Week 6 Discussion Question

Impact of the ACA Provisions – Part 2

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Scenario: Read

You are a Compliance Officer in a healthcare organization in the U.S. You have been asked to research the impact of one provision from the Affordable Care Act (ACA) law on your organization. You may use the organization where you currently work, if applicable. If you do not work in healthcare in the U.S., you may use the Cleveland Clinic, which has ample publicly reported data.

Choose Only ONE of the ACA healthcare provisions from the list below:

  • Ensuring Quality of Care
  • Patient Protections
  • Ensuring that Consumers Receive Value for their Dollars
  • Administrative Simplification Requirements
  • Employer Responsibilities

Use the document in this week’s materials, PPACA Section by Section Overview, to read a summary of your chosen regulation. 

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Then research the topic in relation to your organization and respond to the prompts below:

  • Name and briefly describe the healthcare organization you are using for this DQ
  • Describe the provision you chose and explain how it impacts the activities of your organization
  • How does your organization comply with this provision?
  • What recommendations do you have for improvement?

No Plagiarismquality work

©2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners

Updated: 5/12/2011 1

Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Section-by-Section Analysis

Including Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act Amendments and Regulatory Guidance

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability

Effective
Date

PPACA
Section

Statutory
Section

Immediate Health Insurance Reforms

Annual and
Lifetime Limits

Plans may not establish lifetime limits on the dollar value of essential benefits.
Plans may only establish restricted limits prior to January 1, 2014 on essential
benefits as determined by the Secretary of HHS.

Lifetime limits:
All

plans

Annual limits:
All plans except
grandfathered
individual
market plans

6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2711

Regulations:
HHS released an interim final rule on June 28.

Plans may not establish lifetime limits.
Individuals who lost coverage under a plan because they reached the lifetime
maximum must be given notice that lifetime limits no longer apply and be given a
special enrollment period for enrollment under the same terms and conditions as
a similarly situated individual who did not lose coverage because they exhausted a
lifetime limit.

Annual limits on essential benefits are limited to:

$750,000 for plan years beginning 9/23/2010-9/23/2011

$1.25 million for plan years beginning 9/23/2011-9/23/2012

$2 million for plan years beginning 9/23/2012-12/31/2013
In determining whether an individual has reached the annual limit benefits, a plan
may only take into account essential benefits. A plan may petition HHS for
relaxation of the limits on annual limits if they would cause significant decrease
in access to benefits or premium increases.

Plans may still impose annual and lifetime limits on specific covered benefits that
are not essential benefits, which have not yet been defined in regulation. In the
interim, “the Departments will take into account good faith efforts to comply
with a reasonable interpretation of the term.”

These restrictions do not apply to health flexible spending arrangements

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-06-28/pdf/2010-15278

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 2

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Rescissions Coverage may be rescinded only for fraud or intentional misrepresentation of
material fact as prohibited by the terms of the coverage. Prior notification must
be made to policyholders prior to cancellation.

All plans 6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2712

HHS released an interim final rule on June 28.

Rescissions are defined as any retroactive cancellations of coverage, except for
those attributable to failure to pay premiums or contributions. These rules do
not apply to prospective cancellations.

A plan must provide at least 30 days advance written notice to each participant
who would be affected prior to rescinding coverage.

Coverage of
preventive health
services

Plans must provide coverage without cost-sharing for:

Services recommended by the US Preventive Services Task Force

Immunizations recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices of the CDC

Preventive care and screenings for infants, children and adolescents
supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration

Preventive care and screenings for women supported by the Health
Resources and Services Administration

Current recommendations from the US Preventive Services Task force for breast
cancer screenings will not be considered.

The Secretary will determine an interval of not less than 1 year after which new
recommendations will be incorporated.

Secretary of HHS

All non-
grandfathered
plans

6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2713

Regulations:
HHS released interim final rules on July 19.

Plans that have a network of providers may impose cost sharing for preventive
items and services delivered by out-of-network providers. Plans may use
reasonable medical management techniques for coverage of preventive items and
services to determine the frequency, timing, method, treatment or setting of
services to the extent that they are not specified in the relevant recommendation
or guideline.

If a preventive service is billed separately from an office visit, the plan may
impose cost sharing on the office visit. If it is not billed separately from the
office visit, then the plan may not impose cost-sharing on the visit if the primary
purpose of the visit is to receive the preventive item or service.

A plan may impose cost-sharing for a treatment not described in the regulations,

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-06-28/pdf/2010-15278

http://www.healthcare.gov/center/regulations/prevention/regs.html

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 3

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

even if that treatment results from an item or service that is.

This regulation expires on July 12, 2013, or such earlier date specified in final
regulations.

Extension of
adult dependent
coverage

Plans that provide dependent coverage must extend coverage to adult children up
to age 26. Carriers are not required to cover children of adult dependents.
The Secretary will define which adult children coverage must be extended.

For plan years beginning before 2014, group health plans will be required to
cover adult children only if the adult child is not eligible for employer-sponsored
coverage.

Secretary of HHS All plans 6 months
after
enactment

1001

HR 4872
§2301

PHSA 2714

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS released an interim final rule on May 13, 2010.

The rule clarifies that, with respect to children who have not attained age 26, a
plan or issuer may not define dependent for purposes of eligibility for dependent
coverage of children other than in terms of the relationship between the child
and the participant (in the individual market, the primary subscriber). Examples
of factors that cannot be used for defining dependent for purposes of eligibility
(or continued eligibility) include financial dependency on the participant or
primary subscriber (or any other person), residency with the participant or
primary subscriber (or any other person), student status, employment, eligibility
for other coverage, or any combination of these. Surcharges for coverage of
children under age 26 are not allowed except where the surcharges apply
regardless of the age of the child (up to age 26), and that, for children under age
26, the plan cannot vary benefits based on the age of the child.

The rule requires a plan or issuer to give a child whose coverage ended, or who
was denied coverage (or was not eligible for coverage) an opportunity to enroll
that continues for at least 30 days regardless of whether the plan or coverage
offers an open enrollment period and regardless of when any open enrollment
might otherwise occur. This enrollment period must be provided not later than
the first day of the first plan year (in the individual market, policy year) beginning
on or after September 23, 2010, even if the request for enrollment is made after
the first day of the plan year. In subsequent years, dependent coverage may be
elected for an eligible child in connection with normal enrollment opportunities
under the plan or coverage. Any child enrolling in group health plan coverage
pursuant to this enrollment right must be treated as a special enrollee, as provided
under the regulations interpreting the HIPAA portability provisions.

http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/contentStreamer?objectId=0900006480aecb38&disposition=attachment&contentType=pdf

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 4

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Accordingly, the child must be offered all the benefit packages available to
similarly situated individuals who did not lose coverage by reason of cessation of
dependent status and cannot be required to pay more.

Preexisting
condition
exclusions

A plan may not impose any preexisting condition exclusions. All plans except
grandfathered
individual
market plans

6 months
after
enactment for
under 19.

1201 &
10103(e)

PHSA 2704

Regulations:
HHS released an interim final rule on June 21.
Plans may not impose any exclusion of benefits (including a denial of coverage)
limit coverage based upon a preexisting condition, for an individual under age 19.

Uniform
explanation of
coverage
documents and
standardized
definitions

The Secretary must develop standards for a summary of benefits and coverage
explanation to be provided to all potential policyholders and enrollees. The
summary must contain:

Uniform definitions of insurance and medical terms

A description of coverage and cost sharing for each category of
essential benefits and other benefits

Exceptions, reductions and limitations in coverage

Renewability and continuation of coverage provisions

A “coverage facts label” that illustrates coverage under common
benefits scenarios

A statement of whether it provides minimum essential coverage with an
actuarial value of at least 60% that meets the requirements of the
individual mandate

A statement that the outline is a summary and that the actual policy
language should be consulted

A contact number for the consumer to call with additional questions
and the web address of where the actual policy language can be found.

The Secretary must consult with the NAIC, as well as a working group of
insurers, providers, patient advocates, and those representing individuals with
limited English proficiency.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation
with the NAIC
and a working
group of
consumer
advocacy
organizations,
insurers, health
care professionals,
patient advocates,
and other
qualified
individuals.

All plans Standards
developed
within 12
months.

Uniform
documents
implemented
within 24
months

1001 PHSA 2715

Provision of
additional
information

All plans must submit to the Secretary and State insurance commissioner and
make available to the public the following information in plain language:

Claims payment policies and practices

Periodic financial disclosures

Data on enrollment

Data on disenrollment

Data on the number of claims that are

denied

All non-
grandfathered
plans

6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA
2715A

http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/contentStreamer?objectId=0900006480b03a90&disposition=attachment&contentType=pdf

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 5

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Data on rating practices

Information on cost-sharing and payments with respect to out-of-
network coverage

Other information as determined appropriate by the Secretary

Prohibition on
discrimination
based on salary

Extends current law provisions prohibiting discrimination in favor of highly
compensated employees in self-insured group plans to fully-insured group plans.
The Secretary of HHS will develop rules.

Fully insured
non-
grandfathered
group health
plans

6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2716

Ensuring quality
of care

Plans must submit annual reports to the Secretary of HHS on whether the
benefits under the plan:

Improve health outcomes through activities such as quality reporting,
case management, care coordination, chronic disease management

Implement activities to prevent hospital readmission

Implement activities to improve patient safety and reduce medical errors

Implement wellness and health promotion activities

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
experts in health
care quality and
stakeholders

All non-
grandfathered
plans

2 years after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2717

Bringing down
the cost of health
care

Carriers must report to the Secretary of HHS the ratio of incurred losses
(incurred claims) plus loss adjustment expense (change in contract reserves) to
earned premiums. The report must include the percentage of total premium
revenue, after accounting for risk adjustment, premium corridors, and payments
of reinsurance that is expended on:

Reimbursement for clinical services

Activities that improve health care quality

All other non-claims expenses, including the nature of the costs,
excluding Federal and State taxes and licensing or regulatory fees

Insurers must provide a rebate to consumers if the percentage of premiums
expended for clinical services and activities that improve health care quality is less
than 85% in the large group market and 80% in the small group and individual
markets.

All hospitals must establish and make public a list of its standard charges for
items and services, including for diagnosis-related groups.

The NAIC shall
establish, by
December 31,
2010, uniform
definitions of the
categories of
expenses and
standardized
methodologies for
calculating
measures of them.

All fully insured
plans, including
grandfathered
plans

01/01/11 1001 PHSA 2718

Regulatory Guidance:
On November 22, HHS issued an interim final rule on November 22 and
technical corrections on December 30.

The regulations are based largely upon the NAIC’s Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act Medical Loss Ratio Regulation.

http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/2010-29596

http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/2010-32526

http://www.naic.org/documents/committees_ex_mlr_reg_asadopted

http://www.naic.org/documents/committees_ex_mlr_reg_asadopted

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 6

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

 “Plan Year” is defined as the calendar year, which means the Medical Loss
ratio will be calculated based on premiums received (minus taxes and fees)
and claims and quality improvement activities expenses beginning January 1
and ending December 31. The MLR report will be completed and any
required rebates will be paid in the following year.

 “Small Group” is defined as coverage issued to employers with 1-100
employees, unless, until 2016, state law specifies that the upper limit is 50.

 “Federal and State taxes and licensing and regulatory fees” are defined
as adopted by the NAIC in the Supplemental Blank. Taxes include all taxes
except federal income taxes on investment income.

 “Expenses to improve health care quality” are defined as adopted by the
NAIC in the Supplemental Blank. In essence, such activities include those
that: 1) improve health outcomes, including increasing the likelihood of
desired outcomes compared to baseline and reducing health disparities
among specified populations; 2) prevent hospital readmissions; 3) improve
safety and reduce medical errors, lower infection and mortality rates; 4)
increase wellness and promote health activities; or 5) enhance the use of
health care data to improve quality, transparency, and outcomes. The interim
final rule outlines some specific items that are included and not included in
these activities.

 Experience is aggregated by state, by market (individual, small group, large
group), and by licensed entity. In the case of an employer with employees in
more than one state, the experience of the employer would be aggregated in
the state where the contract was issued.

 Issuers who have blocks of business less than a given size can make a
credibility adjustment to their MLR calculation.

o Blocks with less than 1,000 life years are considered non-
credible and will not be required to pay rebates in most cases.

o Blocks greater than 1,000 but less than 75,000 life years may
add a credibility adjustment to the calculated MLR.

o The credibility adjustment is the product of a base factor that
varies by life years and a plan cost-sharing factor that varies by
deductible.

o Blocks greater than 75,000 life years are considered fully
credible and can’t use a credibility adjustment.

The factors for the credibility adjustment are as follows

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 7

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Table 1
Base Credibiilty Additive Adjustment Factors

Life Years Additive Adjustment

<1,000 No Credibility

1,000 8.3%

2,500 5.2%

5,000 3.7%

10,000 2.6%

25,000 1.6%

50,000 1.2%

75,000 0.0%

Table 2
Plan Cost-Sharing Adjustment Factors by Deductible

Range

<$2,500 1.00

$2,500 1.164

$5,000 1.402

>=$10,000 1.736

 Payment of Rebates. Rebates must be paid to the individual or entity that
paid the premium no later than August 1 of the year following the end of
the MLR reporting year. Issuers may provide rebates in the form of a
premium credit or lump-sum reimbursement. If the total rebate for a group
or individual policy is less than $5, insurers may instead aggregate them and
increase the rebates due policyholders whose rebates are above the $5
threshold. In the group market, insurers may enter into arrangements to
provide all rebates due a to a group to the policyholder for pro-rated
distribution to enrollees.

 Application to Expatriate and Limited Benefit Plans. Expatriate plans,
issued to U.S. nationals employed abroad are exempted from the MLR
requirement due to their higher intrinsic administrative costs and the fact
that these plans compete against plans issued by foreign insurers not subject
to U.S. law, but must aggregate and report data to HHS. Plans that have
received waivers from the restrictions on annual limits will be exempted
from the MLR requirement for a period of one year while HHS determines
what the future treatment of these plans will be. They will, however, be
required to submit MLR data to HHS on a quarterly basis.

 Adjustments. Insurance Commissioners may request an adjustment of the
minimum MLR for the individual market in their states. The interim final
rule specifies the procedure for requesting an adjustment and for

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 8

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

consideration of requests by HHS.

Appeals process Internal claims appeal process:

Group plans must incorporate the Department of Labor’s claims and
appeals procedures and update them to reflect standards established by
the Secretary of Labor.

Individual plans must incorporate applicable law requirements and
update them to reflect standards established by the Secretary of HHS.

External review:

All plans must comply with applicable state external review processes
that, at a minimum, include consumer protections in the NAIC
Uniform External Review Model Act (Model 76) or with minimum
standards established by the Secretary of HHS that is similar to the
NAIC model.

Secretaries of Labor
and HHS

All non-
grandfathered
plans
6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA 2719

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS released an interim final rule on July 23.

The regulations expand the definition of “adverse benefit determination” to
include rescissions of coverage whether or not there is an adverse effect upon
any particular benefit.

Internal Appeals
Plans must comply with the DOL Claims regulations, as published in the Federal
Register on Nov. 21, 2000, as currently modified. These modifications require
plans to:

Treat a rescission of coverage as an adverse benefit

Notify a claimant of a benefit determination involving urgent care as soon as
possible, taking into account the medical exigencies, but not later than 24
hours after the receipt of the claim, unless the claimant fails to provide
sufficient information

Allow a claimant to review the claim file and present evidence and testimony

Provide a claimant, free of charge, with any new or additional evidence or
rationales in connection with the claim as soon as possible

Ensure that all claims and appeals are adjudicated in a way designed to
ensure the independence and impartiality of the persons involved

Ensure that any notice of adverse benefit includes information sufficient to
identify the claim involved,

Ensure that the reason or reasons for the adverse benefit determination or
final internal adverse benefit determination includes the denial code and its
corresponding meaning, as well as a description of the plan’s or issuer’s

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-07-23/pdf/2010-18043

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 9

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

standard, if any, that was used in denying the claim. In the case of a final
internal adverse benefit determination, this description must also include a
discussion of the decision.

Provide a description of available internal appeals and external review
processes, including information on how to initiate an appeal.

Disclose the availability of, and contact information for, any applicable office
of health insurance consumer assistance or ombudsman to assist individuals
with the internal clams and appeals and external review processes.

All internal appeals processes are deemed to have been exhausted if a plan fails
to strictly adhere to all requirements and the claimant may file an external review.
Individual market plans must only provide for one level of internal review and
must retain records for six years.

External Appeals
If a state external review process provides, at a minimum, consumer protections
in the NAIC Uniform Health Carrier External Review Model Act (#76), then
carriers must meet that standard. Carriers in states whose processes do not meet
that standard and plans not subject to state regulation must comply with a new
Federal external review process that is similar to the NAIC model.

Patient
Protections

A plan that provides for designation of a primary care provider must allow the
choice of any participating primary care provider who is available to accept them,
including pediatricians.

If a plan provides coverage for emergency services, the plan must do so without
prior authorization, regardless of whether the provider is a participating provider.
Services provided by nonparticipating providers must be provided with cost-
sharing that is no greater than that which would apply for a participating provider
and without regard to any other restriction other than an exclusion or
coordination of benefits, an affiliation or waiting period, and cost-sharing.

A plan may not require authorization or referral for a female patient to receive
obstetric or gynecological care from a participating provider and must treat their
authorizations as the authorization of a primary care provider.

All non-
grandfathered
plans
6 months
after
enactment

1001 PHSA
2719A

Regulations:
HHS released an interim final rule on June 28.

Any cost-sharing requirement for emergency services provided out-of-network
cannot exceed cost-sharing requirements for in-network emergency services.
Enrollees may, however, be required to pay, in addition to the in-network cost-
sharing, any excess provider charges beyond the greater of: the following:

The median amount negotiated with in network providers for the

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-06-28/pdf/2010-15278

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 10

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

emergency service negotiated;

The amount for the emergency service calculated using the same
method the plan generally uses to determine payments for out-of
network services (such as the usual, customary, and reasonable amount),
excluding any in-network copayment or coinsurance imposed;

The amount that would be paid by Medicare for the emergency service,
excluding any in-network copayment or coinsurance imposed.

Any cost-sharing other than a copayment or coinsurance, such as a deductible,
may be applied if that requirement applies to out-of-network benefits.

A plan that requires the designation of a primary care provider must provide a
notice to each participant of the terms of the plan regarding this designation,
and any rights under this section. This notice must be provided with the
summary plan description or other description of benefits, or in the case of an
individual policy, when the issuer provides a primary subscriber with a policy,
certificate, or contract. The regulation provides model language.

Health insurance
consumer
assistance offices
and ombudsmen

The Secretary of HHS shall provide $30 million in grants to states to establish
and operate offices of health insurance consumer assistance or health insurance
ombudsman programs to:

Assist with the filing of complaints and appeals

Collect, track, and quantify problems and inquiries

Educate consumers on their rights and responsibilities

Assist consumers with enrollment in plans

Resolve problems with obtaining subsidies
As a condition of receiving a grant, a state must collect and report data on the
types of problems and inquiries encountered by consumers. The data shall be
used to identify areas where enforcement action is necessary and shall be shared
with state insurance regulators, the Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of
Treasury.

Date of
enactment

1002 PHSA 2793

Grant Requirements:
HHS released a grant announcement on July 22.
Applications must be submitted by September 10. Grant awards will be made
around October 8.
HHS will award grants based upon a state’s population to state agencies,
including insurance departments, independent offices of health insurance
consumer assistance, attorneys general, and independent state consumer
assistance agencies, or to nonprofit organizations contracting with the state.
Agencies receiving grants must be able to advocate freely and vigorously on
behalf of consumers and be capable of reporting objective data to the Secretary
on the responsiveness of agencies that oversee private health insurance and

https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=11720

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 11

Provision Notes
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Effective
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Section

group plans and public coverage.

Grant funds must be used to support the following activities:

Assist with the filing of complaints and appeals;

Collect, track and quantify problems and inquiries encountered by
consumers;

Educate consumers on their rights and responsibilities with respect to
group health plans and health insurance coverage;

Assist consumers with enrollment in group health plans or health
insurance coverage by providing information, referral, and assistance;
and

Resolve problems obtaining premium subsidies/

Entities receiving grants must provide quarterly data to HHS on:

Caseload

Caller demographics

Types of coverage involved

Problem types

Data on referrals and responsiveness

Case resolution

Data on recovered benefits

Data on provider and industry behavior

Ensuring that
consumers get
value for their
dollars

The Secretary, in conjunction with the states, shall develop a process for the
annual review of unreasonable premium increases for health insurance coverage.
The process shall require insurers to submit to the State and the Secretary a
justification for an unreasonable premium increase and post it online.

The Secretary shall award $250 million in grants to states over a 5-year period to
assist rate review activities, including reviewing rates, providing information and
recommendations to the Secretary, and establishing Medical Reimbursement Data
Centers to develop database tools that fairly and accurately reflect market rates
for medical services.

The Secretary in
conjunction with
the states.

All non-
grandfathered
fully-insured
plans

2010 plan
year

1003 PHSA 2794

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS released a notice of proposed rulemaking on December 21, 2010.

The proposed rule would apply only to non-grandfathered individual and small
group health insurance coverage. For the purposes of this rule, the rule defers to
state definitions of the small group market. If a state has no definition, small
group is defined as 1-50 employees. It does not include groups of more than 50
employees at this time. HHS is still reviewing whether or how this section will

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-12-23/pdf/2010-32143

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 12

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apply to the large group market.
Rates subject to review. A rate increase in excess of 10% for increases filed on
or after July 1, 2011, or effective on or after that date if the state does not require
filing. In calendar year 2012 and following, a rate increase in excess of 10% or a
state-specific threshold if one is established by the Secretary. The rate increase
exceeds a threshold if, in combination with other increases from the past 12
months, the weighted average increase for all enrollees exceeds the threshold.
Review of rates. HHS will review all increases subject to review, unless it
determines that the state has an effective rate review program and it provides
HHS with a final determination of whether the increase is unreasonable. In
determining whether a state has an effective rate review program in the individual
or small group market, HHS will use the following criteria:

1. The state receives sufficient data and documentation from insurers in
connection with increases

2. The state conducts an effective and timely review of the data and
documentation

3. The state examines the reasonableness of the insurers’ assumptions and
the validity of historical data and the accuracy of the insurers’ past
projections.

4. The examination includes an analysis of the impact of changes in
medical trend, utilization, cost-sharing, and benefits by major service
categories, as well as the impact of changes in enrollee risk profile, over-
or under-estimate of medical trend for prior periods, changes in reserve
needs, changes in administrative costs that improve health care quality,
changes in applicable taxes, licensing or regulatory fees, the medical loss
ratio, and the insurer’s risk-based capital status.

5. The state determines whether a rate is reasonable based upon a standard
that is set forth in statute or regulation.

Definition of unreasonable. An increase is unreasonable if it is:
1. Excessive—Premiums are unreasonably high in relation to the benefits

provided. In determining this, HHS will consider:
a. Whether the rate results in an MLR below the federal standard

in the appropriate market
b. Whether the assumptions behind the rate increase are not

supported by substantial evidence or the choice of
assumptions is unreasonable.

2. Unjustified—The data and documentation provided to HHS is
incomplete, inadequate, or otherwise does not provide a basis for
reasonableness.

3. Unfairly discriminatory—The increase results in premium variation
between insureds in similar risk categories that are impermissible under
state law or do not correspond to differences in expected costs if no

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 13

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Section

applicable state law exists.
4. A state finds it to be otherwise unreasonable.

Submission of disclosure. An insurer must submit to HHS and the state (if it
accepts them) a preliminary justification for each product affected by a rate
increase that is subject to review. This must be submitted within the timeframe
specified in the state’s rate review process, or prior to implementation if the state
has no requirement. The preliminary justification must consist of a summary, a
written justification, and, if the review is conducted by HHS, rate filing
documentation. If the claims experience of multiple products has been
aggregated to calculate rate increases and those increases are uniform across all
products, the insurer may submit a single, combined preliminary justification.

The rate increase summary must contain historical and projected claims
experience, trend projections for cost and utilization, claims assumptions related
to benefit changes, allocation of the increase to claims and non-claims costs,
PMPM allocation of current and projected premium, current and projected loss
ratio, 3-year premium history for the product, and employee and executive
compensation from the insurer’s financial statement.

The written justification must contain an explanation of the rating methodology,
an explanation of the most significant factors causing the increase, and a brief
description of the overall experience of the policy.

The rate filing documentation must contain a description of the policy, the scope
and reason for the increase, the average annual premium before and after the
increase, past experience and other data used, a description of how the increase
was determined, including a description and the source of any assumptions, the
cumulative, projected future, and projected lifetime loss ratios, and the applicable
federal medical loss ratio standard and justification for any failure to meet that
standard.

HHS will place the disclosures on its website along with its final determination
and a brief explanation of its analysis. If a state reviews the increase, HHS will
adopt the state’s determination and will post the state’s final determination on its
website. If an insurer elects not to implement an unreasonable increase or to
implement a lower increase, it must notify the state and HHS of that fact. If the
issuer implements an unreasonable increase, it must submit a final justification to
HHS and prominently post the information on the company web site for at least
3 years.

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 14

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Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Temporary high
risk pool program

The Secretary shall establish a temporary high risk health insurance pool program
to provide coverage to individuals with preexisting conditions who have been
without coverage for at least 6 months. The program may be carried out directly
or through contracts with states or nonprofit entities. States must agree not to
reduce the annual amount expended for current high risk pools before
enactment. Provides $5 billion to fund pools through 2013
Pools funded through these grants must:

Have no preexisting condition exclusions

Cover at least 65% of total allowed costs

Have an out-of-pocket limit no greater than the limit for high deductible
health plans

Utilize adjusted community rating with maximum variation for age of
4:1

Have premiums established at a standard rate for a standard population
The Secretary shall establish criteria to prevent insurers and employers from
encouraging enrollees to drop prior coverage based upon health status.

Secretary of HHS 90 days after
enactment

1101

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS distributed a Solicitation for State Proposals to Operate Qualified High
Risk Pools on May 10.

Individuals may satisfy the preexisting condition criterion for eligibility by
providing evidence of a denial of coverage, that coverage is available only with an
exclusionary rider, or the presence of certain medical conditions specified by the
state and approved by HHS.

Funds will be allocated on a non-competitive basis according to population,
number of uninsured individuals, and geographic cost variations. HHS will
establish accounts for states to draw down funds for benefit claims.
Administrative expenses will be limited to 10% of the total state allocation.

Temporary
reinsurance
program for early
retirees.

The Secretary of HHS shall establish a temporary reinsurance program to
reimburse employment-based plans for 80% of costs incurred by early retirees
over the age of 55 but not eligible for Medicare between $15,000 and $90,000
annually. Payments under the program must be used to lower costs of the plan.
Provides $5 billion to fund the program.

Secretary of HHS 90 days after
enactment

1102

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS released an interim final rule on May 5, 2010.

The rules interpret the provision to require reimbursements to be made to the
plan sponsor, rather than to the insurer providing coverage if the group health
plan is fully-insured.

http://www.hhs.gov/ociio/Documents/state_solicitation

http://www.hhs.gov/ociio/Documents/state_solicitation

http://www.hhs.gov/ociio/regulations/gate

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 15

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PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Web portal to
identify affordable
coverage options

The Secretary shall establish a mechanism, including a website through which
individuals and small businesses may identify affordable health insurance
coverage. It will allow them to receive information on:

Health insurance coverage

Medicaid

CHIP

Medicare

A high risk pool

Small group coverage, including reinsurance for early retirees, tax
credits, and other information

The Secretary shall develop a standard format to be used in presenting
information relating to coverage options, which shall include:

The percentage of total premiums spend on nonclinical costs

Availability

Premium rates

Cost sharing

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
the states

Secretary of HHS

07/01/10

60 days after
enactment

1103

Regulatory Guidance:
HHS released an interim final rule on May 5, 2010 and has held a series of
conference calls and webinars with states.

The first phase of the portal will launch by July 1, and will provide summary level
information on coverage options by state and ZIP code. In October the second
phase will launch providing more detailed pricing and benefit information with a
plan-compare functionality.

States have been asked to provide the names and contact information for each
carrier in the state, and the number of plans each sells in the individual, small-
group and large-group markets. This information will be used to verify
information submitted by the individual insurers.

Administrative
simplification
requirements

Requires the Secretary to develop operating rules for the electronic exchange of
health information, transaction standards for electronic funds transfers and
requirements for financial and administrative transactions.

Rules adopted
by July 1,
2011 to
become
effective by
January 1,
2013.

1104 SSA 1171

2014 Market Reforms

SUBTITLE C—Quality Health Insurance Coverage for All Americans

http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/contentStreamer?objectId=0900006480ae714f&disposition=attachment&contentType=pdf

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 16

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Section

PART I—HEALTH INSURANCE MARKET REFORMS
Subpart I—General Reform

Preexisting
condition
exclusions
A plan may not impose any preexisting condition exclusions. All plans except
grandfathered
individual
market plans

6 months
after
enactment for
individuals 19
and under.
Plan years
beginning
01/01/14 for
all others.

1201 PHSA 2704

Fair health
insurance
premiums

Premiums may only vary by:

Age (3:1 maximum)

Tobacco (1.5:1 maximum)

Geographic rating area

Whether coverage is for an individual or a family
Each state shall establish one or more rating areas for the purposes of
geographic rating. The Secretary shall review them and determine their adequacy.
If they are not adequate, or if a state fails to establish them, the Secretary may
establish rating areas for the state.

Geographic rating
areas: States, with
Secretarial review
Age bands: Secretary,
in consultation with
the NAIC

Non-
grandfathered
fully-insured
small group
and individual
plans. Fully
insured large
group plans in
states that allow
them to
purchase
through the
Exchange.

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2701

Guaranteed
availability of
coverage

Insures must accept every employer and every individual that applies for coverage
except that: an insurer may restrict enrollment based upon open or special
enrollment periods.

Secretary of HHS Non-
grandfathered
fully-insured
plans.

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2702

Guaranteed
renewability of
coverage

Insurers must renew or coverage or continue it in force at the option of the plan
sponsor or the individual.

All non-
grandfathered
fully-insured
plans.

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2703

Prohibiting
discrimination
against individual
participants and
beneficiaries
based on health
status

A plan may not establish rules for eligibility based on any of the following health
status-related factors:

Health status

Medical condition

Claims experience

Receipt of health care

Medical history

Secretary of HHS

All non-
grandfathered
plans

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2705

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
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Generic information

Evidence of insurability (including conditions arising out of domestic
violence)

Disability

Any other health-status related factor deemed appropriate by the
Secretary

Health promotion and disease prevention programs that base the conditions for
obtaining a premium discount or any other reward upon a health status-related
factor must limit such rewards to 30% of the cost of coverage. The Secretaries
of HHS, Labor and Treasury may increase the cap on rewards up to 50% if
deemed appropriate. Wellness programs must be reasonably designed to
promote health or prevent disease and must give eligible individuals the
opportunity to qualify for the reward at least once per year, and rewards must be
made available to all similarly situated individuals. Existing wellness programs
established before March 23, 2010, may continue to be carried out.

Creates a Wellness Program Demonstration Program in 10 states to allow states
to design wellness programs for individual market enrollees.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
Secretaries of
Treasury and Labor

Non-
grandfathered
individual
market plans

07/01/2014

Non-
discrimination in
health care

Plans may not discriminate against any provider operating within their scope of
practice. Does not require that a plan contract with any willing provider or
prevent tiered networks.

Plans may not discriminate against individuals or employers based upon:

Whether they receive subsidies

Whether they provide information to state or federal investigators or
cooperate in the investigation of a violation of the Fair Labor Standards
Act

Secretary of HHS All non-
grandfathered
plans

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2706

Comprehensive
health insurance
coverage

All plans must include the essential benefits package required of plans sold in the
Exchanges and must comply with limitations on annual cost-sharing for plans
sold in the Exchanges. (See §§ 1302(a) and (c).)

If a carrier offers coverage in one of the tiers of coverage specified for the
Exchanges, they must also offer that coverage as a plan open only to children
under age 21.

All non-
grandfathered
plans
Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2707

Prohibition on
Excessive Waiting

Group health plans and group health insurance may not impose waiting periods
that exceed 90 days.

All group plans Plan years
beginning

PHSA 2708

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 18

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Periods 01/01/14

Coverage for
individuals
participating in
approved clinical
trials

A plan may not deny an individual participation in an approved clinical trial for
cancer or a life-threatening disease or condition, may not deny or limit the
coverage of routine patient costs for items and services provided in connection
with the trial, and may not discriminate against participants in a clinical trial.

All non-
grandfathered
plans
Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

PHSA 2709

PART II—

OTHER PROVISIONS

Preservation of
right to maintain
existing coverage

Subtitles A and C of this bill shall not apply to coverage in which an individual
was enrolled as of the date of enactment.. The following provisions will apply to
grandfathered plans:

PHSA §2708-Excessive waiting periods

PHSA §2711-Lifetime limits only

PHSA §2712-Rescissions

PHSA §2714-Extension of dependent coverage

PHSA §2715-Uniform summary of benefits and coverage and
standardized definitions

PHSA §2718-Medical loss ratios
Provisions of PHSA §2711 relating to annual limits and of PHSA §2704 relating
to preexisting condition exclusions apply to grandfathered group health plans for
plan years beginning when they would first otherwise apply.

Additional family members may enroll in grandfathered coverage, and new
employees may enroll in grandfathered group coverage.
Coverage maintained pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement ratified
before the date of enactment is not subject to Subtitles A and C until the
expiration of that agreement. A Change made to coverage to conform to these
subtitles is not considered termination of an agreement.

All coverage in
place on the
date of
enactment.

Date of
enactment
(March 23,
2010)

1251

Regulations:
HHS published an interim final rule on June 17.

Grandfathered plans must provide notice to enrollees in any plan materials
describing benefits that they believe themselves to be grandfathered. Model
language is provided.

Grandfathered plans must maintain records documenting the terms of the plan
in connection with coverage in effect as of March 23, 2010.

If the principal purpose of a merger, acquisition or similar business restructuring

http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/contentStreamer?objectId=0900006480b03a90&disposition=attachment&contentType=pdf

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
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is to cover new individuals under grandfathered plans, those plans will cease to be
grandfathered.

Group coverage maintained pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement ratified
before March 23, 2010, will continue to be grandfathered until the last of the
collective bargaining agreements in effect on March 23, 2010 terminates.

The following actions will cause a plan to lose its grandfathered status”

The elimination of all or substantially all benefits to diagnose or treat a
particular condition;

Any increase in percentage cost-sharing requirements (such as
coinsurance);

An increase in fixed-amount cost sharing other than a copayment (such
as a deductible) of more than medical inflation plus 15%;

An increase in a copayment of more than medical inflation plus 15% or
$5 increased by medical inflation, whichever is greater;

A decrease in the proportion of premiums paid by the employer of
more than 5%;

Addition of an annual limit on benefits if the plan had neither an
annual or lifetime limit in place on March 23, 2010;

Addition of an annual limit that is lower than the lifetime limit the plan
had in place on March 23, 2010; or

Decrease of an annual limit that was in place on March 23, 2010.

Changes made prior to March 23 but effective after March 23; changes made
after March 23 pursuant to a contract entered into or an insurance department
filing prior to March 23; and changes effective after March 23 pursuant to written
amendments to a plan adopted prior to March 23 will be considered in place as
of March 23.

Changes made after March 23 and adopted prior to the date that this regulation
was issued (June 14) will not cause a plan to lose grandfathered status if the
changes are modified or revoked effective the first day of the plan year beginning
September 23, 2010.

Updated Regulations:
HHS published an update to its grandfathering regulations on November 17.

The update allows fully-insured group health plans to retain their grandfathered
status if they replace existing coverage with a new policy, so long as the terms of
the new policy do not violate any of the tests would cause an existing plan to lose

http://www.ofr.gov/OFRUpload/OFRData/2010-28861_PI

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 20

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grandfathered status.

Rating reforms
must apply
uniformly to all
health insurance
issuers and group
health plans

Any standard or requirement adopted by a State pursuant to, or related to, Title I
must be applied uniformly to all health plans in each market to which the
standards or requirements apply.

Plan years
beginning
01/01/14

1252

Study of Large
Group Market

The Secretary of HHS shall conduct a study of self-insured and fully-insured
plans to compare the characteristics of employers, plan benefits, plan reserves
and solvency and determine the extent to which the bill’s market reforms will
cause adverse selection in the large group market and prompt small and mid-size
employers to self insure.
The Secretary shall also collect information on:

The extent to which self-insured plans can offer less expensive coverage
and whether lower costs are due to more efficient plan administration
and lower overhead or the denial of claims and more limited benefit
packages;

Claim denial rates and benefit fluctuations and the impact of limited
recourse options for consumers; and

Potential conflict of interest as it relates to the health care needs of
self-insured enrollees and the employer’s financial contribution or profit
margin.

Secretary of HHS

Secretary of HHS,
in conjunction with
the Secretary of
Labor

No later than
1 year after
enactment

1254

Effective Dates All provisions of this subtitle become effective for plan years beginning January
1, 2014, except that the grandfathering of existing plans becomes effective on the
date of enactment, and the prohibition on preexisting condition exclusions
becomes effective with respect to enrollees under age 19 for plan years beginning
6 months after enactment.

1255

Health Insurance Exchanges

SUBTITLE D—AVAILABLE COVERAGE CHOICES FOR ALL AMERICANS
PART I—Establishment of Qualified Health Plans

Qualified Health
Plans Defined

A “qualified health plan” is a health plan that

Is certified by each Exchange through which it is

offered

Provides the essential benefits package

Is offered by an issuer that is

Licensed and in good standing in each state in which it is

Qualified
Health Plans

01/01/14 1301

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 21

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offered

Agrees to offer at least one silver plan and one gold plan

Agrees to charge the same premium whether the plan is sold
through the Exchange or outside the Exchange

Complies with other requirements of the Secretary and the
Exchange

A reference to a qualified health plan is also a reference to a Co-Op plan and a
Multi-State plan.

A qualified health plan may offer coverage through a primary care medical home
plan

A qualified health plan may vary premiums by rating area.

Essential Health
Benefits
Requirements

The essential health benefits package must cover the following general categories
of services:

Ambulatory patient services

Emergency services

Hospitalization

Maternity and newborn care

Mental health and substance abuse disorder services, including
behavioral health treatment

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
The scope of benefits is to be determined by the Secretary of HHS and equal to
the scope of benefits under a typical employer-based plan. Nothing shall prevent
a qualified health plan from providing benefits in excess of the essential benefits
package.

The cost-sharing under a health plan may not exceed the cost-sharing for high-
deductible health plans in 2014 (currently $5,950 individual/$11,900 family). In
following years, the limitation on cost-sharing is indexed to the rate or average
premium growth.

Deductibles for plans in the small group market are limited to $2,000
individual/$4,000 family, indexed to average premium growth. This amount may
be increased by the maximum amount of reimbursement available to an
employee under a flexible spending arrangement.

Secretary of HHS 01/01/2014 1302

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 22

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Statutory
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The levels of coverage are defined as follows:

Bronze level-Must provide coverage that provides benefits that are
actuarially equivalent to 60% of the full actuarial value of benefits under
the plan.

Silver level-Must provide coverage that provides benefits that are
actuarially equivalent to 70% of the full actuarial value of benefits under
the plan.

Gold level-Must provide coverage that provides benefits that are
actuarially equivalent to 80% of the full actuarial value of benefits under
the plan.

Platinum level-Must provide coverage that provides benefits that are
actuarially equivalent to 90% of the full actuarial value of benefits under
the plan.

Individuals under 30 years of age or those exempt from the individual mandate
because no affordable plan is available to them or because of a hardship may
purchase a catastrophic plan providing the essential benefits package with a
deductible equal to the total limitation on cost-sharing above and first-dollar
coverage of at least three primary care visits.

Plans offered through the Exchange must also be available as a plan available only
to individuals under the age of 21.

Special Rules State opt-out of abortion coverage:
A state may prohibit qualified health plans offered through the exchange from
covering abortions.

Special rules relating to coverage of abortion services:
This title shall not be construed to require a plan to cover abortion services as
part of the essential benefits package. If a plan covers elective abortion services,
it may not use any funds attributable to subsidies provided through the Exchange
to pay for them and must collect a separate payment from enrollees for the
actuarial value of those services. State insurance commissioners shall insure that
health plans comply with the requirement that plans segregate funds for abortion
services.

Qualified
health benefits
plans

01/01/14 1303

Related
Definitions

Small group market is defined to include employers with 1-100 employees. Until
January 1, 2016, states may elect to define it as employers with 1-50 employees.

01/01/14
State option
to define
market as 1-
50 ends
01/01/16

1304

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 23

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PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

PART II—CONSUMER CHOICES AND INSURANCE COMPETITION THROUGH HEALTH BENEFIT PLANS

Affordable
choices of health
benefits plans

Grants will be made available to states in amounts to be specified by the
Secretary of HHS for planning and activities related to establishing an Exchange.
Grants may be renewed if the State is making progress in establishing an
Exchange and the market reforms. Exchanges must be self-sustaining beginning
in 2015, and may generate revenue through assessments, user fees or other
means. The Secretary is also directed to provide technical assistance to states on
facilitating participation of small employers in SHOP exchanges.

Secretary of HHS

Beginning not
later than 1
year after the
date of
enactment,
lasting until
01/01/15

01/01/14

1311

Grant Announcement:
HHS released a grant announcement on July 29.

Applications are due by September 1, 2010. Awards will be made by September
30, 2010.

Each state and the District of Columbia will be eligible for $1 million in this
round of funding.. States receiving the grant will be required to provide quarterly
reports, as well as a final project report that would include:

A draft implementation plan that includes goals, objectives, responsible
parties, costs, timeframes and milestones;

A needs assessment that includes baselines of staff, funding, and
information technology needs;

A list of resources and capabilities, an organizational chart that includes
key personnel, and biographical sketches of such personnel; and

An evaluation plan to include a detailed description of data collection
activities and analyses, from which the State will base its design for
covering its uninsured.

In the grant project narrative, states should describe activities that will be funded
in the following areas:

Background research

Stakeholder involvement

Program integration

Resources and capabilities

Governance

Finance

Technical infrastructure

Business operations

Regulatory or policy actions.

https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=11777

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 24

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Grant funds may not be used to:

Provide direct services to individuals;

Meet matching requirements for other Federal programs;

Promote federal or state legislative and regulatory modifications;

Improve systems or processes solely related to Medicaid/SCHIP
eligibility.

Additional Exchange establishment grants are expected in early 2011.

Each state shall establish, as a governmental agency or nonprofit entity, an
American Health Benefit Exchange that facilitates the purchase of qualified
health plans and provides for the establishment of a Small Business Health
Options Program (referred to as a “SHOP Exchange”) to assist qualified
employers in facilitating the enrollment of employees in small group qualified
health benefits plans states. States may choose to establish a single Exchange that
performs both functions. States may jointly form regional Exchanges or may
form multiple subsidiary exchanges if each one serves a distinct geographic area.
Exchanges may contract with entities with demonstrated experience in the
individual and small group markets and in benefits coverage if the entity is not an
insurer or controlled by an insurer, or with the state Medicaid agency.

Exchanges must consult with relevant stakeholders, including consumers, those
with experience facilitating coverage in qualified health plans, representatives of
small businesses, state Medicaid offices, and advocates for enrolling hard-to reach
populations.

Exchange must publish online an accounting of its administrative costs, including
of funds lost to waste, fraud, and abuse.

Exchanges may not sell plans that are not qualified health benefits plans, except
for stand-alone dental plans if they offer pediatric dental benefits meeting the
requirements of the act.

Exchanges must provide for an initial open enrollment period, annual open
enrollment periods after the initial period, and special enrollment periods under
circumstances similar to those for Medicare PDPs, and special enrollment period
for Native Americans.

Exchanges may sell qualified health plans that provide only the essential benefits
package, except that states may require additional benefits if it defrays enrollees
for the additional cost of these benefits.

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 25

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An exchange must, at a minimum:

Certify qualified health benefits plans consistent with guidelines
developed by the Secretary of HHS if making them available through
the Exchange is in the interests of individuals and employers in the
state.

An Exchange may not exclude a health plan:

Because it is a fee-for-service plan,

Through the imposition of premium price controls

On the basis that the plan provides necessary
treatments in circumstances that the Exchange deems
inappropriate or too costly

In order to be certified, plans must:

Meet marketing requirements

Meet network adequacy requirements under PHSA
§2702(c)

Include in networks essential community providers
that serve low-income, underserved communities

Be accredited by an entity recognized by the Secretary
for accreditation of health plans

Implement market-based strategies for quality
improvement

Utilize a uniform enrollment form that takes into
account criteria that the NAIC develops and submits
to the Secretary

Utilize the standard format established for presenting
health benefits plan options; and

Provide information to the Exchange and enrollees
on quality measures for health plan performance

Submit justifications of any premium increase prior
to implementation and post it on its website. Such
justifications shall be taken into account when
certifying plans.

Submit to the Exchange, the Secretary of HHS, and
the state Insurance Commissioner and publicly
disclose the following information:

Claims payment policies and practices
Periodic financial disclosures
Data on enrollment
Data on disenrollment

Data on the number of claims that are

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 26

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denied
Data on rating practices

Information of cost-sharing and payments
with respect to any out-of-network coverage

Information on enrollee rights

Other information specified by the Secretary

Allow individuals to learn the cost-sharing under their
plan for furnishing a specific item or service by a
participating provider upon request through a
website.

Contract with hospitals with more than 50 beds only
if they utilize a patient safety evaluation system and
provide education and counseling upon discharge,
comprehensive discharge planning, and post-
discharge reinforcement by a health care professional

Contract with a health care provider only if they
implement quality improvement mechanisms required
by the Secretary of HHS

Operate a toll-free consumer assistance hotline

Maintain a website to provide standardized comparative information on
qualified health benefits plans

Assign a rating based upon relative quality and price to each qualified
health benefits plan.

Use a standardized format for presenting coverage options under the
Exchange, including use of the uniform outline of coverage

Inform individuals of eligibility requirements for the state’s Medicaid
program, CHIP program and any applicable state or local public
program and screen and enroll eligible individuals in these programs

Certify exemptions from the individual mandate

Transfer information to the Secretary of Treasury on exemptions form
the individual mandate, as well as on employees receiving subsidies
through the exchange because the employer failed to provide sufficient
affordable coverage.

Provide information to employers on employees who cease coverage in
a qualified health benefits plan

Establish a navigator program to provide to entities with relationships
to employers and employees, consumers, or self-employed individuals.
Grants must be made out of operational funds, and may not use federal
funds for establishment of Exchanges.

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 27

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Date
PPACA
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Section

Navigators will:

Conduct public education activities

Distribute information concerning enrollment in plans
and subsidy availability

Facilitate enrollment in plans

Provide referrals to health insurance consumer assistance
offices or ombudsmen to enrollees with grievances,
complaints or questions:

Eligible entities include

Trade, industry, and professional associations

Commercial fishing industry organizations

Community and consumer-focused nonprofit entities

Chambers of commerce

Unions

Resource partners of the Small Business Administration

Licensed insurance producers,

Other entities that are not insurers and do not receive any
direct or indirect compensation from insurers in connection
with plan enrollments or disenrollments.

The Secretary, in collaboration with states, will develop standards to
ensure that information provided by navigators is fair, accurate, and
impartial.

Consumer choice Individuals enrolling in the Exchange may choose any plan for which they are
eligible. Employers may specify a level of coverage for which to provide support,
and employees may choose any plan that offers coverage at that level. Individuals
may pay premiums directly to the insurer.

Insurers must consider all enrollees in all non-grandfathered plans in the
individual and small group markets, respectively, to be members of the same risk
pools. States may require the individual and small group markets to be merged,
but may not require that grandfathered plans be pooled together with non-
grandfathered plans.

Nothing in this title prohibits an insurer from offering insurance outside of the
Exchange or eligible individuals and employers from purchasing coverage outside
the Exchange. No individual or employer shall be compelled to purchase
coverage through the Exchange. Members of Congress and their personal staff
will no longer be eligible for the FEHBP, and must purchase coverage through
the Exchange in order to receive coverage through the federal government.

01/01/2014

1312

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 28

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

The Secretary of HHS shall establish procedures for a state to allow producers to
enroll individuals and employers in qualified health plans and to assist individuals
in applying for subsidies.

Only citizens and lawful residents may purchase coverage through the Exchange.
Incarcerated individuals may not enroll through the Exchange.

Employers of 1-100 employees may offer 1 or more small group plans to
employees through the Exchange. Beginning in 2017, states may allow insurers
to offer large group plans through the Exchange.

Secretary of HHS

01/01/2014.
States may
expand to
larger
employers
beginning
01/01/2017.

Financial
Integrity

Exchanges must keep an accurate accounting of all activities, receipts and
expenditures and annually report to the Secretary of HHS, who shall conduct
annual audits and may investigate the affairs of an Exchange. An Exchange or
State that has engaged in serious misconduct may be subject to a 1% reduction
of all grants and payments administered by the Secretary of HHS until corrective
actions are taken.

The Secretary of HHS shall provide for the efficient and non-discriminatory
administration of the Exchanges and shall implement measures to reduce fraud
and abuse.

The False Claims Act shall apply to any payments that include federal funds.

Secretary of HHS

01/01/2014 1313

PART III—State Flexibility Relating to Exchanges

State flexibility in
operation and
enforcement of
Exchanges and
related
requirements

The Secretary of HHS shall issue regulations setting standards for the
requirements for Exchanges, the offering of qualified health plans sold through
Exchanges, reinsurance and risk adjustment mechanisms and other requirements
the Secretary deems appropriate.

A state that elects to operate an exchange must adopt the federal standards or a
state law implementing them by January 1, 2014. If the Secretary determines by
January 1, 2013 that the state is not electing to operate an Exchange or that it will
not have the Exchange operational by January 1, 2014 or has not taken necessary
actions to implement the market reforms, the Secretary shall operate an
Exchange, either directly or through agreement with a non-profit entity.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation
with the NAIC, its
members,
insurers,
consumer
organizations and
other interested
parties.

1321

Federal program
to assist
establishment and

The Secretary of HHS shall provide Co-Op plans with loans to assist with start-
up costs and grants to assist with meeting solvency requirements. In making the
loans and grants, the Secretary must give priority to plan that offer qualified

Secretary of HHS Co-Op Plans No later than
7/1/2013

1322

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 29

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

operation of
nonprofit,
member-run
health insurance
issuers

health plans on a statewide basis, use integrated care models, and have significant
private support and ensure that there is sufficient funding to establish at least 1
Co-Op plan in each state. Loans must be repaid within 5 years and grants must
be repaid within 15 years. $6 billion is appropriated to fund the loans and grants.
[NOTE: H.R. 1473, enacted on April 15, 2011 reduced funding for Co-Op loans and
grants to $3.8 billion.]

Any entity receiving a loan or grant must be organized under state law as a
nonprofit, member corporation and may not have been a health insurance issuer
prior to 7/16/2009 and may not be sponsored by a state or local government.
Governance of the organization must be subject to a majority vote of its
members and must avoid insurance industry involvement and interference. Any
profits made by the organization must be used to lower premiums, improve
benefits, or improve the quality of care. The organization must meet all
requirements that are required of other qualified health plans, including solvency
and licensure rules, rules on payments to providers, network adequacy rules, rate
and form filing rules, and any applicable premium assessments. Co-Op plans
may not offer coverage in a state until the state has adopted the market reforms
in Subtitles A and C of this legislation. Co-Op plans will be considered tax-
exempt as long as they abide by restrictions of this section.

Co-Op plans may form a private purchasing council through which to enter into
collective purchasing arrangements for items and services that increase
administrative efficiency, including claims administration, administrative services,
health IT, and actuarial services, within the confines of federal antitrust law.

Level Playing
Field

Health insurance plans shall not be subject to any of the following state or
federal laws unless Co-Op plans and multistate health plans are also subject to
them:

Guaranteed renewal

Rating

Preexisting conditions

Non-discrimination

Quality improvement and reporting

Fraud and abuse

Solvency and financial requirements

Market conduct

Prompt payment

Appeals and grievances

Privacy and confidentiality

1/1/2014 1324

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 30

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Licensure, and

Benefit plan material or information.

SUBTITLE D—AVAILABLE COVERAGE CHOICES FOR ALL AMERICANS
PART IV-STATE FLEXIBILITY TO ESTABLISH ALTERNATIVE PROGRAMS

State Flexibility to
Establish Basic
Health Programs
for Low-Income
Individuals Not
Eligible for
Medicaid

The Secretary of HHS shall establish a basic health program under which a state
may contract with standard health plans providing at least essential benefits to
individuals between 133% and 200% FPL and legal immigrants above 133% FPL
who are not eligible for Medicaid. The federal government will provide states
creating basic health programs the subsidy funds that eligible individuals would
have otherwise received.

Individuals eligible to participate in these plans would not be eligible to purchase
coverage through the Exchange, and premiums may not exceed what the
individual would have paid in the Exchange. Cost-sharing may not exceed that
of a platinum plan in the Exchange for individuals below 150% FPL or that of a
gold plan for all others. Plans must have an MLR of at least 85%.

States may enter into compacts to allow residents of all compacting states to
enroll in all standard plans.

Secretary of HHS 1331

Waiver for State
Innovation

A state may apply for waivers of the following requirements:

Requirements for Qualified Health Benefits Plans

Requirements for Health Insurance Exchanges

Requirements for reduced cost-sharing in qualified health benefits plans

Requirements for premium subsidies

Requirements for the employer mandate

Requirements for the individuals mandate
The Secretary of HHS may not waive any law that is not within the jurisdiction
of HHS (such as ERISA).

The state will receive funds for implementing the waiver equal to any subsidies or
tax credits for which residents would otherwise receive if the state had not
received a waiver.

State waiver plans must provide coverage that is at least as comprehensive as
coverage offered through Exchanges, must cover at least as many state residents
as this title would cover and may not increase the federal deficit. Waivers are
good for 5 years and may be renewed unless the Secretary disapproves a request
for renewal within 90 day of receipt.

The Secretary must coordinate and consolidate this waiver application process

Secretary of HHS,
within 180 days of
enactment..

Plan years
beginning
January 1,
2017

1332

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 31

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

and the waiver processes for Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, and any other federal
health care law.

Provisions
relating to
offering of plans
in more than one
state

Two or more states may enter into a “health care choice compact” under which
individual market plans could be offered in all compacting states, subject to the
laws and regulations of the state where it was written or issued. Issuers would
continue to be subject to the following laws of the purchaser’s home state:

Market conduct;

Unfair trade practices;

Network adequacy;

Consumer protection standards, including rating rules;

Laws addressing performance of the contract.
Plans must be licensed in each state in which they sell coverage or must submit to
the jurisdiction of the states with regard to the above laws.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation
with the NAIC, no
later than July 1,
2013

01/01/16 1333

Multi-State Plans The Director of OPM shall contract with insurers to offer at least 2 multi-state
qualified health benefits plans through the Exchange in each state to provide
individual and small group coverage. At least one plan in each state must be
provided by a nonprofit entity. The Director may set standards for multistate
plans regarding medical loss ratios, profit margins, premiums, and other terms
and conditions in the interests of enrolless.
Participating insurers must be licensed in each state where it sells coverage and
are subject to all requirements of State law that are not inconsistent with
requirements of this section. Plans must offer a uniform benefit package in each
state which consists of the essential benefits package and any additional benefits
required by a state, as long as the state reimburses enrollees for the cost of these
additional benefits. States with rating rules that restrict variation due to age to
less than 3:1 may require multi-state plans to adhere to these requirements.
Insurers must sell multi-state plans in 60% of states in the first year they offer
them, 70% of states in the second year, 85% of states in the third year, and all
states in the fourth year.
Requirements for FEHBP plan that do not conflict with this title will apply to
multi-state plans. Multi-state plans will be considered a separate risk pool from
FEHBP plans.

Office of Personnel
Management

01/01/14 1334

PART V—
REINSURANCE
AND RISK
ADJUSTMENT

Transitional State shall enact a model regulation established by the Secretary, in consultation Secretary of HHS, All plans must Plan years 1341

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 32

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

reinsurance
program for
individual market
in each state

with the NAIC that will enable them to establish a temporary reinsurance
program for plan years beginning in 2014-2016. Insurers and TPAs, on behalf of
self-insured plans, must make payments to the reinsurance entity and non-
grandfathered individual market insurers that cover high risk individuals will
receive payments from the entity if they cover high risk enrollees in the individual
market.

High-risk individuals will be identified on the basis of a list of medical conditions
or another comparable objective method of identification recommended by the
American Academy of Actuaries. Payments will be based upon a schedule of
payments for each condition or another method recommended by the American
Academy of Actuaries.

Assessments will be based on the percentage of revenue of each insurer and the
total costs of providing benefits to enrollees in self-insured plans or a specified
amount per enrollee. The total amount of contributions will be based on the
best estimates of the NAIC and not including additional assessments to cover
administrative costs, equal $12 billion for plan years beginning in 2014, $8 billion
in 2015, and $5 billion in 2016. States may collect additional amounts from
issuers on a voluntary basis. Of these amounts, $2 billion in 2014, $2 billion in
2015 and $1 billion in 2016 shall be deposited in the US Treasury and will not be
available for this program.

Reinsurance entities must be non-profit organizations with the purpose of
stabilizing premiums in the individual market for the first three years of
Exchange operation. States may have more than one reinsurance entity and two
or more states may enter into agreements to create entities to administer
reinsurance in all such states.

in consultation
with the NAIC
and with
recommendations
from the
American
Academy of
Actuaries.

pay assessments.
Non-
grandfathered
individual plans
may receive
payments.

beginning in
2014 through
2016

Establishment of
risk corridors for
plans in individual
and small group
markets

The Secretary shall establish and administer a risk corridor program for 2014-
2016 based upon the risk corridor program for Medicare PDPs. Plans will receive
payments if their ratio of nonadministrative costs, less any risk adjustment and
reinsurance payments, to premiums, less administrative costs, is above 103%.
Plans must make payments if that ratio is below 97%.

Secretary of HHS Qualified health
plans

Calendar
years 2014-
2016

1342

Risk adjustment Each state shall assess health plans if the actuarial risk of all of their enrollees in
a state is less than the average risk of all enrollees in fully-insured plans in that
state and make payments to health plans whose enrollees have an actuarial risk
that is greater than the average actuarial risk in that state.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
the States

Non-
grandfathered
individual and
small group

01/01/14 1343

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 33

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

The Secretary of HHS, in consultation with the states, shall establish criteria and
methods for these risk adjustment activities, which may be similar to those for
Medicare Advantage plans and Prescription Drug Plans.

plans

SUBTITLE E—AFFORDABLE COVERAGE CHOICES FOR ALL AMERICANS
PART I- Premium Tax Credits and Cost-Sharing Reductions

Subpart A—Premium Tax Credits and Cost-Sharing Reductions

Refundable tax
credit providing
premium
assistance for
coverage under a
qualified health
plan

A tax credit is created for qualified taxpayers between 100% and 400% FPL that
covers the difference between a percentage of household income and the
second-lowest cost silver level plan available through the Exchange in the
individual’s rating area. The percentage of income varies on a sliding scale within
the following ranges:

Income Premium Cap

<133% FPL 2%

133-150% FPL 3-4%

150-200% FPL 4-6.3%

200-250% FPL 6.3-8.05%

250-300% FPL 8.05%-9.5%

300-400% FPL 9.5%

The above percentages will be adjusted to reflect the growth of premiums.
Credits will be advanced to insurer through which the individual purchased
coverage.

Individuals eligible for employer-sponsored coverage for which the employee’s
contribution does not exceed 9.5% of household income are not eligible for
subsidies. Individuals not lawfully present in the United States are not eligible for
subsidies.

Secretary of
Treasury

Individuals
between 100%
and 400% FPL

01/01/14 1401 IRC 36B

Reduced cost-
sharing for
individuals
enrolling in
qualified health
plans

Cost sharing for individuals enrolling in the silver level of coverage through an
exchange who are between 100%-400% FPL. Cost-sharing reduced so that the
plan covers 94% of the benefit costs of the plan for individuals between 100%-
150% FPL, 87% of benefit costs for individuals between 150%-200% FPL, 73%
for individuals between 200%-250% FPL, and 70% for individuals between
250%-400%FPL. Native Americans below 300% FPL will have no cost-sharing
under a plan.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
Secretary of
Treasury

Individuals
between 100%
and 400% FPL

01/01/14 1402

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 34

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

The Secretary will make periodic payments to insurers for the value of these
cost-sharing reductions. Reductions to cost-sharing will not apply to additional
benefits provided under a plan or to mandated benefits beyond the essential
benefits package.

Procedures for
determining
eligibility for
Exchange
participation,
premium tax
credits and
reduced cost
sharing, and
individuals
responsibility
exemptions

The Secretary of HHS shall develop a program for the determination of
eligibility for Exchange participation, subsides, and exemptions. Exchanges must
collect specified relevant information for determining eligibility from the
individual mandate and submit it to the Secretary of HHS for verification by
relevant federal agencies and report the results back to the Exchange.

Secretary of HHS 1411

Advance
determinations
and payment of
premium tax
credits and cost-
sharing
reductions

The Secretary of HHS, in consultation with the Secretary of Treasury must
establish a program for the advance determination of income eligibility for
individuals applying for subsidies through the Exchange. The Secretary of HHS
will notify the Exchange and the Secretary of Treasury, and the Secretary of
Treasury will make the necessary payments to the insurer, who must reduce the
individual’s premiums and cost-sharing. States may provide subsidies in addition
to the federal subsidies.

Secretary of HHS,
in consultation with
the Secretary of
Treasury

1412

Streamlining of
procedures for
enrollment
through an
Exchange and
state Medicaid,
CHIP, and health
subsidy programs

The Secretary shall establish a system for individuals to apply for enrollment in
Medicaid, SCHIP through an Exchange. The Secretary must provide a single
streamlined form that may be used in applying for all applicable state health
subsidy programs. This form can be filed online, by mail, or by telephone. States
may develop and use their own alternative streamlined forms consistent with
standards developed by the Secretary of HHS.

Secretary of HHS 1413

PART II-Small Business Tax Credit

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 35

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Credit for
employee health
insurance
expenses for small
businesses

Small employers with 25 or fewer employees will receive tax credit as follows:
Tax years 2010-2013—Employers that contribute at least 50% of premium, or
50% of the average small group premium in the state, will receive a credit against
general business tax for 35% (or 25% in the case of a tax-exempt small employer)
of the total nonelective contribution the for the plan.
Tax years 2014 and later—Employers that contribute at least 50% of premium
towards coverage in the exchange will receive a credit of 50% (or 35% in the case
of a tax-exempt small employer). Employers may only receive the credit for two
years.

The credit is phased out for employers with 10-25 employees and employers
whose average wages are from $25,000-$50,000, indexed to the annual cost-of-
living adjustment.

Secretary of
Treasury

Small
businesses with
25 or fewer
employees

01/01/14 1421 IRC 45R

SUBTITLE F—SHARED RESPONSIBILITY FOR HEALTH CARE
PART I—Individual Responsibility

Requirement to
maintain
minimum
essential coverage

If a taxpayer fails to maintain minimum essential coverage, they will be required
to pay an annual tax penalty of the greater of $95for each household member, up
to three, or 1% of household income in 2014, $325 or 2% of household income
in 2015 and $695 or 2.5% of income in following years. The penalty is prorated
for each month in which a taxpayer fails to maintain minimal essential coverage.

Taxpayers are exempted from the penalty if:

The individual has a religious objection to purchasing health insurance.

The cost of the taxpayer’s premium contribution for employer-
sponsored coverage or for the lowest-cost bronze level coverage
available in the Exchange exceeds 8% of household income. The 8%
threshold is indexed to the amount by which average premium growth
exceeds wage growth.

The taxpayer’s household income is below the federal income tax filing
threshold

The taxpayer is a member of a recognized Indian tribe

The break in coverage is less than three months

The Secretary of HHS determines that the taxpayer has suffered a
hardship with respect to their ability to obtain coverage

The individual is enrolled in a health care sharing ministry

The individual resides outside the United States

Any criminal penalty against a taxpayer for failure to pay the penalty is waived,
and the Secretary of Treasury may not file liens or levies to collect the penalty.

Secretary of
Treasury

01/01/14 1501 IRC 5000A

PART II—Employer Responsibilities

© 2011 National Association of Insurance Commissioners
Updated: 5/12/2011 36

Provision Notes
Standards
Development Applicability
Effective
Date
PPACA
Section
Statutory
Section

Automatic
enrollment for
employees of
large employers

Employers with more than 200 employees offering a health benefits plan must
automatically enroll all new employees one of the plans and automatically
continue the enrollments of current employees, unless either opts out.

Employers with
more than 200
full-time
employees

1511 FLSA 18A

Employer
requirement to
inform employees
of coverage
option

Employers must provide employees with written notice at the time of hiring
informing them of the existence of the Exchange and the availability of
subsidies through the Exchange if the plan covers less than 60% of the cost of
covered benefits.

Employers
subject to the
Fair Labor
Standards Act

03/01/2013 1512 FLSA 18B

Shared
responsibility for
employers
regarding health
coverage

If an employer fails to offer minimum essential coverage and one of its
employees receives a subsidy through the Exchange, it will be subject to a penalty
of $2000 per employee.

Employers offering coverage whose employees receive a subsidy through the
exchange will be subject to a penalty of $3,000 per employee receiving a subsidy.
The penalty shall not exceed $2000 times the number of full-time employees.

Employers of 50 or fewer employees are exempt from these requirements, and
the first 30 employees are disregarded in calculating the penalty.

Secretary of
Treasury

Employers with
more than 50
employees

01/01/2014 1513 IRC 4980H

OTHER PROVISIONS

GAO study
regarding the
rate of denial of
coverage and
enrollment by
health insurance
and group health
plans

The GAO shall conduct a study of the incidence of denials of coverage for
medical services and denials of application to enroll in health insurance plans by
group health plans and health insurance issuers.

Government
Accountability
Office

One year
after
enactment

1562

[Free choice
vouchers]

NOTE: This provision was repealed by H.R. 1473, enacted on April 15, 2011.
[Employers must provide a voucher in the amount of the employer’s contribution
towards the group health plan to each employee whose household income is
below 400%FPL if the employees’ cost of coverage under the group health plan
is between 8% and 9.8% of household income and the employee does not enroll
in the employer’s group health plan. Employees may use these vouchers to
purchase coverage through the Exchange.]

[Non-
grandfathered
fully insured
group plans.]

[10108]

PHSA-Public Health Service Act
SSA-Social Security Act of 1935

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