PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2018
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS
Media Inquiries
CMS issues final 2019
Payment Notice Rule to increase access to affordable health plans for
Americans suffering from high Obamacare premiums
Final rule will improve program integrity, increase state
flexibility, and reduce regulatory burdens
Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued the
HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2019. The final rule will
mitigate the harmful impacts of Obamacare and empower states to regulate
their insurance market. The rule will do this by advancing the Administration’s
goals to increase state flexibility, improve affordability, strengthen
program integrity, empower consumers, promote stability, and reduce
unnecessary regulatory burdens imposed by the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act.
“Too many Americans are facing skyrocketing premiums that they can’t
afford and every year consumers are faced with the threat of fewer choices.
This rule gives states new tools to stabilize their health insurance
markets and empower citizens to find coverage that fits their families’
needs and budgets,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act has led to higher
premiums and fewer choices. Between 2013 and 2017, the average premiums
more than doubled in the states using the Federal Health Insurance Exchange
platform and half of the counties in America had only one issuer to choose
from this year. The final rule provides states with the tools needed to
help lower health premiums or, stabilize premium growth. The final rule
will also enhance consumer choice by removing provisions that discourage
issuers from offering plans that address the specific needs of
Americans.
The final rule builds on the significant steps already taken by the
Administration to promote health care choice and competition and decrease
costs. Earlier this year, the Departments of Health and Human Services,
Labor, and the Treasury published a proposed
rule to expand the availability of short-term, limited-duration health
insurance to provide consumers with more affordable options. CMS also
issued the Market Stabilization Rule last year, which was implemented to
lower premiums and increase consumer choice. All of this work is especially
important at a time when the impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act has priced many consumers out of the insurance market.
The final rule issued today includes the following key provisions:
Increasing Flexibility
- Essential Health
Benefits (EHB): To allow insurers to offer more affordable health
plans, CMS is providing states with additional flexibility in how they
select their EHB-benchmark plan. The final rule provides states
with substantially more options in what they can select as an
EHB-benchmark plan. Instead of being limited to 10 options, states
will now be able to choose from the 50 EHB-benchmark plans used for
the 2017 plan year in other states or select specific EHB categories,
such as drug coverage or hospitalization, from among the categories
used for the 2017 plan year in other states.
States will also now be able to build their own set of benefits that
could potentially become their EHB-benchmark plan, subject to certain scope
of benefits requirements.
- Qualified Health
Plan (QHP) Certification Standards: The final rule
returns important oversight authority to states regarding state review
of network adequacy, and eases burden on issuers related to essential
community providers. The rule also eliminates the meaningful
difference requirement for QHPs to give insurers more flexibility in
designing plans.
Improving Affordability
- Exemptions: Exchanges will be
able to make a determination of lack of affordable coverage based on
projected income using the lowest cost Exchange metal level plan
offered through the Exchange when there is no bronze level plan available
in the service area.
Strengthening Program Integrity
- Risk Adjustment: The final rule
amends the HHS-operated risk adjustment data validation program to
reduce burdens on issuers. In addition, the HHS-operated risk
adjustment program is recalibrated for the 2019 benefit year to
incorporate new data that reflects the actual experience of individual
and small group market enrollees, which should more closely reflect
the risk within markets. In States where HHS operates the risk
adjustment program, CMS will also provide states with the flexibility
to request a reduction to the otherwise applicable risk adjustment
transfers in the individual, small group or merged market by up to 50
percent beginning with the 2020 benefit year, which may be helpful in
attracting and retaining insurers and more precisely accounting for
relative risk differences in the state market. States requesting such
a reduction must provide evidence and analysis that show the
state-specific rules or market dynamics warrant the adjustment to more
precisely account for the relative risk differences in the State’s
market and justifies the reduction amount requested.
- Advanced Premium Tax
Credit (APTC) Program Integrity: The final rule
improves program integrity by requiring Exchanges to implement
stronger checks to verify applicants actually earn the income they
claim to qualify for APTCs. The rule also requires Exchanges to
discontinue APTCs for enrollees who fail to file taxes and reconcile
past APTCs, even if the Exchange does not first send notice directly
to the tax filer.
Empowering Consumers
- Special Enrollment
Periods (SEPs): CMS is aligning the enrollment options for all
dependents who are newly enrolling in Exchange coverage through an SEP
and are being added to an application with current enrollees,
regardless of the SEP the dependent qualifies under. For consumers
newly gaining or becoming a dependent and enrolling through the birth,
adoption, foster care placement, or court order SEPs, CMS amended and
standardized the alternate coverage start date options available under
all of these SEPs. CMS will also allow pregnant women who are
receiving health care services through Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP) coverage for their unborn child to qualify for a loss
of coverage SEP upon losing access to this coverage. Finally, CMS
exempts consumers from the prior coverage requirement that applies to
certain special enrollment periods if they lived in a service area
without qualified health plans available through an Exchange.
Promoting Stability
- Medical Loss Ratio
(MLR):
The final rule amends MLR requirements to reduce regulatory burden in
order to stabilize insurance markets, increase insurer participation
and expand consumer choice. Specifically, the rule reduces quality
improvement activity reporting burdens on insurers and allows states
to request reasonable adjustments to the MLR standard for the
individual market if the state shows a lower MLR standard could help
stabilize its individual insurance market.
Reducing Unnecessary Regulatory Burden
- Small Business
Health Options Program (SHOP): The final rule removes several regulatory
requirements on SHOPs and outlines a new enrollment process in the
SHOP Exchanges using the Federal platform. This change allows SHOPs to
eliminate the online enrollment process and allows employers to enroll
directly with an Exchange-registered agent, broker, or issuer and, the
FF-SHOPs and SBE-FP for SHOPs will exercise the flexibilities outlined
in the notice for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2018. By
January 1, 2017 only 7,600 employer groups, covering 39,000 lives,
were in enrolled in the federal SHOP Exchange, far short of the 4
million people the Congressional Budget Office once projected would be
enrolled by 2017. Turning over enrollment to qualified agents and
brokers will help small business more easily enroll in coverage and
lower costs.
- Rate Review: The final rule
increases the primary role of state regulators in the rate review
process, while reducing the regulatory burden for states and issuers.
The rule exempts student health insurance coverage from Federal rate
review requirements, and raises the default threshold for review of
reasonableness from 10 percent to 15 percent.
The Final Annual Issuer Letter was also released today. This
Letter provides operational and technical guidance to issuers that want to
offer Qualified Health Plans (QHPs) in the Federally-facilitated Exchanges
(FFEs) for plan years beginning in 2019.
CMS also issued new guidance today expanding hardship exemptions. Under
this hardship exemption guidance, individuals who live in counties with no
issuers or only one issuer, will now qualify for a hardship exemption from
paying the Affordable Care Act’s penalty for not having coverage. The
guidance also allows CMS to consider a broad range of circumstances that
result in consumers needing hardship exemptions.
In addition, CMS issued a bulletin today to extend the transitional
policy for one additional year. This policy allows for the transition
to fully Affordable Care Act compliant coverage in the individual and small
group health insurance markets until 2019. CMS is releasing this
bulletin to provide states additional flexibility and control over their
health insurance markets.
To view the Final Annual Issuer Letter, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/index.html#Health
Insurance Marketplaces
To view the Hardship Exemption guidance, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2018-Hardship-Exemption-Guidance.pdf
To view the Extended Transitional Policy guidance, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/cciio/resources/regulations-and-guidance/#Health
Insurance Market Reforms
To view the Payment Notice Fact Sheet associated with this rule, please
visit: https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Fact-sheets/2018-Fact-sheets-items/2018-04-09.html
To view the Final Notice on the Federal Register, please visit: https://s3.amazonaws.com/public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2018-07355.pdf
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