CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 20, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Announces Enhanced Program Integrity Efforts for the
Exchange
Rule provides additional protection for Americans by ensuring effective Exchange oversight and accurate eligibility determinations for premium subsidies
The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) issued the Exchange Program Integrity Final
Rule, today, that implements policies aimed at protecting taxpayer dollars by
ensuring that Exchange enrollees are accurately determined eligible for
premium subsidies.
The final rule focuses on
strengthening oversight of State-based Exchanges (SBE) and implementing
a new requirement that Exchanges conduct regular eligibility verifications
with outside data sources at least twice a year. In addition, the rule aligns
federal regulations with the statutory requirements of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) to help ensure consumers understand the
coverage they are buying and also requires Qualified Health Plan (QHP)
issuers to send a separate bill and attempt to collect separate payments for
the portion of consumers’ premiums attributable to certain abortion services
for which public funding is prohibited.
“Our healthcare programs,
including the Exchanges, are evolving rapidly, and our program integrity
efforts must keep up,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Today’s final
rule drastically improves our ability to pay it right—to make the right
payment to the right plan for the right people. The Trump Administration will
spare no effort to ensure that taxpayer dollars are only going to those truly
eligible.”
Today’s final rule
addresses several recommendations from the Office of Inspector General (OIG)
and the Government Accountability Office (GAO). Those recommendations
addressed issues such as weaknesses in the process for determining
eligibility for advance payments of the premium tax credit (APTC) and
cost-sharing reductions (CSRs) in both the State and Federal Exchanges. To
address this issue, the rule strengthens programmatic oversight of SBE
program reporting requirements to confirm states are correctly identifying
eligible enrollees, including those who are qualified for APTC and CSRs.
Specifically, SBEs are
required to conduct and submit the results of annual programmatic audits and
CMS is finalizing changes that clarify the scope of such audits, including
procedures to test eligibility and enrollment transactions to ensure SBEs
that operate their own eligibility and enrollment platforms are properly
determining consumer eligibility for QHPs, APTC and CSRs. These changes will
strengthen CMS’s programmatic oversight and the program integrity of SBEs,
and better align with CMS’s program integrity priorities, providing CMS and
states with greater insight into SBE compliance with eligibility and
enrollment standards in a more cost-effective manner.
The rule also implements
safeguards regarding the eligibility and enrollment process across all
Exchanges, including SBEs, State-based Exchanges on the Federal Platform
(SBE-FPs), and Federally-facilitated Exchanges (FFEs). This includes enhanced
periodic data matching that will allow CMS to more frequently identify and
resolve issues related to consumers who are dually enrolled in both Medicare
and a QHP through the Exchange. This will ensure that people are enrolled in
the most appropriate type of coverage for them. Beginning with plan year
2020, CMS will require SBEs to conduct Medicare, Medicaid/CHIP, and as
applicable, Basic Health Plan periodic data matching at least twice a year
for QHP enrollees who receive subsidies.
Through the SBE oversight
requirements and improved data verification and audit requirements, CMS will
be able to identify and correct eligibility and enrollment issues sooner.
Early identification of eligibility and enrollment issues is particularly
important for consumers who are eligible for or enrolled in other coverage
because it can minimize the time these consumers inadvertently receive tax
credits that they will have to pay back later, and mitigate risks that they
are paying premiums for a plan they no longer need.
The rule includes new
requirements to align federal regulations with the statutory requirements of
section 1303 of the Affordable Care Act, which prohibits federal funding for
coverage of certain abortion services (“non-Hyde abortion services”). Section
1303 specifically prohibits QHPs from using APTC or CSRs to pay coverage of
for abortions for which public funding is prohibited. We estimate that
18 states currently have QHP issuers that offer coverage of non-Hyde abortion
services. Section 1303 requires these QHP issuers to collect a separate
payment from each enrollee for the portion of the consumer’s premium
attributable to health insurance coverage of these services.
The rule better aligns
with Congress’ intent for QHP issuers to collect two distinct payments, one
for the coverage of non-Hyde abortion services, and one for coverage of all
other services covered under a QHP. Pursuant to the law, this rule will
ensure that taxpayers do not contribute funds to pay for coverage of abortion
services for which funding isn’t allowed by law, and will alert consumers
that their health plan covers abortion services, allowing them to make fully
informed decisions about their coverage.
The separate billing
requirements in the final rule become effective June 27, 2020; the balance of
the final rule becomes effective nationwide within 60 days from today.
To view the fact sheet,
please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/2019-health-and-human-services-exchange-program-integrity-final-rule-fact-sheet
The final rule
(CMS-9922-F), can be viewed here: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/12/27/2019-27713/patient-protection-and-affordable-care-act-exchange-program-integrity
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Friday, December 20, 2019
CMS Announces Enhanced Program Integrity Efforts for the Exchange
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