendments
- Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act
(HEART) - Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
Reporting
3Statistics
- The biggest driver of health care reform is the
uninsured or underinsured - Why are so many uninsured?
- Rates are too high (CA rates are actually the 6th
lowest in U.S.) - Cant access coverage due to poor health and
being declined - Dont know what is available through public
programs - Low-cost plans are available, need education or
resources - Politics drive the issues
4Update on Health Care Reform
- California Reform Provisions
- Expand eligibility for lower income
- Open to all California residents
- Guarantee Issue Coverage
- Mandate for everyone to buy coverage
- Create pools for the uninsured to provide a more
affordable plan - Employer pay or play mandate requiring employers
to provide meaningful coverage or pay into a
health care system for those with no coverage - On an average, employers pay 10-11 towards
employee benefits. (The pay or play program
previously talked about a 4 payroll tax for
employers who do not play. Who will want to play
anymore at 10-11 when you would only pay 4 and
who will pay for the difference in costs?)
5Update on Health Care Reform
- Obamas Proposal
- Employer pay or play mandate requiring employers
to provide meaningful coverage or pay into a
national health care system for employees with no
coverage - National Health Plan for uninsured/low-income
coverage would be based on the Federal Employee
Health Benefit Program - Expand eligibility for Medicaid/SCHIP programs so
more can be covered - Apply strict limits on loss ratios (Limit
carriers on what they can spend on claims and
what can be spent on administrative fees
85/15) - Guarantee Issue and Portability on a National
Basis - Require Electronic Medical Records and
Transparency of Health Care Costs - Federal Reinsurance to employers to cover
catastrophic illness costs - Subsidies for low-income who do not qualify for
Medicaid or SCHIP
6Universal Coverage vs. Single Payor
- Universal Coverage (Everyone has something that
fits for them) - Single Payor System (Government pays for your
health care, no more insurance companies, similar
to Medicare for all, funded by taxes) - Closest example of a Single Payor System is
Canada whose population is LESS than Californias
population - Does not include RX coverage
- Hospitals funded annually upfront, funds run out
and programs are shut down - Health care system consumed 45 of Canadas
budget and that rate is growing at a fast rate,
system is subject to budgets - Costs associated with bureaucracy
- Rationing and waits for care, the average wait
for an Emergency Room visit is 24 hours, to
schedule an MRI is 6 months, Cancer treatment
upon diagnosis wait is 6.5 weeks - Minimum tax bracket in Canada is 35, the highest
is 60 - Should government make life or death decisions
based on cost?
7Recent Health Care Reform Updates
- The U.S. House of Representatives voted on
January 14, 2009, to expand a childrens program
and raise cigarette taxes to pay for it - The bill passed by the House aims to increase the
number of children enrolled in the program to
about 11 million from 6.7 million. The expanded
program is paid for in part by raising the
cigarette tax to 1 a pack. Taxes on cigars and
other tobacco products also would rise - The program is designed to provide health care to
children in families who are unable to afford
health insurance but earn too much to qualify for
the Medicaid health care program for the poor
8Reality of Health Care Reform
- Everyone has their hands in it legislators,
activists, the media, social groups - It is extremely difficult to fix the broken
health care system - There is NO MONEY and the economic crisis is a
higher priority - People always want choice and do not want
government to make life/death decisions on their
behalf based on cost - The current system works for 85-95 of the
people although some change is needed - Consider the consequences and the overall impact
of those changes and what the true end result of
the costs will be - Change is coming! Changes need to be made
appropriately, reasonably and in increments
9Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA)(HR 1424)
- MHPA was enacted in 1996 to provide parity
between mental health and medical/surgical
benefits in terms of lifetime or annual dollar
limits. MHPA was extended year-by-year and had
shortcomings - Expanded mental health and substance abuse parity
requirements have become law as part of EESA
(Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008) - Current Goal for group health plans to provide
mental health and substance abuse coverage on par
with medical and surgical benefits - Effective Dates
- For plan years beginning after October 3, 2009
(January 1, 2010, for calendar-year plans) - Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs) ratified
before October 3, 2008, the later of January 1,
2009, or termination date of the last CBA
relating to the plan
10Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA)(HR 1424)
- New parity requirements
- Financial limitations and treatment
limitations parity prohibits more restrictive
limitations for mental health or substance abuse
disorder benefits than for medical/surgical
benefits - Financial limitations include deductibles,
co-payments, co-insurance, and out-of-pocket
expenses. Also, no separate cost-sharing
arrangements - Treatment limitations include limits on frequency
of treatment, number of visits, days of coverage
or other similar limits on the scope or duration
of treatment - Out of network coverage Required for mental
health and substance abuse disorders if provided
for medical and surgical benefits
11Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA)(HR 1424)
- Items to note
- Flexibility in plan design retainedplan sponsor
can define covered services subject to applicable
federal and state laws - DOES NOT require plans to provide mental health
or substance abuse disorder benefits - If there is such a coverage, parity requirements
apply - Requirement to provide out-of-network coverage if
plan does so for medical and surgical - Exemptions
- Not applicable to employers with fewer than 50
employees - Cost exemption
- Plan must establish that compliance with changes
will result in a cost increase of more than 2 in
the first year and more than 1 each subsequent
year. Requires certification by qualified and
licensed actuaries and notice to governmental
agencies and participants
12 Michelles Law (Reqd coverage for Dependent
Students)
- NH HB 37 aka Michelles Law named after Michelle
Morse - Allows full-time college students to take up to
12 months medical leave and requires
non-termination of coverage - Applies to students who are covered under their
parents group health insurance plan - Medical leave can mean that the student is
absent from school or reduces his/her course load
to part-time - The date the medical leave begins is determined
by a students physician with written
certification to establish medical necessity - Effective for plan years beginning on or after
October 9, 2009 - (January 1, 2010 for calendar year plans)
13Michelles Law (Reqd coverage for Dependent
Students)
- Entitled to same level of benefits during leave
as prior to leave - If changes are made to the plan, dependent
remains eligible for changed coverage. Cannot
single out those on medical leave - Notice is required of the right of coverage
should be included with any notice regarding a
requirement for student status for coverage under
the plan - What is not as clear is how Michelles Law
interacts with another law that protects plan
participants when they lose eligibility for
coverage COBRA. There are four areas that need
additional clarity - Length of COBRA coverage
- Alternative coverage
- Timing of COBRA election and certification of
Michelles Law leave - COBRA notice requirements
14Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA)
- Prohibits discrimination by Group Health Plans,
insurers and employers based on genetic
information - Genetic information includes genetic tests of an
individual or family member plus manifestation of
a disease or disorder in family member - Nondiscrimination requirements in health coverage
with respect to premiums, genetic testing and
underwriting, effective for plan years beginning
after May 21, 2009 - Nondiscrimination requirements in employer
practices with respect to compensation, terms,
conditions or privileges of employment, cannot
request genetic info or use known info, effective
after November 21, 2009 - Revisions to HIPAAs privacy regulations to
include GINA
15What is a Disability on or after January 1,
2009?
- The purpose of the changes is to reinstate a
broad scope of protection - Definition of key terms added to expand the
definition of Disability under ADA effective
January 1, 2009 - Major life activities to now include
communicating and reading to the list of
major life activities (caring for oneself,
performing manual tasks, walking, talking,
breathing, concentrating, thinking and working - Major bodily functions - includes but is not
limited to, functions of the immune system,
digestive, neurological, brain, respiratory,
reproductive functions - Substantially limits - in order to be
considered a disability, an impairment that
substantially limits one major life activity need
not limit other major life activities
16What is a Disability on or after January 1, 2009?
- The ADA Amendment Act provides rules of
construction that are to be applied when
determining whether an individual has a
disability (In favor of broader coverage) - An employer may not discriminate against a
qualified individual on the basis of disability
with respect to (among other things) fringe
benefits, such as coverage provided under Group
Health Plans
17Family Medical Leave Act Amendments
- Updates the FMLA regulations to implement new
military family leave entitlements enacted under
the National Defense Authorization Act for FY
2008 effective on January 16, 2009 - Military Caregiver Leave - eligible employees who
are family members of covered servicemembers will
be able to take up to 26 workweeks of leave in a
single 12-month period to care for a covered
servicemember with a serious illness or injury
incurred in the line of duty on active duty - This 26 workweek entitlement is a special
provision that extends FMLA job-protected leave
beyond the normal 12 weeks of FMLA leave. This
provision also extends FMLA protection to
additional family members (i.e., next of kin)
beyond those who may take FMLA leave for other
qualifying reasons
18Family Medical Leave Act Amendments
- Qualifying Exigency Leave helps families of
members of the National Guard and Reserves manage
their affairs while the member is on active duty
in support of a contingency operation. - This provision makes the normal 12 workweeks of
FMLA job-protected leave available to eligible
employees with a covered military member serving
in the National Guard or Reserves to use for any
qualifying exigency arising out of the fact that
a covered military member is on active duty or
called to active duty status in support of a
contingency operation. Defines qualifying
exigency by referring to a number of broad
categories for which employees can use FMLA
leave - Short-notice deployment
- Military events and related activities
- Childcare and school activities
- Financial and legal arrangements
- Counseling
- Rest and recuperation
- Post-deployment activities and
- Additional activities not encompassed in the
other categories, but agreed to by the employer
and employee
19Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act
(HEART)
- Signed into law on June 17, 2008 provides
benefits for U.S. Armed Forces members - Differential Pay Starting in 2009, reservists
differential pay will be treated as employee
wages subject to income tax withholding, and
therefore must be reported on Form W-2, not Form
1099 - Health FSA Balances Employees called to perform
military service for more than 179 days will be
able to get their unused health FSA balances as a
taxable cash distribution before the FSA plan
year ends. (Effective for distributions after
June 17, 2008) This is a plan option and is not
a requirement of the employer. Plan documents
need amendment if the employer elects this option
for employees
20Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
Mandatory Reporting Requirement
- Effective January 1, 2009, new reports will help
CMS more effectively enforce Medicare secondary
payer (MSP) rules - Which group health plans must meet this reporting
requirement? - Any plan, whether insured or self-insured, that
an employer sponsors or to which an employer
contributes - Includes plans for current or former employees,
business associates or their families union
plans and federal or state governmental plans - NOT Plans covering only retirees or other former
employees - Who must submit new reports?
- Insurers, TPAs, and administrators of group
health plans that are both self-insured and
self-administered are responsible for submitting
the new reports to CMS - Any of these entities can appoint an agent to
handle reporting, and if a TPA manages an
insurers claim payments, the TPA is responsible
for the reports - What are the next steps for employers?
- Work with insurers, TPAs or other reporting
agents to monitor CMS guidance and identify the
information required
21Its Time for Jeopardy!
Tom Daschle?
- President Obamas Nomination for the Position of
The Secretary of Health and Human Services
22Thank you!
- The FBC Staff would like to thank you for your
attendance today and for your continued support
of the - Fringe Benefits Consortium!