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The Provisions
The changes beginning Sept. 23, 2010, include expanded
coverage and new consumer protections. If they are not spelled out in
the documentation you receive from your insurance provider or employer,
talk with your employer’s plan administrator or your health
insurance company about how these protections will apply to your
coverage and what new options you may have.
Effective Date
If you have health insurance coverage through an
employer, these new benefits and protections will be added to your
policy at the next policy renewal after Sept. 23, 2010. If you
purchased an individual health insurance policy on your own, the
effective date is a bit more complicated. If your insurer has specified
a "policy year" for your coverage, the new provisions will become
effective on that date. Otherwise, the new benefits and protections
will be added on the date when annual deductibles and annual limits
reset each year. If your policy does not have an annual deductible or
annual limit, these changes will become effective on Jan. 1, 2011. If
you have questions about when these provisions will become effective
for your policy, contact your insurance company.
Grandfathered Plans
You may be hearing a lot about what are referred to as
“grandfathered plans.” These are health plans in which
either a group or an individual was enrolled in prior to March 23,
2010, when President Obama signed the PPACA into law. Grandfathered
plans are exempt from most changes required by the PPACA. However, if
the plan significantly reduces benefits or increases deductibles,
copayments, and/or an employee‘s share of premium contributions,
it will lose its grandfathered status and its exemptions. This could
make a difference in what provision you see at renewal time.
Coverage Changes
- Annual and Lifetime Limits – At the
new plan year, plans may not contain lifetime limits on essential
benefits. This provision applies to all plans. Annual limits will be
phased out through 2014 for all plans, except grandfathered individual
plans. Check with your insurance company to see if this applies to your
policy before you renew.
- Rescissions – Rescission is when an
insurance company retroactively cancels your policy. The PPACA bans
rescissions except in cases of fraud or intentional misrepresentation
of material fact. You must be notified prior to the cancellation. This
provision applies to all types of health insurance plans.
- Preventive Health Services – A wide
range of preventive care including immunizations, well baby and child
screenings, and well women exams must be covered without cost-sharing
under all non-grandfathered plans. For an exact list of what preventive
services are available without cost-sharing, contact your insurance
company.
- Adult Dependent Coverage – Plans that
cover dependent children must extend coverage until the child’s
26th birthday. This applies to all types of plans, however before 2014,
group health plans will be required to cover adult children only if the
adult child is not eligible for employer-sponsored coverage. Adult
children cannot be charged more than any other dependent.
- Preexisting Condition Exclusions –
Beginning Sept. 23, 2010, children under 19 years of age cannot be
denied coverage or benefits based on medical status or past illnesses.
This applies to all plans except grandfathered individual plans.
Consumer Protection Changes
- Primary Care/Preapproval – All
non-grandfathered plans must:
- Allow you the choice of any primary care provider
available (if you are required to designate a primary care physician).
- Provide covered emergency services without prior
approval, regardless of whether the provider is in-network.
- Limit cost-sharing on emergency services by
nonparticipating providers to the same amount as that of a
participating provider.
- Allow female patients to receive obstetric or
gynecological care from a participating provider and treat their
authorizations the same as that of a primary care provider.
- Allow children to receive care from a
participating pediatrician and treat their authorizations the same as
that of a primary care provider.
More Information
If you have questions or are confused about your
insurance coverage,
contact the Arkansas Insurance Department Consumer Services Division
at (800) 852-5494 or (501) 371-2640.
You can find more information about the PPACA and
how it will affect you today and in the future on the NAIC website. Go
to the special health reform section at http://www.naic.org/index_health_reform_section.htm.
Here you’ll find the latest information on the state insurance
departments’ work on the PPACA implementation; a FAQ for
consumers, employers and seniors on the health care reform; timelines
for implementation and much more.
Get smart about your insurance
needs! More information about auto, home, life and health insurance
options — as well as tips for choosing the coverage that is right
for you and your family — is located on the NAIC Web site, www.InsureUonline.org.
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