Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2018, 61455-61536 [2016-20896]
Download as PDF
Vol. 81
Tuesday,
No. 172
September 6, 2016
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, 147, 148, et al.
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS Notice of Benefit and
Payment Parameters for 2018; Proposed Rule
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 4717
Sfmt 4717
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61456
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, 147, 148, 153,
154, 155, 156, 157, and 158
[CMS–9934–P]
RIN 0938–AS95
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act; HHS Notice of Benefit and
Payment Parameters for 2018
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule sets forth
payment parameters and provisions
related to the risk adjustment program;
cost-sharing parameters and costsharing reductions; and user fees for
Federally-facilitated Exchanges and
State-based Exchanges on the Federal
platform. It also provides additional
guidance relating to standardized
options; qualified health plans;
consumer assistance tools; network
adequacy; the Small Business Health
Options Program; stand-alone dental
plans; fair health insurance premiums;
guaranteed renewability; the medical
loss ratio program; eligibility and
enrollment; appeals; and other related
topics.
SUMMARY:
To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m. on October 6, 2016.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–9934–P. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
four ways (please choose only one of the
ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–9934–P, P.O. Box 8016, Baltimore,
MD 21244–8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments to the
following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–9934–P, Mail
Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
4. By hand or courier. Alternatively,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments ONLY to the
following addresses prior to the close of
the comment period: a. For delivery in
Washington, DC—Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Room 445–
G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20201.
(Because access to the interior of the
Hubert H. Humphrey Building is not
readily available to persons without
Federal government identification,
commenters are encouraged to leave
their comments in the CMS drop slots
located in the main lobby of the
building. A stamp-in clock is available
for persons wishing to retain a proof of
filing by stamping in and retaining an
extra copy of the comments being filed.)
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address, call
telephone number (410) 786–7195 in
advance to schedule your arrival with
one of our staff members.
Comments erroneously mailed to the
addresses indicated as appropriate for
hand or courier delivery may be delayed
and received after the comment period.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff
Wu, (301) 492–4305, Lindsey Murtagh,
(301) 492–4106, or Michelle Koltov,
(301) 492–4225 for general information.
Lisa Cuozzo, (410) 786–1746, for
matters related to fair health insurance
premiums, guaranteed renewability, and
single risk pool.
Michael Cohen, (301) 492–4277, for
matters related to the Pre-Existing
Condition Insurance Plan Program.
Kelly Drury, (410) 786–0558, or
Krutika Amin, (301) 492–5153, for
matters related to risk adjustment.
Adrianne Patterson, (410) 786–0686,
for matters related to sequestration, risk
adjustment data validation
discrepancies, and administrative
appeals.
Emily Ames, (301) 492–4246, for
matters related to language access.
Dana Krohn, (301) 492–4412, for
matters related to periodic data
matching, redeterminations of advance
payments of the premium tax credit,
and appeals.
Ryan Mooney, (301) 492–4405, for
matters related to premium payment,
billing, and terminations due to fraud.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Christelle Jang, (410) 786–8438, for
matters related to the Small Business
Health Options Program (SHOP).
Krutika Amin, (301) 492–5153, for
matters related to the Federallyfacilitated Exchange user fee.
Leigha Basini, (301) 492–4380, for
matters related to mid-year withdrawals,
and other standards for QHP issuers.
Ielnaz Kashefipour, (301) 492–4376,
for matters related to standardized
options.
Rebecca Zimmermann, (301) 492–
4396, for matters related to stand-alone
dental plans.
Cindy Chiou, (301) 492–5142, for
matters related to QHP issuer oversight
and direct enrollment.
Allison Yadsko, (410) 786–1740, for
matters related to levels of coverage and
actuarial value.
Pat Meisol, (410) 786–1917, for
matters related to cost-sharing
reductions, reconciliation of the costsharing reduction portion of advance
payments discrepancies, and the
premium adjustment percentage.
Christina Whitefield, (301) 492–4172,
for matters related to the medical loss
ratio program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have
been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the search
instructions on that Web site to view
public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection as
they are received, generally beginning
approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday
through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an
appointment to view public comments,
phone 1–800–743–3951.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview
B. Stakeholder Consultation and Input
C. Structure of Proposed Rule
III. Provisions of the Proposed HHS Notice of
Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2018
A. Part 144—Requirements Relating to
Health Insurance Coverage
B. Part 146—Requirements for the Group
Health Insurance Market
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
C. Part 147—Health Insurance Reform
Requirements for the Group and
Individual Health Insurance Markets
D. Part 148—Requirements for the
Individual Health Insurance Market
E. Part 152—Pre-Existing Condition
Insurance Plan Program
F. Part 153—Standards Related to
Reinsurance, Risk Corridors, and Risk
Adjustment Under the Affordable Care
Act
G. Part 154—Health Insurance Issuer Rate
Increases: Disclosure and Review
Requirements
H. Part 155—Exchange Establishment
Standards and Other Related Standards
Under the Affordable Care Act
I. Part 156—Health Insurance Issuer
Standards Under the Affordable Care
Act, Including Standards Related to
Exchanges
J. Part 157—Employer Interactions With
Exchanges and Shop Participation
K. Part 158—Issuer Use of Premium
Revenue: Reporting and Rebate
Requirements
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
A. ICRs Regarding Upload of Risk
Adjustment Data
B. ICRs Regarding Data Validation
Requirements When HHS Operates Risk
Adjustment
C. ICR Regarding the Interim and Final
Discrepancy Reporting Processes for Risk
Adjustment Data Validation When HHS
Operates Risk Adjustment
D. ICR Regarding Standardized Options in
SBE–FPs
E. ICR Regarding Differential Display of
Standardized Options on the Web sites
of Agents and Brokers and QHP Issuers
F. ICR Regarding Ability of States To
Permit Agents and Brokers To Assist
Qualified Individuals, Qualified
Employers, or Qualified Employees
Enrolling in QHPs
G. ICR Regarding Eligibility
Redeterminations
H. ICR Regarding Termination of Exchange
Enrollment or Coverage
I. ICR Regarding QHP Issuer Request for
Reconsideration
J. ICR Regarding Notification by Issuers
Denied Certification
K. ICR Regarding the Discrepancy
Reporting Processes for the
Reconciliation of the Cost-Sharing
Reduction Portion of Advance Payments
L. ICRs Regarding Administrative Appeals
M. ICR Regarding Medical Loss Ratio
V. Response to Comments
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Impact Estimates of the Payment Notice
Provisions and Accounting Table
D. Regulatory Alternatives Considered
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act
F. Unfunded Mandates
G. Federalism
H. Congressional Review Act
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Affordable Care Act The collective term for
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (Pub. L. 111–148) and the Health Care
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–152), as amended
APTC Advance payments of the premium
tax credit
AV Actuarial value
CBO Congressional Budget Office
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CHIP Children’s Health Insurance Program
CMP Civil money penalties
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
CPI Consumer price index
ECP Essential community provider
ED Enrollment duration
EDGE External data gathering environment
EHB Essential health benefits
ESRD End Stage Renal Disease
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFE Federally-facilitated Exchange
FF–SHOP Federally-facilitated Small
Business Health Options Program
FPL Federal poverty level
FR Federal Register
FTE Full-time equivalent
HCC Hierarchical condition category
HDHP High deductible health plan
HHS United States Department of Health
and Human Services
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–
191)
HMO Health maintenance organization
IRS Internal Revenue Service
LEP Limited English proficient/proficiency
MLR Medical loss ratio
NAIC National Association of Insurance
Commissioners
NDC National Drug Code
NHEA National Health Expenditure
Accounts
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PCIP Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan
PHS Act Public Health Service Act
PI Personal income
PMPM Per member per month
PPO Preferred provider organization
QHP Qualified health plan
QIA Quality improvement activities
RXC Prescription Drug Categories
SADP Stand-alone dental plan
SBC Summary of benefits and coverage
SBE–FP State-based Exchange on the
Federal platform
SHOP Small Business Health Options
Program
The Code Internal Revenue Code of 1986
(26 U.S.C. 1, et seq.)
USP United States Pharmacopeia
I. Executive Summary
The Affordable Care Act enacted a set
of reforms that are making high quality
health insurance coverage and care
more affordable and accessible to
millions of Americans. These reforms
include the creation of competitive
marketplaces called Affordable
Insurance Exchanges, or ‘‘Exchanges’’
(in this proposed rule, we also call an
Exchange a Health Insurance
Marketplace SM,1 or MarketplaceSM),
1 Health Insurance MarketplaceSM and
MarketplaceSM are service marks of the U.S.
Department of Health & Human Services.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61457
through which qualified individuals
and qualified employers can purchase
health insurance coverage. In addition,
many individuals who enroll in
qualified health plans (QHPs) through
individual market Exchanges are
eligible to claim a premium tax credit to
make health insurance premiums more
affordable, and reductions in costsharing payments to reduce out-ofpocket expenses for health care services.
These Affordable Care Act reforms also
include the risk adjustment program
and rules that are intended to mitigate
the potential impact of adverse selection
and stabilize the price of health
insurance in the individual and small
group markets. In previous rulemaking,
we have outlined the major provisions
and parameters related to many
Affordable Care Act programs.
In this proposed rule, to further
promote stable premiums in the
individual and small group markets, we
propose several updates to the risk
adjustment methodology based on our
experience with the program to date that
are intended to refine the methodology’s
ability to estimate risk. In particular, we
propose updates to better estimate the
risk associated with enrollees who are
not enrolled for a full 12 months, to use
prescription drug data to update the
predictive ability of our risk adjustment
models, and to establish transfers that
will better account for the risk of highcost enrollees. We propose a number of
policies relating to the use of external
data gathering environment (EDGE)
server data for recalibration of our risk
adjustment models, and the use of more
recent data for future calibrations. We
also propose several amendments to the
risk adjustment data validation process,
including proposals relating to the
review of prescription drug data and the
establishment of a discrepancy
identification and administrative
appeals process.
In addition to provisions aimed at
stabilizing premiums, we propose
several provisions related to costsharing parameters. First, we propose
the premium adjustment percentage for
2018, which is used to set the rate of
increase for several parameters detailed
in the Affordable Care Act, including
the maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing for 2018. We also propose the
maximum annual limitations on cost
sharing for the 2018 benefit year for
cost-sharing reduction plan variations.
This proposed rule also proposes
standards for stand-alone dental plans
(SADPs) related to the annual limitation
on cost sharing.
We also propose a number of
amendments that we believe would help
promote consumer choice in health
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61458
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
plans. These include a proposal
specifying that at least one QHP in the
silver coverage level and at least one
QHP in the gold coverage level must be
offered throughout each service area in
which a QHP issuer offers coverage
through the Exchange; and a proposal to
permit a broader de minimis range for
the actuarial value of bronze plans to
permit greater flexibility in benefit
design and to accommodate proposed
updates to the 2018 Actuarial Value
(AV) Calculator.
Our proposal requiring QHP issuers
on an Exchange to participate in the
Exchange for a full plan year (unless a
basis for suppression applies) as a QHP
certification requirement would help
ensure that individuals enrolling
through special enrollment periods and
newly qualified employees have access
to a range of plans that is generally
comparable to the range of plans that
can be accessed by those who enroll
during an open enrollment period. We
also seek comment on whether to
remove a requirement tying
participation in the individual market
Federally-facilitated Exchanges to
participation in the Federally-facilitated
Small Business Health Options
Programs.
We also propose to expand the
medical loss ratio (MLR) provision
allowing issuers to defer reporting of
policies newly issued with a full 12
months of experience (rather than
policies newly issued and with less than
12 months of experience) in that MLR
reporting year, and to limit the total
rebate liability payable with respect to
a given calendar year. We propose
several changes to our guaranteed
renewability regulations that would
address instances where issuers may
inadvertently trigger a 5-year
prohibition on re-entering an applicable
market. In these select instances, we
believe it is appropriate to allow issuers
to remain in the applicable market, and
believe allowing so will improve the
availability of choice for consumers. We
also propose a change to our age rating
rules for children.
In this proposed rule, we propose
several provisions regarding when and
how consumers may choose and enroll
in plans. This rule includes proposals
relating to codifying several special
enrollment periods that are already
available to consumers in order to
ensure the rules are clear and to limit
abuse; the enrollment processes in the
Small Business Health Options Program
(SHOP); and binder payment deadlines.
We also propose several amendments
related to insurance affordability
programs, including regarding eligibility
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
determinations, and periodic data
matching.
We are proposing a number of
amendments to assist consumers in
selecting and enrolling in QHPs and
insurance affordability programs. In the
HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment
Parameters for 2017 Final Rule (2017
Payment Notice), we established
standardized options, which we will
display on HealthCare.gov in a manner
that distinguishes them from other
QHPs, and a categorization of network
depth. We believe both policies will
make it easier for consumers to select
health plans through HealthCare.gov. In
this proposed rule, we expand upon
both policies. For standardized options,
we propose four bronze standardized
options (including one health savings
account-eligible high deductible health
plan), and three standardized options at
each of the silver, silver cost-sharing
reduction variations, and gold metal
levels. We propose to select one
standardized option at each metal level
and one at each cost-sharing reduction
plan variation level for use in each
State. We hope that by increasing the
scope of potential standardized designs,
we will better accommodate State costsharing laws. We also propose to make
differential display of standardized
options available in State-based
Exchanges on the Federal platform
(SBE–FPs) at the State’s option, as well
as to require differential display of
standardized options by QHP issuers
and web-brokers using a direct
enrollment pathway to facilitate
enrollment through a Federallyfacilitated Exchange (FFE) or SBE–FP.
Additionally, we propose a number of
standards and consumer protections
that would apply to a web-broker or
issuer using the direct enrollment
pathway. We propose to augment our
network adequacy display policy to
account for QHPs that are part of an
integrated delivery system. We also
make proposals relating to the essential
community provider requirements and
propose amendments to the standards
regarding providing taglines in nonEnglish languages indicating the
availability of language services.
We seek comment on potential ways
to further support the transition of
former Pre-Existing Condition Insurance
Plan (PCIP) Program enrollees into the
Exchange to ensure that they do not
experience a lapse in coverage.
We also propose several amendments
that would strengthen Exchanges’
oversight capabilities. These include
proposals requiring issuers attempting
to rescind coverage purchased through
the Exchange to show that the rescission
is appropriate; and making explicit
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
HHS’s authority to impose civil money
penalties (CMPs) in situations where
QHP issuers are non-responsive or
uncooperative with compliance reviews.
We also propose an avenue through
which issuers can appeal a noncertification or decertification.
Finally, in this proposed rule, we
propose minor adjustments to our rules
governing the single risk pool, SHOP,
user fees, and notices, including notices
related to SHOP, decertification, and
appeals.
II. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview
The Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148) was enacted
on March 23, 2010. The Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–152), which amended and
revised several provisions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, was
enacted on March 30, 2010. In this
proposed rule, we refer to the two
statutes collectively as the ‘‘Affordable
Care Act.’’
The Affordable Care Act reorganizes,
amends, and adds to the provisions of
title XXVII of the Public Health Service
Act (PHS Act) relating to group health
plans and health insurance issuers in
the group and individual markets.
Section 2701 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act, restricts the
variation in premium rates charged by a
health insurance issuer for nongrandfathered health insurance coverage
in the individual or small group market
to certain specified factors. The factors
are: Family size, geographic area, age,
and tobacco use.
Section 2701 of the PHS Act operates
in coordination with section 1312(c) of
the Affordable Care Act. Section 1312(c)
of the Affordable Care Act generally
requires a health insurance issuer to
consider all enrollees in all health plans
(except grandfathered health plans)
offered by such issuer to be members of
a single risk pool for each of its
individual and small group markets.
States have the option to merge the
individual and small group market risk
pools under section 1312(c)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act.
Section 2702 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act, requires
health insurance issuers that offer
health insurance coverage in the group
or individual market in a State to offer
coverage to and accept every employer
and individual in the State that applies
for such coverage, unless an exception
applies.2
2 Before enactment of the Affordable Care Act, the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
of 1996 amended the PHS Act (formerly section
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Section 2703 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act, and former
section 2712 and section 2742 of the
PHS Act, as added by the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA),
require health insurance issuers that
offer health insurance coverage in the
group or individual market to renew or
continue in force such coverage at the
option of the plan sponsor or individual
unless an exception applies.
Section 2718 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act, generally
requires health insurance issuers to
submit an annual medical loss ratio
report to HHS, and provide rebates to
enrollees if the issuers do not achieve
specified MLR thresholds.
Section 2794 of the PHS Act, as added
by the Affordable Care Act, directs the
Secretary of HHS (the Secretary), in
conjunction with the States, to establish
a process for the annual review of
unreasonable increases in premiums for
health insurance coverage.3 The law
also requires health insurance issuers to
submit to the Secretary and the
applicable State justifications for
unreasonable premium increases prior
to the implementation of the increases.
Section 2794(b)(2) of the PHS Act
further directs the Secretary, in
conjunction with the States, to monitor
premium increases of health insurance
coverage offered through an Exchange or
outside of an Exchange beginning with
plan years starting in 2014.
Section 1101 of the Affordable Care
Act required the Secretary to establish a
temporary high-risk health insurance
pool program to provide health
insurance coverage from the
establishment of the program until
January 1, 2014 for eligible individuals,
namely U.S. residents who are U.S.
citizens or lawfully present in the U.S.;
did not have other health insurance
coverage in the 6 months preceding
enactment; and have a pre-existing
condition. Section 1101 also requires
that the Secretary develop procedures to
provide for the transition of eligible
individuals enrolled in this health
insurance coverage into qualified health
plans offered through an Exchange to
avoid a lapse in coverage.
Section 1302 of the Affordable Care
Act provides for the establishment of an
essential health benefits (EHB) package
that includes coverage of EHB (as
defined by the Secretary), cost-sharing
2711) to generally require guaranteed availability of
coverage for employers in the small group market.
3 The implementing regulations in part 154 limit
the scope of the requirements under section 2794
of the PHS Act to health insurance issuers offering
health insurance coverage in the individual market
or small group market.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
limits, and actuarial value (AV)
requirements. The law directs that EHBs
be equal in scope to the benefits covered
by a typical employer plan and that they
cover at least the following 10 general
categories: Ambulatory patient services;
emergency services; hospitalization;
maternity and newborn care; mental
health and substance use disorder
services, including behavioral health
treatment; prescription drugs;
rehabilitative and habilitative services
and devices; laboratory services;
preventive and wellness services and
chronic disease management; and
pediatric services, including oral and
vision care.
Section 1301(a)(1)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act directs all issuers of
QHPs to cover the EHB package
described in section 1302(a) of the
Affordable Care Act, including coverage
of the services described in section
1302(b) of the Affordable Care Act, to
adhere to the cost-sharing limits
described in section 1302(c) of the
Affordable Care Act and to meet the AV
levels established in section 1302(d) of
the Affordable Care Act. Section 2707(a)
of the PHS Act, which is effective for
plan or policy years beginning on or
after January 1, 2014, extends the
coverage of the EHB package to nongrandfathered individual and small
group market coverage, irrespective of
whether such coverage is offered
through an Exchange. In addition,
section 2707(b) of the PHS Act directs
non-grandfathered group health plans to
ensure that cost sharing under the plan
does not exceed the limitations
described in section 1302(c)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act.
Section 1302(d) of the Affordable Care
Act describes the various levels of
coverage based on actuarial value.
Consistent with section 1302(d)(2)(A) of
the Affordable Care Act, AV is
calculated based on the provision of
EHB to a standard population. Section
1302(d)(3) of the Affordable Care Act
directs the Secretary to develop
guidelines that allow for de minimis
variation in AV calculations.
Section 1311(b)(1)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act directs that the
Small Business Health Options Program
assist qualified small employers in
facilitating the enrollment of their
employees in qualified health plans
offered in the small group market.
Sections 1312(f)(1) and (2) of the
Affordable Care Act define qualified
individuals and qualified employers.
Under section 1312(f)(2)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act, beginning in 2017,
States will have the option to allow
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61459
issuers to offer QHPs in the large group
market through an Exchange.4
Section 1311(c)(1)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary to establish minimum criteria
for provider network adequacy that a
health plan must meet to be certified as
a QHP.
Section 1311(c)(5) of the Affordable
Care Act requires the Secretary to
continue to operate, maintain, and
update the Internet portal developed
under section 1103 of the Affordable
Care Act to provide information to
consumers and small businesses on
affordable health insurance coverage
options.
Section 1311(c)(6)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act states that the
Secretary is to provide for special
enrollment periods specified in section
9801 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 (the Code) and other special
enrollment periods under circumstances
similar to such periods under part D of
title XVIII of the Social Security Act (the
Act).
Section 1312(e) of the Affordable Care
Act directs the Secretary to establish
procedures under which a State may
permit agents and brokers to enroll
qualified individuals and qualified
employers in QHPs through an
Exchange, and to assist individuals in
applying for financial assistance for
QHPs sold through an Exchange.
Section 1321(a) of the Affordable Care
Act provides broad authority for the
Secretary to establish standards and
regulations to implement the statutory
requirements related to Exchanges,
QHPs and other components of title I of
the Affordable Care Act. Section
1321(a)(1) directs the Secretary to issue
regulations that set standards for
meeting the requirements of title I of the
Affordable Care Act with respect to,
among other things, the establishment
and operation of Exchanges.
Sections 1313 and 1321 of the
Affordable Care Act provide the
Secretary with the authority to oversee
the financial integrity of State
Exchanges, their compliance with HHS
standards, and the efficient and nondiscriminatory administration of State
Exchange activities. Section 1321 of the
Affordable Care Act provides for State
flexibility in the operation and
enforcement of Exchanges and related
requirements.
When operating a Federally-facilitated
Exchange under section 1321(c)(1) of
the Affordable Care Act, HHS has the
4 If a State elects this option, the rating rules in
section 2701 of the PHS Act and its implementing
regulations will apply to all coverage offered in
such State’s large group market under section
2701(a)(5) of the PHS Act.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61460
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
authority under sections 1321(c)(1) and
1311(d)(5)(A) of the Affordable Care Act
to collect and spend user fees. In
addition, 31 U.S.C. 9701 permits a
Federal agency to establish a charge for
a service provided by the agency. Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
Circular A–25 Revised establishes
Federal policy regarding user fees and
specifies that a user charge will be
assessed against each identifiable
recipient for special benefits derived
from Federal activities beyond those
received by the general public.
Furthermore, these user fees are
appropriated to CMS in the CMS
Program Management appropriation.
Section 1321(c)(2) of the Affordable
Care Act authorizes the Secretary to
enforce the Exchange standards using
CMPs on the same basis as detailed in
section 2723(b) of the PHS Act. Section
2723(b) of the PHS Act authorizes the
Secretary to impose CMPs as a means of
enforcing the individual and group
market reforms contained in part A of
title XXVII of the PHS Act with respect
to health insurance issuers when a State
fails to substantially enforce these
provisions.
Section 1321(d) of the Affordable Care
Act provides that nothing in title I of the
Affordable Care Act should be
construed to preempt any State law that
does not prevent the application of title
I of the Affordable Care Act. Section
1311(k) of the Affordable Care Act
specifies that Exchanges may not
establish rules that conflict with or
prevent the application of regulations
issued by the Secretary.
Section 1343 of the Affordable Care
Act establishes a risk adjustment
program in which States, or HHS on
behalf of States, collects charges from
health insurance issuers that attract
lower-risk populations in order to use
those funds to provide payments to
health insurance issuers that attract
higher-risk populations, such as those
with chronic conditions, thereby
reducing incentives for issuers to avoid
higher-risk enrollees.
Sections 1402 and 1412 of the
Affordable Care Act provide for, among
other things, reductions in cost sharing
for essential health benefits for qualified
low- and moderate-income enrollees in
silver level health plans offered through
the individual market Exchanges. These
sections also provide for reductions in
cost sharing for Indians enrolled in
QHPs at any metal level.
1. Premium Stabilization Programs
In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register
(76 FR 41929), we published a proposed
rule outlining the framework for the
premium stabilization programs. We
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
implemented the premium stabilization
programs in a final rule, published in
the March 23, 2012 Federal Register (77
FR 17219) (Premium Stabilization Rule).
In the December 7, 2012 Federal
Register (77 FR 73117), we published a
proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2014 benefit
year to expand the provisions related to
the premium stabilization programs and
set forth payment parameters in those
programs (proposed 2014 Payment
Notice). We published the 2014
Payment Notice final rule in the March
11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
15409).
In the December 2, 2013 Federal
Register (78 FR 72321), we published a
proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2015 benefit
year to expand the provisions related to
the premium stabilization programs,
setting forth certain oversight provisions
and establishing the payment
parameters in those programs (proposed
2015 Payment Notice). We published
the 2015 Payment Notice final rule in
the March 11, 2014 Federal Register (79
FR 13743).
In the November 26, 2014 Federal
Register (79 FR 70673), we published a
proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2016 benefit
year to expand the provisions related to
the premium stabilization programs,
setting forth certain oversight provisions
and establishing the payment
parameters in those programs (proposed
2016 Payment Notice). We published
the 2016 Payment Notice final rule in
the February 27, 2015 Federal Register
(80 FR 10749).
In the December 2, 2015 Federal
Register (80 FR 75487), we published a
proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2017 benefit
year to expand the provisions related to
the premium stabilization programs,
setting forth certain oversight provisions
and establishing the payment
parameters in those programs (proposed
2017 Payment Notice). We published
the 2017 Payment Notice final rule in
the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81
FR 12203).
2. Program Integrity
In the June 19, 2013 Federal Register
(78 FR 37031), we published a proposed
rule that proposed certain program
integrity standards related to Exchanges
and the premium stabilization programs
(proposed Program Integrity Rule). The
provisions of that proposed rule were
finalized in two rules, the ‘‘first Program
Integrity Rule’’ published in the August
30, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 54069)
and the ‘‘second Program Integrity
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Rule’’ published in the October 30, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 65045).
3. Exchanges
We published a request for comment
relating to Exchanges in the August 3,
2010 Federal Register (75 FR 45584).
We issued initial guidance to States on
Exchanges on November 18, 2010. We
proposed a rule in the July 15, 2011
Federal Register (76 FR 41865) to
implement components of the
Exchanges, and a rule in the August 17,
2011 Federal Register (76 FR 51201)
regarding Exchange functions in the
individual market, eligibility
determinations, and Exchange standards
for employers. A final rule
implementing components of the
Exchanges and setting forth standards
for eligibility for Exchanges was
published in the March 27, 2012
Federal Register (77 FR 18309)
(Exchange Establishment Rule).
We established standards for SHOP in
the 2014 Payment Notice and in the
Amendments to the HHS Notice of
Benefit and Payment Parameters for
2014 interim final rule, published in the
March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
15541). We also set forth standards
related to Exchange user fees in the
2014 Payment Notice.
In the 2017 Payment Notice we
established additional Exchange
standards, including requirements for
State Exchanges using the Federal
platform and standardized options.
In an interim final rule with comment
published in the May 11, 2016 Federal
Register (81 FR 29146) we amended the
parameters of certain special enrollment
periods.
4. Essential Health Benefits and
Actuarial Value
On December 16, 2011, HHS released
a bulletin 5 (the EHB Bulletin) that
outlined an intended regulatory
approach for defining EHB, including a
benchmark-based framework. HHS also
published a bulletin that outlined its
intended regulatory approach to
calculations of AV on February 24,
2012.6 A proposed rule relating to EHBs
and AVs was published in the
November 26, 2012 Federal Register (77
FR 70643). We established requirements
relating to EHBs and AVs in the
Standards Related to Essential Health
Benefits, Actuarial Value, and
5 Essential Health Benefits Bulletin. (Dec. 16,
2011). Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Files/Downloads/essential_health_
benefits_bulletin.pdf.
6 Actuarial Value and Cost-Sharing Reductions
Bulletin. Feb. 24, 2012. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/
Av-csr-bulletin.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Accreditation Final Rule, which was
published in the February 25, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 12833) (EHB
Rule).
published an interim final rule in the
May 22, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
30218).
5. Market Rules
A proposed rule relating to the 2014
health insurance market rules was
published in the November 26, 2012
Federal Register (77 FR 70584). A final
rule implementing the health insurance
market rules was published in the
February 27, 2013 Federal Register (78
FR 13406) (2014 Market Rules).
A proposed rule relating to Exchanges
and Insurance Market Standards for
2015 and Beyond was published in the
March 21, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR
15808) (2015 Market Standards
Proposed Rule). A final rule
implementing the Exchange and
Insurance Market Standards for 2015
and Beyond was published in the May
27, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR 30240)
(2015 Market Standards Rule).
HHS has consulted with stakeholders
on policies related to the operation of
Exchanges, including the SHOPs, and
the premium stabilization programs. We
have held a number of listening sessions
with consumers, providers, employers,
health plans, the actuarial community,
and State representatives to gather
public input. We consulted with
stakeholders through regular meetings
with the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners (NAIC),
regular contact with States through the
Exchange Establishment grant and
Exchange Blueprint approval processes,
and meetings with Tribal leaders and
representatives, health insurance
issuers, trade groups, consumer
advocates, employers, and other
interested parties.
On March 31, 2016, we hosted a
public conference to discuss the
potential improvements to the Federally
certified HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology. Prior to the conference,
we published the ‘‘March 31, 2016,
HHS-Operated Risk Adjustment
Methodology Meeting: Discussion
Paper’’ (‘‘White Paper’’),7 on which we
received public comment. These
comments are available at: https://
www.regtap.info/uploads/library/RA_
Onsite_Discussion_Paper_Comments_
5CR_080916.pdf.
We considered all public input we
received as we developed the policies in
this proposed rule.
B. Stakeholder Consultation and Input
6. Rate Review
A proposed rule to establish the rate
review program was published in the
December 23, 2010 Federal Register (75
FR 81003). A final rule with comment
period implementing the rate review
program was published in the May 23,
2011 Federal Register (76 FR 29963)
(Rate Review Rule). The provisions of
the Rate Review Rule were amended in
final rules published in the September
6, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 54969),
the February 27, 2013 Federal Register
(78 FR 13405), the May 27, 2014 Federal
Register (79 FR 30339), and the
February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80
FR 10749).
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
7. Medical Loss Ratio
We published a request for comment
on section 2718 of the PHS Act in the
April 14, 2010 Federal Register (75 FR
19297), and published an interim final
rule relating to the MLR program on
December 1, 2010 (75 FR 74863). A final
rule was published in the December 7,
2011 Federal Register (76 FR 76573).
An interim final rule was published in
the December 7, 2011 Federal Register
(76 FR 76595). A final rule was
published in the Federal Register on
May 16, 2012 (77 FR 28790).
8. Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan
Program
We published an interim final rule in
the July 30, 2010 Federal Register (75
FR 45013) setting forth implementing
regulations for the Pre-Existing
Condition Insurance Plan Program. An
amendment to this interim final rule
was published in the August 30, 2012
Federal Register (77 FR 52614). We
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
C. Structure of Proposed Rule
The regulations outlined in this
proposed rule would be codified in 45
CFR parts 144, 146, 147, 148, 153, 154,
155, 156, 157 and 158.
The proposed regulations in parts 144
and 154 would make conforming
revisions to the regulatory definitions of
‘‘plan’’ and ‘‘product.’’
The proposed regulations in parts
146, 147 and 148 would address two
scenarios in which the discontinuation
of all coverage currently offered by an
issuer within a market and State will
not be treated as a market withdrawal
for purposes of the guaranteed
renewability requirements. The
proposed regulations in part 147 would
also create multiple child age bands for
rating purposes, and would amend the
provision regarding limited open
enrollment periods (also known as
7 Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/
Downloads/RA-March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61461
special enrollment periods) in the
individual market to reflect the
proposed amendments regarding special
enrollment periods in the Exchanges.
The discussion in part 152 seeks
comment on potential approaches to
ensure the successful transition of
former Pre-Existing Condition Insurance
Plan (PCIP) Program enrollees to the
Exchange without a lapse in coverage,
under the PCIP statute.
The proposed regulations in part 153
include the risk adjustment user fee for
2018 and outline a number of proposed
modifications to the HHS risk
adjustment methodology, including
modifications to: (1) Address partial
year enrollment; (2) use prescription
drug data to predict actuarial risk; and
(3) alter the methodology to better
account for high-cost enrollees. We also
propose to use EDGE server data to
recalibrate the risk adjustment models,
and propose revisions to the risk
adjustment data validation process.
The proposed regulations in part 155
include several amendments regarding
standardized options, including the
2018 cost-sharing structures for
standardized options. Other proposals
in part 155 are related to the eligibility
and verification processes for insurance
affordability programs. We propose to
amend rules related to enrollment of
qualified individuals into QHPs and
make various proposals related to the
SHOPs. We propose to amend the
regulations requiring Exchanges, QHP
issuers, and web-brokers to provide
taglines in non-English languages. We
propose the required contribution
percentage for 2018. We propose a new
policy regarding appealing denials of
QHP certification. We also propose
amendments to the standards applicable
in State Exchanges using the Federal
platform for SHOP functions in parts
155 and 156. We also propose
amendments to the regulations
applicable to qualified employers in the
SHOPs in part 157.
The proposed regulations in part 156
set forth proposals related to costsharing parameters, including the
premium adjustment percentage, the
maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing, and the reductions in the
maximum annual limitation for costsharing plan variations for 2018. We
also propose the user fee rate applicable
in the FFEs and SBE–FPs. The proposed
regulations also include an amendment
providing for calibration of the single
risk pool index rate. We also propose
changes regarding AV, levels of
coverage, and essential community
provider requirements.
The proposed amendments to the
regulations in part 158 propose
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61462
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
revisions related to deferral of reporting
of experience for newer business, as
well as revisions related to limiting the
total rebate liability payable with
respect to a given calendar year.
III. Provisions of the Proposed HHS
Notice of Benefit and Payment
Parameters for 2018
A. Part 144—Requirements Relating to
Health Insurance Coverage
1. Definitions (§ 144.103)
We propose to revise the regulatory
definitions of ‘‘plan’’ and ‘‘product’’ in
§ 144.103. Specifically, we propose to
remove language from each definition
that would restrict a plan or product
from being considered the same plan or
product when it is no longer offered by
the same issuer, but is still offered by a
different issuer in the same controlled
group. We also propose to add a second
sentence to clarify that, in the case of a
product that has been modified,
transferred, or replaced, the product
will be considered to be the same
product when it meets the standards for
uniform modification of coverage at
§ 146.152(f), § 147.106(e), or
§ 148.122(g), as applicable. For further
discussion of the provisions of this
proposed rule related to the transfer or
replacement of all products in a market
in a State, please see the preamble to
§ 147.106. Finally, for purposes of
clarity, we propose to include examples
of product network types in the
definition of ‘‘product’’ in § 144.103,
including health maintenance
organization (HMO), preferred provider
organization (PPO), exclusive provider
organization, point of service, and
indemnity.
B. Part 146—Requirements for the
Group Health Insurance Market
1. Guaranteed Renewability of Coverage
for Employers in the Group Market
(§ 146.152)
For a discussion of the provisions of
this proposed rule related to part 146,
please see the preamble to § 147.106.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
C. Part 147—Health Insurance Reform
Requirements for the Group and
Individual Health Insurance Markets
1. Fair Health Insurance Premiums
(§ 147.102)
Section 2701 of the PHS Act, as
implemented at 45 CFR 147.102(a)(3),
permits premium rates to vary based on
age within a ratio of 3 to 1 for adults.
Section 147.102(d) provides for uniform
age bands, including a single age band
for individuals age 0 through 20. In the
proposed 2017 Payment Notice (80 FR
75496), we stated that we recognized
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
that the Federal child age band and
factor may need to be updated to better
reflect the health risk of children. While
average health care costs vary by the age
of the child, in general, claim costs are
highest for children age 0 through 4,
followed by individuals age 15 through
20. Children age 5 through 14 generally
have lower claim costs. Having one age
band for individuals age 0 through 20,
together with the current child age
factor, may result in significant
premium increases for an individual
when reaching age 21. In general, the
premium at age 21 is 57% higher than
the premium at age 20. Therefore, we
sought comment regarding age rating for
children to inform our reconsideration
of the child age rating factor in the
Federal uniform age curve.8
Most comments submitted to HHS in
response to the proposed 2017 Payment
Notice supported continuing to spread
the cost of newborns across a broader
age band, and supported a more gradual
transition in premiums up to age 21.
Some stakeholders also indicated that
the default child age factor of 0.635
should be higher, stating that the
relatively low child age factor currently
leads to insufficient premiums for
children. We conducted an analysis of
total annual cost from a national
commercial database that incorporates
2015 claims data from the individual
and small group markets. Based on this
analysis, we propose to amend
§ 147.102(d) to create multiple child age
bands and propose a corresponding
increase in the overall child age factor.
We propose one age band for
individuals age 0 through 14 and then
single-year age bands for individuals age
15 through 20, effective for plan years
or policy years beginning on or after
January 1, 2018. Establishing single-year
age bands beginning at age 15 would be
likely to result in small annual increases
in premiums for children age 15 to 20,
which would help mitigate large
premium increases attributable to age
due to the transition from a child to an
adult age rating. However, we solicit
comments on alternative approaches
that would achieve these objectives.
We recognize that age rating factors
have a significant impact on issuers’
approach to developing health
insurance rates and therefore also
propose age rating factors for the default
2. Guaranteed Availability of Coverage
(§ 147.104)
For a discussion of the provisions of
this proposed rule related to limited
open enrollment periods (also known as
special enrollment periods) in
§ 147.104, please see the preamble to
§ 155.420.
The guaranteed availability
requirement in section 2702 of the PHS
Act generally requires each health
insurance issuer that offers health
insurance coverage in the group or
individual market in a State to accept
every employer or individual in the
State that applies for such coverage.
However, in the case of an issuer that
offers coverage through a network plan,
the issuer may limit its offer of coverage
to individuals in the individual market
who live or reside in the service area of
such network plan, and to employers in
the small group or large group market
with employees who live, work, or
reside in the service area of such
network plan.9
8 Under 45 CFR 147.102(e), each State may
establish a uniform age rating curve in the
individual or small group market, or both markets,
for rating purposes. If a State does not establish a
uniform age rating curve or provide information on
such age curve in accordance with § 147.103, a
default uniform age rating curve specified in
guidance by the Secretary will apply in that State
that takes into account the rating variation
permitted for age under State law.
9 In the 2014 Market Rules, we codified in
regulation the ability of an issuer of a network plan
to limit the availability to individuals who live or
reside in the service area, noting that ‘‘[w]hile PHS
Act section 2702(c)(1)(A) does not explicitly
include a corresponding exception allowing issuers
to limit the sale of individual market coverage to
individuals who live or reside in the individual
market plan’s service area, failing to recognize such
an exception would eliminate an issuer’s ability to
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Federal standard child age curve. These
factors, listed in Table 1, correspond to
the proposed change to child age bands.
We solicit comments on these child age
rating factors and whether they should
be implemented at one time or phased
in over a 3-year period. As stated in the
preamble to the 2014 Market Rules (78
FR at 13413), we intend to revise the
default Federal standard age curve
periodically in guidance, but no more
frequently than annually, to reflect
market patterns in the individual and
small group markets. We propose to
reflect this approach by amending
§ 147.102(e). We intend to monitor the
effect of these new age bands and rating
factors, if finalized, to determine
whether further refinements are needed.
TABLE 1—CMS STANDARD AGE
CURVE FOR CHILDREN
Age
0–14 ..........
15 ..............
16 ..............
17 ..............
18 ..............
19 ..............
20 ..............
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Current
premium ratio
Proposed
premium ratio
0.635
0.635
0.635
0.635
0.635
0.635
0.635
0.765
0.833
0.859
0.885
0.913
0.941
0.970
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
This protection under Federal law
does not require that the employer have
a principal business address within the
issuer’s service area.10 In the 2017
Payment Notice, we amended § 147.102
to ensure that a network plan could be
appropriately rated for sale to an
employer with employees in multiple
geographical rating areas, consistent
with both the rating rules and the
guaranteed availability requirements.
We understand that some issuers have
unique network sharing agreements
with other affiliated issuers through
which an employer’s employees may
access in-network coverage outside the
service area of the primary issuer, using
the provider network of the affiliated
issuers. Under the terms of these
agreements, the affiliated issuers require
the employer itself to be located in the
issuer’s service area in order to be
eligible to purchase coverage, and the
issuers agree not to offer products to an
employer whose business headquarters
is outside of the primary issuer’s service
area. For example, affiliated issuers A
and B have service areas A and B,
respectively. Under the terms of the
agreements, an employer with business
headquarters in service area A could
purchase coverage from issuer A to
cover its employees in both service
areas A and B, but that employer could
not purchase coverage from issuer B.
We understand these issuers believe
issuer B satisfies the guaranteed
availability requirements because the
employer is guaranteed coverage from
issuer A, and its employees in service
area B can have access to the coverage
under the plan issued by issuer A using
issuer B’s network. These issuers
explain that this system promotes
simplicity for employers, who can
purchase a single plan from one of the
locally affiliated issuers serving the
employer’s area to cover their
employees in multiple service areas.
We seek comment on whether and
how restricting an employer’s ability to
purchase coverage from an issuer, when
the offering of such coverage would not
exceed the scope of the issuer’s license
define a service area for its individual market
business within a State. Moreover, references to
persons with individual market coverage in
paragraph (c)(1) and subparagraph (c)(1)(B) of PHS
Act section 2702 suggest that such persons with
individual market coverage also were intended to
be described in paragraph (c)(1)(A).’’
10 However, this provision does not require an
issuer to offer coverage to an employer whose place
of business is located outside the State in which the
issuer is licensed to do business. Further, this
provision does not require an issuer to offer
coverage to an employer if doing so would exceed
the scope of the issuer’s State licensure (for
example, the issuer’s product is not approved for
sale to an employer where the situs of the contract
is outside the issuer’s service area).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
from the applicable State authority, may
limit employers’ options.
We also seek comments on these and
other similar arrangements and whether
or how they could be structured,
consistent with State licensure
requirements, to satisfy the guaranteed
availability right of employers to
purchase all products that are approved
for sale from an issuer when the
employer has employees who live,
work, or reside within the issuer’s
service area.
3. Guaranteed Renewability of Coverage
(§ 147.106)
a. Market Withdrawal Exception to
Guaranteed Renewability Requirements
PHS Act section 2703(c)(2)(B)
provides that a health insurance issuer
that elects to discontinue all health
insurance coverage in the individual or
group market in a State is prohibited
from re-entering the applicable market
for at least 5 years. The 5-year ban on
market re-entry is codified at
§ 147.106(d)(2). However, we recognize
that interpreting certain issuer
transactions or reorganizations to be
withdrawals from the market, triggering
the 5-year ban on market re-entry, may
have unintended effects and may not be
necessary to ensure the continuity of
coverage for consumers, which is a
primary focus of the protections in the
guaranteed renewability statute.
For example, as part of a corporate
reorganization, an issuer could transfer
all of its products to another related
issuer, where the products otherwise
would be considered the same products
based on the uniform modification
standards at § 147.106(e). More
specifically, an issuer with multiple
lines of business, such as a Medicaid
managed care line and a commercial
line, could decide to create a subsidiary
and transfer its commercial line of
business to the subsidiary. In such
cases, enrollees in the commercial
products maintain continuity of
coverage when their plans and products
are not changed beyond what is
permitted by the scope of the uniform
modification provisions. We also note
that several States evaluate transactions
at the holding company level and have
informed HHS that a transaction of the
type described in this example would
not trigger the 5-year ban on market reentry and corresponding notice
requirement under State law.
We recognize that interpreting such a
transfer to constitute a market
withdrawal could have the unintended
consequences of potentially raising
conflicts with State approaches and
unnecessarily limiting issuer corporate
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61463
structuring transactions. Therefore, to
align with State approaches to corporate
structuring or other transactions within
a controlled group of issuers, and to
avoid unintended market bans where
continuity of coverage is effectively
provided, we propose to amend
§ 147.106(e)(3)(i) to provide that, for
purposes of guaranteed renewability, a
product will be considered to be the
same product when offered by a
different issuer within an issuer’s
controlled group, provided it otherwise
meets the standards for uniform
modification of coverage.11
For this purpose, we propose to use
a definition based on the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) definition of
controlled group that applies for
purposes of determining whether a
group of two or more persons is treated
as a single covered entity under the
health insurance providers fee under
section 9010 of the Affordable Care Act
and 26 CFR 57.2(c). Specifically, for
purposes of guaranteed renewability, we
propose that ‘‘controlled group’’ means
a group of two or more persons that is
treated as a single employer under
section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended. We propose that definition for
consistency with other Affordable Care
Act provisions, including sections 9008
and 9010, which pertain to the branded
prescription drug fee and health
insurance providers fee, respectively,
and are familiar to health insurance
issuers. We note that the definition of
issuer group under 45 CFR 156.20 is
also familiar to issuers and we are
considering whether to use a similar
definition for purposes of these
regulations. That section provides that
the term issuer group means all entities
treated under subsection (a) or (b) of
section 52 of the Code as a member of
the same controlled group of
corporations as (or under common
control with) a health insurance issuer,
or issuers affiliated by the common use
of a nationally licensed service mark.
We solicit comment on whether this or
another definition would be
appropriate.
As a result of this proposal, issuers
transferring products to another issuer
in their controlled group that otherwise
remain within the scope of a uniform
modification would not be required to
11 As we explained in an FAQ related to Market
Reforms, https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/qa_hmr.html, enrollees in a
grandfathered product can maintain that coverage if
that coverage continues to be offered and the
coverage does not make a change that would cause
the product to cease to be grandfathered as
provided for in regulations. See 26 CFR 54.9815–
1251(g)(1); 29 CFR 2590.715–1251(g)(1); and 45 CFR
147.140(g)(1).
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61464
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
send discontinuation notices under
paragraph (c)(1) or (d)(1), as applicable.
However, because this interpretation
considers the transferred product to be
the same as the product previously
offered, the issuer of the coverage at the
time notice must be provided (whether
the current issuer or the acquiring
issuer) would be required to provide a
renewal notice in accordance with the
timeframe specified in the regulation.
We also propose that States that
interpret or apply market withdrawal
provisions differently under State law
would not be prohibited by this
interpretation from considering
products transferred to a different issuer
within a controlled group to be a new
product and the scenario a market
withdrawal. We propose to make
conforming amendments at
§§ 146.152(f)(3)(i) and 148.122(g)(3)(i).
Because, under this interpretation, the
products would be considered the same
products for purposes of continuity of
coverage for the enrollees, we also
propose that the products be considered
the same products for purposes of the
Federal rate review requirements, to the
extent applicable, and therefore we
propose conforming amendments as
described in the preamble to § 154.102.
For States where HHS is responsible for
enforcement of the guaranteed
renewability provisions of the PHS Act,
we propose to adopt this interpretation
and not consider the transfer of
products to a different issuer within a
controlled group to be a market
withdrawal when the conditions in this
proposed rule are met, where permitted
under applicable State law.
There is a second situation where we
have determined that it may not be
appropriate to interpret an issuer’s
actions to constitute a market
withdrawal resulting in a 5-year ban on
market re-entry. When an issuer
discontinues offering all of its products
and seeks to offer new products within
the same market, if the changes made to
the new products exceed the scope of a
uniform modification of coverage, we
have considered such an action to be a
market withdrawal, subject to the 5-year
ban on market re-entry.12 In such a
scenario an issuer might, for example,
offer only products A, B, and C one
year, but then offer only products D, E,
and F the next year, where products D,
E and F differ from products A, B and
C in ways that do not meet the criteria
for uniform modification of coverage.
12 Uniform Modification and Plan/Product
Withdrawal FAQ (Jun. 15, 2015), available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheetsand-FAQs/Downloads/uniform-mod-and-plan-wdFAQ–06–15–2015.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
This scenario is different from the first
scenario mentioned above because the
new products are offered by the same
issuer that previously offered the
discontinued products. State regulators
and other interested parties have
indicated that this scenario is not
viewed by some States as a market
withdrawal under State law, as long as
the issuer continues to provide a
product in the same market in which it
previously offered the discontinued
products.13 As noted above, we believe
ensuring continuity of coverage for
consumers is a primary focus of the
protections in the guaranteed
renewability statute. Unlike the
circumstances described in the prior
scenario, where the enrollee has
continuity of the product, but with a
related issuer, in the situation described
here, enrollees would have continuity
with the same issuer, but would not
have the protection of the limitations
imposed by the uniform modification
provision. Notwithstanding our prior
interpretation described in the Uniform
Modification and Plan/Product
Withdrawal FAQ,14 we recognize that
the statute could be interpreted to mean
that, as long as an issuer has a product
available in the applicable market (even
if that issuer discontinues all of its
previously offered products), it has not
withdrawn from the applicable market.
Adopting this interpretation may be in
the best interest of consumers, as
imposing the 5-year ban on market reentry in these circumstances could
diminish consumer choice and market
competition.
We note that, under our current
interpretation requiring that the issuer
leave at least one product in place that
meets uniform modification standards
to avoid the 5-year market ban on reentry, the issuer would remain subject
to Federal rate review under section
2794 with respect to at least one
product. Under the new interpretation,
an issuer would be able to avoid Federal
rate review altogether without triggering
the 5-year ban by sufficiently altering all
of its existing products. To prevent
issuers from avoiding Federal rate
review requirements in this manner, we
propose to permit issuers to replace
their entire portfolio of products
13 We
also note that, in the context of
reenrollment through an Exchange in coverage
under a different product, we stated that, under
certain limited circumstances, enrollments
completed under the hierarchy specified in 45 CFR
155.335(j) will be considered to be a renewal of the
enrollee’s coverage.
14 Uniform Modification and Plan/Product
Withdrawal FAQ (Jun. 15, 2015). Available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheetsand-FAQs/Downloads/uniform-mod-and-plan-wdFAQ–06–15–2015.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
without triggering the 5-year ban under
the market withdrawal provision when
an issuer replaces its entire portfolio of
products in a market with products that
are different in ways that are not within
the scope of uniform modifications,
provided the issuer reasonably
identifies which newly offered product
(or products) replace which
discontinued product (or products) and
subjects the new product (or products)
to the Federal rate review process under
part 154 (to the extent otherwise
applicable to coverage of the same type
and in the same market (for example,
the Federal rate review process does not
apply in the U.S. territories)) as if it
were the same product as the
discontinued product it replaces.15 An
issuer’s identification of which new
product replaces which discontinued
product would be considered reasonable
if it reflects the issuer’s expectations
regarding significant transfer of
enrollment from one product to the
other (for example, because the products
have been cross-walked for autoreenrollment). We also propose that
States that interpret or apply market
withdrawal provisions differently under
State law would not be prohibited from
continuing to consider the scenario
described here as a market withdrawal.
For States where HHS is responsible for
enforcement of the guaranteed
renewability provisions of the PHS Act,
we propose to adopt this interpretation
and not consider this scenario to
constitute a market withdrawal when
the conditions outlined in this proposed
rule are met, where permitted under
applicable State law.
We note that in the second scenario,
consumers generally will still get the
protection required under the product
discontinuance provision under
guaranteed renewability, including a
special enrollment period for loss of
minimum essential coverage to select
another product made available by the
same or a different issuer, and a notice
from the issuer of the product
discontinuance at least 90 days in
advance of the termination of
coverage.16
To reflect our proposed
interpretations in these two scenarios,
15 Under this interpretation, issuers of health
insurance products offered in the U.S. territories
would be able to replace their products in those
markets without subjecting the new products to the
Federal rate review process and without triggering
the 5-year ban.
16 As noted earlier, under certain limited
circumstances, enrollments through an Exchange
into a different product that are completed under
the hierarchy specified in 45 CFR 155.335(j) will be
considered to be a renewal of the enrollee’s
coverage. In such cases, a special enrollment period
is not available, and a renewal notice is sent.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
we propose to add a new paragraph
(d)(3) to § 147.106 to provide that an
issuer has not discontinued offering all
health insurance coverage in a market if
a member of the issuer’s controlled
group continues to offer and make
available for enrollment at least one
product of the original issuer that is
considered to be the same product (as
proposed to be amended in § 144.103 of
this proposed rule), meaning that any
change to the product is within the
scope of a uniform modification of
coverage under § 147.106(e), or if the
issuer continues to offer and make
available a product in the applicable
market in a State and subjects the new
product to the rate review requirements
under part 154 of this title (to the extent
otherwise applicable to coverage of the
same type and in the same market) as if
that part applied to that product, and
reasonably identifies a discontinued
product that corresponds to the new
product for purposes of such rate
review. We also propose to make
conforming amendments to
§§ 146.152(d)(3) and 148.122(e)(4).
We solicit comment on all aspects of
these proposals.
b. Guaranteed Renewability in the
Individual Market and Medicare
Eligibility
The guaranteed renewability
provision at § 147.106(h)(2) states that
Medicare eligibility or entitlement is not
a basis for nonrenewal or termination of
an individual’s health insurance
coverage in the individual market. The
anti-duplication provision at section
1882(d)(3) of the Act prohibits the sale
or issuance of an individual health
insurance policy to an individual
entitled to benefits under Part A or
enrolled under Part B of Medicare 17
with knowledge that the policy
duplicates health benefits to which the
individual is otherwise entitled under
Medicare or Medicaid, but does not
expressly prohibit the renewal of
individual health insurance coverage to
someone who becomes entitled to
benefits under Part A or enrolls under
Part B while enrolled in the individual
market coverage. There also is no
prohibition on issuers covering
Medicare beneficiaries under group
health insurance policies.
Under 45 CFR 147.106, in certain
circumstances, issuers can satisfy their
guaranteed renewability obligations by,
at the end of a policy year, reenrolling
Medicare beneficiaries who were
17 For information on when individuals are
entitled to, eligible for, or able to enroll in
Medicare, see https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
eligibility-and-enrollment/
origmedicarepartabeligenrol/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
enrolled in individual market health
insurance coverage when they obtained
Medicare coverage into a different plan
within the same individual health
insurance product, or into a different
plan within a different individual health
insurance product issued by the same
issuer of the beneficiary’s existing
individual market coverage. This may
occur, for example, when an issuer
makes revisions to a product that exceed
the scope of uniform modification of
coverage, thus replacing the existing
product with a new product. Under our
proposal earlier in this section of the
preamble, issuers also could satisfy their
guaranteed renewability obligations by
reenrolling Medicare beneficiaries into
individual market health insurance
coverage that is considered the same
product but that is issued by a different
issuer within the issuer’s controlled
group. We solicit comments on whether
the guaranteed renewability statute and
the anti-duplication provision at section
1882(d)(3) of the Act should together be
interpreted to require or prohibit
renewal of a Medicare beneficiary’s
individual market coverage, if the issuer
has knowledge that the renewed
coverage would duplicate the Medicare
beneficiary’s benefits: (1) In a plan
under the same contract of insurance;
(2) under a plan that was modified but
is considered under the guaranteed
renewability provisions to be the same
plan but that would require a new
contract; (3) under a different plan
within the same product; (4) under a
different product with the same issuer;
or, as discussed earlier in this preamble;
(5) under the same product offered by a
different issuer within the issuer’s
controlled group. We are particularly
interested in information about how
requiring or prohibiting renewal in
these circumstances could affect
individuals’ decisions to enroll in the
Medicare program, their premiums and
out-of-pocket costs if they were insured
in the Medicare program versus the
individual market, and the effect on
Medicare’s and the insurance plans’ risk
pools.
We have become aware of an issue
that has arisen with respect to
coordination of benefits between
Medicare and individual health
insurance coverage. Since Medicare
Secondary Payer rules do not apply to
health coverage in the individual health
insurance market, Medicare always pays
primary to individual health insurance
coverage. Some issuers have a provision
in their individual health insurance
policies indicating that the coverage
will pay secondary to Medicare not only
for individuals who are currently
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61465
covered by Medicare but also for those
who could obtain Medicare coverage
(such as those individuals who must
pay for Part A coverage) but who are not
currently covered. We solicit comments
on the effects of such provisions on
consumers, their premiums, and out-ofpocket costs, how these provisions
could affect individuals’ decisions to
enroll in the Medicare program or
individual market coverage, and the
effects these provisions and those
decisions could have on the Medicare
and individual market risk pools, as
well as whether this is a permissible
coordination of benefits provision with
respect to the individuals who could but
do not have Medicare coverage. Given
that the Medicare Secondary Payer rules
have different provisions for End Stage
Renal Disease (ESRD) beneficiaries, we
also welcome comments on whether a
legal basis exists to treat coordination of
benefit provisions that relate to coverage
in the individual market for Medicare
beneficiaries differently for Medicare
beneficiaries who are entitled to benefits
under Medicare Part A and eligible to
enroll under Part B under the ESRD
provisions at 42 U.S.C. 426–1.
D. Part 148—Requirements for the
Individual Health Insurance Market
1. Guaranteed Renewability of
Individual Health Insurance Coverage
(§ 148.122)
For a discussion of the provisions of
this proposed rule related to part 148,
please see the preamble to § 147.106.
E. Part 152—Pre-Existing Condition
Insurance Plan Program
1. Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan
Program (§ 152.45)
Section 1101 of the Affordable Care
Act directed HHS to establish a
temporary Federal high risk pool
program in 2010 to provide health
insurance coverage to individuals who
were U.S. citizens or nationals or
lawfully present in the United States,
did not have other health insurance
coverage in the 6 months preceding
enactment, and had a pre-existing
condition. Section 1101(g)(3)(B)
directed HHS to develop procedures to
provide for the transition of eligible
individuals enrolled in health insurance
coverage offered through the high risk
pool HHS established into qualified
health plans offered through an
Exchange. Those procedures should, in
particular, ensure that there is no lapse
in coverage with respect to the
individual and may extend coverage
after the termination of the risk pool
involved, if the Secretary determines
necessary to avoid such a lapse.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61466
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Starting in 2010, shortly after the
Affordable Care Act was enacted, HHS
established and began operating the risk
pool program required under section
1101, which it called the Pre-Existing
Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP)
Program, to provide health insurance
coverage to eligible individuals, as
defined in the Affordable Care Act.
Beginning in 2013, HHS worked to
enroll these individuals in QHPs
through the Exchanges. However, for a
variety of reasons, individuals from the
high-risk pool established under section
1101 may find it difficult to obtain and
maintain coverage in QHPs without a
lapse in coverage.
We are therefore seeking information
regarding whether and how the
remaining funds provided under section
1101 might be used to ensure the
successful transition of former PCIP
enrollees to the Exchange without a
lapse in coverage, consistent with
section 1101(g)(3)(B) and its objective of
ensuring that high-risk individuals with
preexisting conditions are able to
transition successfully into the new
Exchanges without a lapse in coverage.
We seek information, in particular, on
the best ways to identify former PCIP
enrollees in a QHP of an issuer that has
participated in the Exchange from 2014
to 2017, available methods for
determining their claims costs, and the
necessity of taking steps to ensure that
they do not experience a lapse in
coverage. If it is not possible to identify
former PCIP enrollees, HHS also seeks
information about other appropriate
measures to assess the size and impact
of former PCIP enrollment on existing
issuers.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
F. Part 153—Standards Related to
Reinsurance, Risk Corridors, and Risk
Adjustment Under the Affordable Care
Act
1. Sequestration
In accordance with the OMB Report to
Congress on the Joint Committee
Reductions for Fiscal Year 2017,18 both
the transitional reinsurance program
and risk adjustment program are subject
to the fiscal year 2017 sequestration.
The Federal government’s 2017 fiscal
year will begin on October 1, 2016. The
reinsurance program will be sequestered
at a rate of 6.9 percent for payments
made from fiscal year 2017 resources
(that is, funds collected during the 2017
fiscal year). To meet the sequestration
18 OMB Report to the Congress on the Joint
Committee Reductions for Fiscal Year 2017 (Feb. 9,
2016). Available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
sites/default/files/omb/assets/legislative_reports/
sequestration/jc_sequestration_report_2017_
house.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
requirement for the risk adjustment
program for fiscal year 2017, HHS will
sequester risk adjustment payments
made using fiscal year 2017 resources in
all States where HHS operates risk
adjustment, at a sequestration rate of 7.1
percent. HHS estimates that increasing
the sequestration rate for all risk
adjustment payments made in fiscal
year 2017 to all issuers in the States
where HHS operates risk adjustment by
0.16 percent will permit HHS to meet
the required national risk adjustment
program sequestration percentage of 6.9
percent noted in the OMB Report to
Congress.
HHS, in coordination with the OMB,
has determined that, under section
256(k)(6) of the Balanced Budget and
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985,
as amended, and the underlying
authority for these programs, the funds
that are sequestered in fiscal year 2017
from the reinsurance and risk
adjustment programs will become
available for payment to issuers in fiscal
year 2018 without further Congressional
action. If the Congress does not enact
deficit reduction provisions that replace
the Joint Committee reductions, these
programs would be sequestered in
future fiscal years, and any sequestered
funding would become available in the
fiscal year following that in which it
was sequestered.
2. Definition of Large Employer for the
Risk Adjustment and Risk Corridors
Programs (§ 153.20)
We propose deleting the definition of
‘‘large employer’’ set forth in § 153.20,
which defines a large employer as
having the meaning given to the term at
45 CFR 155.20.19 HHS provided notice
of our intent to propose these changes
in a public FAQ 20 which clarified how
an issuer should count an employer’s
employees to determine whether an
employer is a small employer or large
19 45 CFR 155.20 defines a large employer, in
connection with a group health plan with respect
to a calendar year and a plan year, as an employer
who employed an average of at least 51 employees
on business days during the preceding calendar
year and who employs at least 1 employee on the
first day of the plan year. In the case of an employer
that was not in existence throughout the preceding
calendar year, the determination of whether the
employer is a large employer is based on the
average number of employees that it is reasonably
expected the employer will employ on business
days in the current calendar year. A State may elect
to define large employer by substituting ‘‘101
employees’’ for ‘‘51 employees.’’ The number of
employees must be determined using the method
set forth in section 4980H(c)(2) of the Code.
20 FAQs #15450 and #15449, published on April
12, 2016 available at: https://www.regtap.info/faq_
viewu.php?id=15450 and https://www.regtap.info/
faq_viewu.php?id=15449.
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
employer for purposes of the risk
adjustment and risk corridors programs.
In that FAQ, we clarified that for the
risk adjustment program, the issuer
should use the employee counting
method used to determine group size
under State law, unless that counting
method does not account for employees
that are not full-time. If the State
counting method does not take non-fulltime employees into account, then the
issuer should use the counting method
under section 4980H(c)(2) of the Code.21
The FAQ also noted that under section
1304(b)(4)(D) of the Affordable Care Act
and § 155.710(d), when a small
employer participating in a SHOP
ceases to be a small employer solely by
reason of an increase in the number of
its employees, it will continue to be
treated as a small employer for purposes
of SHOP participation for as long as it
continues to purchase coverage through
the SHOP, and the issuer should treat
such an employer as a small employer
for purposes of risk adjustment. We note
that nothing in this proposal supersedes
or conflicts with the option under
section 1312(f)(2)(B)(i) of the Affordable
Care Act, which would allow large
employers to participate in a SHOP, at
the option of a State.
In the FAQ, HHS also clarified that for
the risk corridors program, the issuer
should use the employee counting
method used to determine group size
under State law (see § 153.510(f)).
However, under section 1304(b)(4)(D) of
the Affordable Care Act and
§ 155.710(d), when a small employer
participating in a SHOP ceases to be a
small employer solely by reason of an
increase in the number of its employees,
it will continue to be treated as a small
employer for purposes of SHOP
participation for as long as it continues
to purchase coverage through the SHOP,
and the issuer should treat such an
employer as a small employer for
purposes of risk corridors.
We seek comment on this proposal.
3. Provisions and Parameters for the
Permanent Risk Adjustment Program
In subparts D and G of 45 CFR part
153, we established standards for the
administration of the risk adjustment
program. The risk adjustment program
is a program created by section 1343 of
the Affordable Care Act that transfers
funds from lower risk, nongrandfathered plans to higher risk, nongrandfathered plans in the individual
and small group markets, inside and
outside the Exchanges. In accordance
with § 153.310(a), a State that is
approved or conditionally approved by
21 See
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
79 FR 8544.
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
the Secretary to operate an Exchange
may establish a risk adjustment
program, or have HHS do so on its
behalf.
On March 31, 2016, HHS convened a
public conference to discuss potential
updates to the HHS risk adjustment
methodology for the 2018 benefit year
and beyond. Prior to the conference, we
also issued a White Paper that was
available for public comment.22 The
conference and White Paper focused on
what we have learned from the 2014
benefit year of the risk adjustment
program, and specific areas of potential
refinements to the methodology,
including prescription drug modeling,
addressing partial year enrollment,
future recalibrations using risk
adjustment data, and a discussion of the
risk adjustment transfer formula. We
received numerous thoughtful and
substantive comments to the White
Paper and at the conference, which
directly informed the policy proposals
in this Payment Notice.
a. Risk Adjustment Applied to Plans in
the Individual and Small Group Markets
(§ 153.20)
Section 1312(c) of the Affordable Care
Act directs issuers to use a single risk
pool for a market—the individual or
small group market—when developing
rates and premiums. Section 1312(c)(3)
of the Affordable Care Act gives States
the option to merge the individual and
small group market into a single risk
pool. To align risk pools for the risk
adjustment program and rate
development, we stated in the 2014
Payment Notice that we would merge
markets when operating risk adjustment
on behalf of a State if the State elects to
do the same for single risk pool
purposes.23 When the individual and
small group markets are merged, we
stated that the State average premium
would be the average premium of all
applicable individual and small group
market plans in the applicable risk pool,
and calculations under the transfer
equation would occur across all plans in
the applicable risk pool in the
individual and small group markets.
Under the section 1312(c)(3)
definition of a merged market and its
implementing regulations at §§ 156.80
and 147.104, issuers in a merged
individual and small group market must
offer the same plans at the same rates to
all applicants in the merged market,
22 March 31, 2016, HHS-Operated Risk
Adjustment Methodology Meeting: Discussion
Paper (Mar. 24, 2016). Available at https://
www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-andOther-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-WhitePaper-032416.pdf.
23 See 78 FR at 15419.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
must offer coverage on a calendar year
basis, and may not make quarterly rate
adjustments to rates for small group
market plans. Some States with markets
that are not merged under the Federal
merged market provisions require
issuers to use a combined individual
and small group experience to establish
a market-adjusted index rate, but
separate the markets for applying plan
adjustment factors and for other
purposes. This allows small group
issuers to make quarterly rate changes
that would not otherwise be allowable
under the definition at section
1312(c)(3).
Because States that use a combined
individual and small group experience
to establish a market-adjusted index rate
operate in large part as a merged market
for purposes of rate setting, we believe
they should be risk adjusted as merged
markets if the State so elects. Risk
adjustment directly impacts rate setting,
and as such, should reflect the markets
in which States allow issuers to set
premiums. Beginning for 2017 benefit
year risk adjustment, when HHS will
operate risk adjustment on behalf of all
States, we propose to expand our
interpretation of merged market for
purposes of HHS risk adjustment as
described in the 2014 Payment Notice to
include States that meet the definition
of merged market at section 1312(c)(3),
as well as States that use a combined
individual and small group experience
to establish a market-adjusted index
rate. HHS will communicate with States
that use a combined individual and
small group experience to establish a
market-adjusted index rate to determine
whether they elect to be treated as a
merged market for purposes of HHS risk
adjustment. We seek comment on this
proposal.
b. Overview of the HHS Risk
Adjustment Model (§ 153.320)
The HHS risk adjustment model
predicts plan liability for an average
enrollee based on that person’s age, sex,
and diagnoses (risk factors), producing a
risk score. The HHS risk adjustment
methodology utilizes separate models
for adults, children, and infants to
account for cost differences in each of
these age groups. In each of the adult
and child models, the relative costs
assigned to an individual’s age, sex, and
diagnoses are added together to produce
a risk score. Infant risk scores are
determined by inclusion in one of 25
mutually exclusive groups, based on the
infant’s maturity and the severity of its
diagnoses. If applicable, the risk score
for adults, children, or infants is
multiplied by a cost-sharing reductions
adjustment.
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61467
The enrollment-weighted average risk
score of all enrollees in a particular risk
adjustment covered plan, also referred
to as the plan liability risk score, within
a geographic rating area is one of the
inputs into the risk adjustment payment
transfer formula, which determines the
payment or charge that an issuer will
receive or be required to pay for that
plan. Thus, the HHS risk adjustment
model predicts average group costs to
account for risk across plans, which
accords with the Actuarial Standards
Board’s Actuarial Standards of Practice
for risk classification.
c. Proposed Updates to the Risk
Adjustment Model (§ 153.320)
For the 2018 benefit year risk
adjustment model, HHS will continue to
incorporate the methodological
improvements finalized in the 2017
Payment Notice, such as incorporating
preventive services in our simulation of
plan liability and using more granular
trend rates that better reflect the growth
in specialty drug expenditures and
drugs generally as compared to medical
and surgical expenditures. Consistent
with our discussion in the White Paper,
we are proposing a number of updates
to the risk adjustment model, including:
(1) Adjustment factors for partial year
enrollment; (2) prescription drug
utilization factors; and (3) modifying
transfers to account for high-cost
enrollees. We also propose to recalibrate
our risk adjustment models using the
most recent available data following the
publication of the final Payment Notice
for the applicable benefit year, and seek
comments on other considerations to
improve the model’s risk prediction in
future rulemaking.
i. Partial Year Enrollment
After the 2014 benefit year of risk
adjustment, we received feedback
indicating that some issuers
experienced higher than expected
claims costs for partial year enrollees.
We sought comment in the 2017
Payment Notice on how the risk
adjustment methodology could be
adjusted to more directly reflect the
experience of partial year enrollees, and
we received comments generally
supporting an adjustment addressing
partial year enrollees in the risk
adjustment model. We also received
feedback to the White Paper that some
believe the methodology does not fully
capture the risk associated with
enrollees with chronic conditions who
may not have accumulated diagnoses in
their partial year of enrollment.
In general, we believe that individual
and small group health plans are risk
adjusted accurately under the HHS risk
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61468
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
adjustment methodology. In light of our
experience with the 2014 benefit year,
we have observed that risk adjustment
may not fully account for when a plan’s
enrollees differ substantially from the
market average with respect to
characteristics that are not adjusted for
in the risk adjustment model. For
example, if a plan has an enrollee
population with enrollment duration
that differs from the market average, and
the risk associated with the enrollment
duration is not fully captured through
other aspects of the methodology, then
for that plan, partial year enrollment
may not be fully accounted for in the
HHS risk adjustment methodology. As
we noted in the White Paper, if the risk
adjustment methodology does not fully
capture risk for partial year enrollment,
and if the plan had lower than average
enrollment duration, the plan’s risk
score might be lower than it might have
been otherwise.24
As we discussed in the White Paper,
we reviewed the predicted
expenditures, actual expenditures, and
predictive ratios (that is, the ratios of
predicted to actual weighted mean plan
liability expenditures) by enrollment
duration groups (for each: 1 Month, 2
months, and so on up to 12 months)
annualized for 2014 MarketScan® adults
in our risk adjustment concurrent
modeling sample. We found that
actuarial risk for all adult enrollees with
short enrollment periods tends to be
slightly under predicted, and for adult
enrollees with full enrollment periods
(12 months) tends to be over predicted
in our methodology. One potential
explanation for these results is that
because risk adjustment is calculated on
a per member per month basis, the
model predicts costs for chronic
conditions, which are often spread more
evenly over time, better than costs for
sudden acute events, which are often
concentrated in a small number of
months, when the enrollment is only for
part of the year.
We discussed various approaches to
address this issue in the White Paper,
including the use of additional factors
and the use of wholly separate models
that account for duration of enrollment
and metal level.
There was a broadly held preference
among commenters to the White Paper
for adding enrollment duration (for
each: 1 Month, 2 months, and so on up
to 11 months 25) binary indicator
variables as additional risk factors, as
opposed to separate models based on
enrollment duration. After reviewing
this feedback, we announced on June 8,
2016, that we intended to propose that,
beginning for the 2017 benefit year, the
risk adjustment model include
adjustment factors for partial year
enrollees in risk adjustment covered
plans.26
Based on analysis we performed on
the MarketScan® data, the use of
additional risk factors by number of
enrollment months that decrease
monotonically as the number of months
of enrollment increases (with 12 months
being the reference group) appears to
best address partial year enrollment in
the risk adjustment model in the short
term, starting in 2017. We also believe
that our proposal to add prescription
drug utilization in the risk adjustment
model will capture additional costs for
partial year enrollees beginning in the
2018 benefit year (see discussion
below).
We are proposing to recalibrate the
2017 risk adjustment adult model to
reflect the incorporation of partial year
enrollment duration (ED) factors. Those
factors are labeled ‘‘ED_01 . . . ED_11’’
in the list of factors for the 2017 risk
adjustment adult model at the bottom of
Table 3 below.27 We are proposing to
incorporate partial year ED factors in the
risk adjustment model methodology for
the reasons discussed above, starting
with the 2017 benefit year. We are
proposing to amend our regulations at
§ 153.320(a)(1) to allow for HHS to make
this update for the 2017 benefit year.
Currently, this provision states that a
risk adjustment methodology must be
Federally certified, and one way a risk
adjustment methodology may become
Federally certified is to be developed by
HHS and published in the annual HHS
notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the applicable benefit
year. We propose to change this
provision to state that the methodology
may be developed by HHS and
published in rulemaking in advance of
the benefit year. While HHS would
generally make changes to the risk
adjustment methodology in the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the applicable benefit
year, under this rule, in cases where we
have identified a change that we can
implement prior to the benefit year, and
where we can provide issuers with
sufficient notice and detail on the
proposed change so that issuers may
24 White Paper at p. 36. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-andOther-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-WhitePaper-032416.pdf.
25 Twelve months is the reference group and
therefore is not included.
26 Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RAOnsiteQA-060816.pdf.
27 This table replaces Table 1 published at 81 FR
12220–12223 as the final adult model for the 2017
benefit year.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
reasonably account for the change, HHS
would have the authority to implement
the change prior to the beginning of the
applicable benefit year in other
rulemaking. For our proposed change to
address partial year enrollment, we
notified issuers of our intent to propose
this change in prior guidance, and
provided significant detail on the
policy.28 We seek comment on this
approach.
We are also proposing to incorporate
partial year enrollment duration factors
in the 2018 risk adjustment adult model.
Those factors are labeled ‘‘ED_01, . . .
ED_11’’ in the list of factors for the 2018
risk adjustment adult model near the
bottom of Table 4. We seek comment on
recalibrating the adult models for the
2017 and 2018 benefit years to address
partial year enrollment.
We are not making this change in the
child and infant models as those models
are based on a smaller dataset that does
not provide adequate representation of
partial year enrollment in these
populations. We will reassess both the
proposed partial year enrollment
adjustment methodology, and whether
we can make this adjustment in the
child and infant models in the future.
We also intend to continue to explore
approaches under which we would use
separate models for enrollees with
different enrollment durations, rather
than including partial year enrollment
factors in the risk adjustment model,
and may implement such an approach
in future years. While we do not believe,
based on the current data available and
the analyses we have been able to
perform, that using separate models for
each enrollment duration is currently
feasible, we believe that using separate
models may better capture how the
pattern of costs associated with
particular diagnoses varies across
enrollees with different enrollment
durations, particularly for sudden acute
events.
ii. Prescription Drug Hybrid Model
As discussed in the White Paper, HHS
has been considering whether to
propose the incorporation of
prescription drug utilization indicators
into the HHS risk adjustment model,
beginning for the 2018 benefit year, to
create a ‘‘hybrid’’ drug-diagnosis risk
adjustment model. We are aware that
there are advantages and disadvantages
to including prescription drug
utilization indicators in the HHS risk
adjustment model and we seek
comment on our proposal.
28 See https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RA-OnsiteQA060816.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Many commenters to the White Paper
stated that drug information can
effectively indicate health risk in cases
where diagnoses may be missing. For
example, diagnoses may be missing if
clinicians fail to enter the condition on
a patient’s chart, or if there is stigma
associated with certain health
conditions that leads providers not to
record these diagnoses on claims, or if
the enrollee simply does not visit a
physician during the term of his or her
enrollment. However, even in these
cases, prescriptions may be filled,
providing information on health status.
Drug utilization patterns can also
provide information on the severity of
the illness. The hierarchical condition
categories (HCCs) already capture
information about illness severity from
diagnoses, but drugs can potentially
measure the severity of illness within a
given HCC. A patient may receive first,
second, or third lines of treatment
involving different medications that
indicate increasing levels of severity.
Additionally, commenters have noted
that drug data can be available sooner
and more easily than diagnoses from
medical claims. In addition,
commenters have noted that because
prescription drug data is standardized,
it is particularly useful for calibrating
and measuring health risk because the
prescription drug data will have less
variability in coding.
Incorporating prescription drug
utilization into the risk adjustment
model will help reflect costs incurred by
plans for medications for their enrollees
in plans’ risk scores.
Adding drug data to a diagnosis-based
model also introduces operational
complexities. Clinical indications for
drugs can change quickly, which
requires frequent updates to the model
calibration and possibly to the
therapeutic classification groupings as
well. Because the model is calibrated
before the start of the benefit year, it
may be difficult to assess all updates or
upcoming utilization pattern changes.
Additional data requirements increase
the administrative burden associated
with calibrating and applying the
model. Issuers of risk adjustment
covered plans would be required to
report prescription drug utilization as
well as diagnoses, and audit and
verification of the reported data would
be necessary.
We have also indicated our concern
that incorporating prescription drug
utilization in the model may provide an
incentive to overprescribe medications.
Drug models may be particularly
susceptible to this sort of behavior when
there are inexpensive drugs included in
therapeutic classes that are statistically
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
linked to high total medical
expenditures; in these situations, a
small cost to the insurance plan
(reimbursement for the drug) can bring
a relatively large increase in revenue
through the risk adjustment program.
In analyzing if and how to propose to
use drug data in the risk adjustment
model, we sought to strike a reasonable
balance between increasing predictive
accuracy and reducing incentives for
overprescription. One way we sought to
do so was by focusing on drugs for
which guidelines on when they should
be prescribed are clear. However,
substantial uncertainty or disagreement
across providers exists over the
circumstances in which drugs should be
prescribed.
In addition, incorporating drug
utilization makes risk adjustment
sensitive to variations in drug
utilization patterns that exist for reasons
other than enrollee health status. Health
plans with lower prescribing rates, for
example health plans primarily covering
individuals in rural areas with low
access to pharmacies, would incorrectly
appear to have healthier populations,
and would pay higher risk charges or
receive lower risk payments. Other
things being equal, drug utilization is
expected to be lower in plans with
higher cost sharing (such as bronze or
silver plans) and with aggressive drug
utilization management, such as prior
authorization, step therapy, quantity
limits, restrictive formularies, and more
stringent requirements to qualify for
coverage of expensive drugs.
Furthermore, the lack of clear, one-toone associations between most drug
classes and diagnoses makes
development of a ‘‘hybrid’’ drugdiagnosis risk adjustment model that
incorporates and integrates drug and
diagnosis risk markers challenging.
Few drug classes are indicated for
only one medical condition. Many drug
classes are widely prescribed ‘‘off label’’
for indications that are not U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)approved. Utilization of such drug
classes can have very different
implications for health care
expenditures depending on the reasons
for which they are prescribed. Presence
of a drug class may not discriminate
between high and low cost individuals
if it is used for both high and low cost
conditions. Some drug classes may be
used both for diagnoses that have been
included in the HHS–HCC model, as
well as for diagnoses that have been
intentionally excluded, making it
problematic to maintain this distinction
in a hybrid drug-diagnosis risk
adjustment model. Specific drugs
within a drug class may have varying
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61469
indications; the utilization of such drug
classes may not unambiguously indicate
the presence of a specific diagnosis.
Acknowledging all of the above
considerations, we indicated in the June
8, 2016, guidance noted above that we
intend to propose to incorporate a small
number of prescription drug classes as
predictors in the HHS risk adjustment
methodology for the 2018 benefit year to
impute missing diagnoses and to
indicate severity of illness.29 We
propose to incorporate a small number
of prescription drugs in the risk
adjustment model for the 2018 benefit
year. We are proposing this change to
the model with substantial attention to
the concerns presented above in
determining which drug groups to
include and exclude, and the proposed
model type used for each drug-diagnosis
pair. To ensure this change to the model
does not inadvertently increase the
perverse incentives described above, we
will monitor and evaluate the impact of
incorporating prescription drugs in the
model on utilization patterns. Using the
enrollee-level data that we are
proposing to collect in § 153.610, in
addition to other relevant data sources,
we would seek to evaluate whether
incorporation of drugs in the model
affects the utilization of drugs included
in the model. Based on our evaluation,
we would add or remove drug diagnosis
pairs to or from the model for future
benefit years through notice and
comment rulemaking. We seek comment
on this proposal.
To develop hybrid drug-diagnosis risk
adjustment models, we need a
manageable number of clinically and
empirically cohesive drug classes. We
created several Prescription Drug
Categories (RXCs) to select and group
the drugs to be included in a hybrid
diagnoses-and-drugs risk adjustment
model.
Each prescription drug is assigned a
National Drug Code (NDC) maintained
by the FDA. There are over 190,000
NDCs, which include prescription drugs
as well as over-the-counter medications.
NDC codes are reported in prescription
drug claims data. Due to the large
number of individual NDCs, it is
necessary to use a therapeutic
classification system that classifies
individual NDCs into aggregated
categories of related drugs used for
similar therapeutic purposes, or having
similar pharmacological properties.
In the White Paper, we had initially
based the RXCs on the American
Hospital Formulary Service
29 Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RAOnsiteQA-060816.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61470
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Pharmacologic-Therapeutic
Classification©, which is published by
the Board of the American Society of
Health-System Pharmacists®. We chose
at that point to use the American
Hospital Formulary Service
classification because it is widely used,
widely available, comprehensive, and
regularly updated. Because the
American Hospital Formulary Service
classification and mappings from NDCs
are proprietary, however, we
determined that using the United States
Pharmacopeia (USP) classification
would be better suited for use with HHS
risk adjustment to maintain consistency
with the essential health benefits
requirements and for public access and
transparency. The USP classification
also provides chemical ingredient level
identifications for drug classifications;
that is, unlike American Hospital
Formulary Service, USP includes
comparable levels of detail to identify
and group drugs used for only one
diagnosis with other drugs used for
multiple diagnosis codes. NDC codes
are classified into 153 USP therapeutic
classes. Drawing on the principles and
criteria described below, we selected
appropriate USP therapeutic classes and
combined and edited those classes in
order to create ‘‘payment’’ RXCs, each of
which is closely associated with a
specific HCC or group of HCCs that are
potentially suitable for inclusion in a
payment risk adjustment model. Most
USP classes are somewhat
heterogeneous. To designate a class of
drugs to serve as an indicator that a
medical diagnosis is present, we needed
to comprehensively review the drugs in
each USP class to select only those that
are closely associated with the
diagnosis.
The development of a hybrid HHS–
HCC risk adjustment model requires
selecting drug-diagnosis pairs (RXC–
HCC pairs) to include in the model.
Similar to our approach in the 2014
Payment Notice when initially
determining the HCCs to be included in
the HHS risk adjustment models, we
used a set of principles to guide our
decision making. Development of the
RXC–HCC pairs was an iterative process
that required recurring consultations
with a panel of clinician consultants.
Principle 1—RXC categories should be
clinically meaningful. Each RXC is
composed of a set of NDCs. These codes
should all relate to a reasonably wellspecified pharmacologic, therapeutic or
chemical characteristic that defines the
category. RXCs must be sufficiently
clinically specific to minimize
opportunities for discretionary coding.
Clinical meaningfulness improves the
face validity of the classification system
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
to clinicians and the model’s
interpretability.
Principle 2—RXCs should predict
total medical and drug expenditures.
NDCs in the same RXC should be
reasonably homogeneous with respect to
their effect on current year costs.
Principle 3—RXCs that will affect
payments should have adequate sample
sizes to permit accurate and stable
estimates of expenditures. RXCs used in
establishing payments should have
adequate sample sizes in available
datasets. For example, it is difficult to
reliably determine the expected cost of
extremely rare categories.
Principle 4—In creating an
individual’s clinical profile, hierarchies
should be used to characterize the
person’s illness level within each RXC
where appropriate, while the effects of
unrelated prescriptions accumulate.
Because each new medical event adds to
an individual’s total disease burden,
unrelated prescriptions in different
RXCs should increase predicted costs of
care. However, the most severe
manifestation of a given disease process
principally defines its impact on costs.
Therefore, related RXCs should be
treated hierarchically, with those
associated with more severe
manifestations of a condition
dominating (and eliminating the effect
of) less serious ones.
Principle 5—Providers should not be
penalized for prescribing additional
NDCs (monotonicity). This principle has
two consequences for modeling: (1) No
RXC should carry a negative payment
weight; and (2) an RXC that is higherranked in a drug hierarchy (causing
lower-rank drugs in the same hierarchy
to be excluded) should have at least as
large a payment weight as lower-ranked
RXCs in the same hierarchy.
Principle 6—The classification should
assign NDCs to only one RXC (mutually
exclusive classification). Because each
NDC can map to more than one RXC,
the classification should map NDCs to
the primary RXC based on
considerations such as route of
administration, intended application of
the product, ingredient list identifier,
label, dosage form, and strength of the
drug.
Principle 7—Discretionary and noncredible drug categories should be
excluded from payment models. RXCs
that are particularly subject to
intentional or unintentional
discretionary prescribing variation or
inappropriate prescribing by health
plans or providers, or that are not
clinically or empirically credible as cost
predictors, should not be included.
Excluding these RXCs reduces the
sensitivity of the model to prescribing
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
variation, prescribing proliferation, and
gaming.
We used clinical and statistical
assessments to appropriately balance all
seven principles. In designing the RXCs,
principles 5 (monotonicity) and 6
(mutually exclusive classification), were
generally followed. Clinical
meaningfulness (principle 1) is often
best served by creating a very large
number of detailed clinical groupings.
However, a large number of groupings
conflicts with adequate sample sizes for
each category (principle 3). We
approached the balancing of our
principles by designing a drug
classification system using empirical
evidence on frequencies and predictive
power; clinical judgment on relatedness,
specificity, and severity of RXCs; and
professional judgment on incentives and
likely provider responses to the
classification system. The RXC risk
adjustment model balances these
competing goals to achieve prescription
drug-based classes for use in risk
adjustment.
In addition to following the set of
principles described above, we carefully
considered selection of high-cost drugs,
to avoid overly reducing the incentives
for issuers to strive for efficiency in
prescription drug utilization. We also
carefully considered selection of drugs
in areas exhibiting a rapid rate of
technological change, as a drug class
that is associated with a specific, costly
diagnosis in one year may no longer be
commonly used for that condition the
next, in which case the cost predictions
based on previous years of data would
be inaccurate.
Based on these considerations, we
propose a small number of drugdiagnosis pairs for the proposed hybrid
model. We selected RXCs to impute
diagnoses and to indicate the severity of
diagnoses otherwise indicated through
medical coding. We worked with
clinician consultants to tailor the RXCs
used for imputation based on their
expertise in treatment patterns as well
as statistical indicators such as positive
predictive value. Clinicians also
informed our determination of RXCs for
use as severity-only indicators in the
model. For the severity-only RXCs, the
presence of a prescription in the drug
class signals a more severe case of the
related diagnosis, which is likely to
incur greater medical expenditures
relative to someone with the same
diagnosis, but not the drug. Severityonly RXCs are not specified in the
model to impute the associated
diagnosis when an HCC is not present.
We are proposing limiting the number
of prescription drug classes included as
predictors to only those drug classes
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
where the risk of unintended effects on
provider prescribing behavior is low; as
described above, we intend to monitor
prescription drug utilization for
unintended effects and may remove
drug classes based on such evidence in
future rulemaking.
Table 2 shows the list of RXC–HCC
pairs that we propose to include in the
initial hybrid model. Each pair is
designated as either an imputation/
severity or a severity-only relationship.
For each pair, Table 2 shows the
coefficient for the diagnosis (HCC), the
drug utilization (RXC), and both.
The drug-diagnosis pairs can include
more than one HCC. For example, the
list includes a diabetes drug-diagnosis
relationship that includes three HCCs
(diabetes with acute complication,
diabetes with chronic complication, and
diabetes without complication) which
are grouped together in the model
estimation. This RXC can be interpreted
as an indication that the individual
should have a diagnosis of one of these
three diabetes HCCs. In addition, an
RXC can be linked in the model to more
than one HCC, and vice-versa. For
example, RXC 8 (Immune suppressants
and immunomodulators) has an
imputation/severity relationship with
HCC 056 (Rheumatoid arthritis and
specified autoimmune disorders), and
also has a severity-only relationship
with HCC 048 (Inflammatory bowel
disease).
While ten of the RXC–HCC pairs have
three levels of incremental predicted
costs (diagnosis only, prescription drug
61471
only, both diagnosis and prescription
drug), indicating that they can be used
to impute a particular condition, the
model also includes two RXC–HCC
pairs that will be used for severity
only—that is, they will predict
incremental costs for enrollees with the
diagnosis only, and with both the
diagnosis and the prescription drug.
There are no additional costs predicted
for an enrollee taking the drug who
lacks the associated diagnosis. Table 2
lists the RXC–HCC pairs we are
proposing to incorporate in the adult
models for the 2018 benefit year. Table
4 incorporates the full set of HCCs and
RXC–HCCs and their associated
coefficients that we are proposing to
implement in the 2018 adult models.
TABLE 2—DRUG-DIAGNOSIS (RXC–HCC) PAIRS CHOSEN FOR THE HYBRID RISK ADJUSTMENT MODELS
RXC
RXC Label
HCC
HCC Label
1 ..........
Hepatitis C Antivirals ........
037C, 036, 035, 034 ........
imputation/severity.
2 ..........
3 ..........
4 ..........
HIV/AIDS Antivirals ..........
Antiarrhythmics ................
End Stage Renal Disease
(ESRD) Phosphate
Binders.
Anti-inflammatories for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
Anti-Diabetic Agents, Except Insulin and
Metformin Only.
001 ...................................
142 ...................................
184, 183, 187, 188 ...........
Chronic Hepatitis C, Cirrhosis of Liver, End-Stage
Liver Disease, and Liver Transplant Status/Complications.
HIV/AIDS .....................................................................
Specified Heart Arrhythmias .......................................
End Stage Renal Disease, Kidney Transplant Status,
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5, Chronic Kidney
Disease, Severe (Stage 4).
Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Intestine Transplant
Status/Complications.
imputation/severity.
6b ........
Insulin ...............................
019, 020, 021, 018 ...........
7 ..........
8 ..........
Multiple Sclerosis Agents
Immune Suppressants
and Immunomodulators.
118 ...................................
056, 057, 048, 041 ...........
9 ..........
Cystic Fibrosis Agents .....
159, 158 ...........................
10 ........
Ammonia Detoxicants ......
036, 035, 034 ...................
11 ........
Diuretics, Loop and Select
Potassium-Sparing.
130, 129, 128 ...................
Diabetes with Acute Complications, Diabetes with
Chronic Complications, Diabetes without Complication, Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications.
Diabetes with Acute Complications; Diabetes with
Chronic Complications; Diabetes without Complication, Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications.
Multiple Sclerosis ........................................................
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other
Autoimmune Disorders, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Intestine Transplant Status/Complications.
Cystic Fibrosis, Lung Transplant Status/Complications.
Cirrhosis of Liver, End-Stage Liver Disease, Liver
Transplant Status/Complications.
Congestive Heart Failure, Heart Transplant, Heart
Assistive Device/Artificial Heart.
5 ..........
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
6a ........
048, 041 ...........................
019, 020, 021, 018 ...........
We propose to incorporate the RXC–
HCC pairs—some of which are used to
impute a diagnosis and calibrate the
severity of the condition, and others of
which are used only as an indication of
severity—into the adult risk adjustment
model, beginning in the 2018 benefit
year. We intend to evaluate the effects
of this change to determine whether to
continue, broaden, or reduce this set of
factors in the HHS risk adjustment
models. We seek comment on this
approach, including comments on the
list of RXC–HCC pairs.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
iii. High-Cost Risk Pooling
The HHS risk adjustment model
reflects the average cost for individuals
with a given set of demographic
characteristics and diagnoses. Our
experience with the 2014 benefit year
risk adjustment demonstrated the model
may underpredict costs for extremely
high-cost enrollees since predicted plan
liabilities reflect the average costs for
individuals with the set of demographic
characteristics and diagnoses included
in the model. As a consequence, even
with risk adjustment in place, issuers
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Proposed RXC use
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
imputation/severity.
severity-only.
severity-only.
may retain an incentive to engage in risk
selection in order to avoid these very
high-cost enrollees (called ‘‘high-cost
enrollees’’ throughout this proposal).
Recent research has shown that
adjusting for high-cost enrollees in a
risk adjustment model benefits the
model fit and predictive ability for the
remaining risk population.30 To mitigate
any residual incentive for risk selection
30 Schillo, S., G. Lux, J. Wassem and F. Buchner
(2016) ‘‘High Cost Pool or High Cost Groups—How
to Handle Highest Cost Cases in a Risk Adjustment
Mechanism?’’ Health Policy (120): 141–147.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61472
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
to avoid high-cost enrollees, and to
ensure that the actuarial risk of a plan
with high-cost enrollees is better
reflected in the risk adjustment transfers
to issuers with high actuarial risk, we
propose to alter the risk adjustment
methodology to better account for highcost enrollees so that transfers resulting
from the risk adjustment methodology
from high actuarial risk plans to low
actuarial risk plans better reflect the
actuarial risk of risk adjustment covered
plans in a market, across all States. We
also seek to offset the need for issuers
to build large risk premiums into their
rates to account for these cases by giving
issuers greater predictability on
expenditures.
To account for the incorporation of
high-cost risk in the risk adjustment
model, we propose to adjust the risk
adjustment model for high-cost
enrollees by excluding a percentage of
costs above a certain threshold level in
the calculation of enrollee-level plan
liability risk scores so that risk
adjustment factors are calculated
without the high-cost risk. Secondly, to
account for the issuers’ actuarial risk for
costs associated with the high-cost
enrollees, we would apply an
adjustment for each issuer of a risk
adjustment covered plan to account for
a percentage of all high-cost enrollees’
costs above the threshold. We would set
the threshold and percentage of costs at
a level that would continue to
incentivize issuers to control costs
while improving the risk prediction of
the risk adjustment model. Issuers with
the high-cost enrollees would receive an
adjustment to account for actuarial risk
for the percentage of costs above the
threshold in their respective transfers.
Using claims data submitted to the
EDGE server by issuers of risk
adjustment covered plans, HHS will
calculate the total amount of paid
claims costs for high-cost enrollees
above the threshold. HHS would then
calculate an adjustment as a percent of
the issuer’s total premiums in the
respective market, which would be
applied to the total transfer amount in
that market, maintaining the balance of
payments and charges within the risk
adjustment program. We are proposing
a uniform percentage of premium
adjustment across all States for the
individual (including catastrophic and
non-catastrophic plans and merged
market plans) and small group markets.
We believe pooling across all States for
purposes of calculating this adjustment
would be most effective in reducing the
impact of high-cost enrollees to better
reflect actuarial risk, and seek comment
on this proposal. Creating a uniform
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
pool of high-cost enrollees, by risk pool
or market, could result in some States or
geographic areas subsidizing issuers
with high-cost enrollees in other States
or geographic areas, as we discussed at
the conference and commenters to the
White Paper noted. We believe pooling
high-cost enrollees across all States on
whose behalf we are operating the risk
adjustment program could prevent
certain States with high-cost enrollees
from bearing a disproportionate amount
of unpredictable risk.
In the White Paper we discussed a
threshold of $1 million and a
coinsurance rate of 80 percent (where
the issuer would be liable for 20 percent
of costs above $1 million for an
enrollee). Commenters expressed
concerns about the potential for issuers
to ‘‘game’’ this policy by shifting costs
to the risk adjustment program, and not
pay sufficient attention to cost
containment for costs above the
threshold. While we believe these
inordinately high costs reflect random
risk selection for certain issuers, we are
sensitive to these concerns, particularly
in the first year of this adjustment in the
risk adjustment model. Therefore,
beginning for the 2018 benefit year, we
are proposing a threshold of $2 million
and a coinsurance rate of 60 percent
(where the issuer would be liable for 40
percent of costs above $2 million).
Beginning with the 2018 benefit year
recalibration, we would also incorporate
these parameters in our recalibration of
the model by truncating at 40 percent of
costs above $2 million in our dataset
used to simulate plan liability. Doing so
will produce more accurate predictive
coefficients that reflect the impact of the
high-cost enrollee pool. To help mitigate
concerns raised, while still helping
protect issuers from the unpredictable
risk of exceptionally high costs, we have
designed this proposal based on what
we discussed at the conference and
comments received on the White Paper.
As discussed above, beginning for the
2018 benefit year, we propose to adjust
issuers’ risk adjustment transfers by a
percent of premium amount that would
be determined based on the aggregate
costs of the high-cost risk pool above $2
million at 60 percent coinsurance in the
benefit year. This adjustment to the
transfer formula would be made for all
issuers of risk adjustment covered plans
in the individual (including
catastrophic and non-catastrophic plans
and merged market plans), or small
group market, across all States, based on
total premiums in the respective market.
We would create two high-cost risk
pools across all States: One for the
individual market (including
catastrophic, non-catastrophic, and
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
merged market plans), and one for the
small group market. To calculate the
adjustments, risk adjustment covered
plans would be assessed an adjustment
to fund the applicable pools and we
would perform additional data quality
metrics to determine an issuer’s
eligibility for high-cost risk pool
adjustments, even if the issuer failed the
data quality analysis for a risk
adjustment transfer and was assessed a
default charge under § 153.740(b) on
that basis. At the proposed threshold
and coinsurance, we expect total
adjustments as a result of this policy
nationally to be very small as a percent
of premiums (less than one tenth of one
percent of total premiums for either
market). We believe the inclusion of this
policy, in combination with the
transfers attributable to the plan liability
risk scores, will allow us to better assess
total actuarial risk for each risk
adjustment eligible plan, and thereby to
ensure that risk adjustment is
appropriately compensating issuers. We
seek comment on this proposal. We also
seek comment on whether to cap the
adjustments if they exceed a certain
amount.
iv. Other Considerations
We had previously reported that
based on the commercial MarketScan®
data, the HHS risk adjustment models
slightly underpredict risk for low-cost
enrollees, and slightly overpredict risk
for enrollees with high expenditures.31
We have received feedback that HHS
should adjust the risk adjustment
models for the underprediction of risk
for low cost enrollees, and the
overprediction of risk for enrollees with
high expenditures, which affects the
plan liability risk scores of plans that
enroll more healthy individuals or plans
that enroll more individuals with the
most extreme chronic health conditions.
We are considering the implementation
of the following policies, beginning with
the 2018 benefit year, in order to
improve model performance for these
subpopulations, and seek comment on
these approaches. We are considering
use of a constrained regression
approach, under which we would
estimate the adult risk adjustment
model using only the age-sex variables.
We would then re-estimate the model
using the full set of HCCs, while
constraining the value of the age-sex
coefficients to be same as those from the
first estimation. We believe that this
two-step estimation approach would
result in age-sex coefficients of greater
magnitude, potentially helping us
31 Available at: https://www.cms.gov/mmrr/
Downloads/MMRR2014_004_03_a03.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
predict the risk of the healthiest
subpopulations more accurately.
Similarly, we are considering
approaches in which our first estimation
of the model would include additional
independent variables intended to
account for potential non-linearities in
risk for the highest-risk subpopulations,
and then removing those additional
variables in the second estimation. We
are considering creating separate models
for enrollees with and without HCCs to
derive two separate sets of age-sex
coefficients. We believe such an
approach could also help improve the
models’ predictive ratios for the
healthiest subpopulations, though this
model would have a separate set of agesex coefficients for individuals with no
HCCs and the individuals with HCCs.
Finally, we are evaluating an approach
in which we would directly adjust plan
liability risk scores outside of the model
for these subpopulations. For example,
we could potentially make an
adjustment to the plan liability risk
scores calculated through the HHS risk
adjustment models that would adjust for
such an underprediction or
overprediction in actuarial risk by
directly increasing low plan liability
risk scores and directly reducing high
plan liability risk scores in order to
better match the relative risks of these
subpopulations. We note that while we
believe modifications of this type could
improve the model’s performance along
this specific dimension, there is a risk
that such modifications could
unintentionally worsen model
performance along other dimensions on
which the model currently performs
well. For this reason, we are continuing
to evaluate the effect of these types of
modifications on all aspects of the
model’s performance before choosing to
implement such an approach, and
would not implement these types of
modifications if we determined that
doing so would have material
unintended consequences for the
model’s performance along other
dimensions. We seek comment on
methods discussed above as well as
other methods to improve the predictive
ratios of the HHS risk adjustment
models.
In addition, we have received
feedback regarding our transfer
methodology in community rated States.
In the 2014 Payment Notice, we stated
that billable members exclude children
who do not count towards family rates.
In the second Program Integrity Rule,
we clarified the modification to the
transfer formula to accommodate
community rated States that utilize
family tiering rating factors. In the case
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
of family tiering States, billable
members are based on the number of
children that implicitly count towards
the premium under a State’s family
rating factors. We have received
feedback that there may be alternative
methodologies for calculating billable
member months in family tiering States,
such as by adjusting for the expected
actual number of members on the
policy, not the number of members that
implicitly count towards the premium.
We seek comment on whether our
methodology for calculating billable
member months in family tiering States
should be altered, and how.
v. Data Timing for Risk Adjustment
Recalibrations
We have used the three most recent
years of MarketScan® data to recalibrate
the 2016 and 2017 benefit year risk
adjustment models. This approach has
allowed for using the blended, or
averaged, coefficients from three years
of separately solved models, which
promotes stability for the risk
adjustment coefficients year-to-year,
particularly for conditions with small
sample sizes. This approach in previous
years has also required that we finalize
coefficients based on data that does not
become available until after the
publication of the proposed Payment
Notice. We received several comments
to the 2017 Payment Notice proposed
rule requesting that the Payment Notice
schedule be moved up to accommodate
substantive comments and to permit
issuers more time between the
publication of the Payment Notice and
the commencement of issuers’
certification activities. In order to
accommodate commenters’ request for
an earlier Payment Notice schedule, we
would not be able to incorporate an
additional recent year of data. We also
received many comments on how to
best address the data lag for HHS risk
adjustment and better reflect new
treatments that may be associated with
high-cost conditions. We had discussed
in the White Paper the use of only 2014
MarketScan® data for the 2018 benefit
year recalibration; using blended, three
year data coefficients would mitigate
any introductions of new costs for
particular conditions by two years of
older data. However, commenters to the
White Paper supported continuing to
use a 3-year blend for 2018 benefit year
recalibration. We are proposing to
continue to use the 3-year blend for
2018 benefit year recalibration.
We noted at the conference that we
were considering releasing more recent,
updated final coefficients closer to the
respective risk adjustment benefit year
using more recent data available in
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61473
guidance after the risk adjustment
methodology for the corresponding
benefit year has been finalized in the
applicable Payment Notice. Commenters
supported releasing coefficients closer
to the benefit year that reflect the most
recent data. We are proposing to amend
our regulations at § 153.320(b)(1)(i) to
allow for HHS to provide draft
coefficients in an annual Payment
Notice, as well as the intended datasets
to be used to calculate final coefficients
and the date by which the final
coefficients will be released in
guidance. We are considering using
2015, 2016, and 2017 MarketScan® data
for 2018 risk adjustment, publishing the
final, blended coefficients in the early
spring of 2019, prior to final 2018
benefit year risk adjustment
calculations. We have previously
finalized the risk adjustment
methodology, including the final
coefficients prior to rate setting and
benefits being provided to members. We
seek comment on this proposal,
specifically the timing of the release of
final coefficients and whether such a
practice would affect issuer
expectations with respect to the
methodology to be applied.
We also seek comment on the timing
of the publication of the final
coefficients, providing a few options to
reduce the data lag as much as possible.
As the first option, we could release
final coefficients for the 2018 benefit
year risk adjustment model in the spring
of 2017 that would reflect the
incorporation of 2015 MarketScan®
data, after it becomes available, blended
with 2013 and 2014 MarketScan®. On
the other hand, we could release final
coefficients for the 2018 benefit year
risk adjustment model in the spring of
2019, prior to the April 30, 2019, data
submission deadline for the 2018
benefit year that would reflect 2015,
2016, and 2017 blended MarketScan®
data. We could also provide interim
coefficients in the spring of 2018 using
2014, 2015 and 2016 blended
MarketScan® data, in addition to the
interim coefficients that would be
published in the 2018 Payment Notice
final rule using 2013 and 2014 data. As
noted above, we would continue to
finalize the risk adjustment
methodology for the corresponding year
through notice and comment in the
applicable annual Payment Notice.
We seek comment on this proposal.
d. List of Factors To Be Employed in the
Model (§ 153.320)
For the 2018 benefit year, in addition
to the RXCs we are proposing to include
in the adult risk adjustment model, we
are also proposing to separate the
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61474
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Chronic Hepatitis HCC into two new
HCCs for Hepatitis C and Hepatitis A
and B, in the adult, child, and infant
models. This would increase the total
HCCs in the HHS risk adjustment
methodology from 127 to 128. The
proposed factors resulting from the
blended factors from the 2013 and 2014
separately solved models (with the
incorporation of partial year enrollment
and prescription drugs reflected in the
adult models only) are shown in the
Tables 4 through 9. The adult, child,
and infant models have been truncated
to account for the high-cost enrollee
pool payment parameters ($2 million
threshold, 60 percent coinsurance).
Table 4 contains factors for each adult
model, including the interactions.32
Table 5 contains the HHS HCCs in the
severity illness indicator variable. Table
6 contains the factors for each child
model. Table 6 contains the factors for
each infant model.
TABLE 3—FINAL ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2017 BENEFIT YEAR
Factor
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
Demographic Factors
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
21–24,
25–29,
30–34,
35–39,
40–44,
45–49,
50–54,
55–59,
60–64,
21–24,
25–29,
30–34,
35–39,
40–44,
45–49,
50–54,
55–59,
60–64,
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Male ..................................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
Female .............................................................
0.199
0.189
0.245
0.312
0.391
0.471
0.611
0.701
0.810
0.339
0.399
0.539
0.633
0.713
0.724
0.821
0.829
0.876
0.148
0.137
0.180
0.234
0.301
0.369
0.492
0.567
0.654
0.262
0.308
0.428
0.513
0.579
0.585
0.671
0.672
0.706
0.092
0.080
0.107
0.147
0.199
0.253
0.355
0.414
0.478
0.171
0.203
0.305
0.380
0.433
0.432
0.501
0.495
0.513
0.056
0.043
0.059
0.089
0.130
0.174
0.260
0.306
0.349
0.111
0.132
0.224
0.294
0.336
0.327
0.382
0.367
0.372
0.055
0.043
0.059
0.088
0.129
0.173
0.258
0.304
0.347
0.110
0.130
0.222
0.292
0.335
0.325
0.379
0.364
0.370
8.943
8.450
8.099
8.142
8.143
10.685
10.510
10.404
10.460
10.461
6.636
4.664
8.507
24.307
6.535
4.428
8.406
23.874
6.470
4.269
8.340
23.573
6.491
4.227
8.322
23.632
6.492
4.227
8.321
23.633
12.629
12.295
12.061
12.065
12.066
5.852
5.159
5.617
4.924
5.440
4.743
5.393
4.695
5.392
4.694
2.965
2.792
2.655
2.602
2.601
1.459
5.458
1.192
1.192
1.192
13.677
2.285
2.285
2.285
1.304
5.236
1.053
1.053
1.053
13.685
2.165
2.165
2.165
1.167
5.093
0.929
0.929
0.929
13.695
2.066
2.066
2.066
1.076
5.115
0.825
0.825
0.825
13.756
2.013
2.013
2.013
1.074
5.115
0.824
0.824
0.824
13.757
2.013
2.013
2.013
2.285
16.044
7.110
3.856
3.856
4.429
32.610
2.165
15.870
6.870
3.694
3.694
4.268
32.560
2.066
15.760
6.712
3.572
3.572
4.158
32.521
2.013
15.773
6.730
3.538
3.538
4.147
32.564
2.013
15.773
6.731
3.537
3.537
4.147
32.563
11.825
6.542
11.566
6.277
11.387
6.105
11.416
6.124
11.417
6.124
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Diagnosis Factors
HIV/AIDS ..............................................................................
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response
Syndrome/Shock ..............................................................
Central Nervous System Infections, Except Viral Meningitis ...................................................................................
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis ............................................
Opportunistic Infections .......................................................
Metastatic Cancer ................................................................
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers, Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid Leukemia .......................................
Non-Hodgkin‘s Lymphomas and Other Cancers and Tumors ..................................................................................
Colorectal, Breast (Age < 50), Kidney, and Other Cancers
Breast (Age 50+) and Prostate Cancer, Benign/Uncertain
Brain Tumors, and Other Cancers and Tumors ..............
Thyroid Cancer, Melanoma, Neurofibromatosis, and Other
Cancers and Tumors ........................................................
Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications .........................
Diabetes with Acute Complications .....................................
Diabetes with Chronic Complications ..................................
Diabetes without Complication ............................................
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition .................................................
Mucopolysaccharidosis ........................................................
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis ................................................
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and Other Metabolic Disorders .....
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Significant Endocrine Disorders ...............................................................................
Liver Transplant Status/Complications ................................
End-Stage Liver Disease .....................................................
Cirrhosis of Liver ..................................................................
Chronic Hepatitis ..................................................................
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including Neonatal Hepatitis
Intestine Transplant Status/Complications ..........................
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal
Perforation/Necrotizing
Enterocolitis ......................................................................
Intestinal Obstruction ...........................................................
32 We note that the interaction factors are
additive, and not hierarchical in nature—that is, an
enrollee could have several, additive interactions.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61475
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3—FINAL ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2017 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Factor
Platinum
Chronic Pancreatitis .............................................................
Acute Pancreatitis/Other Pancreatic Disorders and Intestinal Malabsorption ...........................................................
Inflammatory Bowel Disease ...............................................
Necrotizing Fasciitis .............................................................
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis ................................
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other Autoimmune
Disorders ..........................................................................
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and Other Osteodystrophies ......
Congenital/Developmental Skeletal and Connective Tissue
Disorders ..........................................................................
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate ............................................................
Hemophilia ...........................................................................
Myelodysplastic Syndromes and Myelofibrosis ...................
Aplastic Anemia ...................................................................
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, Including Hemolytic Disease
of Newborn .......................................................................
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS) .................................................
Thalassemia Major ...............................................................
Combined and Other Severe Immunodeficiencies ..............
Disorders of the Immune Mechanism ..................................
Coagulation Defects and Other Specified Hematological
Disorders ..........................................................................
Drug Psychosis ....................................................................
Drug Dependence ................................................................
Schizophrenia ......................................................................
Major Depressive and Bipolar Disorders .............................
Reactive and Unspecified Psychosis, Delusional Disorders
Personality Disorders ...........................................................
Anorexia/Bulimia Nervosa ....................................................
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, and Autosomal Deletion
Syndromes .......................................................................
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other Chromosomal Anomalies, and Congenital Malformation Syndromes ................
Autistic Disorder ...................................................................
Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Except Autistic Disorder .................................................................................
Traumatic Complete Lesion Cervical Spinal Cord ..............
Quadriplegia .........................................................................
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal Spinal Cord .................
Paraplegia ............................................................................
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries .............................................
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other Anterior Horn
Cell Disease .....................................................................
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy ................................................
Cerebral Palsy, Except Quadriplegic ...................................
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/Spinal/Nervous System Congenital Anomalies .............................................................
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders and Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic Neuropathy ...............
Muscular Dystrophy .............................................................
Multiple Sclerosis .................................................................
Parkinson‘s, Huntington‘s, and Spinocerebellar Disease,
and Other Neurodegenerative Disorders .........................
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions ....................................
Hydrocephalus .....................................................................
Non-Traumatic Coma, and Brain Compression/Anoxic
Damage ............................................................................
Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status ....................
Respiratory Arrest ................................................................
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock, Including Respiratory Distress Syndromes ............................................
Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart .................................
Heart Transplant ..................................................................
Congestive Heart Failure .....................................................
Acute Myocardial Infarction .................................................
Unstable Angina and Other Acute Ischemic Heart Disease
Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except Rheumatic ................
Specified Heart Arrhythmias ................................................
Intracranial Hemorrhage ......................................................
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke ...........................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
5.458
5.236
5.093
5.115
5.115
2.710
3.667
6.581
6.581
4.854
2.522
3.401
6.382
6.382
4.592
2.385
3.197
6.243
6.243
4.399
2.337
3.105
6.258
6.258
4.389
2.336
3.103
6.258
6.258
4.389
1.212
3.126
1.077
2.927
0.957
2.766
0.872
2.706
0.871
2.705
3.126
1.310
46.447
12.671
12.671
2.927
1.149
46.159
12.534
12.534
2.766
1.020
45.940
12.439
12.439
2.706
0.952
45.946
12.449
12.449
2.705
0.951
45.947
12.449
12.449
9.742
9.742
9.742
5.438
5.438
9.580
9.580
9.580
5.290
5.290
9.457
9.457
9.457
5.186
5.186
9.448
9.448
9.448
5.188
5.188
9.448
9.448
9.448
5.188
5.188
2.810
3.832
3.832
3.196
1.720
1.720
1.190
2.704
2.712
3.576
3.576
2.940
1.552
1.552
1.054
2.537
2.631
3.381
3.381
2.749
1.408
1.408
0.920
2.400
2.603
3.288
3.288
2.685
1.312
1.312
0.823
2.342
2.603
3.286
3.286
2.684
1.311
1.311
0.822
2.341
2.648
2.517
2.414
2.364
2.364
1.073
1.190
0.965
1.054
0.861
0.920
0.788
0.823
0.787
0.822
1.190
12.012
12.012
9.161
9.161
5.641
1.054
11.856
11.856
9.003
9.003
5.430
0.920
11.742
11.742
8.889
8.889
5.278
0.823
11.739
11.739
8.877
8.877
5.249
0.822
11.740
11.740
8.877
8.877
5.249
3.027
1.229
0.135
2.790
1.016
0.073
2.623
0.855
0.039
2.583
0.791
0.016
2.583
0.790
0.015
0.077
0.022
0.000
0.000
0.000
5.252
2.150
13.598
5.104
1.984
13.194
4.998
1.862
12.910
4.975
1.787
12.956
4.975
1.786
12.957
2.150
1.503
6.394
1.984
1.344
6.272
1.862
1.213
6.171
1.787
1.143
6.144
1.786
1.142
6.144
9.200
34.709
10.541
9.064
34.699
10.391
8.958
34.698
10.296
8.953
34.764
10.360
8.952
34.765
10.361
10.541
35.115
35.115
3.281
10.133
5.231
6.303
2.834
9.426
3.167
10.391
34.870
34.870
3.173
9.797
4.955
6.168
2.685
9.147
2.982
10.296
34.711
34.711
3.096
9.582
4.782
6.068
2.569
8.956
2.870
10.360
34.771
34.771
3.090
9.693
4.796
6.046
2.515
8.965
2.875
10.361
34.772
34.772
3.090
9.695
4.797
6.046
2.515
8.965
2.876
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61476
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3—FINAL ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2017 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
Factor
Platinum
Cerebral Aneurysm and Arteriovenous Malformation .........
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis ......................................................
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic Syndromes .............................
Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with Ulceration or Gangrene ................................................................................
Vascular Disease with Complications ..................................
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis ..............
Lung Transplant Status/Complications ................................
Cystic Fibrosis ......................................................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Including
Bronchiectasis ..................................................................
Asthma .................................................................................
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung Disorders ........................
Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias and Other
Severe Lung Infections ....................................................
Kidney Transplant Status .....................................................
End Stage Renal Disease ...................................................
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5 ........................................
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage 4) .........................
Ectopic and Molar Pregnancy, Except with Renal Failure,
Shock, or Embolism .........................................................
Miscarriage with Complications ...........................................
Miscarriage with No or Minor Complications .......................
Completed Pregnancy With Major Complications ...............
Completed Pregnancy With Complications .........................
Completed Pregnancy with No or Minor Complications ......
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Pressure ..............................
Hip Fractures and Pathological Vertebral or Humerus
Fractures ..........................................................................
Pathological Fractures, Except of Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus ................................................................................
Stem Cell, Including Bone Marrow, Transplant Status/
Complications ...................................................................
Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination .....................
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation Complications
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
3.947
5.466
3.457
3.748
5.372
3.324
3.605
5.315
3.230
3.563
5.358
3.211
3.563
5.359
3.211
10.936
7.731
3.845
36.420
18.022
10.837
7.546
3.678
36.228
17.696
10.782
7.419
3.558
36.104
17.452
10.850
7.419
3.531
36.181
17.474
10.852
7.420
3.531
36.182
17.474
0.951
0.951
1.894
0.833
0.833
1.774
0.723
0.723
1.685
0.648
0.648
1.644
0.646
0.646
1.643
7.595
10.187
38.453
2.087
2.087
7.521
9.922
38.219
1.988
1.988
7.472
9.747
38.071
1.924
1.924
7.486
9.738
38.191
1.919
1.919
7.486
9.738
38.193
1.919
1.919
1.357
1.357
1.357
3.651
3.651
3.651
2.360
1.170
1.170
1.170
3.168
3.168
3.168
2.236
0.991
0.991
0.991
2.877
2.877
2.877
2.153
0.806
0.806
0.806
2.726
2.726
2.726
2.137
0.803
0.803
0.803
2.727
2.727
2.727
2.137
9.462
9.246
9.102
9.137
9.138
2.011
1.880
1.766
1.695
1.694
31.030
10.041
5.262
31.024
9.948
5.111
31.019
9.888
5.014
31.037
9.926
5.043
31.037
9.927
5.044
10.392
10.392
10.618
10.618
10.787
10.787
10.882
10.882
10.884
10.884
10.392
10.618
10.787
10.882
10.884
10.392
10.618
10.787
10.882
10.884
10.392
10.618
10.787
10.882
10.884
10.392
10.392
10.618
10.618
10.787
10.787
10.882
10.882
10.884
10.884
10.392
10.618
10.787
10.882
10.884
10.392
1.899
10.618
2.034
10.787
2.136
10.882
2.220
10.884
2.221
1.899
2.034
2.136
2.220
2.221
1.899
1.899
2.034
2.034
2.136
2.136
2.220
2.220
2.221
2.221
1.899
2.034
2.136
2.220
2.221
1.899
2.034
2.136
2.220
2.221
1.899
2.034
2.136
2.220
2.221
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Interaction Factors
Severe illness × Opportunistic Infections ............................
Severe illness × Metastatic Cancer .....................................
Severe illness × Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers,
Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid Leukemia ................
Severe illness × Non-Hodgkin‘s Lymphomas and Other
Cancers and Tumors ........................................................
Severe illness × Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders
and Guillain-Barre Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic
Neuropathy .......................................................................
Severe illness × Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except
Rheumatic ........................................................................
Severe illness × Intracranial Hemorrhage ...........................
Severe illness × HCC group G06 (G06 is HCC Group 6
which includes the following HCCs in the blood disease
category: 67, 68) ..............................................................
Severe illness × HCC group G08 (G08 is HCC Group 8
which includes the following HCCs in the blood disease
category: 73, 74) ..............................................................
Severe illness × End-Stage Liver Disease ..........................
Severe illness × Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including
Neonatal Hepatitis ............................................................
Severe illness × Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with Ulceration or Gangrene .......................................................
Severe illness × Vascular Disease with Complications .......
Severe illness × Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias and Other Severe Lung Infections ......................
Severe illness × Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination ................................................................................
Severe illness × HCC group G03 (G03 is HCC Group 3
which includes the following HCCs in the musculoskeletal disease category: 54, 55) ...................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61477
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3—FINAL ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2017 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
Factor
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
Enrollment Duration Factors
One month of enrollment .....................................................
Two months of enrollment ...................................................
Three months of enrollment .................................................
Four months of enrollment ...................................................
Five months of enrollment ...................................................
Six months of enrollment .....................................................
Seven months of enrollment ................................................
Eight months of enrollment ..................................................
Nine months of enrollment ...................................................
Ten months of enrollment ....................................................
Eleven months of enrollment ...............................................
0.515
0.454
0.387
0.316
0.273
0.248
0.217
0.166
0.114
0.114
0.100
0.441
0.381
0.321
0.264
0.228
0.208
0.186
0.142
0.103
0.103
0.092
0.396
0.329
0.270
0.221
0.188
0.170
0.155
0.118
0.092
0.092
0.084
0.386
0.318
0.258
0.211
0.176
0.156
0.145
0.110
0.089
0.089
0.082
0.386
0.318
0.258
0.211
0.176
0.156
0.144
0.109
0.089
0.089
0.082
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
Demographic Factors
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
21–24,
25–29,
30–34,
35–39,
40–44,
45–49,
50–54,
55–59,
60–64,
21–24,
25–29,
30–34,
35–39,
40–44,
45–49,
50–54,
55–59,
60–64,
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Male .....................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
Female .................................
0.176
0.160
0.206
0.270
0.337
0.408
0.533
0.608
0.702
0.303
0.351
0.485
0.572
0.644
0.652
0.738
0.742
0.780
0.140
0.125
0.160
0.215
0.273
0.335
0.447
0.510
0.588
0.249
0.286
0.405
0.483
0.545
0.549
0.627
0.626
0.654
0.095
0.080
0.105
0.148
0.196
0.249
0.346
0.397
0.460
0.179
0.207
0.312
0.383
0.434
0.434
0.501
0.496
0.513
0.052
0.036
0.048
0.079
0.114
0.155
0.234
0.272
0.312
0.106
0.122
0.214
0.280
0.320
0.310
0.361
0.347
0.351
0.049
0.033
0.044
0.074
0.108
0.149
0.227
0.264
0.304
0.101
0.116
0.209
0.275
0.315
0.304
0.353
0.339
0.341
6.183
9.552
5.760
9.383
5.473
9.283
5.469
9.330
5.539
9.368
6.422
6.330
6.272
6.293
6.313
4.503
7.320
22.731
11.734
4.287
7.228
22.324
11.425
4.163
7.177
22.054
11.226
4.106
7.153
22.096
11.215
4.139
7.165
22.169
11.265
5.463
5.251
5.110
5.051
5.077
4.767
4.556
4.412
4.350
4.375
2.781
2.627
2.522
2.457
2.472
1.329
1.199
1.101
0.996
1.002
4.775
4.576
4.459
4.475
4.514
0.647
0.647
0.647
12.908
2.037
2.037
0.575
0.575
0.575
12.906
1.934
1.934
0.511
0.511
0.511
12.897
1.861
1.861
0.432
0.432
0.432
12.961
1.798
1.798
0.430
0.430
0.430
12.969
1.806
1.806
Diagnosis Factors
HCC001 .............................................
HCC002 .............................................
HCC003 .............................................
HCC004
HCC006
HCC008
HCC009
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC010 .............................................
HCC011 .............................................
HCC012 .............................................
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
HCC013 .............................................
HCC018 .............................................
HCC019
HCC020
HCC021
HCC023
HCC026
HCC027
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
HIV/AIDS ..................................................
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/Shock.
Central Nervous System Infections, Except Viral Meningitis.
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis ................
Opportunistic Infections ...........................
Metastatic Cancer ....................................
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers,
Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid
Leukemia.
Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas and Other
Cancers and Tumors.
Colorectal, Breast (Age <50), Kidney,
and Other Cancers.
Breast (Age 50+) and Prostate Cancer,
Benign/Uncertain Brain Tumors, and
Other Cancers and Tumors.
Thyroid
Cancer,
Melanoma,
Neurofibromatosis, and Other Cancers
and Tumors.
Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications.
Diabetes with Acute Complications .........
Diabetes with Chronic Complications ......
Diabetes without Complication ................
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition .....................
Mucopolysaccharidosis ............................
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis ....................
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61478
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
HCC029 .............................................
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and Other Metabolic Disorders.
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Significant
Endocrine Disorders.
Liver Transplant Status/Complications ....
End-Stage Liver Disease .........................
Cirrhosis of Liver ......................................
Chronic Viral Hepatitis C .........................
Chronic Hepatitis, Other/Unspecified ......
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including
Neonatal Hepatitis.
Intestine Transplant Status/Complications
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal
Perforation/
Necrotizing Enterocolitis.
Intestinal Obstruction ...............................
Chronic Pancreatitis .................................
Acute Pancreatitis/Other Pancreatic Disorders and Intestinal Malabsorption.
Inflammatory Bowel Disease ...................
Necrotizing Fasciitis .................................
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis ....
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and
Other Autoimmune Disorders.
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and Other
Osteodystrophies.
Congenital/Developmental Skeletal and
Connective Tissue Disorders.
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate ................................
Hemophilia ...............................................
Myelodysplastic
Syndromes
and
Myelofibrosis.
Aplastic Anemia .......................................
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, Including
Hemolytic Disease of Newborn.
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS) ....................
Thalassemia Major ..................................
Combined
and
Other
Severe
Immunodeficiencies.
Disorders of the Immune Mechanism ......
Coagulation Defects and Other Specified
Hematological Disorders.
Drug Psychosis ........................................
Drug Dependence ....................................
Schizophrenia ..........................................
Major Depressive and Bipolar Disorders
Reactive and Unspecified Psychosis, Delusional Disorders.
Personality Disorders ...............................
Anorexia/Bulimia Nervosa .......................
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, and
Autosomal Deletion Syndromes.
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other Chromosomal Anomalies, and Congenital
Malformation Syndromes.
Autistic Disorder .......................................
Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Except Autistic Disorder.
Traumatic Complete Lesion Cervical Spinal Cord.
Quadriplegia .............................................
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal Spinal Cord.
Paraplegia ................................................
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries .................
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other
Anterior Horn Cell Disease.
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy ....................
Cerebral Palsy, Except Quadriplegic .......
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/Spinal/
Nervous System Congenital Anomalies.
HCC030 .............................................
HCC034 .............................................
HCC035 .............................................
HCC036 .............................................
HCC037C ..........................................
HCC037B ..........................................
HCC038 .............................................
HCC041 .............................................
HCC042 .............................................
HCC045 .............................................
HCC046 .............................................
HCC047 .............................................
HCC048
HCC054
HCC055
HCC056
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC057 .............................................
HCC061 .............................................
HCC062 .............................................
HCC063 .............................................
HCC066 .............................................
HCC067 .............................................
HCC068 .............................................
HCC069 .............................................
HCC070 .............................................
HCC071 .............................................
HCC073 .............................................
HCC074 .............................................
HCC075 .............................................
HCC081
HCC082
HCC087
HCC088
HCC089
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC090 .............................................
HCC094 .............................................
HCC096 .............................................
HCC097 .............................................
HCC102 .............................................
HCC103 .............................................
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
HCC106 .............................................
HCC107 .............................................
HCC108 .............................................
HCC109 .............................................
HCC110 .............................................
HCC111 .............................................
HCC112 .............................................
HCC113 .............................................
HCC114 .............................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Platinum
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
2.037
1.934
1.861
1.798
1.806
2.037
1.934
1.861
1.798
1.806
11.899
3.843
1.336
0.913
0.913
3.843
11.778
3.664
1.218
0.801
0.801
3.664
11.711
3.556
1.144
0.726
0.726
3.556
11.700
3.533
1.089
0.667
0.667
3.533
11.720
3.561
1.101
0.677
0.677
3.561
30.139
10.733
30.077
10.494
30.019
10.340
30.075
10.353
30.090
10.395
6.002
4.775
2.419
5.756
4.576
2.255
5.611
4.459
2.152
5.611
4.475
2.092
5.654
4.514
2.112
2.046
6.007
6.007
2.278
1.872
5.828
5.828
2.137
1.751
5.710
5.710
2.035
1.655
5.716
5.716
1.968
1.669
5.748
5.748
1.982
1.030
0.918
0.836
0.737
0.740
2.905
2.727
2.600
2.526
2.543
2.905
2.727
2.600
2.526
2.543
1.143
42.231
12.207
1.002
41.976
12.080
0.908
41.792
11.999
0.827
41.785
12.004
0.839
41.825
12.026
12.207
8.782
12.080
8.635
11.999
8.534
12.004
8.511
12.026
8.532
8.782
8.782
4.911
8.635
8.635
4.779
8.534
8.534
4.696
8.511
8.511
4.688
8.532
8.532
4.709
4.911
2.568
4.779
2.480
4.696
2.417
4.688
2.380
4.709
2.388
3.749
3.749
3.103
1.630
1.630
3.517
3.517
2.871
1.484
1.484
3.368
3.368
2.722
1.381
1.381
3.255
3.255
2.639
1.273
1.273
3.277
3.277
2.668
1.282
1.282
1.142
2.692
2.409
1.028
2.539
2.290
0.930
2.431
2.211
0.819
2.367
2.148
0.820
2.382
2.159
0.849
0.756
0.680
0.594
0.595
1.142
1.142
1.028
1.028
0.930
0.930
0.819
0.819
0.820
0.820
11.189
11.036
10.934
10.921
10.945
11.189
8.762
11.036
8.617
10.934
8.520
10.921
8.501
10.945
8.523
8.762
5.523
2.567
8.617
5.325
2.353
8.520
5.201
2.220
8.501
5.163
2.162
8.523
5.191
2.191
1.020
0.168
0.046
0.881
0.111
0.000
0.784
0.070
0.000
0.706
0.030
0.000
0.716
0.033
0.000
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61479
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
HCC115 .............................................
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders
and Guillain-Barre Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic Neuropathy.
Muscular Dystrophy .................................
Multiple Sclerosis .....................................
Parkinson’s,
Huntington’s,
and
Spinocerebellar Disease, and Other
Neurodegenerative Disorders.
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions ........
Hydrocephalus .........................................
Non-Traumatic Coma, and Brain Compression/Anoxic Damage.
Respirator
Dependence/Tracheostomy
Status.
Respiratory Arrest ....................................
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock,
Including Respiratory Distress Syndromes.
Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart .....
Heart Transplant ......................................
Congestive Heart Failure .........................
Acute Myocardial Infarction .....................
Unstable Angina and Other Acute
Ischemic Heart Disease.
Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except
Rheumatic.
Specified Heart Arrhythmias ....................
Intracranial Hemorrhage ..........................
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke ...............
Cerebral Aneurysm and Arteriovenous
Malformation.
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis ..........................
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic Syndromes
Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with
Ulceration or Gangrene.
Vascular Disease with Complications ......
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein
Thrombosis.
Lung Transplant Status/Complications ....
Cystic Fibrosis .........................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease,
Including Bronchiectasis.
Asthma .....................................................
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung Disorders.
Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias and Other Severe Lung Infections.
Kidney Transplant Status ........................
End Stage Renal Disease .......................
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5 ...........
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage
4).
Ectopic and Molar Pregnancy, Except
with Renal Failure, Shock, or Embolism.
Miscarriage with Complications ...............
Miscarriage with No or Minor Complications.
Completed Pregnancy With Major Complications.
Completed Pregnancy With Complications.
Completed Pregnancy with No or Minor
Complications.
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Pressure ..
Hip Fractures and Pathological Vertebral
or Humerus Fractures.
Pathological
Fractures,
Except
of
Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus.
Stem Cell, Including Bone Marrow,
Transplant Status/Complications.
HCC117 .............................................
HCC118 .............................................
HCC119 .............................................
HCC120 .............................................
HCC121 .............................................
HCC122 .............................................
HCC125 .............................................
HCC126 .............................................
HCC127 .............................................
HCC128
HCC129
HCC130
HCC131
HCC132
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC135 .............................................
HCC142
HCC145
HCC146
HCC149
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC150 .............................................
HCC151 .............................................
HCC153 .............................................
HCC154 .............................................
HCC156 .............................................
HCC158 .............................................
HCC159 .............................................
HCC160 .............................................
HCC161 .............................................
HCC162 .............................................
HCC163 .............................................
HCC183
HCC184
HCC187
HCC188
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
.............................................
HCC203 .............................................
HCC204 .............................................
HCC205 .............................................
HCC207 .............................................
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
HCC208 .............................................
HCC209 .............................................
HCC217 .............................................
HCC226 .............................................
HCC227 .............................................
HCC251 .............................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Platinum
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
5.158
5.020
4.933
4.905
4.924
2.075
3.652
2.075
1.927
3.459
1.927
1.838
3.335
1.838
1.751
3.267
1.751
1.763
3.289
1.763
1.447
5.884
8.606
1.308
5.771
8.480
1.211
5.685
8.389
1.127
5.652
8.378
1.137
5.667
8.396
32.063
32.042
32.021
32.093
32.106
9.458
9.458
9.316
9.316
9.223
9.223
9.280
9.280
9.312
9.312
31.966
31.966
2.074
9.396
4.759
31.751
31.751
1.978
9.079
4.510
31.611
31.611
1.912
8.878
4.368
31.636
31.636
1.873
8.975
4.366
31.677
31.677
1.883
9.044
4.412
5.703
5.585
5.507
5.477
5.492
2.065
8.616
2.891
3.677
1.948
8.359
2.725
3.501
1.869
8.198
2.634
3.391
1.802
8.189
2.629
3.335
1.811
8.231
2.660
3.357
4.955
3.104
9.488
4.864
2.983
9.411
4.808
2.909
9.360
4.848
2.881
9.434
4.869
2.899
9.459
7.268
3.480
7.097
3.331
6.989
3.236
6.978
3.195
7.005
3.215
31.358
7.004
0.897
31.201
6.736
0.797
31.097
6.550
0.718
31.176
6.529
0.631
31.215
6.569
0.634
0.897
1.730
0.797
1.624
0.718
1.557
0.631
1.508
0.634
1.518
6.798
6.731
6.689
6.697
6.711
7.065
23.772
0.395
0.395
6.838
23.578
0.326
0.326
6.705
23.450
0.286
0.286
6.674
23.516
0.280
0.280
6.710
23.559
0.292
0.292
1.283
1.127
1.008
0.814
0.806
1.283
1.283
1.127
1.127
1.008
1.008
0.814
0.814
0.806
0.806
3.466
3.027
2.823
2.625
2.694
3.466
3.027
2.823
2.625
2.694
3.466
3.027
2.823
2.625
2.694
2.003
9.015
1.903
8.812
1.843
8.682
1.825
8.709
1.840
8.747
2.028
1.913
1.830
1.750
1.758
28.116
28.117
28.113
28.139
28.143
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61480
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
HCC253 .............................................
Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination.
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation Complications.
HCC254 .............................................
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
9.095
9.005
8.946
8.979
8.999
4.508
4.378
4.298
4.323
4.351
9.355
9.355
9.355
9.550
9.550
9.550
9.669
9.669
9.669
9.785
9.785
9.785
9.768
9.768
9.768
9.355
9.550
9.669
9.785
9.768
9.355
9.550
9.669
9.785
9.768
9.355
9.550
9.669
9.785
9.768
9.355
9.355
9.550
9.550
9.669
9.669
9.785
9.785
9.768
9.768
9.355
9.550
9.669
9.785
9.768
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
1.895
2.007
2.070
2.170
2.164
0.470
0.381
0.337
0.264
0.229
0.212
0.190
0.148
0.100
0.098
0.083
0.427
0.335
0.291
0.226
0.194
0.180
0.163
0.128
0.089
0.089
0.079
0.411
0.316
0.270
0.209
0.175
0.163
0.148
0.115
0.085
0.085
0.077
0.414
0.319
0.272
0.211
0.176
0.163
0.148
0.116
0.085
0.085
0.077
23.451
5.889
2.226
13.308
1.822
1.258
23.158
5.594
2.149
13.238
1.708
1.134
23.236
5.432
2.079
13.249
1.541
0.975
23.320
5.482
2.083
13.271
1.543
0.966
Interaction Factors
SEVERE × HCC006 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC008 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC009 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC010 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC115 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC135 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC145 ..........................
SEVERE × G06 .................................
SEVERE × G08 .................................
SEVERE × HCC035 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC038 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC153 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC154 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC163 ..........................
SEVERE × HCC253 ..........................
SEVERE × G03 .................................
Severe illness × Opportunistic Infections
Severe illness × Metastatic Cancer .........
Severe illness × Lung, Brain, and Other
Severe Cancers, Including Pediatric
Acute Lymphoid Leukemia.
Severe
illness
×
Non-Hodgkin‘s
Lymphomas and Other Cancers and
Tumors.
Severe illness × Myasthenia Gravis/
Myoneural Disorders and GuillainBarre Syndrome/Inflammatory and
Toxic Neuropathy.
Severe illness × Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except Rheumatic.
Severe illness × Intracranial Hemorrhage
Severe illness × HCC group G06 (G06 is
HCC Group 6 which includes the following HCCs in the blood disease category: 67, 68).
Severe illness × HCC group G08 (G08 is
HCC Group 8 which includes the following HCCs in the blood disease category: 73, 74).
Severe illness × End-Stage Liver Disease.
Severe illness × Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including Neonatal Hepatitis.
Severe illness × Atherosclerosis of the
Extremities with Ulceration or Gangrene.
Severe illness × Vascular Disease with
Complications.
Severe illness × Aspiration and Specified
Bacterial Pneumonias and Other Severe Lung Infections.
Severe illness × Artificial Openings for
Feeding or Elimination.
Severe illness × HCC group G03 (G03 is
HCC Group 3 which includes the following HCCs in the musculoskeletal
disease category: 54, 55).
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Enrollment Duration Factors
One month of enrollment .........................
Two months of enrollment .......................
Three months of enrollment ....................
Four months of enrollment ......................
Five months of enrollment .......................
Six months of enrollment .........................
Seven months of enrollment ....................
Eight months of enrollment ......................
Nine months of enrollment ......................
Ten months of enrollment ........................
Eleven months of enrollment ...................
0.526
0.434
0.386
0.303
0.263
0.241
0.214
0.166
0.111
0.106
0.088
Prescription Drug Utilization Indicators
RXC
RXC
RXC
RXC
RXC
RXC
01 ..............................................
02 ..............................................
03 ..............................................
04 ..............................................
05 ..............................................
06b ............................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Anti-Hepatitis C (HCV) Agents ................
Anti-HIV Agents .......................................
Antiarrhythmics ........................................
Phosphate Binders ..................................
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Agents .......
Insulin .......................................................
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23.898
6.331
2.320
13.417
1.990
1.379
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61481
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
RXC 06a ............................................
Anti-Diabetic Agents, Except Insulin and
Metformin Only.
Multiple Sclerosis Agents ........................
Immune
Suppressants
and
Immunomodulators.
Cystic Fibrosis Agents .............................
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Anti-Hepatitis C (HCV) Agents and
HCC (Liver Transplant Status/Complications or End-Stage Liver Disease
or Cirrhosis of Liver or Chronic Viral
Hepatitis).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Anti-HIV Agents and HCC HIV/AIDS.
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Antiarrhythmics and HCC Specified
Heart Arrhythmias.
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Phosphate Binders and HCC (End
Stage Renal Disease or Kidney Transplant Status or Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5 or Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage 4)).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Agents
and (HCC Inflammatory Bowel Disease or Intestine Transplant Status/
Complications).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Insulin and (HCC Pancreas Transplant
Status/Complications or Diabetes with
Acute Complications or Diabetes with
Chronic Complications or Diabetes
without Complication).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Anti-Diabetic Agents, Except Insulin
and Metformin Only and (HCC Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications
or Diabetes with Acute Complications
or Diabetes with Chronic Complications or Diabetes without Complication).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Multiple Sclerosis Agents and HCC
Multiple Sclerosis.
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Immune
Suppressants
and
Immunomodulators and (HCC Inflammatory Bowel Disease or Intestine
Transplant Status/Complications) and
(HCC Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders or Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other
Autoimmune Disorders).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Immune
Suppressants
and
Immunomodulators and HCC Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders.
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Immune
Suppressants
and
Immunomodulators and HCC Systemic
Lupus Erythematosus and Other Autoimmune Disorders.
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Immune
Suppressants
and
Immunomodulators and (HCC Inflammatory Bowel Disease or Intestine
Transplant Status/Complications).
RXC 07 ..............................................
RXC 08 ..............................................
RXC 09 ..............................................
RXC 01 × HCC37C, 036, 035, 034 ..
RXC 02 × HCC001 ............................
RXC 03 × HCC142 ............................
RXC 04 × HCC184, 183, 187, 188 ...
RXC 05 × HCC048, 041 ...................
RXC 06b × HCC018, 019, 020, 021
RXC 06a × HCC018, 019, 020, 021
RXC 07 × HCC118 ............................
RXC 08 × HCC056 or 057, and 048
or 041.
RXC 08 × HCC056 ............................
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
RXC 08 × HCC057 ............................
RXC 08 × HCC048, 041 ...................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Platinum
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
0.575
0.502
0.428
0.326
0.319
16.971
10.134
16.286
9.586
15.836
9.234
15.832
9.242
15.945
9.339
17.443
3.212
17.133
3.350
16.931
3.439
17.071
3.522
17.144
3.512
¥2.238
¥1.888
¥1.645
¥1.437
¥1.465
¥0.102
¥0.076
¥0.035
0.037
0.046
7.775
7.850
7.890
7.978
7.973
¥1.296
¥1.208
¥1.126
¥1.028
¥1.026
0.265
0.233
0.289
0.371
0.397
¥0.203
¥0.184
¥0.141
¥0.118
¥0.116
¥1.213
¥0.849
¥0.619
¥0.449
¥0.484
0.022
0.024
0.038
0.012
0.009
¥1.934
¥1.747
¥1.615
¥1.481
¥1.495
¥0.891
¥0.759
¥0.656
¥0.522
¥0.526
0.948
1.194
1.330
1.513
1.493
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61482
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 4—DRAFT ADULT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
HCC or RXC No.
Factor
RXC 09 × HCC159, 158 ...................
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Cystic Fibrosis Agents and (HCC Cystic Fibrosis or Lung Transplant Status/
Complications).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Ammonia Detoxicants and (HCC Liver
Transplant Status/Complications or
End-Stage Liver Disease or Cirrhosis
of Liver).
Additional effect for enrollees with RXC
Diuretics, Loop and Select Potassiumsparing and (HCC Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart or Heart Transplant
or Congestive Heart Failure).
RXC 10 × HCC036, 035, 034 ...........
RXC 11 × HCC130, 129, 128 ...........
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
18.100
18.294
18.402
18.379
18.340
7.113
7.080
7.054
7.145
7.164
2.263
2.270
2.284
2.369
2.382
TABLE 5—HHS HCCS IN THE SEVERITY ILLNESS INDICATOR VARIABLE
Description
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/Shock.
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal Perforation/Necrotizing Enter colitis.
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions.
Non-Traumatic Coma, Brain Compression/Anoxic Damage.
Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status.
Respiratory Arrest.
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock, Including Respiratory Distress Syndromes.
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis.
TABLE 6—DRAFT CHILD RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR
Factor
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
Demographic Factors
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
Age
2–4, Male ......................................................................
5–9, Male ......................................................................
10–14, Male ..................................................................
15–20, Male ..................................................................
2–4, Female .................................................................
5–9, Female .................................................................
10–14, Female .............................................................
15–20, Female .............................................................
0.207
0.142
0.204
0.271
0.163
0.116
0.192
0.309
0.151
0.102
0.160
0.220
0.114
0.081
0.150
0.250
0.085
0.053
0.103
0.158
0.058
0.039
0.099
0.177
0.029
0.011
0.057
0.102
0.015
0.008
0.059
0.109
0.025
0.008
0.053
0.098
0.012
0.006
0.056
0.104
4.686
4.277
4.006
3.895
3.948
15.212
15.056
14.964
14.980
15.011
9.957
2.484
20.790
32.805
9.790
2.302
20.728
32.584
9.682
2.192
20.685
32.417
9.681
2.092
20.673
32.401
9.708
2.112
20.682
32.434
11.049
10.801
10.617
10.544
10.573
8.747
3.175
8.507
2.986
8.333
2.846
8.231
2.724
8.255
2.737
2.813
2.640
2.513
2.398
2.408
1.561
26.035
2.340
2.340
2.340
12.106
8.087
8.087
8.087
1.423
25.914
2.054
2.054
2.054
12.025
7.841
7.841
7.841
1.311
25.841
1.887
1.887
1.887
11.965
7.660
7.660
7.660
1.190
25.846
1.622
1.622
1.622
11.995
7.612
7.612
7.612
1.194
25.867
1.632
1.632
1.632
12.012
7.644
7.644
7.644
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Diagnosis Factors
HIV/AIDS ..............................................................................
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response
Syndrome/Shock ..............................................................
Central Nervous System Infections, Except Viral Meningitis ...................................................................................
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis ............................................
Opportunistic Infections .......................................................
Metastatic Cancer ................................................................
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers, Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid Leukemia .......................................
Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas and Other Cancers and Tumors ..................................................................................
Colorectal, Breast (Age <50), Kidney, and Other Cancers
Breast (Age 50+) and Prostate Cancer, Benign/Uncertain
Brain Tumors, and Other Cancers and Tumors ..............
Thyroid Cancer, Melanoma, Neurofibromatosis, and Other
Cancers and Tumors ........................................................
Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications .........................
Diabetes with Acute Complications .....................................
Diabetes with Chronic Complications ..................................
Diabetes without Complication ............................................
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition .................................................
Mucopolysaccharidosis ........................................................
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis ................................................
Congenital Metabolic Disorders, Not Elsewhere Classified
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61483
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 6—DRAFT CHILD RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Factor
Platinum
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and Other Metabolic Disorders .....
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Significant Endocrine Disorders ...............................................................................
Liver Transplant Status/Complications ................................
End-Stage Liver Disease .....................................................
Cirrhosis of Liver ..................................................................
Chronic Viral Hepatitis C .....................................................
Chronic Hepatitis, Other/Unspecified ...................................
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including Neonatal Hepatitis
Intestine Transplant Status/Complications ..........................
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal
Perforation/Necrotizing
Enterocolitis ......................................................................
Intestinal Obstruction ...........................................................
Chronic Pancreatitis .............................................................
Acute Pancreatitis/Other Pancreatic Disorders and Intestinal Malabsorption ...........................................................
Inflammatory Bowel Disease ...............................................
Necrotizing Fasciitis .............................................................
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis ................................
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other Autoimmune
Disorders ..........................................................................
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and Other Osteodystrophies ......
Congenital/Developmental Skeletal and Connective Tissue
Disorders ..........................................................................
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate ............................................................
Hemophilia ...........................................................................
Myelodysplastic Syndromes and Myelofibrosis ...................
Aplastic Anemia ...................................................................
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, Including Hemolytic Disease
of Newborn .......................................................................
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS) .................................................
Thalassemia Major ...............................................................
Combined and Other Severe Immunodeficiencies ..............
Disorders of the Immune Mechanism ..................................
Coagulation Defects and Other Specified Hematological
Disorders ..........................................................................
Drug Psychosis ....................................................................
Drug Dependence ................................................................
Schizophrenia ......................................................................
Major Depressive and Bipolar Disorders .............................
Reactive and Unspecified Psychosis, Delusional Disorders
Personality Disorders ...........................................................
Anorexia/Bulimia Nervosa ....................................................
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, and Autosomal Deletion
Syndromes .......................................................................
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other Chromosomal Anomalies, and Congenital Malformation Syndromes ................
Autistic Disorder ...................................................................
Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Except Autistic Disorder .................................................................................
Traumatic Complete Lesion Cervical Spinal Cord ..............
Quadriplegia .........................................................................
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal Spinal Cord .................
Paraplegia ............................................................................
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries .............................................
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other Anterior Horn
Cell Disease .....................................................................
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy ................................................
Cerebral Palsy, Except Quadriplegic ...................................
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/Spinal/Nervous System Congenital Anomalies .............................................................
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders and Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic Neuropathy ...............
Muscular Dystrophy .............................................................
Multiple Sclerosis .................................................................
Parkinson‘s, Huntington‘s, and Spinocerebellar Disease,
and Other Neurodegenerative Disorders .........................
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions ....................................
Hydrocephalus .....................................................................
Non-Traumatic Coma, and Brain Compression/Anoxic
Damage ............................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
8.087
7.841
7.660
7.612
7.644
8.087
26.035
11.991
9.308
4.024
2.271
11.991
26.035
7.841
25.914
11.852
9.167
3.889
2.151
11.852
25.914
7.660
25.841
11.762
9.070
3.787
2.049
11.762
25.841
7.612
25.846
11.751
9.044
3.730
1.965
11.751
25.846
7.644
25.867
11.773
9.062
3.743
1.971
11.773
25.867
13.534
4.748
9.837
13.230
4.541
9.629
13.022
4.395
9.502
13.021
4.297
9.493
13.071
4.317
9.527
2.186
6.044
3.999
3.999
3.788
2.075
5.699
3.795
3.795
3.572
1.987
5.465
3.647
3.647
3.404
1.889
5.348
3.572
3.572
3.301
1.892
5.386
3.596
3.596
3.321
1.335
1.489
1.216
1.379
1.112
1.285
0.990
1.201
0.989
1.206
1.489
1.502
55.750
15.915
15.915
1.379
1.322
55.302
15.761
15.761
1.285
1.192
54.985
15.654
15.654
1.201
1.064
54.945
15.632
15.632
1.206
1.075
55.012
15.652
15.652
7.294
7.294
7.294
6.252
6.252
7.048
7.048
7.048
6.092
6.092
6.875
6.875
6.875
5.982
5.982
6.784
6.784
6.784
5.915
5.915
6.812
6.812
6.812
5.931
5.931
4.546
5.380
5.380
5.083
1.873
1.873
0.729
2.892
4.429
5.147
5.147
4.726
1.677
1.677
0.624
2.708
4.333
4.999
4.999
4.492
1.527
1.527
0.520
2.576
4.257
4.923
4.923
4.375
1.350
1.350
0.377
2.504
4.264
4.952
4.952
4.420
1.356
1.356
0.372
2.524
3.492
3.304
3.194
3.154
3.180
1.736
1.671
1.577
1.512
1.469
1.383
1.376
1.224
1.390
1.226
0.835
12.558
12.558
12.180
12.180
4.250
0.726
12.507
12.507
12.010
12.010
4.044
0.612
12.489
12.489
11.883
11.883
3.905
0.447
12.562
12.562
11.877
11.877
3.816
0.437
12.579
12.579
11.912
11.912
3.836
7.619
2.991
0.778
7.407
2.764
0.617
7.257
2.631
0.514
7.196
2.634
0.422
7.221
2.675
0.436
1.275
1.146
1.054
0.976
0.986
8.788
2.941
7.769
8.631
2.765
7.471
8.520
2.650
7.263
8.481
2.563
7.206
8.502
2.580
7.246
2.941
1.905
4.590
2.765
1.753
4.479
2.650
1.628
4.408
2.563
1.483
4.389
2.580
1.486
4.406
6.647
6.522
6.434
6.385
6.397
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61484
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 6—DRAFT CHILD RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
Factor
Platinum
Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status ....................
Respiratory Arrest ................................................................
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock, Including Respiratory Distress Syndromes ............................................
Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart .................................
Heart Transplant ..................................................................
Congestive Heart Failure .....................................................
Acute Myocardial Infarction .................................................
Unstable Angina and Other Acute Ischemic Heart Disease
Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except Rheumatic ................
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome and Other Severe Congenital Heart Disorders ....................................................
Major Congenital Heart/Circulatory Disorders .....................
Atrial and Ventricular Septal Defects, Patent Ductus
Arteriosus, and Other Congenital Heart/Circulatory Disorders ...............................................................................
Specified Heart Arrhythmias ................................................
Intracranial Hemorrhage ......................................................
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke ...........................................
Cerebral Aneurysm and Arteriovenous Malformation .........
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis ......................................................
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic Syndromes .............................
Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with Ulceration or Gangrene ................................................................................
Vascular Disease with Complications ..................................
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis ..............
Lung Transplant Status/Complications ................................
Cystic Fibrosis ......................................................................
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Including
Bronchiectasis ..................................................................
Asthma .................................................................................
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung Disorders ........................
Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias and Other
Severe Lung Infections ....................................................
Kidney Transplant Status .....................................................
End Stage Renal Disease ...................................................
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5 ........................................
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage 4) .........................
Ectopic and Molar Pregnancy, Except with Renal Failure,
Shock, or Embolism .........................................................
Miscarriage with Complications ...........................................
Miscarriage with No or Minor Complications .......................
Completed Pregnancy With Major Complications ...............
Completed Pregnancy With Complications .........................
Completed Pregnancy with No or Minor Complications ......
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Pressure ..............................
Hip Fractures and Pathological Vertebral or Humerus
Fractures ..........................................................................
Pathological Fractures, Except of Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus ................................................................................
Stem Cell, Including Bone Marrow, Transplant Status/
Complications ...................................................................
Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination .....................
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation Complications
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Catastrophic
34.991
11.820
34.882
11.625
34.817
11.511
34.931
11.500
34.967
11.535
11.820
26.035
26.035
6.567
9.084
5.051
14.351
11.625
25.914
25.914
6.472
8.927
4.971
14.240
11.511
25.841
25.841
6.394
8.826
4.917
14.165
11.500
25.846
25.846
6.342
8.828
4.926
14.137
11.535
25.867
25.867
6.348
8.852
4.938
14.149
5.764
1.573
5.584
1.475
5.432
1.361
5.305
1.239
5.313
1.235
1.097
3.684
14.176
7.895
3.545
4.484
3.148
1.010
3.526
13.948
7.786
3.356
4.389
3.018
0.908
3.401
13.803
7.721
3.235
4.333
2.937
0.808
3.320
13.784
7.720
3.172
4.314
2.899
0.807
3.333
13.820
7.739
3.192
4.330
2.917
14.633
16.113
14.661
26.035
19.127
14.377
15.969
14.521
25.914
18.718
14.225
15.873
14.435
25.841
18.428
14.131
15.876
14.448
25.846
18.452
14.168
15.899
14.475
25.867
18.522
0.396
0.396
4.160
0.334
0.334
4.036
0.249
0.249
3.936
0.153
0.153
3.862
0.147
0.147
3.873
10.367
15.081
38.217
3.038
3.038
10.322
14.777
38.061
2.903
2.903
10.287
14.581
37.962
2.802
2.802
10.315
14.566
38.031
2.685
2.685
10.324
14.616
38.065
2.688
2.688
1.033
1.033
1.033
2.991
2.991
2.991
2.057
0.878
0.878
0.878
2.587
2.587
2.587
1.969
0.754
0.754
0.754
2.391
2.391
2.391
1.888
0.549
0.549
0.549
2.161
2.161
2.161
1.819
0.541
0.541
0.541
2.216
2.216
2.216
1.823
5.729
5.486
5.302
5.192
5.214
1.351
1.233
1.116
0.982
0.977
26.035
13.409
7.806
25.914
13.305
7.556
25.841
13.251
7.407
25.846
13.357
7.306
25.867
13.391
7.336
TABLE 7—DRAFT INFANT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Group
Platinum
Extremely Immature * Severity Level 5 (Highest) ................
Extremely Immature * Severity Level 4 ................................
Extremely Immature * Severity Level 3 ................................
Extremely Immature * Severity Level 2 ................................
Extremely Immature * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) .................
Immature * Severity Level 5 (Highest) .................................
Immature * Severity Level 4 .................................................
Immature * Severity Level 3 .................................................
Immature * Severity Level 2 .................................................
Immature * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) ..................................
Premature/Multiples * Severity Level 5 (Highest) ................
Premature/Multiples * Severity Level 4 ................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Gold
336.506
183.468
70.513
29.465
29.465
178.009
80.832
45.204
29.465
26.402
133.590
30.629
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
335.265
182.244
69.447
28.557
28.557
176.784
79.582
44.114
28.557
25.374
132.392
29.458
Silver
334.332
181.331
68.657
27.854
27.854
175.861
78.649
43.299
27.854
24.608
131.511
28.605
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Bronze
334.271
181.224
68.493
27.519
27.519
175.795
78.554
43.140
27.519
24.351
131.378
28.391
Catastrophic
334.459
181.402
68.642
27.614
27.614
175.980
78.740
43.289
27.614
24.477
131.555
28.552
61485
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 7—DRAFT INFANT RISK ADJUSTMENT MODEL FACTORS FOR 2018 BENEFIT YEAR—Continued
Group
Platinum
Premature/Multiples * Severity Level 3 ................................
Premature/Multiples * Severity Level 2 ................................
Premature/Multiples * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) .................
Term * Severity Level 5 (Highest) ........................................
Term * Severity Level 4 ........................................................
Term * Severity Level 3 ........................................................
Term * Severity Level 2 ........................................................
Term * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) .........................................
Age 1 * Severity Level 5 (Highest) .......................................
Age 1 * Severity Level 4 ......................................................
Age 1 * Severity Level 3 ......................................................
Age 1 * Severity Level 2 ......................................................
Age 1 * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) .......................................
Age 0 Male ...........................................................................
Age 1 Male ...........................................................................
Gold
16.302
8.445
5.825
115.287
16.144
6.053
3.715
1.570
49.286
8.659
3.182
1.997
0.529
0.601
0.140
Silver
15.378
7.691
5.277
114.176
15.252
5.490
3.284
1.351
48.692
8.213
2.901
1.779
0.441
0.558
0.123
Bronze
14.694
7.131
4.774
113.343
14.603
4.998
2.849
0.965
48.242
7.871
2.635
1.544
0.299
0.540
0.112
14.308
6.599
4.196
113.147
14.155
4.409
2.209
0.436
48.122
7.641
2.374
1.267
0.196
0.494
0.085
Catastrophic
14.399
6.637
4.187
113.297
14.235
4.397
2.166
0.387
48.198
7.678
2.380
1.257
0.189
0.490
0.084
TABLE 8—HHS HCCS INCLUDED IN INFANT MODEL MATURITY CATEGORIES
Maturity category
HCC/Description
Extremely Immature ............................................
Extremely Immature ............................................
Extremely Immature ............................................
Immature .............................................................
Immature .............................................................
Premature/Multiples ............................................
Premature/Multiples ............................................
Term ....................................................................
Age 1 ..................................................................
Extremely Immature Newborns, Birthweight < 500 Grams.
Extremely Immature Newborns, Including Birthweight 500–749 Grams.
Extremely Immature Newborns, Including Birthweight 750–999 Grams.
Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight 1000–1499 Grams.
Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight 1500–1999 Grams.
Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight 2000–2499 Grams.
Other Premature, Low Birthweight, Malnourished, or Multiple Birth Newborns.
Term or Post-Term Singleton Newborn, Normal or High Birthweight.
All age 1 infants.
TABLE 9—HHS HCCS INCLUDED IN INFANT MODEL SEVERITY CATEGORIES
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Severity category
HCC
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
(Highest) ..................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
Metastatic Cancer.
Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications.
Liver Transplant Status/Complications.
End-Stage Liver Disease.
Intestine Transplant Status/Complications.
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal Perforation/Necrotizing Enterocolitis.
Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status.
Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart.
Heart Transplant.
Congestive Heart Failure.
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome and Other Severe Congenital Heart Disorders.
Lung Transplant Status/Complications.
Kidney Transplant Status.
End Stage Renal Disease.
Stem Cell, Including Bone Marrow, Transplant Status/Complications.
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/Shock.
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers, Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid Leukemia.
Mucopolysaccharidosis.
Major Congenital Anomalies of Diaphragm, Abdominal Wall, and Esophagus, Age < 2.
Myelodysplastic Syndromes and Myelofibrosis.
Aplastic Anemia.
Combined and Other Severe Immunodeficiencies.
Traumatic Complete Lesion Cervical Spinal Cord.
Quadriplegia.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other Anterior Horn Cell Disease.
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy.
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders and Guillain-Barre Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic
Neuropathy.
Non-Traumatic Coma, Brain Compression/Anoxic Damage.
Respiratory Arrest.
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock, Including Respiratory Distress Syndromes.
Acute Myocardial Infarction.
Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except Rheumatic.
Major Congenital Heart/Circulatory Disorders.
Intracranial Hemorrhage.
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61486
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 9—HHS HCCS INCLUDED IN INFANT MODEL SEVERITY CATEGORIES—Continued
Severity category
HCC
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
4
4
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
Severity Level 3 ..................................................
Severity Level 3 ..................................................
Severity Level 3 ..................................................
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
(Lowest) ...................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
Vascular Disease with Complications.
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis.
Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias and Other Severe Lung Infections.
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5.
Hip Fractures and Pathological Vertebral or Humerus Fractures.
Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination.
HIV/AIDS.
Central Nervous System Infections, Except Viral Meningitis.
Opportunistic Infections.
Non-Hodgkin‘s Lymphomas and Other Cancers and Tumors.
Colorectal, Breast (Age < 50), Kidney and Other Cancers.
Breast (Age 50+), Prostate Cancer, Benign/Uncertain Brain Tumors, and Other Cancers and
Tumors.
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis.
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Significant Endocrine Disorders.
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including Neonatal Hepatitis.
Intestinal Obstruction.
Necrotizing Fasciitis.
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis.
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and Other Osteodystrophies.
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate.
Hemophilia.
Disorders of the Immune Mechanism.
Coagulation Defects and Other Specified Hematological Disorders.
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, and Autosomal Deletion Syndromes.
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal Spinal Cord.
Paraplegia.
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries.
Cerebral Palsy, Except Quadriplegic.
Muscular Dystrophy.
Parkinson‘s, Huntington‘s, and Spinocerebellar Disease, and Other Neurodegenerative Disorders.
Hydrocephalus.
Unstable Angina and Other Acute Ischemic Heart Disease.
Atrial and Ventricular Septal Defects, Patent Ductus Arteriosus, and Other Congenital Heart/
Circulatory Disorders.
Specified Heart Arrhythmias.
Cerebral Aneurysm and Arteriovenous Malformation.
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis.
Cystic Fibrosis.
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung Disorders.
Pathological Fractures, Except of Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus.
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis.
Thyroid, Melanoma, Neurofibromatosis, and Other Cancers and Tumors.
Diabetes with Acute Complications.
Diabetes with Chronic Complications.
Diabetes without Complication.
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition.
Congenital Metabolic Disorders, Not Elsewhere Classified.
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and Other Metabolic Disorders.
Cirrhosis of Liver.
Chronic Pancreatitis.
Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified Autoimmune Disorders.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other Autoimmune Disorders.
Congenital/Developmental Skeletal and Connective Tissue Disorders.
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, Including Hemolytic Disease of Newborn.
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb–SS).
Drug Psychosis.
Drug Dependence.
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other Chromosomal Anomalies, and Congenital Malformation
Syndromes.
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/Spinal/Nervous System Congenital Anomalies.
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions.
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic Syndromes.
Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with Ulceration or Gangrene.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Including Bronchiectasis.
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Pressure.
Chronic Hepatitis.
Acute Pancreatitis/Other Pancreatic Disorders and Intestinal Malabsorption.
Thalassemia Major.
Autistic Disorder.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
61487
TABLE 9—HHS HCCS INCLUDED IN INFANT MODEL SEVERITY CATEGORIES—Continued
Severity category
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Severity
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
Level
1
1
1
1
1
1
HCC
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
..................................................
e. Cost-Sharing Reductions (§ 153.320)
We propose to continue including an
adjustment for the receipt of costsharing reductions in the model to
account for increased plan liability due
to increased utilization of health care
services by enrollees receiving cost-
Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Except Autistic Disorder.
Multiple Sclerosis.
Asthma.
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage 4).
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation Complications.
No Severity HCCs.
sharing reductions. The proposed costsharing reductions adjustment factors
for 2018 risk adjustment are unchanged
from those finalized in the 2017
Payment Notice and are set forth in
Table 10. These adjustments are
effective for 2016, 2017, and 2018 risk
adjustment, and are multiplied against
the sum of the demographic, diagnosis,
and interaction factors. We anticipate
adjusting these factors in the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the 2019 benefit year as
additional enrollee-level data from the
individual market becomes available.
We seek comment on this approach.
TABLE 10—COST-SHARING REDUCTIONS ADJUSTMENT
Household income
Induced
utilization
factor
Plan AV
Silver Plan Variant Recipients
100–150% of FPL .......................................................................
150–200% of FPL .......................................................................
200–250% of FPL .......................................................................
>250% of FPL .............................................................................
Plan Variation 94%
Plan Variation 87%
Plan Variation 73%
Standard Plan 70%
....................................................................
....................................................................
....................................................................
....................................................................
1.12
1.12
1.00
1.00
Zero Cost-Sharing Recipients
<300%
<300%
<300%
<300%
of
of
of
of
FPL
FPL
FPL
FPL
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
Platinum (90%) ..........................................................................
Gold (80%) .................................................................................
Silver (70%) ...............................................................................
Bronze (60%) .............................................................................
1.00
1.07
1.12
1.15
Limited Cost-Sharing Recipients
>300%
>300%
>300%
>300%
of
of
of
of
FPL
FPL
FPL
FPL
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
Platinum (90%) ..........................................................................
Gold (80%) .................................................................................
Silver (70%) ...............................................................................
Bronze (60%) .............................................................................
To evaluate the model’s performance,
we examined its R-squared and
predictive ratios. The R-squared
statistic, which calculates the
percentage of individual variation
explained by a model, measures the
predictive accuracy of the model
overall. The predictive ratios measure
the predictive accuracy of a model for
different validation groups or
subpopulations. The predictive ratio for
each of the HHS risk adjustment models
is the ratio of the weighted mean
predicted plan liability for the model
sample population to the weighted
mean actual plan liability for the model
sample population. The predictive ratio
represents how well the model does on
average at predicting plan liability for
that subpopulation. A subpopulation
that is predicted perfectly would have a
predictive ratio of 1.0. For each of the
HHS risk adjustment models, the R-
33 Winkleman, Ross and Syed Mehmud. ‘‘A
Comparative Analysis of Claims-Based Tools for
Health Risk Assessment.’’ Society of Actuaries.
April 2007.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
f. Model Performance Statistics
(§ 153.320)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
1.00
1.07
1.12
1.15
squared statistic and the predictive ratio
are in the range of published estimates
for concurrent risk adjustment
models.33 Because we are proposing to
blend the coefficients from separately
solved models based on MarketScan®
2013 and 2014 data in the proposed
rule, we are publishing the R-squared
statistic for each model and year
separately to verify their statistical
validity. The R-squared statistic for each
model is shown in Table 11.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61488
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 11—R-SQUARED STATISTIC FOR HHS RISK ADJUSTMENT MODELS
R-Squared statistic
Risk adjustment model
2013
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Platinum Adult ..........................................................................................................................................................
Platinum Child ..........................................................................................................................................................
Platinum Infant .........................................................................................................................................................
Gold Adult ................................................................................................................................................................
Gold Child ................................................................................................................................................................
Gold Infant ...............................................................................................................................................................
Silver Adult ...............................................................................................................................................................
Silver Child ...............................................................................................................................................................
Silver Infant ..............................................................................................................................................................
Bronze Adult ............................................................................................................................................................
Bronze Child ............................................................................................................................................................
Bronze Infant ...........................................................................................................................................................
Catastrophic Adult ...................................................................................................................................................
Catastrophic Child ...................................................................................................................................................
Catastrophic Infant ...................................................................................................................................................
g. Overview of the Payment Transfer
Formula (§ 153.320)
In order to maintain the balance of
payments and charges that net to zero
within each State market, we propose to
account for high-cost enrollees through
transfer terms (a payment term and a
charge term) that would be calculated
separately from the State transfer
formula. Thus, the non-outlier pooling
portion of plan risk will continue to be
calculated as the member monthweighted average of individual enrollee
risk scores. We previously defined the
calculation of plan average actuarial risk
and the calculation of payments and
charges in the Premium Stabilization
Rule. In the 2014 Payment Notice, we
combined those concepts into a risk
adjustment payment transfer formula.
Risk adjustment transfers (total
payments and charges including outlier
pooling) will be calculated after issuers
have completed risk adjustment data
reporting. The payment transfer formula
includes a set of cost adjustment terms
that require transfers to be calculated at
the geographic rating area level for each
plan (that is, HHS will calculate two
separate transfer amounts for a plan that
operates in two rating areas).
The payment transfer formula is
designed to provide a per member per
month (PMPM) transfer amount. The
PMPM transfer amount derived from the
payment transfer formula would be
multiplied by each plan’s total member
months for the benefit year to determine
the total payment due or charge owed
by the issuer for that plan in a rating
area.
The total payment or charge is thus
calculated to balance the State market
risk pool in question. In addition to the
total charge collected and payment
made for the State market risk pool, we
propose to add to the risk adjustment
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
methodology additional transfers that
would reflect the payments and charges
assessed with respect to the costs of
high-risk enrollees. In particular, we
would add one term that would reflect
60 percent of costs above $2 million, the
proposed threshold for our payments for
these enrollees, and another term that
would reflect a percentage of PMPM
premium adjustment to the transfer
formula for the high-cost enrollee pool
to maintain the balance of payment and
charges within the risk adjustment
program. We seek comment on this
approach to balance transfers between
high and low risk plans.
We received feedback in the 2017
Payment Notice and the White Paper
from commenters who believe that the
inclusion of administrative costs in the
Statewide average premium incorrectly
increases risk adjustment transfers
based on costs that are unrelated to the
risk of the enrollee population.
Comments ranged from requesting that
administrative expenses be removed
entirely from the Statewide average
premium to requesting that HHS
consider basing risk adjustment
transfers on a portion of Statewide
average premium—namely, the portion
representing the sum of claims, claims
adjustment expenses, and taxes that are
calculated on premiums after risk
adjustment transfers by using a
specified percentage of Statewide
average premiums. While commenters
have stated that the inclusion of
administrative costs in the Statewide
average premium harms efficient plans,
we note that low cost plans do not
necessarily indicate efficient plans.
Should a plan be low cost with low
claims costs, it is likely an indication of
mispricing, as the issuer should be
pricing for average risk. However, we
recognize that commenters are
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
2014
0.4070
0.2947
0.3354
0.4026
0.2902
0.3335
0.3993
0.2866
0.3324
0.3971
0.2836
0.3323
0.3975
0.2839
0.3326
0.4005
0.2908
0.3200
0.3956
0.2860
0.3180
0.3918
0.2821
0.3168
0.3893
0.2789
0.3165
0.3898
0.2792
0.3168
concerned that including fixed
administrative costs in the Statewide
average premium may increase risk
adjustment transfers for all issuers based
on a percentage of costs that are not
dependent on enrollee risk. We have
considered some of the potential effects
of excluding certain fixed
administrative costs from the Statewide
average premium. This modification to
the treatment of administrative costs in
the Statewide average premium would
lower absolute risk adjustment transfers
for all issuers by an equal percentage.
We also note that administrative costs
are affected by claims costs and that
correctly measuring the portion of
administrative costs unaffected by
claims costs may be difficult. An
incorrect measurement of administrative
costs could then result in plans with
high risk enrollees being
undercompensated. We are continuing
to evaluate the impact of administrative
expenses on risk adjustment transfers,
and seek comment on removing a
portion of administrative expenses from
the Statewide average premium for the
2018 benefit year or for future benefit
years.
i. The Payment Transfer Formula
The payment transfer formula is
unchanged from what was finalized in
the 2014 Payment Notice (78 FR 15430
through 15434). We believe it useful to
republish the formula in its entirety,
since, as noted above, we are proposing
to recalibrate the HHS risk adjustment
model. Transfers (payments and
charges) will be calculated as the
difference between the plan premium
estimate reflecting risk selection and the
plan premium estimate not reflecting
risk selection. As finalized in the 2014
Payment Notice, the HHS risk
adjustment payment transfer formula is:
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
The denominator is summed across all
plans in the risk pool in the market in
the State.
The difference between the two
premium estimates in the payment
transfer formula determines whether a
plan pays a risk adjustment charge or
receives a risk adjustment payment.
Note that the value of the plan average
risk score by itself does not determine
whether a plan would be assessed a
charge or receive a payment—even if the
risk score is greater than 1.0, it is
possible that the plan would be assessed
a charge if the premium compensation
that the plan may receive through its
rating (as measured through the
allowable rating factor) exceeds the
plan’s predicted liability associated
with risk selection. Risk adjustment
transfers are calculated at the risk pool
level, and catastrophic plans are treated
as a separate risk pool for purposes of
risk adjustment.
This existing formula would be
multiplied by the number of member
months to determine the total payment
or charge assessed with respect to plan
average risk scores for a plan’s
geographic rating area for the market for
the State and this payment or charge
will be added to the transfer terms
described above to account for the costs
of high-risk enrollees.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
h. Risk Adjustment Issuer Data
Requirements (§ 153.610)
In the 2014 Payment Notice, HHS
established an approach for obtaining
the necessary data for reinsurance and
risk adjustment calculations through a
distributed data collection model that
prevented the transfer of individuals’
protected health information. Under
§ 153.700, each issuer must establish an
EDGE server through which it provides
HHS access to enrollment, claims, and
encounter data. To safeguard enrollees’
privacy, each issuer must establish a
unique masked enrollee identification
number for each enrollee, and may not
include personally identifiable
information in such masked enrollee
identification number. Under the EDGE
server approach issuers currently
provide plan-level data to HHS.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
The lack of enrollee-level data under
this approach limits HHS’s ability to use
that enrollee-level data from risk
adjustment covered plans to improve
the risk adjustment model recalibration.
As we discussed in the White Paper,
access to enrollee-level data with
masked enrollee IDs would permit HHS
to recalibrate the risk adjustment model
using actual data from issuers’
individual and small group populations,
as opposed to the MarketScan®
commercial database that approximates
individual and small group market
populations, while continuing to
safeguard the privacy and security of
protected health information. Therefore,
beginning for the 2019 benefit year,
while maintaining the underlying goals
of the distributed data approach,
including information privacy and
security, we propose to recalibrate the
risk adjustment model using masked,
enrollee-level EDGE server data from the
2016 benefit year. A separate report
would be run on issuers’ EDGE servers
to access select data elements in the
enrollee, medical claim, pharmacy
claim and supplemental diagnosis files,
with masked enrollee ID, plan/issuer ID,
rating area, and State. This approach
would allow for the creation of a
masked, enrollee-level dataset and
would not permit HHS to know the
identity of the enrollee, the plan ID, the
issuer ID, rating area, State or the EDGE
server from which the data was
extracted. HHS would provide
additional information regarding the
data elements it would collect and the
related process considerations in future
guidance.
HHS would use the enrollee-level
dataset to recalibrate the risk adjustment
model and inform development of the
Actuarial Value Calculator and
Methodology, which HHS releases
annually, to describe how issuers of
non-grandfathered health plans in the
individual and small group markets are
to calculate actuarial value for purposes
of determining metal levels. We believe
this data could prove a valuable source
for calibrating other HHS programs in
the individual and small group markets,
and that a public use file derived from
these data could be a valuable tool for
governmental entities and independent
researchers to better understand these
markets.
We believe that the proposal
described above, which minimizes the
burden from the issuer by only requiring
issuers to execute a new EDGE
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
command for the report to be run on
issuers’ EDGE servers, permits
important improvements to the HHSoperated risk adjustment program while
continuing to safeguard privacy and
security. We request comment on this
proposal.
i. Risk Adjustment User Fee
(§ 153.610(f))
As noted above, if a State is not
approved to operate or chooses to forgo
operating its own risk adjustment
program, HHS will operate risk
adjustment on the State’s behalf. As
described in the 2014 Payment Notice,
HHS’s operation of risk adjustment on
behalf of States is funded through a risk
adjustment user fee. Section
153.610(f)(2) provides that an issuer of
a risk adjustment covered plan, as
defined in § 153.20, must remit a user
fee to HHS equal to the product of its
monthly enrollment in the plan and the
per enrollee per month risk adjustment
user fee specified in the annual HHS
notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the applicable benefit
year.
To promote operational efficiency, we
propose to amend § 153.610(f)(2) to
revise the calculation of the risk
adjustment user fee to be equal to the
product of an issuer’s billable monthly
enrollment (billable member months)
and the per enrollee per month risk
adjustment user fee specified in the
annual HHS notice of benefit and
payment parameters. Billable member
months exclude children who do not
count toward family rates or family
policy premiums.34 This revision to
base the total user fee on billable
member months rather than enrollment
member months ensures consistency
with calculating user fees based on
premium revenue generated by issuers,
which aligns with the FFE user fee
policy. We note that this change would
not affect the PMPM risk adjustment
user fee rate due to the small relative
difference between billable member
months and enrollee member months.
Therefore, we propose to implement
this change beginning for the 2016
benefit year risk adjustment user fee
collection, which will be collected in
2017, maintaining the user fee rate set
in the 2016 and 2017 Payment Notices.
We seek comment on this proposal.
OMB Circular No. A–25R establishes
Federal policy regarding user fees, and
34 78
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
FR 15432.
06SEP2
EP06SE16.000
Where:
PS = State average premium;
PLRSt = plan i’s plan liability risk score;
AVi = plan i’s metal level AV;
ARFi = allowable rating factor;
IDFi = plan i’s induced demand factor;
GCFi = plan i’s geographic cost factor;
si = plan i’s share of State enrollment.
61489
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61490
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
specifies that a user charge will be
assessed against each identifiable
recipient for special benefits derived
from Federal activities beyond those
received by the general public. The risk
adjustment program will provide special
benefits as defined in section 6(a)(1)(b)
of Circular No. A–25R to issuers of risk
adjustment covered plans because it
will mitigate the financial instability
associated with potential adverse risk
selection. The risk adjustment program
will also contribute to consumer
confidence in the health insurance
industry by helping to stabilize
premiums across the individual and
small group health insurance markets.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
estimated Federal administrative
expenses of operating the risk
adjustment program to be $1.56 per
enrollee per year, or $0.13 PMPM, based
on our estimated contract costs for risk
adjustment operations. For the 2018
benefit year, we propose to use the same
methodology to estimate our
administrative expenses to operate the
program. These contracts cover
development of the model and
methodology, collections, payments,
account management, data collection,
data validation, program integrity and
audit functions, operational and fraud
analytics, stakeholder training, and
operational support. To calculate the
user fee, we divide HHS’s projected
total costs for administering the risk
adjustment programs on behalf of States
by the expected number of billable
member months in risk adjustment
covered plans (other than plans not
subject to market reforms and student
health plans, which are not subject to
payments and charges under the risk
adjustment methodology HHS uses
when it operates risk adjustment on
behalf of a State) in HHS-operated risk
adjustment programs for the benefit
year.
We estimate that the total cost for
HHS to operate the risk adjustment
program on behalf of States for the 2018
benefit year will be approximately $35
million, and that the risk adjustment
user fee would be $1.32 per billable
enrollee per year (assuming we finalize
our proposal to assess these costs by
billable member months discussed
above), or $0.12 PMPM. The risk
adjustment user fee contract costs for
2018 include costs related to 2018 risk
adjustment data validation, and are
higher than the 2017 contract costs
because some contracts were modified
and rebid. However, because enrollment
is estimated to be higher in 2018 than
2017, the PMPM amount is lower than
that finalized for the 2017 benefit year.
We seek comment on this proposal.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
j. Data Validation Requirements When
HHS Operates Risk Adjustment
(§ 153.630)
HHS will conduct risk adjustment
data validation in any State where HHS
is operating risk adjustment on a State’s
behalf under § 153.630. The purpose of
risk adjustment data validation is to
ensure issuers are providing accurate
high-quality information to HHS, which
is crucial for the proper functioning of
the risk adjustment program. Risk
adjustment data validation consists of
an initial validation audit and a second
validation audit. Under § 153.630, each
issuer of a risk adjustment covered plan
must engage an independent initial
validation audit entity. The issuer
provides demographic, enrollment, and
medical record documentation for a
sample of enrollees selected by HHS to
its initial validation audit entity for data
validation.
i. Materiality Threshold for Risk
Adjustment Data Validation
HHS has been evaluating the burden
associated with the risk adjustment data
validation program, particularly
considering the fixed costs associated
with hiring an initial validation audit
entity and submitting results to HHS,
which may be a large portion of some
issuers’ administrative costs. Beginning
for the 2017 benefit year risk adjustment
data validation program, HHS is
proposing to implement a materiality
threshold. This would mean that issuers
that fall below a certain threshold
would not be required to conduct risk
adjustment data validation each year
and would instead be subject to random
and targeted sampling. We would
expect the random sampling to include
issuers below the threshold being
subject to an initial validation audit
approximately every 3 years, barring
any risk-based triggers that would
warrant annual participation. Potential
risk-based metrics we are considering
using to select issuers at or below this
threshold for more frequent initial
validation audits include the issuer’s
prior risk adjustment data validation
results, and material changes in risk
adjustment data submission, as
measured by our quality metrics. We are
proposing to use a threshold of total
premiums of $15 million—a threshold
at which 1 percent of an issuer’s
premiums would cover the estimated
$150,000 cost of the initial validation
audit. Issuers at or below this threshold
would not be subject to annual initial
validation audit requirements. We
estimate that issuers above this
threshold represent risk adjustment
covered plans that cover approximately
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
98.5 percent of membership nationally
and as such, annual audit of issuers at
or below the threshold is not material
for purposes of risk adjustment data
validation. We seek comment on this
proposal, including with respect to the
appropriate threshold and the risk-based
metrics we should use.
Because risk adjustment data
validation error rates are applied to the
subsequent year’s data, we are
considering whether to base the
participation requirement metric on the
benefit year or the subsequent benefit
year. On the one hand, risk adjustment
data validation is measuring the
accuracy of risk scores from the benefit
year. On the other hand, risk adjustment
data validation results directly adjust
the risk adjustment transfers of issuers
participating in risk adjustment in the
following benefit year. We note that,
even if an issuer is exempt from initial
validation audit requirements using the
proposed materiality threshold, HHS
may require issuers to make records
available for review or to comply with
an audit by the Federal government
under § 153.620. We seek comment on
this approach.
We propose that issuers not materially
affecting risk adjustment data validation
that are not required to perform an
initial validation audit would still have
their payments adjusted based on an
error rate. We are considering an error
rate for an issuer not subject to an initial
validation audit in a particular year that
could be the average negative error rate
nationally, or the average negative error
rate within a State, or its error rate in
past audits. We seek comment on this
approach.
ii. Inclusion of Pharmacy Claims in Risk
Adjustment Data Validation
Beginning with the 2018 benefit year,
as discussed above, the proposed HHS
risk adjustment methodology would
take into account prescription drug
utilization for purposes of determining
an enrollee’s risk score. HHS proposes
to use a hybrid model that employs
prescription drug data to supplement
diagnostic data by serving as a proxy for
a missing diagnosis in cases where
diagnostic data are likely to be
incomplete and as an indicator of the
severity of an enrollee’s illness. We
propose to require that, with respect to
validation of prescription drug
utilization of sampled enrollees, an
issuer must provide an initial validation
audit entity all paid pharmacy claims
for an enrollee, against which the initial
validation audit entity will validate the
associated prescription drug class in the
HHS risk adjustment methodology and
the impact on the enrollee’s risk score.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Therefore, we propose to amend the first
sentence of § 153.630(b)(7)(ii) to include
enrollees’ paid pharmacy claims.
iii. Risk Adjustment Data Validation
Discrepancy and Administrative
Appeals Process
Under § 153.630(d), an issuer may
appeal the findings of a second
validation audit or the application of a
risk score error rate to its risk
adjustment payments and charges. In
the 2015 Payment Notice, we stated that
we would ‘‘provide additional guidance
on the appeals process and schedule in
future rulemaking.’’ 35 As we noted in
the 2015 Payment Notice, HHS will not
permit an issuer to appeal the results of
the initial validation audit, as the initial
validation audit entity is under contract
with the issuer and HHS does not
produce the initial validation audit
results. We are proposing to amend
§ 153.630(d) to clarify that an issuer may
appeal the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate. We make this
clarification to distinguish the
calculation of a risk score error rate from
the application of a risk score error rate
as the calculation is a separate reason
for which an issuer could appeal. We
further propose to clarify that if an
issuer intends to appeal the application
of a risk score error rate to its risk
adjustment payments and charges, HHS
would deem this a risk adjustment
payment or charge amount appeal under
§ 156.1220(a)(1)(ii). In this proposed
rule, we also propose an interim and
final discrepancy reporting process for
the risk adjustment data validation
program and we propose codification of
the process by which an issuer may file
an appeal of the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate.
First, we propose an interim
discrepancy reporting process by which
an issuer must confirm the risk
adjustment data validation initial audit
sample provided by HHS under
§ 153.630(b)(1) or file a discrepancy
report. We propose amending § 153.630
by removing the introductory language
and adding paragraph (d)(1) to provide
that in the manner set forth by HHS,
within 15 calendar days of notification
of the initial validation audit sample set
forth by HHS, an issuer must confirm
the sample or file a discrepancy report
to dispute the HHS risk adjustment data
validation initial validation audit
sample set forth by HHS. In light of the
timing of this interim discrepancy
reporting process, we do not propose to
35 HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters
for 2015, 79 FR 13768
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
permit issuers to appeal the resolution
of any interim discrepancy disputing
the sample. We believe that providing
an interim administrative appeals
process or permitting issuers to appeal
the HHS risk adjustment data validation
initial validation audit sample after
completion of the entire risk adjustment
data validation process for a benefit year
would delay the HHS risk adjustment
data validation process. Additionally,
we believe that it could be efficient to
resolve any issues related to the risk
adjustment data validation initial audit
sample provided by HHS under
§ 153.630(b)(1) during an interim
discrepancy reporting process. We
propose to require confirmation of the
sample, in the form of an attestation, in
order to ensure that issuers thoroughly
review the initial validation audit
sample determined by HHS.
Second, we propose a final, formal
discrepancy reporting process, by which
an issuer must confirm the findings of
the second validation audit or the
calculation of a risk score error rate, or
notify us if the issuer identifies a
discrepancy with the findings of a
second validation audit or the
calculation of a risk score error rate. We
propose adding paragraph (d)(2) to
§ 153.630 to provide that in the manner
set forth by HHS, an issuer must attest
to or report a discrepancy within 15
calendar days of notification of the
findings of a second validation audit or
the calculation of a risk score error rate
to dispute the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate. We believe this
discrepancy reporting process will
enable HHS to work with issuers to
resolve discrepancies prior to the
notification or risk adjustment payments
or charges due under § 153.310(e) and
application of the risk score error rate to
the issuer’s risk adjustment payments
and charges.
As we will discuss in further detail in
the preamble to § 156.1220(a), we also
propose requiring issuers to report a
discrepancy if the issue is identifiable
prior to filing a request for
reconsideration as set forth in 45 CFR
156.1220. As such, we propose to
amend § 156.1220(a)(4)(ii), to provide
that notwithstanding § 156.1220(a)(1), a
reconsideration with respect to a
processing error by HHS, HHS’s
incorrect application of the relevant
methodology, or HHS’s mathematical
error may be requested only if, to the
extent the issue could have been
previously identified by the issuer to
HHS under § 153.630(d)(2) or
§ 153.710(d)(2), it was so identified and
remains unresolved.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61491
Third, we propose to amend § 153.630
to add paragraph (d)(3) to clarify the
process by which an issuer can appeal
the findings of a second validation audit
or the calculation of a risk score error
rate. We propose requiring issuers to use
the administrative appeals process set
forth in § 156.1220. We believe issuers
will appreciate a discrepancy reporting
window and leveraging the existing
administrative appeals processes.
HHS will provide in future guidance
the process for issuers to report
discrepancies. We believe that
providing issuers 15 calendar days to
review the HHS risk adjustment data
validation sample set, will provide
adequate time for issuers to notify HHS
prior to the execution of the initial
validation audit. Additionally, we
believe providing issuers 30 calendar
days from the results of the second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate based on risk
adjustment data validation, will provide
adequate time for issuers to notify HHS
prior to filing a formal request for
reconsideration of such discrepancy. As
with the discrepancy reporting process
set forth in § 153.710(d), HHS will work
with issuers to resolve any
discrepancies related to risk adjustment
data validation prior to final risk
adjustment payments and charges for a
benefit year. We seek comment on these
timeframes and these discrepancy
reporting and appeal proposals.
G. Part 154—Health Insurance Issuer
Rate Increases: Disclosure and Review
Requirements
1. Definitions (§ 154.102)
We propose to revise the definition of
‘‘product’’ in § 154.102. Specifically, we
propose to remove language that would
restrict a product’s being considered the
same product when it is no longer
offered by the same issuer, but by a
different issuer in the same controlled
group. This amendment is necessary in
light of our proposed interpretation of
guaranteed renewability provisions, as
discussed in the preamble to § 147.106.
We are not proposing changes to the
definition of ‘‘plan’’ because the
definition for that term in § 154.102
cross-references the definition in
§ 144.103. Therefore, if finalized as
proposed, the amendments to the
definition of ‘‘plan’’ in § 144.103 would
also apply for purposes of the rate
review requirements under 45 CFR part
154. For further discussion of the reason
for this proposed amendment, please
see the preamble to § 147.106.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61492
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
H. Part 155—Exchange Establishment
Standards and Other Related Standards
Under the Affordable Care Act
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
1. Standardized Options (§ 155.20)
a. Standardized Options Approach for
2018
In the 2017 Payment Notice, HHS
finalized six standardized options (also
now referred to as Simple Choice plans),
one at each of the bronze, silver, silver
cost-sharing reduction variation, and
gold levels of coverage, designed to be
similar to the most popular (enrollmentweighted) QHPs in the 2015 individual
market FFEs. We propose to change the
standardized options from the 2017
versions in order to reflect changes in
QHP enrollment-weighted data from
2015 to 2016, including SBE–FP QHP
enrollment-weighted data, and to the
extent practicable, to comply with
various State cost-sharing standards.
Therefore, for the 2018 plan year, HHS
proposes three new sets of standardized
options, based on an analysis of
enrollment-weighted 2016 individual
market FFE and SBE–FP QHPs (see
Tables 12, 13 and 14). The second and
third sets are different from the first set
only to the extent necessary to comply
with State cost-sharing laws. The
second set of standardized options is
designed to work in States that: (1)
Require that cost sharing for physical
therapy, occupational therapy, or
speech therapy be no greater than the
cost sharing for primary care visits; (2)
limit the amount that can be charged for
each drug tier; or (3) require that all
drug tiers carry a copayment rather than
coinsurance. The third set of
standardized options is designed to
work in a State with maximum
deductible requirements and other costsharing standards.
Like the 2017 standardized options,
the proposed 2018 standardized options
each have a single provider tier, fixed
deductible, fixed annual limitation on
cost sharing, and fixed copayment or
coinsurance for a key set of essential
health benefits that comprise a large
percentage of the total allowed costs for
a typical population of enrollees. These
fixed cost-sharing values are for innetwork care only. Unlike the 2017
standardized options, the proposed
2018 options at the silver, silver costsharing reduction variations, and gold
levels of coverage have separate medical
and drug deductibles, reflecting the
commonality of this cost-sharing
structure in QHPs at these levels of
coverage. The proposed standardized
options at the silver 87 percent costsharing reduction plan variation, silver
94 percent cost-sharing reduction plan
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
variation, and gold levels of coverage
have a drug deductible equal to $0,
meaning no deductible applies to the
drugs.
The bronze standardized options as
proposed rely on finalization of the
proposal discussed in the preamble to
§ 156.140 to permit a broader de
minimis range for bronze plans. If that
proposal is not adopted, the plans
would be revised to comply with the de
minimis range in our regulations, while
still reflecting 2016 enrollment
weighted data, and State cost-sharing
requirements for the second set of
standardized options.
For 2018, we also propose a fourth
standardized option at the bronze level
of coverage that qualifies as a high
deductible health plan (HDHP) under
section 223 of the Code, eligible for use
with a health savings account (HSA).
HDHPs are an option valued by many
consumers—enrollment in HDHPs
across 2016 individual market FFE and
SBE–FP QHPs constituted 9.2 percent of
all FFE and SBE–FP QHP enrollment in
2016. Pursuant to the terms of the Code,
the IRS releases the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing and minimum
annual deductible for HDHPs annually
in the spring, subsequent to the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters rulemaking process.
Therefore, we propose that if any
changes to the HDHP standardized
option would be required to reflect
differences between the HDHP
standardized option finalized in the
2018 Payment Notice and the
subsequently released maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing and minimum
annual deductible for HDHPs, HHS
would publish those changes in
guidance. Accordingly, we propose to
amend the definition of ‘‘standardized
option’’ at § 155.20 to provide for a plan
to be considered a standardized option
if it is: (1) A QHP offered for sale
through an individual market Exchange
with a standardized cost-sharing
structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking; or (2) an HDHP QHP
offered for sale through an individual
market Exchange with a standardized
cost-sharing structure specified by HHS
in guidance issued solely to modify the
cost-sharing structure specified by HHS
in rulemaking to the extent necessary to
align with requirements to qualify as an
HDHP under section 223 of the Code
and meet HHS AV requirements.
b. Standardized Options in SBE–FPs
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
designed a set of standardized options
based on enrollment-weighted 2015 FFE
QHP data, and indicated we anticipated
differentially displaying these HHS-
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
designed standardized options. We
noted that SBE–FPs may have their own
State-designed standardized plans that
differ from HHS-designed standardized
options, but that the HealthCare.gov
platform would not be able to
differentially display these Statedesigned standardized plans.
For 2018, the HealthCare.gov platform
remains unable to provide differential
display to State-designed standardized
plans that differ from the HHS-designed
standardized options. However, we
propose that SBE–FPs may choose to
allow HHS-designed standardized
options to receive differential display on
HealthCare.gov, just as the plans would
if offered through an FFE. We propose
that an SBE–FP must notify HHS if it
wants HHS-designed standardized
options to receive differential display by
a date to be specified in guidance that
will be set to provide sufficient time to
operationalize the State’s choice on
HealthCare.gov. We seek comment on
this proposal.
c. State Customization
In the 2017 Final Payment Notice,
HHS explained that it would not be
possible for HealthCare.gov to
accommodate customization of
standardized options by State in 2017.
Specifically, to reduce operational
complexity, HHS did not vary the
standardized options by State or by
region, and instead finalized one set of
standardized options across all FFEs
that issuers would have the option to
offer in 2017.
As noted above, some States regulate
cost sharing on specific benefits under
State authorities. We seek to
accommodate, to the extent practicable,
State cost-sharing requirements under
our proposed 2018 standardized
options. To do so, we have designed
three bronze standardized options (in
addition to the bronze HDHP), and three
standardized options at each of the
silver, silver cost-sharing reduction plan
variations, and gold levels of coverage,
as set forth in Tables 13 and 14. We
propose to select for each FFE State one
of the three standardized options at each
level of coverage (plus the HDHP option
at the bronze level, if permissible under
State cost-sharing standards) that meets
any existing State cost-sharing
requirements. We propose that this
selection will be published in the final
2018 Payment Notice. We propose to do
the same for each SBE–FP State that
notifies HHS that it chooses to have
HHS standardized options receive
differential display on the
HealthCare.gov platform. If issuers in
the FFE States and those in the SBE–FP
States that choose to have differential
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
display of HHS standardized options
offer the standardized options selected
for the State (that is, the one
standardized option at each level of
coverage selected for the State, in
addition to the HDHP option if
permissible under State standards),
those plans would receive differential
display in the Exchange for the 2018
plan year.
Additionally, many States have oral
chemotherapy access laws, which
require coverage of oral chemotherapy
at parity with intravenous
chemotherapy or cap patients’ monthly
cost sharing for chemotherapy drugs
(both oral and intravenous). We propose
to clarify that these chemotherapy
access requirements do not conflict with
the HHS standardized plan designs
because issuers can design benefit
packages that comply with both the
standardized options requirements and
State oral chemotherapy access laws.
We believe that the proposals
discussed above will allow issuers in
States with cost-sharing laws that would
conflict with a single set of standardized
options to offer standardized options.
Furthermore, by making it possible for
issuers to offer standardized options
while complying with State cost-sharing
rules, we believe this limited State
customization will enhance the
shopping experience of consumers in
more States than was previously
61493
possible. We welcome comments from
each State regarding the standardized
option at each level of coverage that the
State believes would be most suitable
for that State, and whether
modifications should be made to any of
the proposed State-customized
standardized options to further
accommodate State cost-sharing rules.
We also seek comment from States,
issuers, and other stakeholders on State
cost-sharing requirements that would
affect the design of standardized
options, as well as comments generally
on this approach for standardized
options in 2018.
TABLE 12—2018 PROPOSED STANDARDIZED OPTIONS
Bronze
HSA-eligible
bronze HDHP
Silver
Silver 73%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 87%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 94%
CSR plan
variation
Actuarial Value (%) ..........
Deductible (Med/Rx) .........
Annual Limitation on Cost
Sharing.
Emergency Room Services.
Urgent Care ......................
62.68% .......
$6,650 ........
$7,350 ........
61.97% .............................
$6,000 ..............................
$6,000 ..............................
71.05% .......
$3,500/$500
$7,350 ........
73.95% .......
$3,000/$200
$5,850 ........
87.61 ..........
$700/$0 ......
$2,450 ........
94.69 ..........
$250/$0 ......
$1,250 ........
80.65%.
$1,400/$0.
$5,000.
40% ............
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
$75 (*) ........
$75 (*) ........
$40 (*) ........
$25 (*) ........
$60 (*).
Inpatient Hospital Services
40% ............
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
Primary Care Visit ............
$35 (*) ........
after deduct-
$30 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$20 (*).
Specialist Visit ..................
$75 (*) ........
after deduct-
$65 (*) ........
$65 (*) ........
$25 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$50 (*).
Mental Health/Substance
Use Disorder Outpatient
Office Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET Scans,
MRIs).
Speech Therapy ...............
$35 (*) ........
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
after deduct-
$30 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$20 (*).
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
Occupational Therapy/
Physical Therapy.
Laboratory Services .........
40% ............
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
after deduct-
$15 (*) ........
$15 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$3 (*) ..........
$10 (*).
after deduct-
$50 (*) ........
$50 (*) ........
$25 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$40 (*).
after deduct-
$100 (*) ......
$100 (*) ......
$50 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$75 (*).
after deduct-
40% ............
40% ............
30% ............
25% ............
30%.
$75 (*) ........
40% ............
40% ............
40% ............
40% ............
Outpatient Facility Fee (for
example, Ambulatory
Surgery Center).
Outpatient Surgery Physician/Surgical Services.
Generic Drugs ..................
40% ............
$35 (*) ........
Preferred Brand Drugs .....
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
X-rays and Diagnostic Imaging **.
Skilled Nursing Facility .....
35% ............
Non-Preferred Brand
Drugs.
Specialty Drugs ................
40% ............
40% ............
40% ............
45% ............
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
No charge
ible.
(*) = not subject to the deductible
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits (except for high-deductible health plans (HDHPs).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Gold
61494
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 13—2018 PROPOSED STANDARDIZED OPTIONS FOR STATES REQUIRING OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY, PHYSICAL
THERAPY, OR SPEECH THERAPY COST-SHARING PARITY WITH PRIMARY CARE VISITS OR STATES REQUIRING COPAYMENTS OR COPAYMENT LIMITS ON DRUGS
Bronze
Actuarial Value (%) .....
Deductible (Med/Rx) ...
Annual Limitation on
Cost Sharing.
Emergency Room
Services.
Urgent Care .................
Inpatient Hospital Services.
Primary Care Visit .......
Specialist Visit .............
Mental Health/Substance Use Disorder
Outpatient Office
Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET
Scans, MRIs).
Speech Therapy ..........
Occupational Therapy/
Physical Therapy.
Laboratory Services ....
X-rays and Diagnostic
Imaging **.
Skilled Nursing Facility
Outpatient Facility Fee
(e.g., Ambulatory
Surgery Center).
Outpatient Surgery
Physician/Surgical
Services.
Generic Drugs .............
Preferred Brand Drugs
Non-Preferred Brand
Drugs.
Specialty Drugs ...........
Silver
Silver 73%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 87%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 94%
CSR plan
variation
62.79% ........................
$6,650 .........................
$7,350 .........................
71.03% ........................
$3,500/$500 Rx ..........
$7,350 .........................
73.88% ........................
$3,000/$200 Rx ..........
$5,850 .........................
87.70 ..........
$700/$0 ......
$2,450 ........
94.68 ..........
$250/$0 ......
$1,250 ........
80.60%.
$1,400/$0.
$5,000.
40% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
$75 (*) .........................
40% .............................
$75 (*) .........................
20% .............................
$75 (*) .........................
20% .............................
$40 (*) ........
20% ............
$25 (*) ........
5% ..............
$60 (*).
20%.
$35 (*) .........................
$75 (*) .........................
$35 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$65 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$65 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$10 (*) ........
$25 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$20 (*).
$50 (*).
$20 (*).
40% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
$35 (*) .........................
$35 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$30 (*) .........................
$10 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$5 (*) ..........
$20 (*).
$20 (*).
40% .............................
40% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
5% ..............
20%.
20%.
40% .............................
40% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
5% ..............
20%.
20%.
40% .............................
20% .............................
20% .............................
20% ............
5% ..............
20%.
$35 (*) .........................
$40 (copay applies
only after deductible).
$45 (copay applies
only after deductible).
$50 (copay applies
only after deductible).
$15 (*) .........................
$50 (*) .........................
$15 (*) .........................
$50 (*) .........................
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*) ........
$3 (*) ..........
$5 (*) ..........
$10 (*).
$40 (*).
$100 (*) .......................
$100 (*) .......................
$50 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$75 (*).
$150 (copay applies
$150 (copay applies
$75 (*) ........
only after deductible).
only after deductible).
$20 (*) ........
$100(*).
Gold
(*) = not subject to the deductible.
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits.
TABLE 14—2018 PROPOSED STANDARDIZED OPTIONS FOR STATES WITH DEDUCTIBLE MAXIMUMS AND OTHER COSTSHARING REQUIREMENTS
Bronze
Actuarial Value (%) ......................
Deductible .....................................
Annual Limitation on Cost Sharing
Emergency Room Services ..........
Urgent Care ..................................
Inpatient Hospital Services ...........
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Primary Care Visit ........................
Specialist Visit ..............................
Mental Health/Substance Use
Disorder Outpatient Office Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET Scans, MRIs) ...
Speech Therapy ...........................
Occupational
Therapy.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Therapy/Physical
19:33 Sep 02, 2016
Silver
Silver 73%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 87%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 94%
CSR plan
variation
64.84% .........................................
$3,000 ..........................................
$7,150 ..........................................
50% ..............................................
$50 (*) ..........................................
$500 (per day; applies only after
deductible).
$35 (*first 3 visits; then subject to
deductible and $35 copay after
deductible).
$75 (applies only after deductible).
$35 (applies only after deductible).
$100 (applies only after deductible).
$35 (applies only after deductible).
$35 (applies only after deductible).
70.28% .......
$3,000 ........
$7,000 ........
40% ............
$50 (*) ........
40% ............
73.94% .......
$3,000 ........
$5,850 ........
20% ............
$50 (*) ........
20% ............
87.61% .......
$700 ...........
$2,450 ........
20% ............
$40 (*) ........
20% ............
94.53% .......
$250 ...........
$1,250 ........
5% ..............
$25 (*) ........
5% ..............
80.80%.
$1,000.
$5,000.
30%.
$40 (*).
30%.
$30 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*).
$60 (*) ........
$60 (*) ........
$25 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$40 (*).
$30 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*).
$100 (*) ......
$100 (*) ......
$75 (*) ........
$40 (*) ........
$100 (*).
$50 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*).
$50 (*) ........
$30 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*).
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Gold
61495
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 14—2018 PROPOSED STANDARDIZED OPTIONS FOR STATES WITH DEDUCTIBLE MAXIMUMS AND OTHER COSTSHARING REQUIREMENTS—Continued
Bronze
Laboratory Services .....................
X-rays and Diagnostic Imaging**
Skilled Nursing Facility .................
Outpatient Facility Fee (e.g., Ambulatory Surgery Center).
Outpatient Surgery Physician/Surgical Services.
Generic Drugs ..............................
Preferred Brand Drugs .................
Non-Preferred Brand Drugs .........
Specialty Drugs ............................
Silver
Silver 73%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 87%
CSR plan
variation
Silver 94%
CSR plan
variation
50% ..............................................
50% ..............................................
$500 (per day; applies only after
deductible).
50% ..............................................
40% ............
40% ............
40% ............
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
5% ..............
5% ..............
30%.
30%.
30%.
40% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
30%.
50% ..............................................
40% ............
20% ............
20% ............
5% ..............
30%.
$25 (*) ..........................................
50% ..............................................
50% ..............................................
50% ..............................................
$25
$75
$75
$75
$15
$75
$75
$75
$5 (*) ..........
$25 (*) ........
$50 (*) ........
$50 (*) ........
$3 (*) ..........
$5 (*) ..........
$10 (*) ........
$10 (*) ........
$10
$25
$50
$50
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
........
........
........
........
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
........
........
........
........
Gold
(*).
(*).
(*).
(*).
(*) = not subject to the deductible
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits.
2. General Functions of an Exchange
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
a. Functions of an Exchange (§ 155.200)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
established that a State Exchange could
elect to enter into a Federal platform
agreement through which it agrees to
rely on HHS for services related to the
individual market Exchange, the SHOP
Exchange, or both. In § 155.200(f)(2), we
required an SBE–FP to establish and
oversee certain requirements for its
QHPs and QHP issuers that are no less
strict than the requirements that apply
to QHPs and QHP issuers in an FFE.
Requiring QHPs and QHP issuers in
SBE–FPs to meet these same
requirements ensures that all QHPs on
HealthCare.gov meet a consistent
minimum standard and that consumers
obtaining coverage as a result of
applying through HealthCare.gov are
guaranteed plans that meet these
minimum standards.
We propose to amend § 155.200(f) by
adding a new paragraph (f)(4) that
would require State Exchanges that use
the Federal platform for certain SHOP
functions to establish standards and
policies consistent with certain
Federally-facilitated Small Business
Health Options Program (FF–SHOP)
requirements. In contrast to the
requirements contained in
§ 155.200(f)(2), which pertain primarily
to ensuring a consistent experience on
HealthCare.gov, compliance with the
requirements we propose to include in
§ 155.200(f)(4) would be necessary
because the FF–SHOP requirements
listed in paragraph (f)(4) are an integral
part of the FF–SHOP platform’s
functionality and system build, making
compliance with the requirements
necessary from an operational
perspective for State Exchanges to use
the Federal platform for these SHOP
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
functions. Additionally, requiring
compliance with these requirements,
rather than customizing the FF–SHOP
platform’s system build, would avoid
sizeable costs associated with
permitting State-based Exchanges to use
the Federal platform for SHOP
functions. Therefore, we propose to add
a new paragraph (f)(4) to require that
SBE–FPs that utilize the Federal
platform for certain SHOP functions
establish standards and policies with
respect to the following topics that are
consistent with the following rules
applicable in FF–SHOPs:
• Premium calculation, payment, and
collection requirements as specified at
§ 155.705(b)(4) (for SBE–FPs using the
Federal platform for SHOP eligibility,
enrollment, or premium aggregation
functions);
• The timeline for rate changes set
forth at § 155.705(b)(6)(i)(A) (for SBE–
FPs using the Federal platform for
SHOP enrollment or premium
aggregation functions);
• Minimum participation rate
requirements and calculation
methodologies set forth at
§ 155.705(b)(10) (for SBE–FPs using the
Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions);
• Employer contribution
methodologies set forth at
§ 155.705(b)(11)(ii) (for SBE–FPs using
the Federal platform for SHOP
enrollment or premium aggregation
functions);
• Annual employee open enrollment
period requirements set forth at
§ 155.725(e)(2) (for SBE–FPs using the
Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions);
• Initial group enrollment or renewal
coverage effective date requirements set
forth at § 155.725(h)(2) (for SBE–FPs
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
using the Federal platform for SHOP
enrollment functions); and
• Termination of SHOP coverage or
enrollment rules set forth at § 155.735
(for SBE–FPs using the Federal platform
for SHOP eligibility, enrollment, or
premium aggregation functions).
These amendments would become
effective with the effective date of the
final rule.
We seek comment on this proposal,
including on whether it would conflict
with current State requirements, and on
whether other FF–SHOP requirements
should apply in SBE–FPs utilizing the
Federal platform for SHOP functions,
for the reasons discussed above.
b. Consumer Assistance Tools and
Programs of an Exchange (§ 155.205)
Section 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B)
require Exchanges, QHP issuers, and
agents or brokers subject to
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i) (‘‘web-brokers’’) to
provide taglines in non-English
languages indicating the availability of
language services. These entities must
include taglines on Web site content
and documents that are critical for
obtaining health insurance coverage or
access to health care services through a
QHP for qualified individuals,
applicants, qualified employers,
qualified employees, or enrollees. The
taglines must indicate the availability of
language services in at least the top 15
languages spoken by the limited English
proficient (LEP) population of the
relevant State, as determined in HHS
guidance. In March 2016, HHS issued
guidance providing language data and
sample taglines in the top 15 languages
spoken by the LEP population in each
State.36 A similar tagline requirement
36 Ctr. Consumer Info. & Ins. Oversight, Ctrs. for
Medicaid & Medicare Serv., Guidance and
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
Continued
06SEP2
61496
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
appears in the final rule implementing
section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act
(81 FR 31376 (May 18, 2016)), which
prohibits discrimination on the basis of
race, color, national origin, sex, age, or
disability in certain health programs
and activities.37 The section 1557
implementing regulation applies to
every health program or activity
administered by an Exchange, every
health program or activity administered
by HHS, and every health program or
activity, any part of which receives
Federal financial assistance provided or
made available by HHS.38 The section
1557 implementing regulation, as well
as other applicable Federal civil rights
laws, apply independently of the
regulations governing Exchanges and
health insurance issuers.
In the preamble to the 2016 Payment
Notice, we stated that if an entity’s
service area covers multiple States, the
top 15 languages spoken by LEP
individuals may be determined by
aggregating the top 15 languages spoken
by all LEP individuals among the total
population of the relevant States (80 FR
10788). We also restated this policy in
the March 2016 guidance. We propose
to amend § 155.205(c)(2)(iii) to provide
more specificity about when entities
subject to § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B)
would be permitted to aggregate LEP
populations across States to determine
the languages in which taglines must be
provided, in light of questions that have
arisen about this issue since publication
of the 2016 Payment Notice.
At § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), we propose
that if an Exchange is operated by an
entity operating multiple Exchanges, or
relies on an eligibility or enrollment
Population Data for Exchanges, Qualified Health
Plan Issuers, and Web-Brokers to Ensure
Meaningful Access by Limited-English Proficient
Speakers Under 45 CFR 155.205(c) and 156.250
(March 30, 2016), available at https://www.cms.gov/
CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/
Downloads/Language-access-guidance.pdf;
Appendix A—Top 15 Non-English Languages by
State, available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/
Appendix-A-Top-15.pdf; Appendix B—Sample
Translated Taglines, available at https://
www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-andGuidance/Downloads/Appendix-B-SampleTranslated-Taglines.pdf.
37 42 U.S.C. 18116; 45 CFR part 92. Section
92.8(d)(1) requires each covered entity to ‘‘post
taglines in at least the top 15 languages spoken by
individuals with limited English proficiency of the
relevant State or States.’’ The principle of
aggregation with respect to the tagline requirement
at § 92.8(d)(1) is discussed in the section 1557 final
rule at 81 FR 31376, 31400.
38 45 CFR 92.2(a). In addition to the tagline
requirement at § 92.8(d)(1), the section 1557
implementing regulation identifies other obligations
of a covered entity, such as the obligation to have
marketing practices and benefit designs in a healthrelated insurance plan or policy or other healthrelated coverage that are nondiscriminatory. See id.
§ 92.207.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
platform that is relied on by multiple
Exchanges, the Exchange may aggregate
the LEP populations across all the States
served by the entity that operates the
Exchange or its eligibility or enrollment
platform to determine the top 15
languages required for taglines under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A). For example,
under this proposal, all Exchanges that
use the eligibility and enrollment
platform on which the FFEs (including
FFEs where States perform plan
management functions) and SBE–FPs
rely would be permitted to aggregate
languages across the States with
Exchanges that rely on this platform.
At § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), we also
propose that a QHP issuer would be
permitted to aggregate the LEP
populations across all States served by
the health insurance issuers within the
issuer’s controlled group, whether or
not those health insurance issuers offer
plans through the Exchange in each of
those States, to determine the top 15
languages in which it must provide
taglines. For consistency, we propose to
define an issuer’s controlled group
using the definition in § 147.106(d)(3)(i)
of this proposed rule, which would
define a controlled group as a group of
two or more persons that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Code.
Therefore, a QHP issuer that is a
subsidiary of a corporate entity or
holding company that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Code, and
whose subsidiary health insurance
issuers serve multiple States, would be
permitted to meet the tagline
requirement by including taglines on
Web sites and critical documents in at
least the top 15 languages spoken by the
aggregated LEP populations of all States
served by the corporate entity’s or
holding company’s subsidiary health
insurance issuers, rather than in the top
15 languages spoken by the limited
English proficient population of each
individual QHP issuer’s State of
licensure or State served. On the other
hand, a QHP issuer association or
federation comprised of multiple
companies that are not treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Code, and
are thus not considered to be a
controlled group, would not be
permitted to aggregate across the States
served by the health insurance issuers
in its entire association or federation;
rather, the QHP issuer members of the
association or federation would be
permitted to aggregate only across the
States served by the health insurance
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
issuers within each issuer’s controlled
group.
With respect to summaries of benefits
and coverage (SBCs) provided under
section 2715 of the PHS Act, consistent
with the SBC Instruction Guide for
Individual Health Insurance Coverage 39
and the SBC Instruction Guide for
Group Coverage,40 QHP issuers would
still be required to provide an
addendum with their SBCs with
language taglines in the top 15
languages spoken by the LEP
populations of the relevant State or
States for QHPs offered through an
Exchange. Any additional taglines
required under section 2715 of the PHS
Act and the implementing regulations 41
must also be included in this
addendum. However, any taglines that
are included in the addendum are not
required to also be included in the SBC
document. The addendum, which must
only include tagline information
required by the applicable language
access standards, must be provided
along with the SBC and is not
considered a part of the SBC document.
Therefore, the addendum will not count
towards the four double-sided page
limit for the SBC under PHS Act section
2715(b)(1).
Additionally, our proposed policy
related to aggregating LEP populations
to determine the top 15 languages in
which taglines must be provided does
not apply to the tagline requirements
under rules implementing sections 2715
and 2719 of the PHS Act. This means,
for example, that a QHP issuer that is a
member of a controlled group whose
health insurance issuers serve three
States, and that therefore aggregates the
LEP populations across those three
States to determine the top 15 languages
in which it must provide taglines in its
SBC addendum under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), must still include
in its SBC addendum taglines in all of
the languages triggered by the threshold
under § 147.200(a)(5), which requires a
tagline when 10 percent or more of the
population residing in a county is
39 Summary of Benefits and Coverage: Instruction
Guide for Individual Health Insurance Coverage
(April 2017), available at https://www.cms.gov/
CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-OtherResources/Downloads/Individual-Instructions-508–
MM.pdf.
40 Summary of Benefits and Coverage: Instruction
Guide for Group Coverage (April 2017), available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/FormsReports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/GroupInstructions-4–4-clean-MM–508.pdf
41 45 CFR 147.200(a)(5) requires that group health
plans and health insurance issuers offering group
and individual health insurance coverage provide
taglines in a particular non-English language if 10
percent or more of the population residing in the
county is literate only in that same non-English
language.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
literate only in a particular non-English
language, without aggregating the LEP
populations across the counties in its
service area. The same would apply to
tagline requirements under section 2719
of the PHS Act and its implementing
regulations.
We also propose amendments to
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B), to specify that
web-brokers that are licensed in and
serving multiple States would be
permitted to aggregate the LEP
populations in the States they serve to
determine the top 15 languages in
which they must provide taglines under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B).
We believe our proposed approach
balances two important policy
objectives: Ensuring that LEP
individuals have notice of language
assistance services, and minimizing
burden on the entities subject to the
rule, including by minimizing the
potential need for costly information
systems changes. This approach would
establish a floor, and if it is finalized,
QHP issuers, web-brokers, and
Exchanges would be permitted to
provide non-aggregated, State-specific
taglines, or taglines in more than the
required 15 languages. We believe our
proposed approach would help promote
consistency with the tagline
requirements at 45 CFR 92.8(d)(1) and
81 FR 31400, which permit covered
entities that serve individuals in more
than one State to aggregate the number
of individuals with limited English
proficiency in those States to determine
the top 15 languages required by
§ 92.8(d)(1). We seek comment on
whether the proposed approach strikes
the appropriate balance.
We are also proposing amendments to
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) to specify
that Exchanges, QHP issuers, and webbrokers may satisfy tagline requirements
with respect to Web site content if they
post a Web link prominently on their
home page that directs individuals to
the full text of the taglines indicating
how individuals may obtain language
assistance services, and if they also
include taglines on any standalone
document linked to or embedded in the
Web site, such as one in portable
document format (PDF) or word
processing software format, that is
critical within the meaning of the rule.
Thus, for example, if a QHP issuer
included a link to a PDF of its provider
directory or formulary drug list on its
Web site, it would be required to
provide a link to taglines on its Web site
home page and to provide taglines on
that PDF document. In HHS’s view,
providing a prominent link to taglines
on the home page of a Web site gives
sufficient notice to consumers that
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
language services are available. We note
that entities subject to section 1557 of
the Affordable Care Act are still
required to comply with the section
1557 requirements regarding taglines
placed on their home pages.42
In the case of ‘‘critical’’ standalone
documents linked to or embedded in the
Web site, there is a good chance that a
consumer might land on such
documents without going through an
entity’s home page first (for example,
from a link on another Web site), and it
is also likely that such documents
would not contain a link to the entity’s
home page. In contrast, Web pages
within the Web site that are not
standalone linked or embedded
documents are more likely to contain a
prominent link to the home page. Under
this proposal, if an entity subject to
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) or (B) includes the
required taglines in a standalone
‘‘critical’’ document linked to or
embedded in the Web site of another
entity subject to § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) or
(B), then the taglines standard will be
deemed to be met by the entity that
links to or embeds the ‘‘critical’’
document in its Web site, for purposes
of that document. For example, if a webbroker posts a ‘‘critical’’ document
provided to it by an affiliated QHP
issuer, and the QHP issuer includes the
taglines in that document that the issuer
would be required to include, then the
web-broker can rely on those taglines for
purposes of compliance with
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B) when it posts that
document (as provided by the QHP
issuer with the required taglines), even
if the QHP issuer and web-broker are
not required to provide taglines in the
same 15 languages.
We solicit comments on all aspects of
these proposals. In particular, we seek
comments on whether we should
consider alternative standards for
identifying the States across which
Exchanges, QHP issuers, and webbrokers may aggregate languages for
purposes of § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and
(B), and on whether our proposed
approach strikes an appropriate balance
between facilitating access for LEP
42 In particular, we note the separate requirement
for entities covered under section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act that links to taglines from the
home page of a covered entity’s Web site must be
posted as ‘‘in language’’ Web links, which are links
written in each of the 15 non-English languages
posted conspicuously on the home page that direct
the individual to the full text of the tagline
indicating how the individual may obtain language
assistance services. For instance, a tagline directing
an individual to a Web site with the full text of a
tagline written in Haitian Creole should appear as
˚
‘‘Kreyol’’ rather than ‘‘Haitian Creole.’’ (45 CFR
92.8(1)(iii); 81 FR 31396.)
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61497
populations and minimizing burden on
the entities subject to the rule.
Additionally, because the final rule
implementing section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act (81 FR 31376 (May
18, 2016)) imposes on the covered
entities to which that rule applies a
similar set of obligations with respect to
language access taglines, we are
considering whether there is a need for
the separate language access tagline
requirements for Exchanges, QHP
issuers, and web-brokers under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B). We seek
comment on what, if any, additional
protections for LEP consumers the
standards under § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A)
and (B) provide that are not included in
the section 1557 implementing
regulation, and on whether the
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B)
requirements are largely duplicative of
the section 1557 implementing
regulation. We note that not every entity
subject to § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) or (B) is
a ‘‘covered entity’’ subject to section
1557 and its implementing regulation.
We are committed to ensuring that LEP
consumers have sufficient notice of
language assistance services, while also
seeking to minimize the burden on the
entities subject to both the section 1557
implementing regulation and Exchange
language access requirements, including
by minimizing duplicative requirements
and the potential need for costly
information systems changes. For these
reasons, and for continuity with our
existing requirements and the principle
that LEP consumers should have notice
of language access services whether they
are being served by an Exchange, QHP
issuer, or a web-broker,43 we are
considering amending
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii) to replace the tagline
requirements currently set forth at
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) with a
provision requiring Exchanges, QHP
issuers, and web-brokers to follow
certain standards under § 92.8 when
providing the taglines required under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii). Under this
alternative proposal, to the extent that
any entity subject to existing
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) is not a
covered entity within the meaning of
section 1557 and its implementing
regulation, the standards under § 92.8
would apply as if such entity were a
covered entity. We are also considering
limiting the cross-reference such that
Exchanges, QHP issuers, and webbrokers would have to comply only with
the standards related to taglines at
§ 92.8(d)(1) and (f) when providing the
taglines required under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii), and would not have
43 See
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
80 FR 10788.
06SEP2
61498
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
to comply with other notice
requirements in § 92.8, such as § 92.8(a).
This approach would be similar to our
existing regulations and would not
require documents to include additional
information, such as nondiscrimination
disclosures and grievance processes,
that are not contemplated by
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B), unless the
entity providing taglines is separately
subject to § 92.8. Under this alternative
proposal, we are also considering
retaining the requirement that taglines
must be provided on critical documents
within the meaning of
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B), rather
than applying the requirement at
§ 92.8(f)(1)(i) related to significant
publications and significant
communications. However, we seek
comment on this approach and on
whether describing the types of
materials on which taglines must be
provided by Exchanges, QHP issuers,
and web-brokers by instead referring to
significant publications and significant
communications at § 92.8(f)(1)(i) would
help streamline these requirements for
entities subject to § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A)
and (B). We are also considering
removing § 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B)
entirely. In any case, as noted above, the
section 1557 implementing regulation
applies independently of the regulations
governing Exchanges and health
insurance issuers. We request comments
on all of these considerations, including
with respect to what other conforming
changes to § 155.205(c)(2)(iii) or other
regulations such as § 156.250 might be
advisable in order to implement a policy
of relying upon the substantive
standards under section 1557 and
associated rulemaking and guidance for
the language access protections under
§ 155.205(c)(2)(iii).
c. Ability of States To Permit Agents
and Brokers To Assist Qualified
Individuals, Qualified Employers, or
Qualified Employees Enrolling in QHPs
(§ 155.220)
Consistent with section 1312(e) of the
Affordable Care Act, we established
procedures under § 155.220 to support
the States’ ability to permit agents and
brokers to assist individuals, employers
or employees with enrollment in QHPs
offered through an Exchange, subject to
applicable Federal and State
requirements. At § 155.220(c), we
established parameters for enrollment of
qualified individuals through an
Exchange with the assistance of an agent
or broker. At § 155.220(c)(1), we
established that an agent or broker who
assists with enrollment through the
Exchange must ensure completion of an
eligibility verification and enrollment
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
application through the Exchange Web
site as described § 155.405. In
§ 155.220(c)(3), we established
standards that apply when using the
direct enrollment pathway and a Web
site of an agent or broker is used to
complete the QHP selection. As
described at § 155.220(d), an agent or
broker that enrolls qualified individuals
through an Exchange, or assists
individuals in applying for Exchange
financial assistance, must comply with
the terms of a general agreement with
the Exchange, as well as register with
the Exchange and receive training in the
range of QHP options and insurance
affordability programs. In addition, all
agents and brokers must execute the
applicable privacy and security
agreement required by § 155.260(b) to
provide assistance with enrollment
through the Exchange. We also
established FFE standards of conduct
under § 155.220(j) for agents and brokers
that assist consumers in enrolling in
coverage through the FFEs to protect
consumers and ensure the proper
administration of the FFEs. In this
rulemaking, we propose to build on this
foundation with the adoption of new
procedures and additional consumer
protection standards for agents and
brokers that assist with enrollments
through Exchanges. We also solicit
additional comments to help further
inform the development and
implementation of the enhanced direct
enrollment pathway.
i. Differential Display of Standardized
Options on the Web Sites of Agents and
Brokers
Under current rules, web-brokers and
issuers that use the direct enrollment
pathway to facilitate enrollment through
an Exchange that offers standardized
options are not required to give
differential display to standardized
options. In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
noted that we would be conducting
consumer testing to help us evaluate
ways in which standardized options,
when certified by an FFE, could be
displayed on our consumer-facing plan
comparison features in a manner that
makes it easier to find and identify
them, including distinguishing them
from non-standardized plans. We noted
that we anticipate differentially
displaying the standardized options to
allow consumers to compare plans
based on differences in price and
quality rather than cost-sharing
structure, as well as providing
information to explain the standardized
options concept to consumers.
We added a new provision to
§ 155.205(b)(1) codifying the Exchange’s
authority to differentially display
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
standardized options on our consumerfacing plan comparison and shopping
tools. We did not require QHP issuers or
web-brokers to adhere to differential
display requirements of standardized
options when using a non-Exchange
Web site to facilitate enrollment in a
QHP through an Exchange for the 2017
plan year, but we noted that we would
consider whether to propose such a
requirement in the future. Elsewhere in
this document, we propose for the 2018
plan year and beyond, to allow SBE–FPs
to choose to allow HHS-designed
standardized options to receive
differential display on HealthCare.gov,
just as the plans would if offered
through an FFE.
For the 2018 plan year and beyond,
we propose to require web-brokers and
issuers that use the direct enrollment
pathway to differentially display
standardized options when they
facilitate enrollment through an FFE or
an SBE–FP that has elected to
implement differential display;
however, we would not require the
manner of differentiation to be identical
to the one adopted for displaying
standardized options on
HealthCare.gov. We recognize that webbrokers and issuers may have system
constraints that prevent them from
mirroring the HealthCare.gov display
approach, and so propose that if a webbroker or issuer that uses the direct
enrollment pathway wants to deviate
from the manner adopted by HHS for
display on HealthCare.gov, such
deviations would be permitted, subject
to approval by HHS. In approving
deviations, HHS would consider
whether the same level of differentiation
and clarity is being provided under the
deviation requested by the web-broker
or issuer as is provided on
HealthCare.gov. Therefore, we propose
to amend § 155.220(c)(3)(i) governing
web-brokers by adding new paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(H), and to amend
§ 156.265(b)(3) governing QHP issuers
engaged in direct enrollment by adding
new paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to require
differential display of all standardized
options in accordance with the
requirements under § 155.205(b)(1) in a
manner consistent with that adopted by
HHS for display on the FFE Web site,
unless HHS approves a deviation.
ii. Enhanced Direct Enrollment Process
In the 2017 Payment Notice (81 FR at
12258), we discussed a proposal to
implement an enhanced direct
enrollment process to facilitate
enrollment through Exchanges that rely
on the Federal platform for their
eligibility and enrollment functions,
namely FFEs or SBE–FPs. If we were to
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
implement this process, it would be an
additional option for a web-broker or
QHP issuer to conduct direct enrollment
activities; those entities could also
continue to conduct direct enrollment
through the current process, which
requires a consumer to be redirected to
HealthCare.gov in order to apply for
coverage and receive an eligibility
determination. In the 2017 Payment
Notice, we discussed establishing an
enhanced direct enrollment pathway,
and stated that HHS would continue to
analyze the necessary protections that
need to be in place before moving
forward with that new process. We now
seek additional comments from the
public as described below.
Under the direct enrollment process
today, a consumer is redirected from the
Web site of the direct enrollment
partner (issuer or web-broker) to
HealthCare.gov to complete the
eligibility application and obtain an
eligibility determination. Under the
enhanced direct enrollment process that
we are considering, a consumer might
remain on the Web site of the direct
enrollment partner (QHP issuer or webbroker) to submit information necessary
for an eligibility determination without
being redirected to HealthCare.gov. The
enhanced direct enrollment partner
would pass information collected for the
eligibility application to the Exchange.
The Exchange would then generate the
eligibility determination and pass the
eligibility results back to the enhanced
direct enrollment partner. The
consumer could see the results on the
direct enrollment partner’s Web site.
Just as with the current direct
enrollment process, the Exchanges
would continue to make the eligibility
determination under enhanced direct
enrollment, and eligibility verification
information the Exchanges receive from
other government agencies would not be
disclosed to the enhanced direct
enrollment partner. We believe that an
enhanced direct enrollment process
would allow the consumer to have a
more streamlined experience and would
permit the Exchange to offer a diverse
set of enrollment channels to reach
consumers.
Although offering additional
enrollment channels may make it easier
for consumers to access coverage under
qualified health plans, we must
consider any additional risks this
enrollment channel may pose to
consumer privacy and the security of
the consumer data that will be provided
to enhanced direct enrollment partners.
We solicit comment on these additional
risks, as well as comment on any
additional privacy and security
safeguards and other consumer
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
protections that should be implemented.
We intend to conduct a privacy impact
assessment as required by OMB
Memorandum M–10–23. These
comments will inform our identification
and assessment of privacy and security
risks presented by the enhanced direct
enrollment pathway. This assessment
will also help us to identify necessary
safeguards that need to be in place to
protect the personal data that consumers
would entrust to enhanced direct
enrollment partners.
iii. Additional Protections for the
Current Direct Enrollment Process and
FFE Standard of conduct for Agents and
Brokers
We also propose in this rule a number
of modifications to existing
requirements and the establishment of
new requirements for agents and brokers
that use the current direct enrollment
process to ensure adequate consumer
protection if a web-broker is facilitating
enrollment through an FFE or SBE–FP.
We propose to make a number of the
same changes to § 156.1230, which
governs QHP issuers using direct
enrollment, to ensure that consumers
have similar protections when enrolling
through a direct enrollment channel,
whether they enroll using a web-broker,
or a QHP issuer, and seek comment on
whether any additional requirements
should apply, or if any of these
requirements should be modified,
removed, or enhanced when applied to
QHP issuers using the direct enrollment
channel. First, we propose to add
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i)(I) to require webbrokers to display information provided
by HHS pertaining to eligibility for the
advance payments of the premium tax
credit (APTC) and cost-sharing
reductions in a prominent manner. This
will increase the likelihood that
consumers understand their potential
eligibility for APTC and cost-sharing
reductions and potential liability for
excess APTC repayment, and can factor
those determinations into their QHP
selection and the amount of APTC they
elect to take.
Second, under § 155.310(d)(2), an
Exchange may only provide APTC if the
Exchange receives certain attestations
from the tax filer, and must permit an
enrollee to accept less than the full
amount of APTC for which the enrollee
is eligible. Therefore, in order for an
Exchange to provide APTC to a
consumer who enrolls through the
enhanced direct enrollment pathway,
the direct enrollment partner must
provide enrollees with an opportunity
to input their desired amount of APTC
and provide the required APTC-related
attestations. HHS is aware that some
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61499
web-brokers are not consistently
permitting enrollees to select an amount
for APTC under the existing direct
enrollment pathway, and believes that
permitting such would streamline the
current direct enrollment pathway for
consumers. Accordingly, we propose to
add § 155.220(c)(3)(i)(J) to require webbrokers to allow consumers to select an
APTC amount and make related
attestations in accordance with the
requirements of § 155.310(d)(2). We note
that this would be consistent with 45
CFR 156.1230(a)(1)(v), under which
QHP issuer direct enrollment partners
are currently required to allow
consumers to select an APTC amount
and make related attestations.
Third, we propose to add
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i)(K) to require the agent
or broker of record who assisted the
consumer with enrollment through the
Exchange (that is, the agent or broker
whose National Producer Number is
listed on the Exchange application) to
support post-enrollment activities
necessary for the consumer to effectuate
his or her coverage or resolve issues
related to his or her enrollment,
including discrepancies related to
eligibility. For example, we are aware of
situations when consumers
inadvertently failed to make their binder
payments and lost their coverage
without their knowledge. HHS would
require the agent or broker to support
the consumer to help ensure that
consumers are educated about how to
make the binder payment. Similarly, we
would require the agent or broker to
support the resolution of open data
matching issues. We understand that
many agents and brokers provide this
type of assistance today to their clients
after initial enrollment, helping with
questions or problems that may arise
regarding billing, claims or appeals. We
believe that this proposal will help
ensure that consumers who access an
agent or broker’s direct enrollment
channel would have access to the
skilled assistance and expertise of
licensed agents and brokers beyond the
initial QHP selection and enrollment
process. We intend to provide further
guidance on the extent of this required
post-enrollment support, and solicit
comment on types and extent of support
that agents and brokers should be
required to provide. We also solicit
comments on what additional
safeguards, if any, should be put in
place to protect consumers and their
data.
Fourth, we propose to add
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i)(L) to require webbrokers to demonstrate operational
readiness, including compliance with
applicable privacy and security
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61500
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
requirements, prior to accessing either
the current or enhanced direct
enrollment pathway. This is intended to
build upon the onboarding and testing
process that web-brokers undergo under
existing procedures for the current
direct enrollment process. This process
would require the web-broker to
demonstrate that it has implemented
required privacy and security measures
and that it satisfies the technical
specifications, testing requirements, and
onboarding procedures applicable to the
direct enrollment process that the web
broker is using prior to accessing the
Exchange. Consistent with
§ 155.220(c)(5), we intend to conduct
ongoing monitoring and audits to verify
that compliance throughout the term of
the web-broker’s registration with the
Exchange.
Fifth, we propose adding
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i)(M), to allow HHS to
immediately suspend the agent or
broker’s ability to transact information
with the Exchange as part of the direct
enrollment pathway if HHS discovers
circumstances that pose unacceptable
risk to Exchange operations or its
information technology systems. The
suspension would last until HHS is
satisfied that the risk has been removed
or sufficiently mitigated. For example, a
web-broker’s access to the direct
enrollment pathway may be suspended
if it is determined that the web-broker
is using an enrollment process other
than the HHS-approved processes,
presenting a risk of inaccurate eligibility
determinations or presenting
unacceptable security or privacy risks to
consumer data. We note that this direct
enrollment requirement is similar to the
one at § 155.220(c), which applies to
agents or brokers making their Web site
available to another agent or broker. We
seek comment on whether these or other
similar requirements should be
combined. In addition, we propose to
add language to § 155.220(c)(3)(i)(E) to
require an agent or broker to cooperate
with any audit under this section. This
would include responding to requests
for information in a timely fashion, as
well as providing access upon request to
documents or other materials necessary
to confirm compliance with applicable
requirements.
Sixth, consistent with § 155.220(c)(4),
web-brokers are permitted to provide
access, through a contract or other
arrangement, to their direct enrollment
pathway to another agent or broker to
help an applicant complete the QHP
selection process, and must comply
with certain obligations when doing so.
We understand that a number of webbrokers provide access to their direct
enrollment pathway to other agents and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
brokers who host their own third-party
Web sites. To better protect consumers
accessing these downstream third-party
Web sites that connect to the webbroker’s direct enrollment pathway, we
are proposing to add language to
§ 155.220(c)(4)(i)(E) to require webbrokers that provide this access to be
responsible for ensuring those Web sites
are compliant with this section.
HHS is also considering different
methods for completing the monitoring
and audits authorized by
§ 155.220(c)(5). For example, HHS, its
designee, or an approved third party
could perform the onboarding testing or
audit. Where approved third parties
perform onboarding reviews and audits,
we anticipate that they would be
approved by HHS and would need the
capability to audit web-brokers’ ability
to securely collect, maintain, and
transmit eligibility application
information in a manner determined by
HHS and to otherwise review
compliance with HHS rules. For third
parties to be approved to conduct these
activities, we expect that the auditor
would need to submit an application to
HHS demonstrating prior experience in
verifying these sorts of capabilities, and,
if approved, enter into an agreement
with HHS governing the auditor’s
compliance with HHS audit and
verification standards, interface with
HHS systems, and data use. The auditor
would be required to collect, store, and
share data with HHS on these
verifications, and protect that data in
accordance with HHS standards. The
auditor would be subject to monitoring
and periodic certification by HHS, and
would be compensated by the agents or
brokers who engaged the auditor. If HHS
elects to allow third parties to perform
such verifications, we would establish a
process for evaluating and approving
third party vendors in a manner similar
to the one established in § 155.222. We
solicit comment on our proposal to
allow third parties to perform
monitoring and audits authorized by
§ 155.220(c). We also seek comment on
whether we should establish a process
for recognizing third parties to perform
such monitoring, what protections are
needed, and the factors HHS should
consider in evaluating and approving
organizations for this type of role.
Finally, we propose to amend
§ 155.220(j)(2)(i) to provide that an agent
or broker that assists with or facilitates
enrollment of qualified individuals in a
manner that constitutes enrollment
through an FFE or SBE–FP, or assists
individuals in applying for APTC and
cost-sharing reductions for QHPs sold
through an FFE or SBE–FP, must refrain
from having a Web site that HHS
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
determines could mislead consumers
into believing they are visiting
HealthCare.gov. For example, our
experience shows that Web sites that
utilize combinations of colors, text sizes
and fonts or layout similar to those used
on HealthCare.gov have caused
confusion among consumers. Web sites
whose URL address or marketing name
could suggest the Web site is owned or
endorsed by HealthCare.gov would also
be inappropriate. We believe that it is
important to avoid consumer confusion
around which Web sites are operated by
the FFE or SBE–FP, and which ones are
operated by issuers, or agents or brokers.
We would be interested in feedback on
criteria for determining whether a Web
site is misleading to consumers.
We seek comment on all aspects of
this proposal and specifically seek
comment on whether direct enrollment
with a QHP issuer should be permitted
for enrollments through all SBE–FPs, or
at the option of SBE–FPs.
d. General Standards for Exchange
Notices (§ 155.230)
Section 155.230 outlines standards for
notices required to be sent by the
Exchange to individuals or employers.
We propose amending paragraph
§ 155.230(d)(2) to specify that electronic
notices would be the default method for
sending required SHOP Exchange
notices, unless otherwise required by
Federal or State law. The proposed
amendment would make mailed paper
notices optional, at the election of the
employer or employee, as applicable,
unless other Federal or State law would
not permit this.44 We propose this
change because we have received
feedback from SHOP consumers and
issuers that electronic notices are the
preferred method of communication. In
addition, electronic notices provide a
more cost effective way for SHOPs to
distribute required notices. However,
we are aware that some people (and
employers) may still prefer mailed
paper notices, and therefore propose
that paper notices distributed through
standard mail would continue to be
available for those that select paper
notices as the preferred method of
communication. Employers and
employees participating in FF–SHOPs
or in SBE–FPs utilizing the Federal
platform for SHOP functions will
continue to be able to select their
preferred communication method when
44 See Federally-facilitated Marketplace (FFM)
and Federally-facilitated Small Business Health
Options Program (FF–SHOP) Enrollment Manual
available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/ENR_
FFMSHOP_Manual_080916.pdf, for a list of the FF–
SHOP Exchange notices.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
completing the eligibility applications
online at HealthCare.gov. We note that
to the extent that a SHOP is required to
provide notices in a particular format to
meet its obligation to perform effective
communication with an individual with
a disability under the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Ch.
126), section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act, or section 1557 of the Affordable
Care Act, a SHOP should comply with
those requirements.
We note that this amendment would
not change the requirement that a SHOP
comply with the requirements for
electronic notices in 42 CFR
435.918(b)(2) through (5) for the
employer or employee. We seek
comment on this proposal.
We also propose to add a new
paragraph § 155.230(d)(3) to give
individual market Exchanges and
SHOPs flexibility to send notices
through standard mail, instead of
electronically, if an individual market
Exchange or SHOP is unable to send
select notices electronically due to
technical limitations, even if an election
has been made to receive such notices
electronically. Our regulation currently
requires that, should an individual’s,
employee’s, or employer’s notice
preference be electronic notices, an
individual market Exchange must send
required notices according to this
preference, and our proposed
amendment to paragraph (d)(2) would
require that a SHOP provide electronic
notices unless paper notices are selected
as the preferred communication
method. However, Exchanges or SHOPs
may have technological limitations that
prevent them from sending certain
notices electronically. In these
situations, we would like to provide
flexibility for an individual market
Exchange or SHOP to instead notify the
individual, employee, or employer
through standard mail. We encourage
individual market Exchanges or SHOPs
who might need to exercise this option
to explain to individuals, employees, or
employers that some required notices
may be sent through standard mail, and
encourage additional outreach be
conducted, as needed, so the individual,
employee, or employer understands the
content of the standard mail notice
itself. We seek comment on this
proposal.
e. Payment of Premiums (§ 155.240)
When an enrollee stops receiving the
benefit of advance payments of the
premium tax credit, for example as a
result of a data matching inconsistency
period expiring, the enrollee will be
responsible for a greater premium
amount. For individuals who have
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
agreed to pay premiums via electronic
funds transfer (EFT), this could mean
the withdrawal of a larger than expected
amount from the enrollee’s bank
account, and could result in financial
hardship. We recognize that issuers
have different procedures in place to
provide notice to enrollees affected by a
larger-than-expected EFT withdrawal
and to avoid potential consumer
hardship. We are considering future
rulemaking that would require
safeguards for consumers, such as
reversal or termination of EFTs, with or
without simultaneous paper-billing,
when EFT amounts are of a larger-thanexpected amount. We seek comment
regarding the scope of any potential
problem related to larger-than-expected
EFT withdrawals, issuers’ experience
with these withdrawals, industry best
practices, State regulations in this area,
and whether Federal rulemaking is
needed.
3. Exchange Functions in the Individual
Market: Eligibility Determinations for
Exchange Participation and Insurance
Affordability Programs
a. Eligibility Redetermination During a
Benefit Year (§ 155.330)
Paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of § 155.330
requires the Exchange to periodically
examine available data sources for
eligibility determinations for certain
government health programs, including
Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP), for
Exchange enrollees on whose behalf
APTC or the cost-sharing reduction
portion of advance payments are being
paid. We are proposing to amend
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) to require the
Exchange to periodically examine data
sources for information on either
eligibility determinations for or
enrollment in the specified government
programs.
The proposed change would provide
Exchanges with flexibility to use
information about enrollment in the
specified government health programs,
rather than information about eligibility
determinations. Having this flexibility
may be particularly valuable if data on
eligibility determinations (as distinct
from enrollment) are not available.
When deciding whether to examine data
sources for eligibility determinations or
enrollment information, Exchanges
should consider which data source best
meets the criteria of timeliness,
accuracy, and availability.
We propose to add a new paragraph
§ 155.330(e)(2)(iii) related to periodic
examination of data sources. Currently,
paragraph (e)(2)(i) describes the
procedures for redetermination and
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61501
notification of eligibility when, through
a data matching process under
§ 155.330(d), an Exchange identifies
updated information regarding death or
any factor of eligibility not regarding
income, family size, or family
composition. Our regulations have not
previously addressed how an Exchange
should use updated information
regarding compliance with the income
tax filing and reconciliation requirement
under § 155.305(f)(4). Due to certain
operational and legal impediments
explained below, we believe that the
procedures in paragraph (e)(2)(i) may
not be appropriate in these cases.
Proposed new paragraph (e)(2)(iii)
would require an Exchange to choose
among three alternatives for when the
Exchange identifies updated
information regarding compliance with
the income tax filing and reconciliation
requirement under § 155.305(f)(4): (A)
Follow the procedures specified in
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section; (B)
follow alternative procedures specified
by the Secretary in guidance; or (C)
follow an alternative process proposed
by the Exchange and approved by the
Secretary based on a showing that the
process meets the approval criteria
outlined below.
An Exchange enrollee’s continued
eligibility for APTC may be jeopardized
when the person responsible for
reconciling the tax credit on a tax return
fails to do so as required in
§ 155.305(f)(4). However, Exchange
operational concerns, the need for close
cooperation with the IRS, timelines for
tax filing (including requesting an
extension of the tax filing deadline),
timelines for updating the IRS database
that provides information about income
tax return filing and reconciliation, and
restrictions on the disclosure of Federal
tax information affect an Exchange’s
processes for making redeterminations
and communicating with enrollees
regarding redeterminations.
In light of these complexities, specific
procedures for handling these
redeterminations may be warranted that
balance Exchange operational
flexibility, the need for program
integrity protections and procedural
protections for enrollees and tax filers.
Accordingly, under proposed paragraph
(e)(2)(iii), Exchanges must follow the
procedures specified in
§ 155.330(e)(2)(i) (provided the
Exchange is able to maintain adequate
safeguards for Federal tax information
consistent with section 6103 of the Code
with respect to the confidentiality,
disclosure, maintenance, or use of such
information), procedures described in
guidance published by the Secretary, or
alternative procedures approved by the
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61502
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Secretary. The guidance established by
the Secretary could, for example,
provide that an Exchange would follow
specified procedures for providing
notice and, if there is a dispute about
the IRS tax filing data regarding the tax
filer (or his or her spouse, if applicable),
provide an opportunity for the enrollee
to contest.
An Exchange would also be permitted
to choose alternative procedures for
periodic data matching to verify
whether a tax filer has complied with
the filing and reconciliation
requirement, subject to approval by the
Secretary. Approval would require a
showing by the Exchange that the
alternative procedures would facilitate
continued enrollment in coverage with
financial assistance for which the
enrollee remains eligible, provide
appropriate information about the
process to the enrollee (including
regarding any action by the enrollee
necessary to obtain the most accurate
redetermination of eligibility), and
provide adequate program integrity
protections and safeguards for Federal
tax information under section 6103 of
the Code with respect to the
confidentiality, disclosure,
maintenance, or use of such
information.
Additionally, in paragraph (g), we
propose to allow alternate methods of
recalculating APTC during the benefit
year. Currently, paragraph (g) provides
that when an Exchange makes an
eligibility redetermination in
accordance with § 155.330 that results
in a change in the amount of APTC, the
Exchange must recalculate the amount
of APTC to account for any payments
already made on behalf of the tax filer
for the benefit year. The goal of the
recalculation is to provide the total
advance payments for the benefit year
that correspond to the tax filer’s total
projected and allowed premium tax
credit for the benefit year.
We propose for coverage years
through 2023 to permit the Exchange to
recalculate APTC in accordance with an
eligibility redetermination under
§ 155.330 using an alternate method
approved by the Secretary. Approval
would require a showing by the
Exchange that the alternative procedure
provides adequate program integrity
protections, minimizes administrative
burden on the Exchange, and limits
negative impacts on consumers, where
possible. We make this change based on
Exchange feedback and believe the
proposed change will account for the
differences in Exchange systems and
mitigate complexities. We believe this
change balances the need for Exchange
flexibility in the near term with the goal
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
of providing accurate determinations for
APTC and protecting tax filers from the
potential for an excess APTC
repayment, where possible. We seek
comment on this proposal and on the
period of time for which it should be
available.
We seek comment on these proposals.
4. Exchange Functions in the Individual
Market: Enrollment in Qualified Health
Plans
a. Enrollment of Qualified Individuals
into QHPs (§ 155.400)
We propose to amend § 155.400 to
add additional flexibility to the binder
payment rules. Specifically, we propose
to add § 155.400(e)(2) to give Exchanges
the discretion to allow issuers
experiencing billing or enrollment
problems due to high volume or
technical errors to implement a
reasonable extension of the binder
payment deadlines the issuer has set
under § 155.400(e)(1). We propose that
the FFEs and SBE–FPs will, and State
Exchanges may, allow these reasonable
extensions, which in the case of most
high volume situations or technical
errors we would not expect to be more
than 45 calendar days’ duration. Based
on our experience from multiple open
enrollment periods, billing or
enrollment problems, particularly in
cases where an issuer experienced
technical errors or a processing backlog
caused by a large volume of
enrollments, can affect enrollees’ ability
to submit timely binder payments. We
believe providing issuers with the
option to allow reasonable binder
payment deadline extensions, which
must be implemented in a uniform and
nondiscriminatory manner, would
prevent enrollees from having their
coverage cancelled due to non-payment
when those enrollees did not have
adequate time to make their binder
payments and appropriately balances
issuer flexibility and consumer
protectiveness.
We also propose to specify that all
binder payment rules, including the
proposed amendment, in § 155.400(e)
apply to SBE–FPs in addition to FFEs.
We believe that all entities on the
Federal platform should utilize the same
binder payment rules in order to
simplify operational implementation of
enrollment processing and confirmation
using the Federal platform, and consider
these rules to fall within the regulations
pertaining to issuer eligibility and
enrollment functions that a QHP issuer
must comply with in order to
participate in an SBE–FP, under
§ 156.350. We seek comment on this
proposal.
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Additionally, in the preamble to
§ 156.270 in the 2017 Payment Notice,
we stated as part of our interpretation of
§ 156.270(d) that a binder payment is
not necessary when an enrollee enrolls,
either actively or passively, in a plan
within the same insurance product. We
understand that this may be different
than issuer practice prior to the
Affordable Care Act and that issuers
may have operational challenges in
distinguishing between enrollment in
the same product versus a different
product. To minimize operational
concerns, we seek comment on whether
we should amend the binder payment
requirement in § 155.400(e) to not
require a binder payment when a
current enrollee enrolls, either actively
or passively, in any plan with the same
issuer, and on the appropriate
timeframe for making such a change.
b. Special Enrollment Periods
(§ 155.420)
Special enrollment periods, a
longstanding feature of employersponsored coverage, exist to ensure that
people who lose health insurance
during the year, or who experience
other qualifying events, have the
opportunity to enroll in coverage. We
are committed to making sure that
special enrollment periods are available
to those who are eligible for them and
equally committed to avoiding any
misuse or abuse of special enrollment
periods.
In 2016, we added warnings on
HealthCare.gov about inappropriate use
of special enrollment periods,
eliminated special enrollment periods
that are no longer needed as the
Exchanges mature, and tightened
eligibility rules. In addition, we
introduced a special enrollment
confirmation process under which
consumers enrolling through the most
common special enrollment periods are
directed to provide documentation to
confirm their eligibility for the special
enrollment period.
We have heard competing concerns
about how these actions are affecting the
Exchange risk pools. Some have stated
that additional changes are needed to
prevent individuals from misusing
special enrollment periods to sign up for
coverage only after they become sick.45
Others have stated that any differential
costs for the special enrollment period
45 We have heard similar concerns about potential
gaming and adverse selection that could result from
the grace period for payment of premiums for
qualified individuals receiving advance payments
of the premium tax credit. While we seek additional
information on this concern as well, we expect that
changes to grace period policy would require
legislation.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
population reflect the very low take-up
rates for special enrollment periods
among eligible individuals. They claim
that verification processes worsen the
problem by creating new barriers to
enrollment, with healthier, less
motivated individuals, the most likely
to be deterred.
We seek comment on these issues,
especially data that could help
distinguish misuse of special enrollment
periods from low take-up of special
enrollment periods among healthier
eligible individuals, evidence on the
impact of eligibility verification
approaches, including pre-enrollment
verification, on health insurance
enrollment, continuity of coverage, and
risk pools (whether in the Exchange or
other contexts), and input on what
special enrollment period-related policy
or outreach changes, including in the
final rule, could help strengthen risk
pools.
In this rule, we also seek to ensure
transparency, stability, and appropriate
utilization of special enrollment periods
by codifying certain special enrollment
periods that were made available
through prior guidance. Therefore, in
order to provide clarity and certainty to
all stakeholders, we propose to codify:
• Paragraph (d)(8)(ii) for the special
enrollment period for dependents of
Indians who are enrolled or are
enrolling in a QHP through an Exchange
at the same time as an Indian;
• Paragraph (d)(10) for the special
enrollment period for victims of
domestic abuse or spousal abandonment
and their dependents who seek to apply
for coverage apart from the perpetrator
of the abuse or abandonment;
• Paragraph (d)(11) for the special
enrollment period for consumers and
their dependents who apply for
coverage and are later determined
ineligible for Medicaid or CHIP;
• Paragraph (d)(12) for the special
enrollment period that may be triggered
by material plan or benefit display
errors on the Exchange Web site,
including errors related to service areas,
covered services, and premiums; and
• Paragraph (d)(13) for the special
enrollment period that may be triggered
when a consumer resolves a data
matching issue following the expiration
of an inconsistency period.
We propose to codify the special
enrollment period for dependents of
Indians who are enrolling at the same
time as the Indian, as defined by section
4 of the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act, in paragraph (d)(8)(ii)
so that Indians and non-Indian members
of the household may maintain the same
coverage and so that this special
enrollment period is consistently
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
applied across Exchanges. This special
enrollment period has enabled mixed
status Indian families to enroll in or
change coverage together through the
Exchange. We propose to codify the
special enrollment period for victims of
domestic abuse or spousal abandonment
in paragraph (d)(10) so that, as specified
in July 2015 guidance,46 victims of
domestic abuse or spousal
abandonment, along with their
dependents, can enroll in coverage
separate from their abuser or abandoner.
This special enrollment period has
provided a needed pathway to new
coverage for consumers in these
situations. We propose to codify the
special enrollment period for consumers
who apply for coverage during the
Exchange annual open enrollment
period or due to a qualifying event and
are determined ineligible for Medicaid
or CHIP in paragraph (d)(11), so that
consumers who applied for coverage
when they were eligible to do so can
ultimately enroll in coverage through
the Exchange. This special enrollment
period has ensured that consumers who
were incorrectly assessed potentially
eligible for Medicaid or CHIP have a
pathway to coverage. We propose to
codify the special enrollment period for
material plan or benefit display errors in
paragraph (d)(12), so that consumers
who enrolled in a plan based on
incorrect plan or benefit information
can select a new plan that better suits
their needs. We propose to codify the
special enrollment period for data
matching issues that are cleared after
the deadline for resolving has passed in
paragraph (d)(13), so that consumers
who submit required documents to
prove that they are qualified individuals
may enroll in coverage through the
Exchange. This special enrollment
period has enabled consumers who are
not able to submit required documents
prior to the deadline associated with
their data matching issue to enroll in
coverage upon submitting sufficient
documents. We seek comments on these
proposals to codify existing special
enrollment periods.
We also propose to make a variety of
technical corrections to correct
punctuation in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and
(iii), and to update the cross-references
in paragraph (b)(2)(iii) (regarding
coverage effective dates) to reflect the
applicable newly codified special
enrollment periods. All of these changes
reflect existing FFE practice in
46 Updated Guidance on Victims of Domestic
Abuse and Spousal Abandonment (Jul. 27, 2015).
Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/UpdatedGuidance-on-Victims-of-Domestic-Abuse-andSpousal-Abandonment_7.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61503
implementing special enrollment
periods authorized by the Affordable
Care Act and existing regulations, and
do not create new special enrollment
periods for consumers.
We note that certain special
enrollment periods in § 155.420 are
incorporated into the individual market
guaranteed availability regulations at
§ 147.104(b) and apply to all issuers
offering non-grandfathered individual
market coverage, whether through or
outside of an Exchange. Additionally,
certain special enrollment periods in
§ 155.420 also apply in the SHOPs and
are incorporated into the SHOP
regulations at §§ 155.725(j) and
156.285(b). Except for the proposed
additions of paragraphs (d)(8)(ii) and
(d)(13), which are applicable only with
respect to coverage offered through an
Exchange, the proposed changes to
special enrollment periods in this notice
of proposed rulemaking would apply
throughout the individual market, and
we therefore propose conforming
amendments to § 147.104(b). We seek
comment on this approach to aligning
the proposed amendments with the
individual-market-wide and SHOP
special enrollment periods.
c. Termination of Exchange Enrollment
or Coverage (§ 155.430)
We propose to amend
§ 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to specify that when
an issuer seeks to rescind coverage, in
accordance with § 147.128, in a QHP
purchased through an Exchange, the
issuer must first demonstrate, to the
reasonable satisfaction of the Exchange,
that the rescission is appropriate, if so
required by the Exchange. In FFEs and
SBE–FPs, HHS anticipates generally
requiring such a demonstration. Section
2712 of the PHS Act and § 147.128
prohibit an issuer from rescinding
coverage unless the individual (or a
person seeking coverage on behalf of the
individual) performs an act, practice, or
omission that constitutes fraud, or
makes an intentional misrepresentation
of material fact, as prohibited by the
terms of the plan or coverage. We do not
seek to restrict issuers’ ability to rescind
coverage when an individual or a party
seeking coverage on behalf of an
individual fraudulently enrolls the
individual in coverage. However,
because the Exchanges generally must
be involved in all enrollment processes,
including the process of rescinding
coverage for plans purchased through
the Exchange, it is necessary for the
issuer to provide information to the
Exchange in order to implement the
rescission. Additionally, it is important
for consumer protection and the orderly
functioning of Exchanges that
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61504
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
individuals whose eligibility has been
verified and enrollments processed
according to Exchange rules can be sure
that their coverage will not be rescinded
by issuers without a showing that the
enrollment was fraudulent, or due to an
intentional misrepresentation of
material fact, as prohibited by the terms
of the plan or coverage, meeting the
requirements for rescission under
§ 147.128. The FFEs or SBE–FPs would
not hinder an issuer seeking to rescind
on grounds demonstrating fraud or
intentional misrepresentation of
material fact, such as the enrollment of
a non-existent or deceased person. We
seek comment on this proposal.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
5. Appeals of Eligibility Determinations
for Exchange Participation and
Insurance Affordability Programs
a. General Eligibility Appeals
Requirements (§ 155.505)
In § 155.505, we propose to add
paragraph (h) permitting the Exchange
appeals entity to utilize paper-based
appeals processes for the acceptance of
appeal requests, the provision of
appeals notices, and the secure
transmission of appeals-related
information between entities, when the
Exchange appeals entity is unable to
establish and perform otherwise
required related electronic functions, as
further described below. In the first
Program Integrity Rule, 78 FR 54069
(Aug. 30, 2013), we provided flexibility
for Exchanges to implement a paperbased appeals process for the first year
of operations (October 1, 2013 through
December 31, 2014). Our goal was to
allow Exchanges to operate efficient,
effective paper-based appeals processes,
while providing time to modernize their
appeals programs. We believed this
approach balanced the interests of both
appellants and Exchanges.
We extended this flexibility through
December 31, 2016 in guidance
published on October 23, 2014 47 and
March 22, 2016.48 In these documents,
we acknowledged that Exchanges face
many challenges and competing
priorities regarding system
development. Currently, some Exchange
appeals entities are continuing to work
towards full compliance with the
regulatory requirements related to
electronic appeals processes.
Accordingly, we are proposing to add
§ 155.505(h) so the Exchange appeals
47 Subregulatory
Guidance Memorandum (Oct.
23, 2014), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Regulations-andGuidance/Downloads/
Paper-based-Appeals-Process-Guidance.pdf.
48 Subregulatory Guidance Memorandum (Mar.
22, 2016), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/
Extension-for-paper-based-appeals-3-22-2016.pdf).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
entity may establish secure and
expedient paper-based appeals
processes that ensure appropriate
procedural protections for appellants
when it is unable to fulfill the electronic
requirements related to individual
market eligibility appeals, employer
appeals, and SHOP employer and
employee appeals as described in part
155, subparts C, D, F, and H. These
electronic requirements include:
Accepting appeal requests submitted by
telephone or internet (§ 155.520(a)(1)(i)
and (iv)), sending electronic notices
(§ 155.230(d)), and establishing secure
electronic interfaces to transfer
eligibility and appeal records between
appeals entities and Exchanges or
Medicaid or CHIP agencies
(§ 155.345(i)(1); § 155.510(b)(1)(ii) and
(b)(2); § 155.520(d)(1)(ii) and (iii) and
(d)(3) and (4); § 155.545(b)(3);
§ 155.555(e)(1); and § 155.740(h)(1)). We
are also proposing corresponding
amendments to § 155.555(b) (regarding
employer appeals) and § 155.740(b)(2)
(regarding SHOP appeals) to include
cross-references to proposed
§ 155.505(h).
This proposal addresses the ongoing
challenge of implementing complex
electronic appeals processes, while
adequately protecting appellants’
procedural rights. We expect that
appeals entities will continue to work
towards modernizing and automating
their appeals processes, and that they
will implement electronic appeals
processes as they are able, to the extent
such processes may enhance appellants’
experience or the overall efficiency of
eligibility appeals.
We seek comment on this proposal.
b. Employer Appeals Process (§ 155.555)
Section 155.555(b) sets forth the
requirements for employer appeals
processes established either by an
Exchange or HHS. As described above,
we propose to amend § 155.555(b) to
include cross-references to proposed
§ 155.505(h), which would permit an
employer appeals process to utilize
paper-based appeals processes for the
acceptance of appeal requests, the
provision of appeals notices, and the
secure transmission of appeals-related
information between entities, when the
Exchange appeals entity is unable to
establish and perform otherwise
required related electronic functions.
6. Required Contribution Percentage
(§ 155.605(e)(3))
Under section 5000A of the Code, an
individual must have minimum
essential coverage for each month,
qualify for an exemption, or make a
shared responsibility payment with his
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
or her Federal income tax return. Under
section 5000A(e)(1) of the Code, an
individual is exempt if the amount that
he or she would be required to pay for
minimum essential coverage (the
required contribution) exceeds a
particular percentage (the required
contribution percentage) of his or her
actual household income for a taxable
year. In addition, under § 155.605(d)(2),
an individual is exempt if his or her
required contribution exceeds the
required contribution percentage of his
or her projected household income for
a year. Finally, under
§ 155.605(d)(2)(iv), certain employed
individuals are exempt if, on an
individual basis, the cost of self-only
coverage is less than the required
contribution percentage, but the
aggregate cost of individual coverage
through employers exceeds the required
contribution percentage, and no family
coverage is available through an
employer at a cost less than the required
contribution percentage.
Section 5000A established the 2014
required contribution percentage at 8
percent. For plan years after 2014,
section 5000A(e)(1)(D) of the Code and
26 CFR 1.5000A–3(e)(2)(ii) provide that
the required contribution percentage is
the percentage determined by the
Secretary of HHS that reflects the excess
of the rate of premium growth between
the preceding calendar year and 2013,
over the rate of income growth for that
period.
We established a methodology for
determining the excess of the rate of
premium growth over the rate of income
growth for plan years after 2014 in the
2015 Market Standards Rule (79 FR
30302), and we said future adjustments
would be published annually in the
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters.
Under the HHS methodology, the rate
of premium growth over the rate of
income growth for a particular calendar
year is the quotient of (x) 1 plus the rate
of premium growth between the
preceding calendar year and 2013,
carried out to ten significant digits,
divided by (y) 1 plus the rate of income
growth between the preceding calendar
year and 2013, carried out to ten
significant digits.49
As the measure of premium growth
for a calendar year, we established in
the 2015 Market Standards Rule that we
would use the premium adjustment
percentage. The premium adjustment
49 We also defined the required contribution
percentage at § 155.600(a) to mean the product of
8 percent and the rate of premium growth over the
rate of income growth for the calendar year,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth of one
percent.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
percentage is based on projections of
average per enrollee employersponsored insurance premiums from the
National Health Expenditure Accounts
(NHEA), which are calculated by the
CMS Office of the Actuary.50 (Below, in
§ 156.130, we propose the 2018
premium adjustment percentage of
16.17303196 (or an increase of about
16.2 percent) over the period from 2013
to 2017. This reflects an increase of
about 2.6 percent over the 2017
premium adjustment percentage
(1.1617303196/1.1325256291).)
As the measure of income growth for
a calendar year, we established in the
2017 Payment Notice that we would use
per capita personal income (PI). Under
the approach finalized in the 2017
Payment Notice, and using the NHEA
data, the rate of income growth for 2018
is the percentage (if any) by which the
most recent projection of per capita PI
for the preceding calendar year ($51,388
for 2017) exceeds per capita PI for 2013
($44,528), carried out to ten significant
digits. The ratio of per capita PI for 2017
over the per capita PI for 2013 is
estimated to be 1.1540603665 (that is,
per capita income growth of about 15.4
percent). This reflects an increase of
about 4.0 percent relative to the increase
for 2013 to 2016 (1.1540603665/
1.1101836394).
Thus, using the 2018 premium
adjustment percentage proposed in this
rule, the excess of the rate of premium
growth over the rate of income growth
for 2013 to 2017 is 1.1617303196/
1.1540603665, or 1.0066460588. This
results in a proposed required
contribution percentage for 2018 of
8.00*1.0066460588, or 8.05 percent,
when rounded to the nearest onehundredth of one percent, a decrease of
0.11 percentage points from 2017
(8.05317 ¥ 8.16100). The excess of the
rate of premium growth over the rate of
income growth also is used for
determining the applicable percentage
in section 36B(b)(3)(A) and the required
contribution percentage in section
36B(c)(2)(C).
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
7. Enrollment Periods Under SHOP
(§ 155.725)
Section 155.725(g) describes the
process for newly qualified employees
to enroll in coverage through a SHOP
and the coverage effective date for
newly qualified employees. We propose
50 For any given year the premium adjustment
percentage is the percentage (if any) by which the
most recent NHEA projection of per enrollee
employer-sponsored insurance premiums for the
current year exceeds the most recent NHEA
projection of per enrollee employer-sponsored
insurance premiums for 2013.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
to amend paragraphs (g)(1) and (2) and
add new paragraph (g)(3).
Currently, § 155.725(g)(1) requires
both that: (1) The enrollment period for
an employee who becomes a qualified
employee outside of the initial or
annual open enrollment period starts on
the first day of becoming a newly
qualified employee; and (2) a newly
qualified employee must have at least
30 days from the beginning of his or her
enrollment period to make a plan
selection. The latter requirement is
intended to guarantee that the employee
has sufficient time to make an informed
decision about his or her health
coverage needs. We do not propose
changes to this latter requirement, but
we propose to change the day the
enrollment period begins.
Before a newly qualified employee
may make a plan selection through a
SHOP, his or her employer must notify
the SHOP about the newly qualified
employee. Qualified employers in an
FF–SHOP or SBE–FP using the Federal
platform for SHOP eligibility or
enrollment functions generally report
newly qualified employees by adding
the employee to the employee roster or
by calling the FF–SHOP call center. If,
however, a qualified employer waits to
take either action, a newly qualified
employee might not be able to begin the
enrollment process until after the date
upon which the employee became
eligible, and might not have a full 30
days to make a coverage decision, as
contemplated by the current regulations.
We are concerned that there might be a
similar delay in State-based SHOPs.
To ensure that newly qualified
employees have the full 30 days to
enroll, we propose, at § 155.725(g)(1),
that SHOPs would be required to
provide an employee who becomes a
qualified employee outside of the initial
or annual open enrollment period with
a 30-day enrollment period that begins
on the date the qualified employer
notifies the SHOP about the newly
qualified employee. We also propose
that qualified employers would be
required to notify the SHOP about a
newly qualified employee on or before
the 30th day after the day that the
employee becomes eligible for coverage,
and are also proposing a conforming
amendment to the requirements for
qualified employers at § 157.205(f)(1).
Together with the other proposed
amendments to paragraph (g) discussed
below, this proposal would ensure that
the proposed policy of starting the 30day enrollment period on the date of the
qualified employer’s notice to the SHOP
would not delay the effective date of
coverage beyond the limits on waiting
periods imposed under § 147.116, and
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61505
would also ensure that newly qualified
employees are provided with a full 30
days to make their health coverage
decisions after their employer has
notified the SHOP about them.
We also propose to remove the
requirement in current § 155.725(g)(1)
that enrollment periods for newly
qualified employees must end no sooner
than 15 days prior to the date that any
applicable employee waiting period
longer than 45 days would end if the
employee made a plan selection on the
first day of becoming eligible. We are
proposing to remove this requirement
because the proposed amendments at
paragraphs (g)(2) and (3) discussed
below are expected to minimize the risk
of employers exceeding waiting period
limitations, as defined at § 147.116, and
because we believe that removing this
requirement will in some circumstances
give newly qualified employees a longer
period of time to make coverage
decisions. For example, suppose that a
new employee who is not a variable
hour employee is hired and offered
coverage by the qualified employer on
April 25 and that the qualified employer
imposes a 60-day waiting period that
begins on the date of hire (and under
§ 147.116 and the proposed
amendments to paragraph (g)(3)
discussed below ends June 23). The
qualified employer notifies the SHOP on
May 25 about the newly qualified
employee, and the enrollment period
begins on that date and will end on June
23. The newly qualified employee
makes a plan selection on May 26. If we
maintained the requirements that
coverage effective dates for newly
qualified employees must generally be
determined in accordance with
§ 155.725(h) (see discussion below of
proposed amendments to this
requirement) and that enrollment
periods for newly qualified employees
must begin on the date that the
employee becomes eligible, and end no
sooner than 15 days prior to the date
that any applicable employee waiting
period longer than 45 days would end
if the employee made a plan selection
on the first day of becoming eligible, the
newly qualified employee’s enrollment
period would have ended on June 9 and
the employee would have a coverage
effective date of July 1. However, under
the proposed amendments we are
making to this section, the newly
qualified employee would be provided
a full 30-day enrollment period with the
same coverage effective date of July 1.
Current paragraph (g)(2) provides that
a newly qualified employee’s coverage
effective date must always be the first
day of a month, and must generally be
determined in accordance with
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61506
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
paragraph (h), unless the employee is
subject to a waiting period consistent
with § 147.116, in which case the
effective date may be on the first day of
a later month, but in no case may the
effective date fail to comply with
§ 147.116. Thus, in an FF–SHOP, under
the current rule, coverage for a newly
qualified employee generally takes
effect the first day of the following
month for a plan selection made on or
before the 15th day of a month, and
takes effect the first day of the second
following month for a plan selection
made after the 15th day of a month,
unless coverage must take effect on a
later date due to the application of a
waiting period consistent with
§ 147.116. We propose to modify
paragraph (g)(2) to specify that the
coverage effective date for a newly
qualified employee would be the first
day of the month following the plan
selection, (rather than being determined
in accordance with paragraph (h)),
unless the employee is subject to a
waiting period consistent with § 147.116
and proposed paragraph (g)(3), in which
case the effective date would be on the
first day of the month following the end
of the waiting period, but in no case
may the effective date fail to comply
with § 147.116. The proposed
amendments to paragraph (g)(2) also
specify that: (1) If a newly qualified
employee’s waiting period ends on the
first day of a month and the employee
has already made a plan selection by
that date, coverage would also be
effective on that date; and (2) if a newly
qualified employee makes a plan
selection on the first day of a month and
any applicable waiting period has ended
by that date, coverage would be effective
on that date. These amendments would
minimize the risk of an employer
exceeding the limitations on waiting
period length at § 147.116 due to SHOP
enrollment timelines and processes.
Additionally, in order to ensure that
SHOP operations consistent with these
proposed amendments would not cause
a qualified employer to exceed the
limits on waiting periods under
§ 147.116, we propose to amend
§ 155.725(g)(2) to require that if a
qualified employer with variable hour
employees makes regularly having a
specified number of hours of service per
period (or working full-time) a
condition of employee eligibility for
coverage offered through a SHOP, any
measurement period that the qualified
employer uses to determine eligibility
under § 147.116(c)(3)(i) must not exceed
10 months with respect to coverage
offered through the SHOP (rather than
the 12-month measurement period
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
otherwise allowed under
§ 147.116(c)(3)(i)). This aspect of the
proposal is intended to ensure that
coverage takes effect within the
limitations on waiting period length at
§ 147.116(c)(3)(i) for variable hour
employees, under which coverage must
take effect no later than 13 months from
the employee’s start date, plus, if the
employee’s start date is not the first day
of a calendar month, the time remaining
until the first day of the next calendar
month. Specifically, for qualified
employers that condition eligibility for
coverage on an employee regularly
having a specified number of hours of
service per period (or working fulltime), if it cannot be determined that a
newly-hired employee is reasonably
expected to regularly work that number
of hours per period (or work full-time),
the qualified employer may take a
reasonable period of time, not to exceed
10 months and beginning on any date
between the employee’s start date and
the first day of the first calendar month
following the employee’s start date, to
determine whether the employee meets
the eligibility condition.
We seek comment on whether any of
the proposed timeframes might result in
a situation in which an employer or
issuer falls out of compliance with
§ 147.116.
Consistent with § 147.116, as long as
the employee subject to a waiting period
may make a plan selection that results
in coverage becoming effective within
the timeframes required under
§ 147.116, coverage that begins later as
a result of the employee’s delay in
making a plan selection would not
constitute a failure to comply with the
waiting period limitations under
§ 147.116. As a result of our proposal at
paragraph (g)(2) of this section, when a
newly qualified employee subject to a
waiting period makes a plan selection,
coverage would begin the first day of the
first month that follows the expiration
of the waiting period, as long as that
date is consistent with the requirements
in § 147.116. However, if the first day of
the first month following the expiration
of the waiting period for this employee
would be outside the limits under
§ 147.116, the SHOP would be required
under paragraph (g)(2) to ensure that
coverage takes effect within the required
timeframe. To avoid this scenario and
the operational complications it would
cause for SHOPs, we are also proposing
to specify in a new paragraph (g)(3) that
waiting periods in a SHOP may not
exceed 60 days in length. If an
individual subject to a waiting period
could have had an effective date within
the timeframes in § 147.116 by making
a plan selection at the beginning of the
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
enrollment period, but delays making a
plan selection, consistent with
§ 147.116(a), coverage would begin the
first day of the first month following the
end of the waiting period, even if this
would not be within the timeframes in
§ 147.116.
In addition to specifying that waiting
periods in SHOPs would not exceed 60
days, proposed paragraph (g)(3) would
also specify the calculation
methodology for waiting periods in
SHOPs. Under this proposed
amendment, waiting periods in SHOPs
would be calculated beginning on the
date the employee becomes eligible—
regardless of when the qualified
employer notifies the SHOP about the
newly qualified employee. For example,
a 60-day waiting period would be
calculated as the date an employee
becomes otherwise eligible plus 59
days. Under this methodology, the date
the employee becomes otherwise
eligible counts as the first day of the
waiting period. We propose this
amendment to ensure that employers
will remain in compliance with
§ 147.116 when factoring in certain
aspects of the SHOP enrollment
timeline, such as the 30 days employers
would have under these proposed
amendments to notify the SHOP about
a newly qualified employee, the 30 days
newly qualified employees have to
make a plan selection, and the coverage
effective dates that would apply under
these proposed amendments to
§ 155.725(g). To minimize operational
complexity in the Federal platform
build for the SHOP, we are also
proposing amendments to paragraph
(g)(3) to specify that a Federallyfacilitated SHOP or a State-based SHOP
that uses the Federal platform for SHOP
eligibility or enrollment functions
would only allow waiting periods of 0,
15, 30, 45, and 60 days.
Nothing in this proposal would
change the rule that in no case may the
effective date for a newly qualified
employee fail to comply with § 147.116.
This proposal would not change
§ 147.116 and the proposals described
in this section of the preamble apply
only for purposes of the SHOPs.
We propose to amend paragraph
(j)(2)(i) to reflect the proposed
codification of existing special
enrollment periods discussed in the
preamble to § 155.420, specifically those
proposed to be codified at
§ 155.420(d)(10), (11) and (12).
We seek comment on all aspects of
these proposals.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
8. SHOP Employer and Employee
Eligibility Appeals Requirements
(§ 155.740)
We propose to amend § 155.740(b)(2)
to include a cross-reference to proposed
§ 155.505(h). This amendment would
permit SHOP employer and employee
eligibility appeals processes to use a
secure and expedient paper-based
process if the appeals entity cannot
fulfill certain electronic requirements.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
9. Request for Reconsideration
(§ 155.1090)
We propose a new section § 155.1090
to allow an issuer to request
reconsideration of denial of certification
of a plan as a QHP for sale through an
FFE. We propose that an issuer that has
applied to an FFE for certification of
QHPs and has been denied certification
must submit to HHS a written request
for reconsideration within 7 calendar
days of the date of written notice of
denial of certification in the form and
manner specified by HHS in order to
obtain a reconsideration. We further
propose that the issuer must include
any and all documentation in support of
its request when it submits its request
for reconsideration. We propose that
requests may be submitted and
considered only after an issuer has
submitted a complete, initial
application for certification and been
denied. In § 155.1090(a)(3), we propose
that HHS would provide the issuer with
a written reconsideration decision, and
that decision would constitute HHS’s
final determination. We believe this
approach would afford issuers an
opportunity to furnish any additional
facts and information that might not
have been considered as part of an FFE’s
initial decision to deny certification. We
believe the short timeline is required to
permit us to implement a decision to
certify a plan following a request for
reconsideration in time for open
enrollment. We intend to provide future
guidance on the form and manner by
which issuers should submit requests
for reconsideration. We intend for the
Office of Personnel Management to
maintain authority over reconsideration
of applications from issuers to offer a
multi-State plan. We invite comments
on this reconsideration proposal.
I. Part 156—Health Insurance Issuer
Standards Under the Affordable Care
Act, Including Standards Related to
Exchanges
1. General Provisions
a. FFE User Fee for the 2018 Benefit
Year (§ 156.50)
Section 1311(d)(5)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act permits an
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
Exchange to charge assessments or user
fees on participating health insurance
issuers as a means of generating funding
to support its operations. In addition, 31
U.S.C. 9701 permits a Federal agency to
establish a charge for a service provided
by the agency. If a State does not elect
to operate an Exchange or does not have
an approved Exchange, section
1321(c)(1) of the Affordable Care Act
directs HHS to operate an Exchange
within the State. Accordingly, at
§ 156.50(c), we specify that a
participating issuer offering a plan
through an FFE must remit a user fee to
HHS each month that is equal to the
product of the monthly user fee rate
specified in the annual HHS notice of
benefit and payment parameters for
FFEs for the applicable benefit year and
the monthly premium charged by the
issuer for each policy under the plan
where enrollment is through an FFE.
OMB Circular No. A–25R establishes
Federal policy regarding user fees, and
specifies that a user charge will be
assessed against each identifiable
recipient for special benefits derived
from Federal activities beyond those
received by the general public. As in
benefit years 2014 to 2017, issuers
seeking to participate in an FFE in
benefit year 2018 will receive two
special benefits not available to the
general public: (1) The certification of
their plans as QHPs; and (2) the ability
to sell health insurance coverage
through an FFE to individuals
determined eligible for enrollment in a
QHP. These special benefits are
provided to participating issuers
through the following Federal activities
in connection with the operation of
FFEs:
• Provision of consumer assistance
tools.
• Consumer outreach and education.
• Management of a Navigator
program.
• Regulation of agents and brokers.
• Eligibility determinations.
• Enrollment processes.
• Certification processes for QHPs
(including ongoing compliance
verification, recertification and
decertification).
• Administration of a SHOP
Exchange.
OMB Circular No. A–25R further
states that user fee charges should
generally be set at a level so that they
are sufficient to recover the full cost to
the Federal government of providing the
service when the government is acting
in its capacity as sovereign (as is the
case when HHS operates an FFE).
Accordingly, we propose to set the 2018
user fee rate for all participating FFE
issuers at 3.5 percent. This user fee rate
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61507
assessed on FFE issuers is the same as
the 2014 through 2017 user fee rate. In
addition, we intend to seek an exception
from OMB Circular No. A–25R, which
requires that the user fee charge be
sufficient to recover the full cost to the
Federal government of providing the
special benefit. We seek this exception
to ensure that the FFE can support many
of the goals of the Affordable Care Act,
including improving the health of the
population, reducing health care costs,
and providing access to health coverage,
in cases where user fee collections do
not cover the full cost of the special
benefit. We seek comment on this
proposal.
Additionally, we note that some
commenters have suggested that the FFE
would be able to increase enrollment by
allocating more funds to outreach and
education, or reallocating resources
from other funding sources when
available to pay for those expenses if
necessary. We seek comment on how
much funding to devote to outreach and
education, the method to determine
such funding, and the effectiveness of
certain outreach investments to inform
future FFE funding allocations. We also
seek comment on whether HHS should
expressly designate a specific portion or
amount of the FFE user fee to be
allocated directly to outreach and
education activities, recognizing the
need for HHS to continue to adequately
fund other critical Exchange operations
such as the call center, HealthCare.gov,
and eligibility and enrollment activities.
State-based Exchanges on the Federal
platform enter into a Federal platform
agreement with HHS to leverage the
systems established by the FFE to
perform certain Exchange functions, and
to enhance efficiency and coordination
between State and Federal programs.
Accordingly, in § 156.50(c)(2), we
specify that an issuer offering a plan
through an SBE–FP must remit a user
fee to HHS, in the timeframe and
manner established by HHS, equal to
the product of the sum of the monthly
user fee rate specified in the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for State-based Exchanges
that use the Federal platform for the
applicable benefit year, unless the Statebased Exchange and HHS agree on an
alternative mechanism to collect the
funds. The functions provided to issuers
in the SBE–FPs include the Federal
Exchange information technology and
call center infrastructure used in
connection with eligibility
determinations for enrollment in QHPs
and other applicable State health
subsidy programs, as defined at section
1413(e) of the Affordable Care Act; and
enrollment in QHPs under § 155.400. As
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61508
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
previously discussed, OMB Circular No.
A–25R establishes Federal policy
regarding user fees, and specifies that a
user charge will be assessed against
each identifiable recipient for special
benefits derived from Federal activities
beyond those received by the general
public. The user fee rate for SBE–FPs is
calculated based on the proportion of
FFE costs that are associated with the
FFE information technology
infrastructure, the consumer call center,
and eligibility and enrollment services,
and allocating a share of those costs to
issuers in the relevant SBE–FPs. A
significant portion of expenditures for
FFE services are associated with the
information technology, call center
infrastructure, and eligibility
determinations for enrollment in QHPs
and other applicable State health
subsidy programs as defined at section
1413(e) of the Affordable Care Act, and
personnel who perform the functions set
forth in § 155.400 to facilitate
enrollment in QHPs. Based on this
methodology, we propose to charge
issuers offering QHPs through an SBE–
FP a user fee rate of 3.0 percent of the
monthly premium charged by the issuer
for each policy under a plan offered
through an SBE–FP. This fee would
recover funding to support FFE
operations incurred by the Federal
government associated with providing
the services described above. We seek
comment on this proposal. In the 2017
Payment Notice, we set the user fee rate
for SBE–FPs at 1.5 percent of premiums
charged, rather than the full rate of 3.0,
in order to provide a transition year
during which States could adjust to the
assessment of a user fee in SBE–FP
States. We seek comment on whether
the impact of increasing the SBE–FP
user fee rate to the full rate should be
spread over one additional year.
We note that we intend to review the
costs incurred to provide these special
benefits each year, and revise the user
fee rate for issuers in the FFEs and SBE–
FPs accordingly in the annual HHS
notice of benefit and payment
parameters.
to remove the reference to the
transitional reinsurance program, which
was for benefit years 2014 through 2016.
As stated in the Unified Rate Review
Instructions, calibration for age,
geography, and tobacco use is
permissible as long as the calibration is
applied uniformly in the single risk
pool. These calibration adjustments
generally allow for the permissible
rating factors under section 2701 of the
PHS Act and 45 CFR 147.102 to be
applied correctly to the issuer’s plans.
For example, we use the term ‘‘age
calibration’’ to refer to an adjustment to
the index rate, made uniformly for all
plans in the risk pool, to reflect the fact
that without calibration, the planadjusted index rate reflects the average
age of the issuer’s risk pool and the
uniform age rating curve does not.
Therefore, age calibration is necessary
in order to correctly apply the age curve
and calculate the premium rates. The
same rationale applies when applying
geographic and tobacco rating factors to
the plan-adjusted index rate.
To more explicitly reflect how the
rating factors under 45 CFR 147.102 and
the index rating methodology under 45
CFR 156.80 work together, we propose
to restructure paragraph (d)(1) as
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) through (iv), adding
new paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to provide that
the index rate must be calibrated on a
market-wide basis to correspond to an
age rating factor of 1.0, a geographic
rating factor of 1.0, and a tobacco rating
factor of 1.0, in a manner specified by
the Secretary in guidance. Because it is
essentially an adjustment to the index
rate, the calibration from the single risk
pool index rate to the allowable rating
factors may not vary by plan; it must be
made uniformly for all plans in a State
and market. We would provide detailed
technical guidance through Unified Rate
Review Instructions to ensure accurate
and uniform application of the
calibration methodology proposed here.
We seek comment on this proposed
codification.
b. Single Risk Pool (§ 156.80)
Under § 156.80, an issuer must
establish an index rate for each State
market in the single risk pool. The index
rate must be based on the total
combined claims costs for providing
essential health benefits within the
single risk pool of that State market. The
index rate also must be adjusted on a
market-wide basis for the State based on
the total expected market-wide
payments and charges under the risk
adjustment program and Exchange user
fees. We propose to amend § 156.80(d)
a. Premium Adjustment Percentage
(§ 156.130)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
2. Essential Health Benefits Package
Section 1302(c)(4) of the Affordable
Care Act directs the Secretary to
determine an annual premium
adjustment percentage, which is used to
set the rate of increase for three
parameters detailed in the Affordable
Care Act: The maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing (defined at
§ 156.130(a)), the required contribution
percentage used to determine eligibility
for certain exemptions under section
5000A of the Code, and the assessable
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
payment amounts under section
4980H(a) and (b) of the Code. Section
156.130(e) provides that the premium
adjustment percentage is the percentage
(if any) by which the average per capita
premium for health insurance coverage
for the preceding calendar year exceeds
such average per capita premium for
health insurance for 2013, and that this
percentage will be published annually
in the HHS notice of benefit and
payment parameters.
Under the methodology established in
the 2015 Payment Notice and amended
in the 2015 Market Standards Rule for
estimating average per capita premium
for purposes of calculating the premium
adjustment percentage, the premium
adjustment percentage is calculated
based on the projections of average per
enrollee employer-sponsored insurance
premiums from the NHEA, which is
calculated by the CMS Office of the
Actuary. Accordingly, using the
employer-sponsored insurance data, the
premium adjustment percentage for
2018 is the percentage (if any) by which
the most recent NHEA projection of per
enrollee employer-sponsored insurance
premiums for 2017 ($5,962) exceeds the
most recent NHEA projection of per
enrollee employer-sponsored insurance
premiums for 2013 ($5,132).51 Using
this formula, the proposed premium
adjustment percentage for 2018 is
16.17303196 percent. We note that the
2013 premium used for this calculation
has been updated to reflect the latest
NHEA data. Based on the proposed 2018
premium adjustment percentage, we
propose the following cost-sharing
parameters for calendar year 2018.
Maximum Annual Limitation on Cost
Sharing for Calendar Year 2018. Under
§ 156.130(a)(2), for the 2018 calendar
year, cost sharing for self-only coverage
may not exceed the dollar limit for
calendar year 2014 increased by an
amount equal to the product of that
amount and the premium adjustment
percentage for 2018, and for other than
self-only coverage, the limit is twice the
dollar limit for self-only coverage.
Under § 156.130(d), these amounts must
be rounded down to the next lowest
multiple of 50. Using the premium
adjustment percentage of 16.17303196
percent for 2018 that we propose above,
and the 2014 maximum annual
51 See ‘‘NHE Projections 2015–2025—Tables’’
available at: https://www.cms.gov/ResearchStatistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-andReports/NationalHealthExpendData/
NationalHealthAccountsProjected.html in Tables 1
and 17. A detailed description of the NHE
projection methodology is available at https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-andSystems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/
NationalHealthExpendData/Downloads/
ProjectionsMethodology.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
limitation on cost sharing of $6,350 for
self-only coverage, which was published
by the IRS on May 2, 2013,52 we
propose that the 2018 maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing would be
$7,350 for self-only coverage and
$14,700 for other than self-only
coverage. This represents a 2.8 percent
increase above the 2017 parameters of
$7,150 for self-only coverage and
$14,300 for other than self-only
coverage.
b. Reduced Maximum Annual
Limitation on Cost Sharing (§ 156.130)
Sections 1402(a) through (c) of the
Affordable Care Act direct issuers to
reduce cost sharing for essential health
benefits for eligible individuals enrolled
in a silver level QHP. In the 2014
Payment Notice, we established
standards related to the provision of
cost-sharing reductions. Specifically, in
45 CFR part 156, subpart E, we specified
that QHP issuers must provide costsharing reductions by developing plan
variations, which are separate costsharing structures for each eligibility
category that change how the cost
sharing required under the QHP is to be
shared between the enrollee and the
Federal government. At § 156.420(a), we
detailed the structure of these plan
variations and specified that QHP
issuers must ensure that each silver plan
variation has an annual limitation on
cost sharing no greater than the
applicable reduced maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing specified in
the annual HHS notice of benefit and
payment parameters. Although the
amount of the reduction in the
maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing is specified in section
1402(c)(1)(A) of the Affordable Care Act,
section 1402(c)(1)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act states that the
Secretary may adjust the cost-sharing
limits to ensure that the resulting limits
do not cause the AVs of the health plans
to exceed the levels specified in section
1402(c)(1)(B)(i) of the Affordable Care
Act (that is, 73 percent, 87 percent, or
94 percent, depending on the income of
the enrollee). Accordingly, we propose
to continue to use a method we
established in the 2014 Payment Notice
for determining the appropriate
reductions in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing for costsharing plan variations. As we proposed
above, the 2018 maximum annual
52 See https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-1325.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
limitation on cost sharing would be
$7,350 for self-only coverage and
$14,700 for other than self-only group
coverage. We analyzed the effect on AV
of the reductions in the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing
described in the statute to determine
whether to adjust the reductions so that
the AV of a silver plan variation will not
exceed the AV specified in the statute.
Below, we describe our analysis for the
2018 benefit year and our proposed
results.
Consistent with our analysis in the
past four Payment Notices, we
developed three test silver level QHPs,
and analyzed the impact on AV of the
reductions described in the Affordable
Care Act to the estimated 2018
maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing for self-only coverage ($7,350).
The test plan designs are based on data
collected for 2017 plan year QHP
certification to ensure that they
represent a range of plan designs that
we expect issuers to offer at the silver
level of coverage through the Exchanges.
For 2018, the test silver level QHPs
included a PPO with typical costsharing structure ($7,350 annual
limitation on cost sharing, $2,215
deductible, and 20 percent in-network
coinsurance rate), a PPO with a lower
annual limitation on cost sharing
($4,950 annual limitation on cost
sharing, $2,895 deductible, and 20
percent in-network coinsurance rate),
and an HMO ($7,350 annual limitation
on cost sharing, $3,375 deductible, 20
percent in-network coinsurance rate,
and the following services with
copayments that are not subject to the
deductible or coinsurance: $500
inpatient stay per day, $350 emergency
department visit, $25 primary care
office visit, and $55 specialist office
visit). All three test QHPs meet the AV
requirements for silver level health
plans.
We then entered these test plans into
the proposed 2018 AV Calculator
developed by HHS and observed how
the reductions in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing specified in
the Affordable Care Act affected the AVs
of the plans. We found that the
reduction in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing specified in
the Affordable Care Act for enrollees
with a household income between 100
and 150 percent of the Federal poverty
line (FPL) (2⁄3 reduction in the
maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing), and 150 and 200 percent of the
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61509
FPL (2⁄3 reduction), would not cause the
AV of any of the model QHPs to exceed
the statutorily specified AV level (94
and 87 percent, respectively). In
contrast, the reduction in the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing
specified in the Affordable Care Act for
enrollees with a household income
between 200 and 250 percent of FPL (1⁄2
reduction), would cause the AVs of two
of the test QHPs to exceed the specified
AV level of 73 percent. As a result, we
propose that the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing for enrollees
in the 2018 benefit year with a
household income between 200 and 250
percent of FPL be reduced by
approximately 1⁄5, rather than 1⁄2,
consistent with what we have proposed
in previous years. This would allow
issuers the flexibility in designing
innovative plans with varying lower
maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing and deductibles for the 73
percent plans. We further propose that
the maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing for enrollees with a household
income between 100 and 200 percent of
the FPL be reduced by approximately
2⁄3, as specified in the statute, and as
shown in Table 15. These proposed
reductions in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing should
adequately account for unique plan
designs that may not be captured by our
three model QHPs. We also note that
selecting a reduction for the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing that is
less than the reduction specified in the
statute would not reduce the benefit
afforded to enrollees in aggregate
because QHP issuers are required to
further reduce their annual limitation
on cost sharing, or reduce other types of
cost sharing, if the required reduction
does not cause the AV of the QHP to
meet the specified level. We welcome
comment on this analysis and the
proposed reductions in the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing for
2018.
We note that for 2018, as described in
§ 156.135(d), States are permitted to
submit for approval by HHS Statespecific datasets for use as the standard
population to calculate AV. The
deadline for submitting a dataset for the
2018 plan year is September 1, 2016.53
53 The annual deadline for submitting State
specific data for the actuarial value calculator was
announced August 15, 2014. See https://
www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-andGuidance/Downloads/final-state-avc-guidance.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61510
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 15—REDUCTIONS IN MAXIMUM ANNUAL LIMITATION ON COST SHARING FOR 2018
Reduced maximum
annual limitation
on cost sharing for
self-only coverage
for 2018
Eligibility category
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Individuals eligible for cost-sharing reductions under § 155.305(g)(2)(i) (that is, 100–150 percent
of FPL) .........................................................................................................................................
Individuals eligible for cost-sharing reductions under § 155.305(g)(2)(ii) (that is, 150–200 percent of FPL) .................................................................................................................................
Individuals eligible for cost-sharing reductions under § 155.305(g)(2)(iii) (that is, 200–250 percent of FPL) .................................................................................................................................
c. Levels of Coverage: Bronze Plans
(§ 156.140)
Section 2707(a) of the PHS Act and
section 1302 of the Affordable Care Act
direct issuers of non-grandfathered
health insurance in the individual and
small group markets, including QHPs, to
ensure that plans meet a level of
coverage specified in section 1302(d)(1)
of the Affordable Care Act. A plan’s
level of coverage, referred to as the
plan’s actuarial value, is determined on
the basis of the essential health benefits
provided to a standard population.
Section 1302(d)(1) of the Affordable
Care Act requires the level of coverage
for a bronze plan to have an AV of 60
percent, a silver plan to have an AV of
70 percent; a gold plan to have an AV
of 80 percent; and a platinum plan to
have an AV of 90 percent. In addition,
section 1302(d)(3) states that the
Secretary is to develop guidelines to
provide for a de minimis variation in
the actuarial valuations used in
determining the level of coverage of a
plan to account for differences in
actuarial estimates. Currently,
§ 156.140(c) permits a de minimis
variation of +/¥2 percentage points.54
All plans subject to the annual
limitation on cost sharing at section
1302(c) of the Affordable Care Act have
a minimum level of generosity that
limits the lowest AV that a plan can
achieve. For instance, a plan with a
deductible of $7,350 that is equal to the
annual limitation on cost sharing of
$7,350 (which is the proposed 2018
annual limitation on cost sharing) with
no services covered until the deductible
and annual limitation on cost sharing
are met, other than preventive services
required to be covered without cost
sharing under section 2713 of the PHS
Act and 45 CFR 147.130, has an AV of
58.54 percent based on the draft 2018
AV Calculator. Because of the annual
limitation on cost sharing, the AV for
54 Under § 156.400, the de minimis variation for
a silver plan variation means a single percentage
point.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
this type of plan is within the de
minimis range of a bronze level of
coverage. This type of plan does not
have first dollar coverage (except for
certain required preventive services),
and is not a HDHP under 26 U.S.C.
223(c)(2) eligible for use with a health
savings account because the annual
limit on cost sharing under the plan is
likely higher than the annual out of
pocket expense limit for HDHPs for
2018. Furthermore, the bronze plan
described above is less generous than a
catastrophic plan, because a
catastrophic plan is required by section
1302(e)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act
and § 156.155(a)(4) to provide at least
three primary care visits before reaching
the deductible.
We note that in future recalibrations
of the AV Calculator, if claims costs
increase faster than the annual
limitation on cost sharing, issuers’
flexibility in designing different bronze
plans may be reduced. In order to
address this difficulty in designing
bronze plans that are at least as
generous as catastrophic plans and meet
the AV requirements using future AV
Calculators, we propose to permit a
broader de minimis range for bronze
plans. The purpose of the current de
minimis variation of +/¥ 2 percentage
points is to give issuers the flexibility to
set cost-sharing rates while ensuring
consumers can easily compare plans of
similar generosity. Thus, the de minimis
range is intended to allow plans to float
within a reasonable range and is not
intended to freeze plan designs, which
could prevent innovation in the market.
However, we do recognize the unique
challenges that may be posed for bronze
plan designs under future AV
Calculators, and we therefore propose to
amend § 156.140(c) to increase the
allowable de minimis range for bronze
plans under certain circumstances.
Outside of HDHPs, which have
separate cost-sharing requirements,
under future AV Calculators, if actuarial
values increase significantly, bronze
plans may be required to limit the
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Reduced maximum
annual limitation
on cost sharing for
other than
self-only coverage
for 2018
$2,450
$4,900
2,450
4,900
5,850
11,700
services for which the plan pays before
the deductible is reached. Enrollment
data from the FFEs show that consumers
have a preference for plans that cover
and pay for services below the
deductible. Because we believe that the
Affordable Care Act did not intend for
bronze plans to be less generous than
catastrophic plans, which are required
to provide at least three primary care
visits before the deductible, we believe
that it is important to allow bronze
plans to retain at least one service before
the deductible. Therefore, through our
authority under section 1302(d)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act, which directs the
Secretary to develop guidelines to
provide for a de minimis variance in the
actuarial valuations used in determining
the level of coverage of a plan to
account for differences in actuarial
estimates, and section 1321(a)(1)(A) and
(D) of the Affordable Care Act, which
allows the Secretary to issue regulations
setting standards for meeting the
requirements for the establishment and
operation of Exchanges, as well as such
other requirements as the Secretary
determines appropriate, we propose to
allow bronze plans that cover and pay
for at least one major service before the
deductible, other than preventive
services (some of which are required by
Federal laws and regulations to have
zero cost sharing) to have an allowable
variance in AV of ¥2 percentage points
and +5 percentage points. The purpose
of this proposal is to ensure flexibility
in bronze plan designs—particularly, to
permit the design of bronze plans that
will satisfy AV requirements and still
remain at least as generous as
catastrophic plans.
We therefore propose that the major
services covered and paid for by the
plan before the deductible that trigger
the increased de minimis range be
similar in scope and magnitude to the
three primary care visits before the
deductible required under catastrophic
coverage. To permit issuers the
flexibility to address enrollees’ varying
health needs, we propose that the major
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
services an issuer may elect to cover and
pay for before the deductible in order to
access the broader de minimis range be:
Primary care visits; specialist visits;
inpatient hospital services; generic,
specialty, or preferred branded drugs; or
emergency room services. We selected
these services as they can be used by
individuals with a wide variety of
conditions and they have a significant
AV impact. We solicit comments on this
proposal and the proposed definition of
major services, as well as comments on
whether any of these major services
should be excluded from the list or
other major services should added to
this list. We also solicit comments on
whether major services should be
defined based on all or some of the
service inputs listed in the AV
Calculator. This policy does not exempt
issuers from their obligations to comply
with mental health and substance use
disorder parity requirements, including
the rule that a deductible cannot be
applied to mental health or substance
use disorder benefits in a classification
unless it is no more restrictive than the
predominant deductible applicable to
substantially all medical/surgical
benefits in the same classification.
We also propose that the major
service covered and paid for before the
deductible must apply a reasonable
cost-sharing rate to the service to ensure
that the service is reasonably covered.
We also solicit comments on what
should be considered a reasonable costsharing rate for the major service. Lastly,
to ensure that a bronze plan can be as
least as generous as a catastrophic plan,
we propose that a bronze plan with at
least three primary care services under
the deductible would qualify as having
a major service under the deductible.
In addition to ensuring that bronze
plans can remain at least as generous as
catastrophic coverage, we believe it is
important to ensure that bronze plans
can remain eligible to be HDHPs that
may be paired with a health savings
account. Therefore, we propose that if a
bronze plan meets the Federal
requirements to be an HDHP, the
allowable variation in AV for those
plans is ¥2 percentage points and +5
percentage points. These HDHPs would
not be required to cover at least one
major service before the deductible,
outside of certain preventive services, to
meet the requirements for the extended
bronze plan de minimis range, but
instead, these plans would be required
to meet the requirements to be a HDHP
within the meaning of 26 U.S.C.
223(c)(2), including the annual out-ofpocket expense limit for HDHPs. We
solicit comments on this proposal.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
We also seek comment on the
proposed size of the de minimis range,
which is proposed as ¥2 percentage
points and +5 percentage points, and
whether the +5 percentage points
should be higher or lower. Based on our
initial analysis of 2017 bronze plans
submitted for QHP certification in the
FFEs, most 2017 bronze plans are either
HDHPs or are plans providing one of the
major services defined above before
deductible. We believe that this policy
will not be disruptive to the current
bronze plan market as it will allow more
flexibility in designing bronze plans
within the increased de minimis range
as well as allow more options for issuers
to leave 2017 cost-sharing structures
unchanged.
In connection with the release of the
proposed 2018 Payment Notice, we are
also releasing the draft versions of the
2018 AV Calculator, including the 2018
AV Calculator Methodology and User
Guide, for comment on the Center for
Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight Web site.55 As part of the
draft 2018 AV Calculator, we added the
option to calculate AV for a bronze plan
with an extended de minimis range to
align with this proposed policy. (We
note that under this option, the AV
Calculator will not automatically flag a
plan in the bronze extended de minimis
range that does not comply with the
requirement to cover one major service
before the deductible.) Our intention
will be to align the final 2018 AV
Calculator with any provisions that are
finalized through this rulemaking.
d. Application to Stand-Alone Dental
Plans Inside the Exchange (§ 156.150)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
finalized § 156.150(a), which establishes
a formula to increase the annual
limitation on cost sharing for standalone dental plans. Specifically, we
finalized that for plan years beginning
after 2017, the annual limitation for an
SADP for one covered child is $350
increased by the percentage increase of
the consumer price index (CPI) for
dental services for the year two years
prior to the applicable plan year over
the CPI for dental services for 2016; and,
the annual limitation for an SADP for
two or more covered children is twice
that.
The formula increases the dollar limit
for one covered child (currently set at
$350) by the percentage increase of the
CPI for dental services for the year two
years prior to the applicable plan year
55 The draft 2018 AV Calculator and Methodology
will be posted under the ‘‘Plan Management’’
section of CCIIO’s Web site at: https://
www.cms.gov/cciio/resources/regulations-andguidance/.
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61511
over the CPI for 2016. For plan year
2018, the percentage increase of the CPI
for dental services for the two years
prior to the applicable plan year would
be equal to the CPI for 2016, resulting
in a zero percent increase for plan year
2018. Therefore, for plan year 2018, the
dental annual limitation on cost sharing
would be $350 for one child and $700
for one or more children. The annual
limitation on cost sharing for plan year
2019 will be addressed in the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the 2019 benefit year.
3. Qualified Health Plan Minimum
Certification Standards
a. QHP Issuer Participation Standards
(§ 156.200)
Section 156.200(c)(1) implements
section 1301(a)(1)(C)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act to require as part of
QHP participation standards that each
QHP issuer offer at least one QHP in the
silver coverage level and at least one
QHP in the gold coverage level.
As evidenced by QHP application
submissions to the FFEs, QHP issuers
have generally interpreted this
requirement to apply at the service area
level, as opposed to at the Exchange
level, meaning that an issuer must offer
at least one QHP in the silver coverage
level and at least one QHP in the gold
coverage level throughout each service
area in which it will offer a QHP
through the Exchange (that is, one QHP
that has an AV of 70 percent and one
QHP that has an AV of 80 percent, plus
or minus two percentage points). If the
requirement were to be interpreted at
the Exchange level, a QHP issuer could
be in technical compliance with the
requirement by offering one QHP in the
silver coverage level and at least one
QHP in the gold coverage level in a very
limited service area, and not offer such
coverage through the Exchange in a
meaningful way. We believe that the
Affordable Care Act did not intend to
allow an issuer to offer a silver and gold
QHP through the Exchange in merely
one service area in a State, while
offering other products through the
Exchange, such as bronze or
catastrophic QHPs, in other service
areas. The proposal seeks to eliminate
the possibility of such gaming.
Provisions of the Affordable Care Act
sought to ensure an adequate choice of
QHPs and coverage to consumers. We
are proposing this change to ensure that
consumers have an adequate choice of
QHPs at different coverage levels.
Further, the Affordable Care Act also
assumed calculation of the advance
payment of the premium tax credit
based on the availability of a second
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61512
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
lowest cost silver plan. As such, we
propose to modify our regulations to
more accurately align with QHP issuer
practice and our interpretation of the
intention of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 1311(c)(1) and 1321(a)(1)(A)
and (B) of the Affordable Care Act
provide the Secretary of HHS with the
authority to establish certification
criteria for QHPs and Exchanges.
Therefore, we are proposing to require
QHP issuers to offer at least one silver
and one gold coverage level QHP
through the Exchange throughout each
service area in which the issuer offers
coverage through the Exchange. The
offering of both silver and gold level
QHPs is important to ensure adequate
choice to Exchange consumers, as well
as to ensure that a second lowest cost
silver plan is available for calculating
advance payments of the premium tax
credit for consumers. We further clarify
that an issuer can meet this standard by
offering a multi-State plan in both silver
coverage and gold coverage levels
throughout each service area in which it
offers other QHPs through an Exchange.
We seek to establish this policy by
proposing amendments to existing
paragraph (c)(1).
Specifically, we propose to amend
paragraph (c)(1) to require a QHP issuer
to offer through the Exchange at least
one QHP in the silver coverage level and
at least one QHP in the gold coverage
level, as described in § 156.140,
throughout each service area in which it
offers coverage through the Exchange.
This added specificity will ensure that
issuers applying for certification of their
QHPs offer a silver and gold plan
throughout each service area in which
they offer coverage through the
Exchange.
In the 2014 Payment Notice, in order
to help ensure that qualified employers
and qualified employees enrolling
through an FF–SHOP are offered a
robust set of QHP choices, we finalized
a policy at § 156.200(g) under which an
individual market FFE will certify a
QHP only if the QHP issuer (or an issuer
in the same issuer group) offers through
the FF–SHOP of the State at least one
QHP in the silver coverage level and at
least one QHP in the gold coverage
level, unless no issuer in the issuer
group has at least a 20 percent share of
the small group market share in the
State, based on earned premiums. This
policy is intended to leverage issuers’
participation in the FFEs to promote
fuller issuer participation in the FF–
SHOPs, particularly in the initial years
of the FF–SHOPs. We indicated in the
preamble of the 2014 Payment Notice,
in response to a commenter who
suggested we reevaluate the policy in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
two years, that we would evaluate the
effectiveness of the tying provision on
an ongoing basis.
We now seek comment, based on
feedback from stakeholders, on whether
the policy at § 156.200(g) is still
necessary or appropriate in the FF–
SHOPs. We did not finalize this policy
to apply to State-based SHOPs, nor are
we aware of any State-based SHOPs that
have implemented a similar policy. We
are also cognizant that the policy may
be discouraging issuer participation on
the individual market FFEs. We
therefore seek comment on whether we
should eliminate this policy for the FF–
SHOPs, for plan years beginning on or
after January 1, 2018.
We recognize that eliminating the
SHOP participation provision could
have the effect of reducing FF–SHOP
issuer participation in States, and seek
comment on the implications for small
businesses and how to accommodate
such an effect. For example, in such a
circumstance, in consideration of the
ongoing investments that would be
required to maintain the FF–SHOPs,
including for premium aggregation
services, we are considering providing
for elimination of enrollment through
FF–SHOP Web sites and providing for
alternative means of enrollment into
SHOP QHPs, either in States that would
be particularly affected by this change
or in all FF–SHOPs. An FF–SHOP Web
site would still be maintained,
consistent with section 1311(d)(4)(C) of
the Affordable Care Act, but would not
support online enrollment, except
perhaps for the continuation of services
for existing groups in the FF–SHOP
through the end of any plan year that
began before January 1, 2018. In
addition, we seek comment on how
entities such as web-brokers or third
party administrators could help to
facilitate enrollment in available SHOP
QHPs. We seek comment on what other
regulatory provisions would need to be
modified or eliminated in such a
circumstance, and on whether
provisions relating to the operation of
enrollment through a SHOP Web site
should generally be optional at the
election of the Exchanges, including
State-based SHOPs.
b. Network Adequacy Standards
(§ 156.230)
At § 156.230, we established the
minimum criteria for network adequacy
that issuers must meet to have plans
certified as QHPs, including SADPs, in
accordance with the Secretary’s
authority in section 1311(c)(1)(B) of the
Affordable Care Act. Included at
§ 156.230(a)(2) is the requirement that
all issuers maintain a network that is
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
sufficient in number and types of
providers to assure that all services will
be accessible without unreasonable
delay. Section 156.230(b) sets forth
standards for access to provider
directories requiring issuers to publish
an up-to-date, accurate, and complete
provider directory for plan years
beginning on or after January 1, 2016.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, HHS
finalized a policy to provide
information about QHP network breadth
on HealthCare.gov in order to assist
consumers with plan selection. For the
2017 benefit year, we intend to pilot a
network breadth indicator in certain
States on HealthCare.gov to denote a
QHP’s relative network coverage.56 HHS
will make this network breadth
classification available to consumers in
those States at the point of plan
comparison. The results of the pilot will
determine if HHS expands the pilot to
more States for 2018. The specifics of
how the network breadth indicator is
calculated are described in the Final
2017 Letter to Issuers in the Federallyfacilitated Marketplaces.57
For the 2018 plan year, HHS is
considering whether to incorporate
more specificity into these indicators,
and, in particular, how to identify for
consumers whether a particular plan is
offered as part of an integrated delivery
system. For integrated delivery systems,
the breadth of the network for a plan as
calculated through the network breadth
methodology may not accurately
describe the ability of a consumer to
access providers relative to consumers
enrolled in plans that are not part of an
integrated delivery system in the same
county. We propose to incorporate this
specificity into the network information
displayed for plan year 2018 in all
States where network breadth is
displayed in 2018.
To define which plans utilize an
integrated delivery system, we propose
to use the alternate essential community
provider standard in 45 CFR 156.235(b).
Thus, we would identify a plan as part
of an integrated delivery system if it
provides a majority of covered
professional services through physicians
employed by the issuer, or through a
single contracted medical group. If HHS
finalizes this policy, we would provide
additional details in the 2018 Letter to
56 Network Breadth Pilot (August 19, 2016),
available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/NetworkClassification-Pilot-Guidance-81916.pdf.
57 Final 2017 Letter to Issuers in the Federally
facilitated Marketplaces (Feb. 29, 2016) available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulationsand-Guidance/Downloads/Final-2017-Letter-toIssuers-2-29-16.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Issuers in the Federally-facilitated
Marketplace.
We seek comment on all aspects of
this proposal. In particular, we seek
comment on whether we should make
such a differentiation, and how best to
indicate that a plan has an integrated
delivery system—including on whether
we should provide additional
explanatory text to the current indicator
that the plan receives, or whether we
should establish a separate indicator.
We seek comment on what words to use
in either case to best convey the value
of this classification to consumers. We
also seek comment on our proposal to
identify integrated delivery systems by
using the alternate essential community
provider standard, and whether there
are plans that would not meet this
definition but are best categorized in
this group; and, if there is a continuum
of plan arrangements to consider with
respect to network integration, how best
to classify those plans and provide that
information to consumers.
Also, as a reminder, the requirement
established in the 2017 Payment Notice
at § 156.230(e) that QHP issuers count
an essential health benefit provided by
an out-of-network ancillary provider at
an in-network facility towards the innetwork annual limitation on cost
sharing for QHPs in certain
circumstances begins applying in
benefit year 2018. That is, if a QHP
enrollee received an EHB in an innetwork setting, such as an in-network
hospital, but as part of the provision of
the EHB the enrollee was charged outof-network cost sharing for an EHB
provided by an out-of-network ancillary
provider, that cost sharing would apply
towards the annual limitation on cost
sharing.
Alternatively, the plan could provide
a written notice to the enrollee by the
longer of when the issuer would
typically respond to a timely submitted
prior authorization request, or 48 hours
before the provision of the benefit. The
written notice would state that
additional costs may be incurred for the
EHB provided by an out-of-network
ancillary provider in an in-network
setting, including balance billing
charges, unless such costs are
prohibited under State law; and that any
additional charges may not count
toward the in-network annual limitation
on cost sharing. This alternative would
not be available if the issuer does not
meet the timeframe established in
regulation. We are proposing that this
policy applies to QHPs, both on and off
Exchanges, regardless of whether the
QHP covers out-of-network services,
and seek comment on other policy
changes that could limit ‘‘surprise bills’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
for consumers. As stated in the 2017
Payment Notice, we intend to continue
to monitor these situations, including
issuers’ timely compliance with this
provision, to consider whether further
rulemaking is needed.
c. Essential Community Providers
(§ 156.235)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
finalized that, for QHP certification
cycles beginning with the 2018 benefit
year, HHS would credit issuers for
multiple contracted or employed fulltime equivalent (FTE) practitioners at a
single location, up to the number of
available FTE practitioners reported to
HHS by the essential community
provider (ECP) facility through the ECP
petition process and published on the
HHS ECP list. As HHS conducts
additional provider outreach to collect
provider data necessary to implement a
methodology that would credit issuers
for multiple contracted or employed
full-time equivalent practitioners at a
single location, we propose in
§ 156.235(a)(2)(i) to continue the 2017
benefit year calculation methodology
that a plan applying for QHP
certification to be offered through a
Federally-facilitated Exchange must
demonstrate in its QHP application that
its network includes as participating
providers at least a minimum
percentage, as specified by HHS, of
available ECPs in each plan’s service
area, with multiple providers at a single
location counting as a single ECP
toward both the available ECPs in the
plan’s service area and the issuer’s
satisfaction of the ECP participation
standard. Similarly, in § 156.235(b)(2)(i),
we propose to continue the 2017 benefit
year calculation methodology that a
plan described in § 156.235(a)(5)
applying for QHP certification to be
offered through a Federally-facilitated
Exchange demonstrate in its QHP
application that the number of its
providers that are located in Health
Professional Shortage Areas or five-digit
zip codes in which 30 percent or more
of the population falls below 200
percent of the Federal Poverty Line
satisfies a minimum percentage,
specified by HHS, of available ECPs in
the plan’s service area with multiple
providers at a single location counting
as a single ECP. We seek comment on
these proposals. We are also considering
changes to the counting of hospital ECPs
for the 2019 benefit year and seek
comment on the best approach for
measuring hospital participation.
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61513
d. Enrollment Process for Qualified
Individuals (§ 156.265)
We propose an amendment to
§ 156.265 requiring differential display
of standardized options. A discussion of
the proposed provision is contained in
the preamble discussion regarding
§ 155.220, which concerns standards for
agents and brokers using the direct
enrollment process.
We solicit comments on this proposal.
e. Issuer Participation for the Full Plan
Year (§ 156.272)
We propose adding § 156.272 to
provide as a condition of certification
that QHP issuers in all individual
market Exchanges must make their
QHPs available for enrollment through
the Exchange for the full plan year for
which the plan was certified, unless a
basis for suppression under § 156.815
applies. We also propose that issuers in
all SHOP Exchanges must make their
QHPs available for enrollment through
the SHOP Exchange for the full plan
year for which the plan was certified,
unless a basis for suppression under
§ 156.815 applies. This requirement
would ensure that consumers enrolling
in the individual market during limited
open enrollment periods have the same
plan choice as those who enrolled
during open enrollment, and that
qualified employers and qualified
employees would have generally
consistent plan choices throughout the
plan year.
If this proposal is finalized, under our
existing civil money penalty authority at
§ 156.805(a)(1), QHP issuers in FFEs and
FF–SHOPs that do not comply with
§ 156.272(a) and (b) could be subject to
CMPs. (Issuers would not be subject to
CMPs if a basis for suppression under
§ 156.815 applies.) We also propose at
§ 156.272(c) that if an issuer fails to
comply with those sections, HHS could,
at its discretion, preclude that issuer
from participating in the FFEs and FF–
SHOPs, for up to the two succeeding
years.
We seek comments on this proposal,
including the applicability of this
section to all Exchanges and the
potential use of CMPs for QHP issuers
in the FFEs and FF–SHOPs.
f. Non-Certification and Decertification
of QHPs (§ 156.290)
Currently, under § 156.290(b), when a
QHP issuer elects to not seek
certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle with the
Exchange, it is required to provide
notification to enrollees. However, a
QHP issuer is not required to provide
notification to enrollees when it seeks
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61514
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
but is denied certification for a
subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle by the Exchange. We propose to
require that QHP issuers provide such
notice within 30 days of the date of an
Exchange’s denial of certification for a
subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle. Requiring notice in a timely
manner would allow enrollees to be
prepared to participate in the upcoming
open enrollment period. We also
propose to amend the section title from
Non-renewal and decertification of
QHPs to Non-certification and
Decertification of QHPs, and revise the
paragraph headings for § 156.290(a) and
(b) to reflect that QHPs are certified on
an annual basis rather than renewed.
We seek comment on these proposals.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
g. Other Considerations
Increasingly, the Exchanges serve as
laboratories for innovations through
which QHPs develop new ways to
provide quality, cost-effective health
care that responds to consumers’
preferences and needs. We have heard
from issuers about innovations around
paying for high-quality care, working
with health care professionals to
encourage coordinated care,
standardizing benefits in ways that
promote high-value care, and using data
analytics to engage with consumers in
creative ways that improve their health
and bolster retention. We also continue
to seek to foster market-driven programs
in the Exchanges that can improve the
management of costs and care, and that
provide consumers with quality, personcentered coverage. As we stated in the
2017 Payment Notice, we believe that
innovative issuer, provider, Exchange,
and local programs or strategies can
successfully promote and manage care,
in a manner that contributes to better
health outcomes and lower rates while
creating important differentiation
opportunities for market participants.
We seek comment on ways in which we
can facilitate such innovation, and in
particular on whether there are
regulations or policies in place that we
should modify for 2018 in order to
better meet the goals of affordability,
quality, and access to care.
4. Eligibility and Enrollment Standards
for Qualified Health Plan Issuers on
State-Based Exchanges on the Federal
Platform (§ 156.350)
In the 2017 Payment Notice we
established, in § 156.350, that in order
to participate in an SBE–FP, a QHP
issuer must comply with HHS
regulations and guidance pertaining to
issuer eligibility and enrollment
functions as if the issuer were an issuer
of a QHP in an FFE. These regulations
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
and guidance include those
requirements specified in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (3) of § 156.350, which
currently include § 156.285(c)(8)(iii).
For the same reasons that we propose to
add new paragraph § 155.200(f)(4), we
also propose to amend paragraph
§ 156.350(a)(2) to specify that, in order
to participate in an SBE–FP using the
Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions, a QHP issuer would be
required to send enrollment
reconciliation files on at least a monthly
basis according to a process, timeline,
and file format established by the FF–
SHOPs, consistent with § 156.285(c)(5).
Issuers in States operating an SBE–FP
for SHOP enrollment functions would
be required to follow the process
applicable in the FF–SHOPs, as
described in § 156.285(c)(5). This
amendment would become effective
with the effective date of the final rule.
We seek comment on this proposal.
5. Reconciliation of the Cost-Sharing
Reduction Portion of Advance Payments
Discrepancies and Appeals
(§ 156.430(h))
As implemented in the regulations at
45 CFR 156.430, HHS reconciles the
cost-sharing reduction portion of
advance payment amounts by
comparing what the enrollee in a costsharing reduction plan variation
actually paid in cost sharing to what the
enrollee would have paid if enrolled in
a standard plan. In order to facilitate
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
to the actual amount provided for
enrollees in cost-sharing reduction
variation plans, issuers must report the
amount they paid for each eligible
medical claim, the amount enrollees
paid for the claims, and the amount of
cost sharing that would have been paid
for the same services under the
corresponding standard plan. This
information is used to reconcile the
actual cost-sharing amounts provided
for each policy in a plan variation to the
estimated payments that the issuer had
been paid in advance. As set forth at
§ 156.410(d)(3), issuers are not
reimbursed for any cost-sharing
reductions provided to enrollees who
were erroneously assigned to a plan
variation more generous than the one for
which they are eligible. As set forth at
§ 155.430(d)(4), any cost-sharing
reductions, to the extent thereby or
otherwise erroneously provided (such as
cost-sharing reductions for non-EHB or
non-covered services or cost-sharing
reductions provided after a policy has
been terminated) must be excluded from
the reconciliation process.
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
In order to ensure the integrity of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
for the 2014 and 2015 benefit years, we
implemented automatic system checks
that validated data at the time of data
submission, for example matching QHP
or subscriber IDs to HHS data for a
benefit year, and verifying the issuer
used the applicable methodology and
submitted applicable attestations. This
resulted in the rejection of some costsharing reduction amounts submitted by
issuers. Additionally, some issuers were
unable to prepare complete data files in
time to meet the cost-sharing reduction
data submission deadline. In order to
provide issuers with an opportunity to
address potential errors that would have
directly impacted the calculation of
their reconciled cost-sharing reduction
amounts, HHS implemented a process
for reporting data discrepancies for the
2014 and 2015 benefit year.58
We propose adding new paragraph
(h)(1) to § 156.430 to require that any
issuer that reports a discrepancy and
seeks to dispute the notification of the
amount of reconciliation of the costsharing reduction portion of advance
payments, in the manner set forth by
HHS, must report the discrepancy to
HHS within 30 calendar days of
notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
as described in § 156.430(e).
We further propose to codify in
§ 156.430(h)(2) that an issuer may
appeal the amount of reconciliation of
the cost-sharing reduction portion of
advance payments, under the process
set forth in § 156.1220 of this
subchapter, only if it has submitted a
discrepancy report for its cost-sharing
reduction reconciled amounts for the
applicable benefit year. We note that
irrespective of whether an issuer has
filed a discrepancy report under
§ 156.430, a request for reconsideration
under § 156.1220 may only be filed to
contest a processing error by HHS,
HHS’s incorrect application of the
relevant methodology, or HHS’s
mathematical error, as required under
§ 156.1220.
We seek comment on these proposals.
58 On June 23, 2016 CMS released FAQs and
technical specifications on the discrepancy
resolution process for issuers to follow to report a
discrepancy related to reconciliation of the costsharing reduction portion of advance payments.
The technical specifications are available on the
Center for Consumer Information and Insurance
Oversight Web site: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/
Cost-Sharing-Reduction-ReconciliationDiscrepancy-Resolution-Inbound-Specification.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
6. Compliance Reviews of QHP Issuers
in Federally-Facilitated Exchanges
(§ 156.715)
At § 156.715, we previously
established that a QHP issuer is subject
to compliance reviews to ensure
ongoing compliance with Exchange
requirements and standards. In
§ 156.715(b), we require QHP issuers to
make available to HHS records that
pertain to their activities in an FFE. In
the first few years of FFE operations, the
vast majority of QHP issuers were
responsive and cooperative with the
compliance reviews. QHP issuers
generally submitted requested
documents on time and were responsive
to requests for additional information.
However, a few QHP issuers were less
responsive to HHS, which resulted in
unnecessary delays of the compliance
reviews. We propose to amend this
section to specify HHS’s authority to
impose remedies authorized under
subpart I of part 156 in situations where
the QHP issuer is non-responsive or
uncooperative with the compliance
reviews authorized under this section.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
7. Qualified Health Plan Issuer
Responsibilities
a. Administrative Appeals (§ 156.1220)
As discussed in the preamble to
§ 153.630, we propose adding
paragraphs (a)(1)(vii) and (viii) to
§ 156.1220, providing an administrative
appeals right to issuers to contest only
a processing error by HHS, HHS’s
incorrect application of the relevant
methodology, or HHS’s mathematical
error with respect to the findings of a
second validation audit as a result of
risk adjustment data validation; or the
calculation of a risk score error rate as
a result of risk adjustment data
validation, respectively. Also as
discussed in the preamble to §§ 153.630
and 156.430(h), we propose requiring
issuers to file a report for discrepancies
related to risk adjustment data
validation and discrepancies related the
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments,
if the issue is identifiable, prior to filing
a request for reconsideration as set forth
at § 156.1220. As such, we propose to
amend § 156.1220(a)(4)(ii), to provide
that, notwithstanding § 156.1220(a)(1), a
reconsideration with respect to a
processing error by HHS, HHS’s
incorrect application of the relevant
methodology, or HHS’s mathematical
error may be requested only if, to the
extent the issue could have been
previously identified, the issuer notified
HHS of the dispute through the
applicable process for reporting a
discrepancy set forth in § 153.630(d)(2),
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
§ 153.710(d)(2), or § 156.430(h)(1), and
the dispute has not been resolved.
Because risk adjustment payments
and charges for the 2015 benefit year
will not be adjusted as a result of the
risk adjustment data validation process,
we do not believe an administrative
appeal right is necessary for the 2015
benefit year. Therefore, we propose that
the first year of risk adjustment data
validation appeals would begin with the
2016 benefit year, which is the first year
that risk adjustment data validation will
affect the amount of risk adjustment
payments and charges. As such, we
propose to limit the proposed new
§ 156.1220(a)(1)(vii) and (viii)
(specifying that an issuer may file a
request for reconsideration under this
section to contest a processing error by
HHS, HHS’s incorrect application of the
relevant methodology, or HHS’s
mathematical error, with respect to the
findings of a second validation audit or
the calculation of a risk score error rate
as a result of risk adjustment data
validation) to administrative appeals
with respect to risk adjustment data for
the 2016 benefit year and beyond.
We propose to amend § 156.1220(a)(2)
regarding the materiality threshold for
filing a request for reconsideration to
include a reference to the administrative
appeals related to the risk adjustment
data validation process. We also
propose to amend § 156.1220(a)(3)(ii) to
add a reference to risk adjustment data
validation and to provide that issuers
have 30 calendar days to request
reconsideration from the date of the
notification of the findings of a second
validation audit and the calculation of
a risk score error rate as a result of risk
adjustment data validation. We believe
30 calendar days is sufficient for issuers
to review the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate as a result of risk
adjustment data validation and to
submit a request for reconsideration. We
seek comment on these timeframes and
the appeal proposal.
b. Direct Enrollment With the QHP
Issuer in a Manner Considered To Be
Through the Exchange (§ 156.1230)
In this rule, we proposed a number of
modifications and new requirements in
§ 155.220 which would apply to webbrokers using the direct enrollment
channel. We propose to add a number
of these standards to §§ 156.265 and
156.1230(b) so that they also apply to
issuers using direct enrollment on a
Federally-facilitated Exchange.
Specifically, in § 156.1230, we propose
to: (1) Specify that HHS may
immediately suspend the QHP issuer’s
ability to transact information with the
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61515
Exchange if HHS discovers
circumstances that pose unacceptable
risk to Exchange operations or Exchange
information technology systems until
the incident or breach is remedied or
sufficiently mitigated to HHS’s
satisfaction; (2) require QHP issuers to
demonstrate operational readiness and
compliance with applicable
requirements prior to their Web sites
being used to complete QHP selections;
and (3) require QHP issuers to provide
consumers with correct information
regarding FFEs, QHPs offered through
the FFEs and insurance affordability
programs, and refrain from marketing or
conduct that is misleading, coercive, or
discriminatory. A more detailed
discussion of these proposed provisions
is contained in the preamble discussion
regarding § 155.220.
We solicit comments on these
proposals and specifically seek
comment on whether direct enrollment
with a QHP issuer should be permitted
for enrollments through all SBE–FPs, or
at the option of SBE–FPs.
c. Other Notices (§ 156.1256)
Section 156.1256 requires health
insurance issuers offering coverage
through an FFE or an SBE–FP to notify
enrollees of material plan or benefit
display errors under certain
circumstances. We propose to change
the paragraph cross-referenced in
§ 156.1256 from § 155.420(d)(4) to
§ 155.420(d)(12) to reflect our proposal
to codify in § 155.420(d)(12) the special
enrollment period for material plan or
benefit display errors. Since the noticing
requirement in § 156.1256 is limited to
material plan or benefit display errors
and resulting special enrollment
periods, proposed § 155.420(d)(12) is a
more appropriate reference for this
section. We also propose to make some
minor non-substantive changes to the
regulation text. We seek comments on
this proposal.
J. Part 157—Employer Interactions With
Exchanges and Shop Participation
For a discussion of the provisions of
this proposed rule related to part 157,
please see the preamble to § 155.725.
K. Part 158—Issuer Use of Premium
Revenue: Reporting and Rebate
Requirements
1. Newer Experience (§ 158.121)
a. Deferred Reporting of Newer Business
Section 2718(c) of the PHS Act
provides that, subject to the certification
of the Secretary, the NAIC is to establish
standardized medical loss ratio
methodologies that take into
consideration (among other things) the
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61516
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
special circumstances of newer plans.
Consistent with the NAIC’s
recommendation to HHS,59 the MLR
December 1, 2010 interim final rule (75
FR 74863) allows issuers to defer
reporting of experience of policies
newly issued and with fewer than 12
months of experience until the
following reporting year, if such policies
contribute to 50 percent or more of the
issuer’s total earned premium for the
MLR reporting year. As explained in the
interim final rule, the rationale for
deferring experience of newly issued
policies is that claims experience can be
substantially lower than the premium
revenue from those policies during the
year in which the coverage is issued
(although this may occur to a lesser
extent in the current environment than
prior to introduction of the Affordable
Care Act market reforms), and could
create a barrier to the entry of new
issuers into a market.
However, the NAIC’s
recommendation was developed in
2010, prior to implementation of many
Affordable Care Act market reforms. As
a result, the current MLR regulation
allows issuers to defer reporting the
experience of new policies that were in
effect for fewer than 12 months, but not
for those in effect for the full 12 months.
This limitation does not account for the
fact that beginning in 2014, issuers of
non-grandfathered health insurance
coverage in the individual and small
group markets generally must offer
coverage for a consecutive 12-month
period (which may be on a calendar
year basis or otherwise). Consequently,
issuers entering these markets in
substantial part in 2014 or later whose
policies contribute to 50 percent or
more of the issuer’s total earned
premium for the MLR reporting year are
unable to defer reporting of this new
business for MLR purposes because
such coverage has a full 12 months of
experience. Therefore, to align MLR
reporting with the requirement that nongrandfathered coverage generally must
provide coverage for a consecutive 12month period, we propose to modify
§ 158.121 to allow issuers to defer, for
MLR purposes, reporting of data for
newer experience if 50 percent or more
of the issuer’s total earned premium for
the MLR reporting year is attributable to
newly issued policies with 12 full
59 National Association of Insurance
Commissioners—Model Regulation Service,
Regulation for Uniform Definitions and
Standardized Methodologies for Calculation of the
Medical Loss Ratio for Plan Years 2011, 2012 and
2013 per Section 2718(b) of the Public Health
Service Act (Oct 27, 2010), available athttps://
www.naic.org/documents/committees_ex_mlr_reg_
asadopted.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
months of experience, rather than
policies with less than 12 months of
experience. We seek comments on this
proposal.
2. Rebating Premium if the Applicable
Medical Loss Ratio Standard Is Not Met
(§§ 158.232, 158.240)
a. Limit on Rebate Liability
Section 2718(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the PHS
Act requires, beginning on January 1,
2014, the MLR to be calculated as an
average of 3 consecutive years of
experience. When an established
issuer’s MLR falls below the applicable
MLR standard in a given year, the 3-year
averaging spreads the actual payment of
the rebate over the period of 3 years.
This allows issuers to offset low and
high MLRs within any 3-year period,
enabling issuers to potentially pay a
lower overall rebate. However, issuers
that newly enter the market in 2014 or
later are only able to calculate their first
two MLRs based on 1 or 2 years of
experience. Consequently, the
experience of the first 1 or 2 years can
have a disproportionate and overlapping
impact on such issuers’ average MLRs in
their first 3 years in the market, and the
3-year averaging required by section
2718(b)(1)(B)(ii) can lead to distorted
MLR calculations and could be a barrier
to the entry of new issuers into a
market. As a result of the 3-year
averaging rule, a new issuer that has an
MLR that is initially low but increases
within the first 3 years in the market
may end up paying a higher total rebate
over those initial 3 years than an
established issuer with stable
enrollment with the same experience in
each of those 3 years. In addition, the 3year averaging rule can have a similar
impact on an established issuer that
rapidly and significantly expands its
presence in the market.
We note that only a narrow subset of
issuers are affected in this way by 3-year
averaging: Specifically, new issuers and
established issuers that experience rapid
growth (either by entering a new market
or rapidly and significantly expanding
their presence in an existing market)
and whose MLR falls below the
standard in one year and increases
within the following 2 years.
Consistent with the requirement
under section 2718(c) of the PHS Act to
design standardized MLR
methodologies that take into
consideration (among other things) the
special circumstances of smaller and
newer plans, we propose to amend
§§ 158.240 and 158.232 to mitigate the
impact of 3-year averaging on these
issuers and thereby reduce barriers to
entry and promote competition in
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
health insurance markets. Specifically,
we propose to modify § 158.240 by
adding a new paragraph (d) and
redesignating the existing paragraphs (d)
and (e) as paragraphs (e) and (f),
respectively, to provide flexibility to
limit in appropriate cases an issuer’s
total rebate liability payable with
respect to a given calendar year. We also
propose conforming amendments to
paragraph (c) to recognize the proposed
new flexibility under new paragraph (d).
Under this proposal, if an issuer elects
this flexibility, the maximum singleyear rebate liability attributable to a
given calendar year would be limited to
no more than the amount determined
based on the issuer’s MLR calculated
using only that year’s experience. In
these circumstances, we propose to
adjust the maximum rebate liability
attributable to a given calendar year in
each of the two subsequent reporting
years to reflect restatement of claims
incurred in that calendar year as of
March 31 following each of those 2
subsequent reporting years. The
restatement of incurred claims would
ensure that the rebate liability with
respect to the calendar year in question
is corrected either upward or
downward, as appropriate, in the two
subsequent years in order to implement
the 3-year averaging requirement.
Similarly, we propose that an issuer that
elects this option would have to adjust
the maximum rebate liability
attributable to a given calendar year in
the 2 subsequent reporting years to
reflect the credibility adjustment
applicable in each of those 2 subsequent
reporting years. That is, the rebate
liability attributable to year 1 would be
recalculated in year 2 using a credibility
adjustment based on the sum of lifeyears for years 1 and 2. This approach
is consistent with the manner in which
the credibility adjustment was applied
with respect to all issuers when the
MLR requirements were first
implemented. We seek comments on
this proposal.
We also propose that for an issuer that
elects this option, for each reporting
year, after the issuer recalculates the
maximum rebate liability with respect
to each calendar year in the aggregation
using restated incurred claims and
updated credibility adjustment (as
applicable), the outstanding rebate
liability with respect to each year in the
aggregation would be determined by
reducing the maximum rebate liability
with respect to that year by any rebate
payments made toward it in the two
prior years (as applicable). Any rebate
payable for a given reporting year would
be applied toward the outstanding
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
rebate liability of the earliest year in the
relevant aggregation first. If the rebate
calculated for the reporting year based
on a multi-year average MLR (2- or 3year average, as applicable) exceeds the
combined outstanding rebate liability
for all calendar years included in the
aggregation, then under our proposal,
the actual rebate payable by the issuer
for that reporting year would be limited
to the amount of the combined
outstanding rebate liability. Conversely,
if the total rebate calculated for the
reporting year based on a multi-year
average MLR is lower than the
combined outstanding rebate liability
for all years included in the aggregation,
then we propose that the actual rebate
payable by the issuer for that reporting
year be limited to the amount calculated
for the reporting year based on a multiyear average MLR. Therefore, our
proposal would generally prevent the
total rebate amount paid by an issuer
with respect to any given calendar year
over the course of 3 consecutive years
from exceeding the rebate amount
resulting from the ratio of the issuer’s
incurred claims and quality
improvement activity expenses to the
issuer’s after-tax earned premium for
that calendar year, with applicable
adjustments, falling below the
applicable MLR standard. At the same
time, our proposal is designed to benefit
only new issuers and established issuers
that experience rapid growth whose
MLR falls below the standard in one
year and increases within the following
2 years. This is because the combined
outstanding rebate liability for all years
included in the aggregation will
generally equal or exceed the rebate
calculated for the reporting year based
on a 3-year average MLR for established
issuers that do not experience rapid
growth. Therefore, our proposed limit
on the rebate liability would not benefit
such issuers.
For a simplified illustration of our
proposal, suppose that a new, fullycredible individual market issuer
reports year 1 incurred claims and
quality improvement activity expenses
(QIA) of $500,000 and premium
adjusted for applicable taxes and fees of
$1,000,000 (and no other relevant
revenue or expenses relevant to the
MLR calculation); year 2 incurred
claims and QIA of $700,000 and aftertax premium of $1,000,000; and
incurred claims and QIA of $800,000
and after-tax premium of $1,000,000
thereafter. Under our proposal, the
rebate liability for year 1 would be
calculated as (80% ¥ $500,000/
$1,000,000) * $1,000,000 = $300,000;
and the issuer would consequently pay
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
a $300,000 rebate for year 1. Suppose
that after year 2, the issuer determines
that its year 1 incurred claims and QIA
were in fact $550,000 rather than
$500,000. The issuer’s 2-year average
MLR would equal ($550,000 +
$700,000)/($1,000,000 + $1,000,000) =
62.5% and the corresponding rebate
would equal (80% ¥ 62.5%) *
$1,000,000 = 175,000. Under our
proposal, the issuer’s preliminary MLR
with respect to year 1 as adjusted by the
newer incurred claims and QIA data
would be calculated as $550,000/
$1,000,000 = 55% and the
corresponding rebate liability as (80%
¥ 55%) * $1,000,000 = $250,000. The
preliminary MLR with respect to year 2
would be calculated as $700,000/
$1,000,000 = 70% and the
corresponding rebate liability as (80%
¥ 70%) * $1,000,000 = $100,000. The
$300,000 rebate initially paid for year 1
would be applied first against the year
1 rebate liability of $250,000, with the
remaining $50,000 applied against the
year 2 rebate liability of $100,000,
resulting in a combined outstanding
rebate liability of $250,000 + $100,000
¥ $300,000 = $50,000. Because the
combined outstanding rebate liability is
lower than the rebate based on the 2year average MLR, the rebate payable for
year 2 is limited to the lower amount,
or $50,000; whereas under the current
MLR regulations, the issuer would be
required to pay $175,000 in rebates for
year 2. In year 3, the rebate based on the
3-year average MLR would be $116,667,
while the combined outstanding rebate
liability would be zero, resulting in no
rebate payable for year 3.
In recognition of the fact that, as
discussed above, only a limited subset
of issuers may be disadvantaged by the
three-year averaging rule and would be
able to benefit from this proposal, we
propose to make the use of the rebate
liability limit optional for issuers. To
further facilitate application of this
proposal in the least burdensome
manner, as well as to address an
existing ambiguity regarding
applicability of the credibility
adjustment, we additionally propose to
clarify § 158.232 by defining the term
‘‘preliminary MLR’’ to refer to an MLR
calculated without applying any
credibility adjustment, and by explicitly
specifying instances where § 158.232 is
intended to refer to experience of a
single year, rather than 3 years. These
proposed amendments to § 158.232(d),
(e), and (f) will enable issuers that wish
to take advantage of the rebate liability
limit to rely on the single-year,
preliminary MLRs that issuers already
calculate as part of determining their
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61517
credibility adjustment, and minimize
the additional reporting associated with
calculating the outstanding rebate
liability if an issuer elects to exercise
the flexibility proposed in § 158.240(d).
We seek comments on all aspects of this
proposal.
IV. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget for review and approval.
This proposed rule contains information
collection requirements (ICRs) that are
subject to review by OMB. A description
of these provisions is given in the
following paragraphs with an estimate
of the annual burden, summarized in
Table 16. To fairly evaluate whether an
information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A)
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
requires that we solicit comment on the
following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues for the following
sections of this proposed rule that
contain ICRs. We generally used data
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to
derive average labor costs (including a
100 percent increase for fringe benefits
and overhead) for estimating the burden
associated with the ICRs.60
A. ICRs Regarding Upload of Risk
Adjustment Data (§ 153.610)
Under the HHS-operated risk
adjustment program, HHS uses a
distributed data collection approach for
enrollee-level enrollment, claims and
encounter data that reside on an issuer’s
dedicated data environment. Under
§ 153.710(a), an issuer of a risk
adjustment covered plan in a State
where HHS is operating the risk
adjustment or reinsurance program on
behalf of the State, as applicable, must
provide HHS, through the dedicated
data environment, access to enrollee60 See May 2015 Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Occupational Employment Statistics, National
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates at
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_stru.htm.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61518
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
level plan enrollment data, enrollee
claims data, and enrollee encounter
data, as specified by HHS. Under
§ 153.610(a), HHS is proposing that an
issuer must submit or make accessible
all required risk adjustment data for its
risk adjustment covered plans in
accordance with the risk adjustment
data collection approach established by
the State, or by HHS on behalf of the
State, including any data that is
‘‘protected health information’’ as that
term is defined at 45 CFR 160.103 for
purposes of recalibrating the HHS risk
adjustment model, in the form and
manner specified by HHS. This proposal
entails HHS sending a command to all
issuers’ EDGE servers that issuers must
execute, which would provide HHS a
dataset that does not identify the EDGE
server, plan, issuer, geographic rating
area, State, or enrollee, for purposes of
obtaining enrollee-level data upon
which we can recalibrate the HHS risk
adjustment models. Because this EDGE
report requires no new data elements
and only requires an issuer to execute
the command, we do not believe this
provision imposes additional burden on
issuers of risk adjustment covered plans
described under the information
collection currently approved under
OMB Control Number 0938–1155.
B. ICRs Regarding Data Validation
Requirements When HHS Operates Risk
Adjustment (§ 153.630)
Under § 153.630(b), an issuer that
offers at least one risk adjustment
covered plan in a State where HHS is
operating risk adjustment on behalf of
the State for the applicable benefit year
must have an initial validation audit
performed on its risk adjustment data.
The cost associated with this
requirement is the issuer’s time and
effort to provide HHS with source
claims, records, and enrollment
information to validate enrollee
demographic information for initial and
second validation audits and the
issuer’s cost to employ an independent
auditor to perform the initial validation
audit on a statistically valid sample of
enrollees. We estimate that each issuer
sample will consist of approximately
200 enrollees, and we anticipate that
this audit will affect approximately 825
issuers. Beginning with 2018 risk
adjustment data validation, HHS
proposes to require the review of paid
pharmacy claims for all sample
enrollees in the initial validation audit.
Based on 2015 EDGE reinsurance data,
we believe approximately half of all
enrollees have pharmacy claims, and of
those that do, we would expect
approximately six pharmacy claims per
enrollee. Therefore, we expect that it
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
would require 30 minutes for an auditor
(at a labor cost of $72 per hour) and cost
approximately $36 per enrollee to
validate paid pharmacy claims. We
assume that an initial validation audit
would be performed on 165,000
enrollees, with half of them, or 82,500
enrollees, having pharmacy claims.
Based on the information above, we
estimate that the total additional burden
per issuer for initial validation auditors
to review and validate paid pharmacy
claims would be 50 hours and cost
approximately $3,600. Therefore, for
825 issuers, the total annual burden of
conducting initial validation audits
would be 41,250 hours with an
equivalent cost of approximately $2.97
million. We will revise the information
collection currently approved under
OMB Control Number 0938–1155 with
an October 31, 2017 expiration date to
account for this additional burden.
C. ICR Regarding the Interim and Final
Discrepancy Reporting Processes for
Risk Adjustment Data Validation When
HHS Operates Risk Adjustment
(§ 153.630(d))
Under § 153.630(d)(1), we propose
that in the manner set forth by HHS, an
issuer must confirm the sample or file
a discrepancy report within 15 calendar
days to dispute the HHS risk adjustment
data validation sample set forth by HHS
in the HHS–RADV Final Reports. In
§ 153.630(d)(2), we propose that in the
manner set forth by HHS, an issuer may
file a discrepancy report within 30
calendar days to dispute the findings of
a second validation audit or the
calculation of a risk score error rate.
We estimate that 825 issuers of risk
adjustment covered plans would be
subject to this requirement, and that
issuers would review the HHS-risk
adjustment data validation final reports,
specifically the initial validation audit
sample set for the interim discrepancy
reporting process. For the final
discrepancy reporting process, set forth
in proposed § 153.630(d)(2), issuers
would review the results of the second
validation audit and the calculation of
a risk score error rate. On average, we
estimate that it would take a business
operations specialist (at an hourly labor
cost of $78) approximately 2 hours to
respond to an interim report and 6
hours to respond to the interim and
final discrepancy reporting process. The
total burden for each issuer would be 8
hours with an equivalent cost of $624.
Therefore, we estimate an aggregate
annual burden of 6,600 hours with an
equivalent cost of $514,800 for 825
issuers as a result of these requirements.
We will revise the information
collection currently approved under
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
OMB Control Number 0938–1155 with
an October 31, 2017 expiration date to
account for this additional burden.
D. ICR Regarding Standardized Options
in SBE–FPs (§ 155.20)
In proposed § 155.20, we propose that
an SBE–FP must notify HHS if it wants
HHS–designed standardized options to
receive differential display, by a date to
be specified in guidance. We anticipate
that fewer than 10 SBE–FPs would
submit this information to HHS
annually. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this
ICR is not subject to the PRA as it would
affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12month period.
E. ICR Regarding Differential Display of
Standardized Options on the Web Sites
of Agents and Brokers (§ 155.220) and
QHP Issuers (§ 156.265)
We propose to require web-brokers
and QHP issuers that utilize the direct
enrollment pathway to differentially
display standardized options in the
2018 plan year and beyond, consistent
with the approach adopted by HHS for
display on the Exchange Web site,
unless HHS approved a deviation. This
policy would require direct enrollment
entities to prominently display
standardized options in a manner that
makes them clear to consumers. We
estimate that a total of 160 web-brokers
and QHP issuers participate in the FFEs
and SBE–FPs and would be required to
comply with the standard. We estimate
it would take a mid-level software
developer (at a rate of $96.82 per hour)
approximately 2 hours annually to
develop a differential display for
standardized options. We estimate an
annual cost burden of approximately
$193.64 per direct enrollment entity.
The total annual burden will be 320
hours with an equivalent cost of
approximately $30,982.40.
We anticipate that fewer than 10 webbrokers and issuers would submit a
request to deviate from the manner
adopted by HHS for display on
HealthCare.gov. Under 5 CFR
1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to
the PRA as it would affect fewer than 10
entities in a 12-month period.
F. ICR Regarding Ability of States To
Permit Agents and Brokers To Assist
Qualified Individuals, Qualified
Employers, or Qualified Employees
Enrolling in QHPs (§ 155.220)
We propose a number of requirements
for web-brokers related to the direct
enrollment process such as prominently
displaying information regarding
consumers’ eligibility for APTC,
allowing consumers to make attestations
regarding APTC, and providing for the
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
maintenance of electronic records for
purposes of audit. At §§ 156.265 and
156.1230, we propose a number of
parallel provisions for issuers using the
direct enrollment channel. We would
provide additional detail regarding the
specific requirements under these rules
in guidance in the future. At that time,
we would estimate the burden
associated with these requirements,
solicit public comment, and request
OMB approval in accordance with the
PRA, as may be necessary.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
G. ICR Regarding Eligibility
Redeterminations (§ 155.330)
We propose to permit an Exchange to
choose among three alternatives when
the Exchange identifies updated
information regarding compliance with
the income tax filing and reconciliation
requirement under § 155.305. An
Exchange may either follow the process
described in paragraph (e)(2)(i), a
process specified by the Secretary in
guidance, or an alternative process
proposed by the Exchange and approved
by the Secretary. HHS anticipates that it
would require Exchanges requesting
approval for an alternative process to
submit a brief description of the
alternative process, and a justification
for how the process satisfies the
approval criteria outlined in
§ 155.330(e)(2)(iii)(C). Given the
availability of two alternative processes,
we anticipate that fewer than 10
Exchanges would submit a proposal.
Therefore, under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4),
this ICR is not subject to the PRA as it
would affect fewer than 10 entities in a
12-month period.
We also propose to permit the
Exchange to recalculate APTC using the
procedure described in § 155.330(g)(1)
or an alternate procedure approved by
HHS on a transitional basis. HHS
anticipates that it would require
participating Exchanges to submit a
brief description of the alternate
procedure and the extent to which the
alternate procedure would protect tax
filers from an excess APTC repayment.
Here too, we anticipate that fewer than
10 Exchanges would submit a proposal.
Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is
not subject to the PRA as it would affect
fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month
period.
H. ICR Regarding Termination of
Exchange Enrollment or Coverage
(§ 155.430(b)(2)(iii))
We are proposing to amend
§ 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to clarify that when
an issuer seeks termination of a QHP
purchased on an Exchange via a
rescission under § 147.128, it must first
demonstrate, to the reasonable
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
satisfaction of the Exchange, that the
basis for the rescission is appropriate, if
the Exchange requires such a
demonstration. This would require the
issuer to provide information related to
the termination to the Exchange. We do
not anticipate that all Exchanges will
subject issuers to this requirement. We
anticipate that fewer than 10 issuers
would be subject to this requirement
annually. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this
ICR is not subject to the PRA as it would
affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12month period.
I. ICR Regarding QHP Request for
Reconsideration (§ 155.1090)
We propose to add § 155.1090 to
create a process for an issuer that has
applied to an FFE for certification of
QHPs and has been denied certification
to request reconsideration. We
anticipate that fewer than 10 issuers per
year would request reconsideration.
Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is
not subject to the PRA as it would affect
fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month
period.
J. ICR Regarding Notification by Issuers
Denied Certification (§ 156.290)
In proposed § 156.290 we propose
that QHP issuers would be required to
provide a notification to enrollees
within 30 days of the date of HHS’s
denial of certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle. We
anticipate that fewer than 10 issuers
would be subject to this requirement
annually. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this
ICR is not subject to the PRA as it would
affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12month period.
K. ICR Regarding the Discrepancy
Reporting Processes for the
Reconciliation of the Cost-sharing
Reduction Portion of Advance Payments
(§ 156.430(h))
Under § 156.430(h)(1), we proposed
that, if an issuer files a discrepancy
report to dispute the notification of the
amount of reconciliation of the costsharing reduction portion of advance
payments, it must file the discrepancy
report within 30 calendar days of
notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
as described in § 156.430(e), in the
manner set forth by HHS.
We estimate that of approximately
360 QHP issuers that submit costsharing reduction reconciliation data,
less than 1⁄3 would file a discrepancy
report to dispute the notification of the
amount of reconciliation of the costsharing reduction portion of advance
payments. Issuers would review the
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61519
notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
for this discrepancy reporting process.
On average, we estimate that it would
take a business operations specialist (at
an hourly labor cost of $78)
approximately 6 hours to review the
requirements of the discrepancy
reporting process, to determine whether
the issuer should submit a discrepancy
report, to categorize the discrepancy,
and to write a description of the
discrepancy for submission to HHS.
Additionally, we estimate that it would
take a computer programmer (at an
hourly labor cost of approximately $78)
approximately 12 hours to develop the
pipe-delimited file for reporting the
discrepancy, based on the technical
specifications published by HHS, and to
submit the discrepancy file to HHS
through the electronic file transfer
system. Therefore, we estimate that the
total burden for each issuer would be
approximately 18 hours with an
equivalent cost of $1,404. Therefore,
assuming that no more than 120 issuers
would submit a discrepancy, we
estimate a total aggregate annual burden
of approximately 2,160 hours with an
equivalent cost of $168,480 for issuers
as a result of these requirements. We
will revise the information collection
currently approved under OMB Control
Number 0938–1266 with a December 31,
2017 expiration date to account for this
additional burden.
L. ICRs Regarding Administrative
Appeals (§ 156.1220)
In 45 CFR 156.1220, we established
an administrative appeals process to
address any issues or errors for advance
payment of the premium tax credit,
advance payment and reconciliation of
cost-sharing reductions, FFE user fees,
and the premium stabilization
programs, as well as any assessment of
a default risk adjustment charge under
§ 153.740(b). We propose revising
§ 156.1220 to also address
administrative appeals relating to the
risk adjustment data validation process.
Under § 153.630(d), an issuer may
appeal the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate. We propose to
amend § 153.630(d) by clarifying the
process by which an issuer can appeal
the findings of a second validation audit
or the calculation of a risk score error
rate. We propose requiring issuers to use
the administrative appeals process set
forth in § 156.1220.
Under § 156.1220(a), we propose to
clarify that an issuer may file a request
for reconsideration under this section to
contest a processing error by HHS,
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61520
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
HHS’s incorrect application of the
relevant methodology, or HHS’s
mathematical error with respect to the
findings of a second validation audit or
the calculation of a risk score error rate.
While the hours involved in a request
for reconsideration might vary, for
purposes of this burden estimate we
estimate that it would take a business
operations specialist 1 hour (at an
hourly labor cost of $78) to make the
comparison and submit a request for
reconsideration to HHS. We estimate
that 9 issuers, representing
of a 3-year period with respect to a
given calendar year. We anticipate that
implementing this proposal would
require minor changes to the MLR
annual reporting form and we may
revise the information collection
currently approved under OMB Control
Number 0938–1164 to reflect the
proposed policy. However, only a small
number of issuers would elect the
option of additional reporting and we
do not expect that the proposed policy
would increase the burden.
approximately 1 percent of issuers of
risk adjustment covered plans, subject
to risk adjustment data validation,
would submit a request for
reconsideration, resulting in a total
aggregate annual burden of 9 hours with
an equivalent cost of approximately
$702.
M. ICR Regarding Medical Loss Ratio
(§ 158.240)
We are proposing to amend § 158.240
to allow issuers the option of limiting
the total rebate payable over the course
TABLE 16—ANNUAL REPORTING, RECORDKEEPING AND DISCLOSURE BURDEN
Regulation Section
§ 153.630 Risk Adjustment Data Validation ....
§ 153.630(d) Discrepancy
Reporting Processes for
Risk Adjustment Data
Validation ......................
§§ 155.220, 156.265 Differential Display of
Standardized Options ...
§ 156.430(h) Discrepancy
Reporting for cost-sharing reduction reconciliation ..............................
§ 156.1220 Administrative
Appeals .........................
Total ..........................
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Hourly
labor
cost of
reporting
($)
Total
annual
burden
(hours)
Total
labor
cost of
reporting
($)
Total
cost
($)
OMB
Control No.
Number of
respondents
0938–1155
825
82,500
0.5
41,250
72
2,970,000
2,970,000
0938–1155
825
1650
4
6,600
78
514,800
514,800
NEW
160
160
2
320
96.82
30,982
30,982
0938–1266
120
1
18
2,160
78
168,480
168,480
NEW
9
9
1
9
68
702
702
....................
1,114
84,320
25.5
50,339
392.82
3,684,964
3,684,964
Responses
Note: There are no capital/maintenance costs associated with the information collection requirements contained in this rule; therefore, we have
removed the associated column from Table 16.
V. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this proposed rule, and, when we
proceed with a subsequent document,
we will respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This rule proposes standards related
to the risk adjustment program for the
2017 and 2018 benefit years, as well as
certain modifications to the program
that will protect against the potential
effects of adverse selection. The
Premium Stabilization Rule and
previous Payment Notices provided
detail on the implementation of this
program, including the specific
parameters for the 2014, 2015, 2016, and
2017 benefit years applicable to this
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
program. This rule proposes additional
standards related to enrollment and
eligibility, consumer assistance tools
and programs of an Exchange, webbrokers, cost-sharing parameters,
qualified health plans, network
adequacy, stand-alone dental plans,
guaranteed renewability, the rate review
program, the medical loss ratio program,
the Small Business Health Options
Program, and FFE user fees. These
proposed standards represent
incremental amendments that are
intended to continue to strengthen the
Exchanges, improve the stability of the
market, and enhance the choices
available to consumers, while
supporting consumers’ ability to make
informed choices when purchasing
health insurance.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March
22, 1995, Pub. L. 104–4), Executive
Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4,
1999), and the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must
be prepared for rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year).
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61521
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
OMB has determined that this
proposed rule is ‘‘economically
significant’’ within the meaning of
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866,
because it is likely to have an annual
effect of $100 million in any 1 year.
Accordingly, we have prepared an RIA
that presents the costs and benefits of
this proposed rule.
Although it is difficult to discuss the
wide-ranging effects of these provisions
in isolation, the overarching goal of the
premium stabilization, market
standards, and Exchange-related
provisions and policies in the
Affordable Care Act is to make
affordable health insurance available to
individuals who do not have access to
affordable employer-sponsored
coverage. The provisions within this
proposed rule are integral to the goal of
expanding coverage. For example, the
risk adjustment program helps prevent
risk selection and decrease the risk of
financial loss that health insurance
issuers might otherwise expect in 2018
and Exchange financial assistance helps
low- and moderate-income consumers
and American Indians/Alaska Natives
purchase health insurance. The
combined impacts of these provisions
affect the private sector, issuers, and
consumers, through increased access to
health care services, decreased
uncompensated care, lower premiums,
and increased plan transparency.
Through the reduction in financial
uncertainty for issuers and increased
affordability for consumers, these
provisions are expected to increase
access to affordable health coverage.
HHS anticipates that the provisions of
this proposed rule will help further
HHS’s goal of ensuring that all
consumers have access to quality,
affordable health care and are able to
make informed choices, that Exchanges
operate smoothly, that the risk
adjustment program works as intended,
and that SHOPs are provided flexibility.
Affected entities such as QHP issuers
would incur costs to comply with the
proposed provisions. In accordance
with Executive Order 12866, HHS
believes that the benefits of this
regulatory action justify the costs.
C. Impact Estimates of the Payment
Notice Provisions and Accounting Table
In accordance with OMB Circular A–
4, Table 17 depicts an accounting
statement summarizing HHS’s
assessment of the benefits, costs, and
transfers associated with this regulatory
action.
This proposed rule implements
standards for programs that will have a
number of effects, including providing
consumers with affordable health
insurance coverage, reducing the impact
of adverse selection, and stabilizing
premiums in the individual and small
group health insurance markets and in
an Exchange. We are unable to quantify
certain benefits of this proposed rule—
such as improved health outcomes and
longevity due to continuous quality
improvement, and increased insurance
enrollment—and certain costs—such as
the cost of providing additional medical
services to newly-enrolled individuals.
The effects in Table 17 reflect
qualitative impacts and estimated direct
monetary costs and transfers resulting
from the provisions of this proposed
rule. The annualized monetized costs
described in Table 17 reflect direct
administrative costs to health insurance
issuers and web-brokers as a result of
the proposed provisions, and include
administrative costs related to
requirements that are estimated in the
Collection of Information section of this
proposed rule. The annual monetized
transfers described in Table 17 include
costs associated with the risk
adjustment user fee paid to HHS by
issuers, and a decrease in MLR rebates
to consumers. For 2018, we are
proposing to collect a total of $35
million in risk adjustment user fees or
$1.32 per enrollee per year from risk
adjustment issuers, an increase from $24
million in benefit year 2017 when we
established a $1.56 per-enrollee-per-year
risk adjustment user fee amount. As in
2017, the risk adjustment user fee
contract costs for 2018 include costs for
risk adjustment data validation;
however, we expect increased
enrollment in 2018 HHS risk adjustment
covered plans, which decreases the per
enrollee amount.
The annual monetized transfers
described in Table 17 include a decrease
in MLR rebates to consumers.
TABLE 17—ACCOUNTING TABLE
Benefits:
Qualitative:
• Increased enrollment in the individual market leading to improved access to health care for the previously uninsured, especially individuals with medical conditions, which will result in improved health and protection from the risk of catastrophic medical expenditures.
• Improved transparency and shopping experience for consumers due to new, updated standardized options and their differential display;
and protections relating to direct enrollment.
• Provide adequate time to newly qualified employees to make informed decisions regarding their coverage in the SHOP.
• Ensure plan choice, allowing individuals to find coverage that fit their needs.
Costs:
Estimate
(million)
Annualized Monetized ($/year) ........................................................................
Year
dollar
$3.68
3.68
Discount
rate
2016
2016
Period
covered
7
3
2017–2021
2017–2021
Costs reflect administrative costs incurred by issuers and web-brokers to comply with provisions in this final rule.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Transfers:
Estimate
(million)
Annualized Monetized ($/year) ........................................................................
Year
dollar
$22.2
22.6
Discount
rate
2016
2016
Period
covered
7
3
2017–2021
2017–2021
• Transfers include risk adjustment user fees for 2018–2021 (assuming that they remain the same during this time period), which are transfers
from health insurance issuers to the Federal government; and a reduction in total rebate payments by issuers which is a transfer from enrollees to shareholders or nonprofit stakeholders in individual, small and large group markets, resulting from adjustment in MLR methodology.
Qualitative:
• More accurate risk adjustment charges and payments due to change in risk adjustment methodology.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61522
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
This RIA expands upon the impact
analyses of previous rules and utilizes
the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO)
analysis of the Affordable Care Act’s
impact on Federal spending, revenue
collection, and insurance enrollment.
The temporary risk corridors program
and the transitional reinsurance
program end after the benefit year 2016.
Therefore, the costs associated with
those programs are not included in
Tables 17 or 18 for fiscal years 2019–
2021. Table 18 summarizes the effects of
the risk adjustment program on the
Federal budget from fiscal years 2017
through 2021, with the additional,
societal effects of this proposed rule
discussed in this RIA. We do not expect
the provisions of this proposed rule to
significantly alter CBO’s estimates of the
budget impact of the premium
stabilization programs that are described
in Table 18. We note that transfers
associated with the risk adjustment and
reinsurance programs were previously
estimated in the Premium Stabilization
Rule; therefore, to avoid doublecounting, we do not include them in the
accounting statement for this proposed
rule (Table 18).
TABLE 18—ESTIMATED FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OUTLAYS AND RECEIPTS FOR THE RISK ADJUSTMENT, REINSURANCE, AND
RISK CORRIDORS PROGRAMS FROM FISCAL YEAR 2017–2021
[In billions of dollars]
Year
2017
Risk Adjustment, Reinsurance, and Risk
Corridors Program Payments ...............
Risk Adjustment, Reinsurance, and Risk
Corridors Program Collections * ...........
2018
2019
2020
2021
2017–2021
10
8
8
9
9
44
11
7
8
9
9
44
Note 1: Risk adjustment program payments and receipts lag by one quarter. Receipt will fully offset payments over time.
Note 2: The CBO score reflects an additional $2 million in collections in FY 2015 that are outlaid in the FY 2016–FY 2020 timeframe. CBO
does not expect a shortfall in these programs.
Source: Congressional Budget Office. Federal Subsidies for Health Insurance Coverage for People Under Age 65: Tables From CBO’s March
2016 Baseline https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/51298-2016-03-HealthInsurance.pdf.
1. Fair Health Insurance Premiums
The proposed regulations would
amend § 147.102(d) to create multiple
child age bands rather than a single age
band for all individuals aged 0 through
20. Establishing single-year age bands
starting at age 15 is likely to result in
small annual increases in premiums for
children age 15 to 20, which would help
mitigate large premium increases
attributable to age due to the transition
from child to adult age rating.
2. Guaranteed Renewability
This proposed rule would specify the
circumstances in which the
discontinuation of all coverage currently
offered by an issuer in a market in a
State would not be considered a market
withdrawal subject to the 5-year ban on
market re-entry. We believe this
proposal is generally consistent with
State regulation of health insurance and
therefore would not have a material
impact on issuers or enrollees. These
changes would benefit consumers since
imposing the 5-year ban on market reentry in these situations could result in
disruption for consumers and reduced
competition in some markets.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Risk Adjustment
The risk adjustment program is a
program created by the Affordable Care
Act in which States, or HHS on behalf
of States, collects charges from health
insurance issuers that attract lower-risk
populations in order to use those funds
to provide payments to health insurance
issuers that attract higher-risk
populations, such as those with chronic
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
conditions, thereby reducing incentives
for issuers to avoid higher-risk
enrollees. We established standards for
the administration of the risk
adjustment program, in subparts D and
G of part 45 of the CFR. The proposed
modifications to the risk adjustment
model aims to improve the methodology
and would result in more accurate risk
adjustment charges and payments and
mitigate any residual incentive for risk
selection.
A State approved or conditionally
approved by the Secretary to operate an
Exchange may establish a risk
adjustment program, or have HHS do so
on its behalf. As described in the 2014,
2015, 2016 and 2017 Payment Notices,
if HHS operates risk adjustment on
behalf of a State, it will fund its risk
adjustment program operations by
assessing a risk adjustment user fee on
issuers of risk adjustment covered plans.
For the 2018 benefit year, we estimate
that the total cost for HHS to operate the
risk adjustment program on behalf of
States for 2018 will be approximately
$35 million, and that the risk
adjustment user fee would be
approximately $1.32 per enrollee per
year. The risk adjustment user fee
contract costs for 2018 include costs
related to 2018 risk adjustment data
validation, and are higher than the 2017
contract costs as the result of some
contracts that were rebid.
4. SHOP
The SHOPs facilitate the enrollment
of eligible employees of eligible small
employers into small group market
health insurance plans. A qualitative
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
analysis of the costs and benefits of
establishing a SHOP was included in
the RIA published in conjunction with
the Exchange Establishment Rule.61
In § 155.230(d)(2), we propose
requiring SHOPs to make electronic
notices the default method of sending
SHOP notices to employers and
employees, unless otherwise required
by State or Federal law. Electronic
notices would provide a more cost
effective way for SHOPs to distribute
required notices and should decrease
the SHOP’s costs for notifications.
In § 155.725(g), we propose changes to
the enrollment process for newly
qualified employees. We believe the
proposed amendments would provide
newly qualified employees with
adequate time to make informed
decisions regarding their coverage and
are likely to have a negligible impact on
plan premiums and would ensure that
employers do not exceed the waiting
period limits under § 147.116.
5. Direct Enrollment—Standardized
Options Differential Display and
Privacy/Security and Oversight
We did not require QHP issuers or
web-brokers to adhere to differential
display requirements of standardized
options when using a non-Exchange
Web site to facilitate enrollment in a
QHP through an Exchange for the 2017
plan year, but we noted that we would
consider whether to propose such a
standard in the future. We now propose
to amend § 155.220(c)(3)(i) by adding
61 Available at https://cciio.cms.gov/resources/
files/Files2/03162012/hie3r-ria-032012.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
new paragraph (c)(3)(i)(H) to require
web-brokers to differentially display
standardized options consistent with
the approach adopted by HHS, unless a
deviation is approved by HHS and to
amend § 156.265(b)(3) by adding new
paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to likewise require
QHP issuers that conduct direct
enrollment to differentially display
standardized options in such manner
approved by HHS. Requiring webbrokers and QHP issuers using the
direct enrollment pathway to make
changes to their respective QHP display
systems may result a slight increase in
administrative costs but would help
further our goal of ensuring that all
consumers have access to quality and
affordable health care and are able to
make informed choices.
In §§ 155.220, 156.265, and 156.1230,
we propose requirements for webbrokers and issuers related to the direct
enrollment process that would provide
consumer protections and ensure that
consumers have necessary information
to select coverage that would best fit
their needs. Web-brokers and issuers
would incur administrative costs to
comply with these requirements.
6. Eligibility and Enrollment Provisions
In § 155.400, we propose to provide
Exchanges with the discretion to allow
issuers experiencing billing or
enrollment problems due to high
volume or technical errors to implement
a reasonable extension of the binder
payment deadlines in § 155.400(e)(1).
This proposal aims to retain consumers
on the Exchange and to mitigate the
problems associated with issuers
receiving high-volumes of enrollments
in a short timeframe. There would be no
added cost to issuers who choose to
implement the optional binder payment
extensions, while ensuring that they
would not lose enrollees who have not
paid their binder payments simply
because they did not receive their bills
due to a processing backlog or a
technical error. Consumers would
benefit by having a reasonable amount
of time to pay their binder payments,
which should prevent coverage
cancellations due to enrollment
irregularities which are not the fault of
the consumer.
In § 155.420, we propose to codify
several special enrollment periods that
are already provided through the
Exchange. By codifying these, we seek
to ensure that these existing special
enrollment periods are applied
consistently across Exchanges, and to
provide both issuers and consumers
with greater certainty in how these
special enrollment periods are applied.
We believe that this certainty would
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
contribute to greater stability in the
market, and in the use of these special
enrollment periods, specifically.
We propose to amend
§ 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to require that when
an issuer seeks termination of a QHP on
an Exchange via a rescission for fraud or
misrepresentation of material fact under
§ 147.128, it must first demonstrate, to
the reasonable satisfaction of the
Exchange, that the basis for the
rescission is appropriate, if the
Exchange requires such a
demonstration. This would not restrict
issuers’ ability to rescind coverage when
an individual or a party working on
behalf of an individual fraudulently
enrolls in coverage, while protecting
consumers whose verification and
enrollment conform to FFE and SBE–FP
rules and guidance.
7. Standardized Options
We are proposing new standardized
options for 2018, which are updated
versions of the ones finalized in the
2017 Payment Notice. As in 2017,
offering standardized options will be
voluntary for QHP issuers in 2018. In
keeping with the methodology used to
design standardized options in 2017, we
designed the proposed 2018
standardized plans based on the median
cost-sharing features of the most
popular 2016 QHPs, based on
enrollment to ensure minimal market
disruption and impact on premiums.
For 2018, we are proposing additional
standardized options at each metal level
and plan variation with the goal of
having at least one option at each metal
level that would comply with every
State’s respective cost-sharing laws as
applicable. Each applicable State would
have one standardized option at each
metal level and plan variation that
issuers would then be able to choose to
offer. In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
attempted to estimate the potential
impact that the introduction of
standardized options would have on
premiums established by QHPs. As we
previously estimated, we do not
anticipate that standardized options
would impact 2018 plan premiums
significantly. Rather, the proposed
options would allow each applicable
State to have a set of standardized
options that most closely reflects QHPs
in the State while meeting any State
cost-sharing mandates. This policy
should continue to improve simplicity
and transparency for consumers during
the shopping experience. To the extent
it facilitates consumer shopping, it
could put modest downward pressure
on premiums.
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61523
8. User Fees
To support the operation of FFEs, we
require in § 156.50(c) that a
participating issuer offering a plan
through an FFE must remit a user fee to
HHS each month equal to the product
of the monthly user fee rate specified in
the annual HHS notice of benefit and
payment parameters for the applicable
benefit year and the monthly premium
charged by the issuer for each policy
under the plan where enrollment is
through an FFE. In this proposed rule,
for the 2018 benefit year, we propose a
monthly FFE user fee rate equal to 3.5
percent and, for a State-based Exchange
that relies on the Federal platform, 3.0
percent of the monthly premium. We
had estimated the user fee transfers in
the 2017 Payment Notice and there are
no additional incremental charges. To
avoid double-counting, we do not
include the user fee costs in the
accounting statement for this rule (Table
17). For the user fee charges assessed on
issuers in the FFE and State-based
Exchanges using the Federal platform,
we intend to seek an exception to OMB
Circular No. A–25R, which requires that
the user fee charge be sufficient to
recover the full cost to the Federal
government of providing the special
benefit. We seek this exception to
ensure that the FFE can support many
of the goals of the Affordable Care Act,
including improving the health of the
population, reducing health care costs,
and providing access to health coverage
as advanced by § 156.50(d).
9. Levels of Coverage
At § 156.140, we propose to change
the de minimis range of bronze plans
under certain circumstances. We believe
that this policy would not be disruptive
to the current bronze plan market as it
would allow more bronze plans the
flexibility in creating plan designs
within the increased de minimis range,
as well as allow more options for issuers
to leave 2017 cost-sharing structures
unchanged. We also believe this policy
would allow issuers to continue to offer
a range of bronze plans as the AV
Calculator is updated in future years,
which is good for consumers. Plans are
not required to utilize this proposed
option, and we do not anticipate any
significant impact on average bronze
plan premiums from this proposed
policy.
10. Provisions Related to Cost Sharing
The Affordable Care Act provides for
the reduction or elimination of cost
sharing for certain eligible individuals
enrolled in QHPs offered through the
Exchanges. This assistance will help
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61524
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
many low- and moderate-income
individuals and families obtain health
insurance—for many people, cost
sharing is a barrier to obtaining needed
health care.62
We set forth in this proposed rule the
reductions in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing for silver plan
variations. Consistent with our analysis
in previous Payment Notices, we
developed three model silver level
QHPs and analyzed the impact on their
AVs of the reductions described in the
Affordable Care Act to the estimated
2018 maximum annual limitation on
cost sharing for self only coverage
$7,350. We do not believe these changes
would result in a significant economic
impact. Therefore, we do not believe the
provisions related to cost-sharing
reductions in this proposed rule would
have an impact on the program
established by and described in the
2015, 2016, and 2017 Payment Notices.
We also proposed the premium
adjustment percentage for the 2018
benefit year. Section 156.130(e)
provides that the premium adjustment
percentage is the percentage (if any) by
which the average per capita premium
for health insurance coverage for the
preceding calendar year exceeds such
average per capita premium for health
insurance for 2013. The annual
premium adjustment percentage sets the
rate of increase for three parameters
detailed in the Affordable Care Act: The
annual limitation on cost sharing
(defined at § 156.130(a)), the required
contribution percentage used to
determine eligibility for certain
exemptions under section 5000A of the
Code, and the assessable payments
under sections 4980H(a) and 4980H(b).
We believe that the proposed 2018
premium adjustment percentage of
16.17303196 percent is well within the
parameters used in the modeling of the
Affordable Care Act, and we do not
expect that these proposed provisions
would alter CBO’s March 2015 baseline
estimates of the budget impact.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
11. Qualified Health Plan Minimum
Standards
In § 156.200(c), we propose to specify
that, to satisfy the requirements in these
sections, QHPs must be offered through
the applicable Exchange at both the
silver and gold coverage levels
62 Brook, Robert H., John E. Ware, William H.
Rogers, Emmett B. Keeler, Allyson Ross Davies,
Cathy D. Sherbourne, George A. Goldberg, Kathleen
N. Lohr, Patricia Camp and Joseph P. Newhouse.
The Effect of Coinsurance on the Health of Adults:
Results from the RAND Health Insurance
Experiment. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation,
1984. Available at: https://www.rand.org/pubs/
reports/R3055.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
throughout each service area in which
the issuer applying for certification
offers coverage through the Exchange.
Since most issuers are already following
these requirements, it is unlikely that
there would be any impact on
premiums, while ensuring continued
plan choice for consumers.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we
finalized a network breadth policy
through which we would categorize
networks based on their relative size, in
addition to other policies. We seek
comment regarding how this should
apply to ‘‘integrated plans,’’ such as
staff model HMOs. We expect the policy
would continue to improve
transparency for consumers and the
shopping experience.
Proposed § 156.272 would establish as
a condition of certification that QHP
issuers must make their QHPs available
for enrollment through the Exchanges
for the duration of the timeframe for
which the plan was certified, unless a
basis for suppression under § 156.815
applies. QHP issuers in FFEs and FF–
SHOPs that do not comply with this
requirement could be subject to CMPs or
a two-year ban. This would raise costs
or burdens on issuers, who could be
forced to remain on the Exchange or
face a 2-year ban or CMPs in certain
situations. However, we do not believe
that violations of the proposed
requirement of full year participation
under § 156.272 are happening on a
wide scale, which minimizes any
potential impact.
12. Medical Loss Ratio
In this proposed rule, we propose to
amend § 158.121 to align with the
requirement that, beginning in 2014,
issuers must offer non-grandfathered
coverage for a consecutive 12-month
period and enable more issuers to defer
reporting of the experience of new
business in the MLR calculation. In
general, deferring reporting of new
business effectively enables new and
rapidly growing issuers to use a 4-year,
rather than a 3-year average MLR. This
in turn increases the likelihood that low
MLRs in the initial years will be offset
by higher MLRs in later years and that
only a portion of the rebates generated
by the experience of initial years will
ultimately be paid. Deferring reporting
of new business also eliminates the
rebate payment following the first year
and instead spreads it over the
following 3 years (that is, includes the
rebate attributable to year 1 with rebates
payable for years 2 through 4). Based on
data from the 2013 and 2014 MLR
reporting years, we estimate that
allowing issuers to defer experience of
newly sold policies with full 12 months
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
of experience when 50 percent or more
of an issuer’s earned premium comes
from such policies could reduce total
rebate payments from issuers to
consumers over a 4-year period by up to
a total of $11.6 million.
We additionally propose to amend
§ 158.240 to allow issuers the option of
limiting the total rebate payable over the
course of a 3-year period with respect to
a given calendar year, as well as to
clarify references to single-year and
preliminary MLRs in § 158.232. We
estimate no impact from the proposed
clarifications to § 158.232 because these
clarifications are intended to simplify
reporting for purposes of calculating the
rebate limit proposed in § 158.240 and
do not change the manner in which
issuers currently calculate the
credibility adjustment. Because the
proposed amendments to § 158.240
generally would only impact new and
rapidly growing established issuers
whose MLRs initially fall below the
standard and increase in subsequent
years, the magnitude of the impact of
the proposed limit on the rebate liability
would depend on how issuers’
enrollment and MLRs change in 2015
and later. Because the majority of new
issuers have expanded or intend to
expand into new markets in 2014 or
later, the 2014 and earlier MLR reports,
which are the only data source available
at this time, are an insufficient source of
data on the types of issuers that would
be impacted by this proposal. In
addition, significant reporting
differences exist between 2011–13 and
2014 and later MLR data, and some
rebates that were paid for 2014 are
likely to be outliers and may therefore
exaggerate estimates. Consequently,
while we expect the proposal to
decrease the amount of rebates paid by
new and rapidly growing issuers to
consumers, we are not able to estimate
the magnitude of the decrease with a
high degree of certainty.
D. Regulatory Alternatives Considered
In developing the policies contained
in this proposed rule, we considered
numerous alternatives to the presented
proposals. Below we discuss the key
regulatory alternatives that we
considered.
For the proposals in parts 146, 147
and 148, we considered not changing
our interpretation of what constitutes a
market withdrawal when an issuer
transfers all of its products to a related
issuer or replaces all of its products
with new products with changes that
exceed the scope of a uniform
modification of coverage. However, this
approach could result in fewer product
offerings, as issuers would be obligated
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
to leave the market due to the 5-year
prohibition on issuing coverage after
discontinuing all coverage in a market.
This approach could also unnecessarily
restrict issuer corporate structuring
transactions, reduce market competition
and consumer choice, and conflict with
States’ approaches.
For the proposals in part 147, we
considered not changing the uniform
child age band. This approach would
have maintained the use of a single age
band for rating purposes for all
individuals age 0 through 20. We
determined that creating multiple child
age bands more accurately reflects the
health risk of children and minimizes
the increase in premium attributable to
age when an individual attains age 21.
For the proposals in part 153, we
considered various approaches to
addressing partial year enrollment in
the risk adjustment model, including
separate models by enrollment duration,
and interaction factors of enrollment
duration combined with high- and
medium-cost conditions. However,
based on commenter feedback to the
March 31, 2016 White Paper and our
analysis of MarketScan® data, HHS
determined that the enrollment duration
additive factors are preferred and will
best address partial year enrollees in the
short term.
We considered four different hybrid
models for the inclusion of prescription
drugs in the HHS risk adjustment
methodology: An imputation only
model, a prescription drug-dominant
model, a flexible model, and a severity
only model. Commenters to the White
Paper suggested that we use the
imputation only model or the flexible
model, with constraints to prevent an
issuer from being compensated less for
recording prescription drug utilization
for an enrollee. We have imposed
constraints on the flexible model so that
the coefficients for the drug terms are
greater than zero, preventing such a
situation. We are adding two severityonly drug-diagnosis pairs on top of ten
imputation/severity drug-diagnosis
pairs.
We considered a threshold of $1
million and a coinsurance rate of 80
percent for the proposed high-cost
enrollee pool in the risk adjustment
proposal, which was supported by
commenters to the White Paper.
However, many more commenters
suggested that the high-cost enrollee
pool could be subject to gaming among
issuers and would not incentivize cost
containment efforts. Therefore, we are
proposing a higher threshold of $2
million and a 60 percent coinsurance
rate for the high-cost enrollee pool in
the risk adjustment model. We also
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
considered a PMPM adjustment to the
transfer formula for this high-cost
enrollee pool, but we are proposing a
percent of per member per month
premium adjustment to the transfer
formula, to better align with the transfer
formula’s adjustment at the billable
member month premiums.
We considered using only 2014
MarketScan® data for 2018
recalibration. However, commenters to
the White Paper preferred to continue
using the three-year blended approach.
Commenters also supported issuing
final coefficients in guidance, which we
have proposed to do and are seeking
comment on the timing of those final
coefficients.
We considered alternative
methodologies to recalibrating the 2019
risk adjustment model using EDGE
summary level data instead of enrollee
level data, as was proposed by one
commenter to the White Paper.
However, using EDGE summary level
data would not enhance the existing risk
adjustment models, as the model
specifications would need to be known
to create the models, and thus would
prevent exploratory research and other
types of analyses required for research,
development and refinement of the risk
adjustment models for their continuous
improvement. Further, if summary level
data were used, quality checks could
not be performed on the input data, and
additional improvements to address
partial year enrollment could not be
explored.
For the proposals regarding
standardized options, we considered
taking no action in designing additional
plans per metal level to account for
State cost-sharing laws. However,
without this proposed change, issuers in
States with conflicting cost-sharing laws
would not be able to offer standardized
options. We believe that it is important
for issuers in each State in which an
FFE or SBE–FP operates to have the
choice to offer standardized options. We
also considered designing a set of
standardized plans for each State.
However, HHS currently lacks the
resources to propose this option.
For the proposal at § 155.205(c)(2)(iii),
we considered requiring QHP issuers
and web-brokers subject to the rule to
look only to the LEP populations in the
State where the entity is registered or
licensed, such as through an issuer’s
Health Insurance Oversight System
(HIOS) ID, when identifying the
languages in which taglines must be
provided under the rule. However, we
believe that using such a definition
would not recognize that many
insurance companies use a common
technology platform for their issuers
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61525
across multiple States, and would pose
difficult operational challenges for
many such entities without significantly
improving access.
For the proposal at §§ 155.220 and
156.265, we considered not requiring
differential display of standardized
options by web-brokers or QHP issuers.
However, this would have made it less
likely that consumers using a nonExchange Web site would be aware of
the standardized options available. We
believe that the requirement for
differential display of standardized
options will help consumers using nonExchange Web sites more easily
compare and choose amongst the
available plans. We note that we would
not require the manner of differentiation
to be identical to the one adopted for
displaying standardized options on
HealthCare.gov, and issuers are not
required to offer, and consumers are not
required to purchase, standardized
options.
For proposals at § 155.400, we
considered alternatives to our proposal
to allow issuers the option to extend
binder payment deadlines when issuers
experience volume-related backlogs or
technical errors that make it difficult for
enrollees to pay their binder payments
on time. For example, we considered
relying on ad hoc solutions, such as
extensions or remedies resembling
reinstatements, when problems arise.
We believed, however, that codifying
the proposed optional extensions will
give issuers and consumers alike more
certainty and provide for better
remedies when consumers experience
difficulties during the enrollment
process.
For the proposals at § 155.420, we
considered not codifying the existing
special enrollment periods for
consumers who are or were a victim of
domestic abuse or spousal abandonment
and need to enroll in coverage apart
from his or her abuser or abandoner,
have been determined ineligible for
Medicaid or CHIP, have been impacted
by a material plan or benefit display
error, or have resolved a citizenship or
immigration inconsistency postexpiration, all currently provided
through guidance. We also considered
not standardizing the availability of the
special enrollment period for Indians to
non-Indian dependents enrolling at the
same time as the Indian. However, we
believe that codifying these special
enrollment periods provides needed
permanence and clarity for these special
enrollment periods. This is important to
ensure that they continue to be
available, are equitably applied across
Exchanges, and that consumers,
assisters, issuers, and other stakeholders
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
61526
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
have a common understanding of the
parameters and coverage effective dates
associated with each of these special
enrollment periods. In this rule, we seek
to ensure transparency, stability, and
appropriate utilization of special
enrollment periods by codifying certain
special enrollment periods that we have
made available in prior guidance. After
weighing our options, we determined
that codifying these currently available
special enrollment periods is in the best
interest of consumers and other
Exchange stakeholders.
We considered alternatives to
amending § 155.430 in order to protect
consumers from having their coverage
rescinded for reasons the FFE does not
consider reasonable, such as rescissions
based on allegations of fraud, despite
the disputed information having been
verified by the FFE during the
enrollment process. One alternative was
to issue guidance that would explain to
issuers that rescissions based on claims
of fraud arising from information
provided to and verified by the FFE
would not be permissible. Another
alternative considered was to work with
issuers to prevent rescissions
considered unreasonable by the FFE,
but to decline to pursue rulemaking.
After considering all options, we chose
to amend § 155.430(b)(2)(iii) in order to
provide more consumer protection.
For the proposals related to SHOPs,
we considered maintaining several
provisions for the SHOPs. Specifically,
we considered maintaining the current
requirements at § 155.725(g)(1) and (2),
which provide that an employee who
becomes a qualified employee outside of
the initial or annual open enrollment
period must have an enrollment period
beginning on the first day of becoming
a qualified employee, and require the
effective date of coverage to generally be
determined in accordance with
§ 155.725(h). Similarly, we considered
maintaining the current requirements at
§ 155.230(d)(2), which require paper
notices to be the default option for
SHOPs, so that employers and
employees must opt into electronic
notices. Finally, we considered
maintaining existing requirements in
State-based Exchanges using the Federal
platform for SHOP eligibility,
enrollment, or premium aggregation
functions. However, we decided to
propose the policies in this proposed
rule in order to ensure that employers
do not exceed the waiting period limits
under § 147.116, to provide SHOPs with
more cost-effective alternatives to
sending notices, to ensure efficient
SHOP operations, and to minimize the
potential customization costs that could
be associated with permitting State-
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
based Exchanges to use the Federal
platform for SHOP functions.
We considered alternative proposals
for increasing the de minimis range for
bronze plans. We considered simply
increasing the de minimis range for
bronze plans to extend above 62
percentage points without requiring that
plans include certain plan design
features in order to qualify for the
extended de minimis range. This option
could give issuers, and as a result
consumers, more flexibility and choice
with regards to bronze plan designs.
However, we believe that the proposed
policy better ensures that bronze plans
are not less generous than catastrophic
plans.
For the proposals at § 156.200(c)(1),
we propose to specify that, to satisfy the
requirements in that section, QHPs must
be offered through an Exchange at both
the silver and gold coverage levels
throughout each service area in which
the issuer offers coverage through the
Exchange. We could have opted not to
specify this in regulation; however,
issuers could have misinterpreted the
policy and not offered a silver and gold
plan in the applicable service areas.
This could result in fewer silver and
gold plans available for consumers to
select, and thus less choice for
consumers. It also could complicate the
calculation of the APTC for an
individual market consumer. By
revising our regulation, we ensure that
consumers have an adequate choice of
QHPs at different coverage levels to
select from and that we are able to
calculate APTC for all eligible
individual market consumers.
For the proposals at § 156.272 to
require issuer participation for the
entirety of the period for which the plan
was certified, we considered taking no
action. However, we are concerned that
inaction could result in limited access
for qualified individuals and qualified
employees outside of open enrollment
periods.
For the proposed changes to
§ 156.290, we considered not making
any changes. However, that could have
led to enrollees in plans that are not
certified for a subsequent, consecutive
certification cycle not knowing as soon
as possible that they may have to choose
another plan during the annual open
enrollment period.
For the proposals in part 158, we
considered an alternative proposal for
addressing the impact of MLR and
rebate calculation on new and rapidly
growing issuers. Specifically, we
considered allowing new and rapidly
growing issuers to include in the MLR
calculation rebates they paid within the
first 2 years of entering or expanding in
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
a State market, which would be similar
to how the 3-year average calculation
was phased in for all issuers when the
MLR requirements were first
implemented. However, in contrast to
the initial years of implementation of
the MLR requirements, when all issuers
had to calculate their first two MLRs
using only 1 or 2 years of data,
presently, as described in more detail in
the preamble to this proposed rule, only
a small subset of issuers are affected by
the 3-year averaging in a manner that
merits an adjustment. We note that
inclusion of rebates paid for prior years
in the MLR calculation for the current
year is generally not appropriate for
established and certain new issuers, as
it would distort the 3-year average and
effectively lower the MLR standards
required by section 2718 of the PHS Act.
Therefore, the prior year rebate
approach would need to be limited to
only the new and growing issuers that
are adversely affected by the 3-year
averaging. In practice, it would be
extremely challenging to define
enrollment or premium levels, growth
rates, and patterns in year-over-year
changes in MLRs that would
appropriately distinguish new and
growing issuers that are disadvantaged
by the 3-year averaging from issuers that
merely experience ordinary enrollment
fluctuations or otherwise would gain an
unfair advantage by being able to
include prior year rebates in their MLR
calculation. Because the proposed
approach of limiting the total rebate
liability payable with respect to a given
calendar year is designed to only benefit
new and rapidly growing issuers who
are negatively impacted by the 3-year
averaging, we believe that the proposed
approach is a more effective and
objective way to reduce barriers to entry
and promote competition in health
insurance markets while at the same
time preserving the protections
promised to consumers by the law.
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601, et seq.) requires agencies to
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis to describe the impact of the
proposed rule on small entities, unless
the head of the agency can certify that
the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The RFA
generally defines a ‘‘small entity’’ as: (1)
A proprietary firm meeting the size
standards of the Small Business
Administration (SBA); (2) a not-forprofit organization that is not dominant
in its field; or (3) a small government
jurisdiction with a population of less
than 50,000. States and individuals are
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
not included in the definition of ‘‘small
entity.’’ HHS uses a change in revenues
of more than 3 to 5 percent as its
measure of significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
In this proposed rule, we propose
standards for the risk adjustment
program, which are intended to stabilize
premiums as insurance market reforms
are implemented and Exchanges
facilitate increased enrollment. Because
we believe that insurance firms offering
comprehensive health insurance
policies generally exceed the size
thresholds for ‘‘small entities’’
established by the SBA, we do not
believe that an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis is required for such
firms.
For purposes of the RFA, we expect
the following types of entities to be
affected by this proposed rule:
• Health insurance issuers.
• Group health plans.
We believe that health insurance
issuers and group health plans would be
classified under the North American
Industry Classification System code
524114 (Direct Health and Medical
Insurance Carriers). According to SBA
size standards, entities with average
annual receipts of $38.5 million or less
would be considered small entities for
these North American Industry
Classification System codes. Issuers
could possibly be classified in 621491
(HMO Medical Centers) and, if this is
the case, the SBA size standard would
be $32.5 million or less.
Based on data from MLR annual
report submissions for the 2014 MLR
reporting year, approximately 118 out of
525 issuers of health insurance coverage
nationwide had total premium revenue
of $38.5 million or less. This estimate
may overstate the actual number of
small health insurance companies that
may be affected, since almost 80 percent
of these small companies belong to
larger holding groups, and many if not
all of these small companies are likely
to have non-health lines of business that
would result in their revenues
exceeding $38.5 million. Only nine of
these 118 potentially small entities, all
of them part of larger holding groups,
are estimated to experience a decrease
in the rebate amount under the
proposed amendments to the MLR
provisions of this proposed rule in part
158. Therefore, we do not expect the
proposed provisions of this rule
regarding MLR to affect a substantial
number of small entities.
In this proposed rule, we proposed
standards for employers that choose to
participate in a SHOP Exchange. The
SHOPs generally are limited by statute
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
to employers with at least one but not
more than 50 employees, unless a State
opts to provide that employers with 1 to
100 employees are ‘‘small employers.’’
For this reason, we expect that many
employers who would be affected by the
proposals would meet the SBA standard
for small entities. We do not believe that
the proposals impose requirements on
employers offering health insurance
through a SHOP that are more restrictive
than the current requirements on small
businesses offering employer sponsored
insurance. We believe the processes that
we have established for SHOP eligibility
and enrollment constitute the minimum
amount of requirements necessary to
implement the SHOP program and
accomplish our policy goals, and that no
appropriate regulatory alternatives
could be developed to further lessen the
compliance burden.
F. Unfunded Mandates
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits and take certain other
actions before issuing a proposed rule
that includes any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures in any 1 year
by State, local, or Tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2016, that
threshold is approximately $146
million. Although we have not been
able to quantify all costs, the combined
administrative cost and user fee impact
on State, local, or Tribal governments
and the private sector may be above the
threshold. Earlier portions of this RIA
constitute our UMRA analysis.
G. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule that imposes substantial
direct costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
Because States have flexibility in
designing their Exchanges and
Exchange-related programs, State
decisions will ultimately influence both
administrative expenses and overall
premiums. States are not required to
establish an Exchange or risk
adjustment program. For States that
elected to operate an Exchange or, risk
adjustment program, much of the initial
cost of creating these programs were
funded by Exchange Planning and
Establishment Grants. After
establishment, Exchanges must be
financially self-sustaining, with revenue
sources at the discretion of the State.
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61527
Current State Exchanges charge user
fees to issuers.
In HHS’s view, while this proposed
rule would not impose substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, this regulation has
Federalism implications due to direct
effects on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the State and
Federal governments relating to
determining standards relating to health
insurance that is offered in the
individual and small group markets.
However, HHS anticipates that the
Federalism implications (if any) are
substantially mitigated because under
the statute and our proposals, States
have choices regarding the structure,
governance, and operations of their
Exchanges and risk adjustment program.
For example, our proposals relating to
binder payment rules and termination of
coverage are intended to provide State
Exchanges with significant flexibility.
Additionally, the Affordable Care Act
does not require States to establish these
programs; if a State elects not to
establish any of these programs or is not
approved to do so, HHS must establish
and operate the programs in that State.
Additionally, States have the option to
establish and operate their own SHOP
without also establishing and operating
their own individual market Exchange.
Our proposals requiring SBE–FPs to
establish requirements that are
consistent with certain Federal
requirements when using the Federal
platform for certain SHOP functions
would not apply should the State decide
not to use the Federal platform for these
SHOP functions.
In compliance with the requirement
of Executive Order 13132 that agencies
examine closely any policies that may
have Federalism implications or limit
the policy making discretion of the
States, HHS has engaged in efforts to
consult with and work cooperatively
with affected States, including
participating in conference calls with
and attending conferences of the
National Association of Insurance
Commissioners, and consulting with
State insurance officials on an
individual basis.
While developing this proposed rule,
HHS has attempted to balance the
States’ interests in regulating health
insurance issuers, and Congress’ intent
to provide access to Affordable
Insurance Exchanges for consumers in
every State. By doing so, it is HHS’s
view that we have complied with the
requirements of Executive Order 13132.
States will continue to license,
monitor, and regulate agents and
brokers, both inside and outside of
Exchanges. All State laws related to
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61528
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
agents and brokers, including State laws
related to appointments, contractual
relationships with issuers, licensing,
marketing, conduct, and fraud will
continue to apply.
H. Congressional Review Act
This proposed rule is subject to the
Congressional Review Act provisions of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5
U.S.C. 801, et seq.), which specifies that
before a rule can take effect, the Federal
agency promulgating the rule shall
submit to each House of the Congress
and to the Comptroller General a report
containing a copy of the rule along with
other specified information, and has
been transmitted to Congress and the
Comptroller for review.
List of Subjects
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
Health care, Health insurance,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
45 CFR Part 153
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health care, Health
insurance, Health records, Organization
and functions (Government agencies),
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
45 CFR Part 154
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 155
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Brokers,
Conflict of interest, Consumer
protection, Grant administration, Grant
programs—health, Health care, Health
insurance, Health maintenance
organizations (HMO), Health records,
Hospitals, Indians, Individuals with
disabilities, Intergovernmental relations,
Loan programs—health, Medicaid,
Organization and functions
(Government agencies), Public
assistance programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Technical
assistance, Women and youth.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
45 CFR Part 157
Employee benefit plans, Health
insurance, Health maintenance
organizations (HMO), Health records,
Hospitals, Indians, Individuals with
disabilities, Medicaid, Organization and
functions (Government agencies), Public
assistance programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Technical
assistance, Women and youth.
45 CFR Part 158
45 CFR Part 148
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 156
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, American
Indian/Alaska Natives, Conflict of
interest, Consumer protection, Cost-
sharing reductions, Grant programs—
health, Grants administration, Health
care, Health insurance, Health
maintenance organization (HMO),
Health records, Hospitals, Individuals
with disabilities, Loan programs—
health, Medicaid, Organization and
functions (Government agencies), Public
assistance programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, State and
local governments, Sunshine Act,
Technical assistance, Women, Youth.
PART 144—REQUIREMENTS
RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE
COVERAGE
1. The authority citation for part 144
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791,
and 2792 of the Public Health Service Act,
42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91,
and 300gg–92.
2. Section 144.103 is amended by
revising the introductory text of the
definition of ‘‘plan’’ and by revising the
definition of ‘‘product’’ to read as
follows:
■
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Plan means, with respect to a product,
the pairing of the health insurance
coverage benefits under the product
with a particular cost-sharing structure,
provider network, and service area. The
product comprises all plans offered with
those characteristics and the
combination of the service areas for all
plans offered within a product
constitutes the total service area of the
product. With respect to a plan that has
been modified at the time of coverage
renewal consistent with § 147.106 of
this subchapter—
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4701
PART 146—REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE
MARKET
3. The authority citation for part 146
continues to read as follows:
■
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of Health and
Human Services proposes to amend 45
CFR parts 144, 146, 147, 148, 153, 154,
155, 156, 157 and 158 as set forth below.
§ 144.103
Product means a discrete package of
health insurance coverage benefits that
are offered using a particular product
network type (such as health
maintenance organization, preferred
provider organization, exclusive
provider organization, point of service,
or indemnity) within a service area. In
the case of a product that has been
modified, transferred, or replaced, the
new product will be considered to be
the same as the modified, transferred, or
replaced product when the changes to
the modified, transferred, or replaced
product meet the standards of
§ 146.152(f), § 147.106(e), or § 148.122(g)
of this subchapter (relating to uniform
modification of coverage), as applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
Sfmt 4702
Authority: Secs. 2702 through 2705, 2711
through 2723, 2791, and 2792 of the PHS Act
(42 U.S.C. 300gg–1 through 300gg–5, 300gg–
11 through 300gg–23, 300gg–91, and 300gg–
92).
4. Section 146.152 is amended by
adding paragraph (d)(3) and revising
paragraph (f)(3)(i) to read as follows:
■
§ 146.152 Guaranteed renewability of
coverage for employers in the group
market.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (d),
subject to applicable State law, an issuer
is not considered to have discontinued
offering all health insurance coverage in
a market if—
(i) The issuer or a member of the
issuer’s controlled group continues to
offer and make available in the
applicable market in the State at least
one product of the issuer that is
considered to be the same product as a
product the issuer had been offering (as
defined in § 144.103 of this subchapter).
For purposes of this section, the term
controlled group means a group of two
or more persons that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and
make available at least one product in
the applicable market in the State, even
if such product is not considered to be
the same product as a product the issuer
had been offering (as defined in
§ 144.103 of this subchapter), provided
the issuer subjects that product to the
rate review requirements under part 154
of this title (to the extent otherwise
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
applicable to coverage of the same type
and in the same market) as if that part
applied to that product, and reasonably
identifies a discontinued product that
corresponds to the new product for
purposes of such rate review.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same
health insurance issuer (within the
meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the
PHS Act), or a member of the issuer’s
controlled group (as defined in
paragraph (d) of this section);
*
*
*
*
*
events described in § 155.420(d) of this
subchapter, excluding §§ 155.420(d)(3)
of this subchapter (concerning
citizenship status), 155.420(d)(8) of this
subchapter (concerning Indians),
155.420(d)(9) of this subchapter
(concerning exceptional circumstances),
and 155.420(d)(13) of this subchapter
(concerning eligibility for insurance
affordability programs or enrollment in
the Exchange).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 147.106 is amended by
adding paragraph (d)(3) and revising
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) to read as follows:
PART 147—HEALTH INSURANCE
REFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL HEALTH
INSURANCE MARKETS
§ 147.106 Guaranteed renewability of
coverage.
*
5. The authority citation for part 147
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791,
and 2792 of the Public Health Service Act (42
U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91,
and 300gg–92), as amended.
6. Section 147.102 is amended by
revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (e) to read
as follows:
■
§ 147.102
Fair health insurance premiums.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Child age bands. (i) A single age
band for individuals age 0 through 14.
(ii) One-year age bands for individuals
age 15 through 20.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Uniform age rating curves. Each
State may establish a uniform age rating
curve in the individual or small group
market, or both markets, for rating
purposes under paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of
this section. If a State does not establish
a uniform age rating curve or provide
information on such age curve in
accordance with § 147.103, a default
uniform age rating curve specified in
guidance by the Secretary to reflect
market patterns in the individual and
small group markets will apply in that
State that takes into account the rating
variation permitted for age under State
law.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Section 147. 104 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 147.104 Guaranteed availability of
coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Limited open enrollment periods.
A health insurance issuer in the
individual market must provide a
limited open enrollment period for the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (d),
subject to applicable State law, an issuer
is not considered to have discontinued
offering all health insurance coverage in
a market if—
(i) The issuer or a member of the
issuer’s controlled group continues to
offer and make available in the
applicable market in the State at least
one product of the issuer that is
considered to be the same product as a
product the issuer had been offering (as
defined in § 144.103 of this subchapter).
For purposes of this section, the term
controlled group means a group of two
or more persons that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and
make available at least one product in
the applicable market in the State, even
if such product is not considered to be
the same product as a product the issuer
had been offering (as defined in
§ 144.103 of this subchapter), provided
the issuer subjects that product to the
rate review requirements under part 154
of this title (to the extent otherwise
applicable to coverage of the same type
and in the same market) as if that part
applied to that product, and reasonably
identifies a discontinued product that
corresponds to the new product for
purposes of such rate review.
(e) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same
health insurance issuer (within the
meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the
PHS Act) or member of the issuer’s
controlled group (as defined in
paragraph (d) of this section);
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61529
PART 148—REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
INDIVIDUAL HEALTH INSURANCE
MARKET
9. The authority citation for part 148
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791
and 2792 of the Public Health Service Act (42
U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91,
and 300gg–92), as amended.
10. Section 148.122 is amended by
adding paragraph (e)(4) and revising
paragraph (g)(3)(i) to read as follows:
■
§ 148.122 Guaranteed renewability of
individual health insurance coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(4) For purposes of this paragraph (e),
subject to applicable State law, an issuer
is not considered to have discontinued
offering all health insurance coverage in
a market if—
(i) The issuer or a member of the
issuer’s controlled group continues to
offer and make available in the
applicable market in the State at least
one product of the issuer that is
considered to be the same product as a
product the issuer had been offering (as
defined in § 144.103 of this subchapter).
For purposes of this section, the term
controlled group means a group of two
or more persons that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a),
52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and
make available at least one product in
the applicable market in the State, even
if such product is not considered to be
the same product as a product the issuer
had been offering (as defined in
§ 144.103 of this subchapter), provided
the issuer subjects that product to the
rate review requirements under part 154
of this title (to the extent otherwise
applicable to coverage of the same type
and in the same market) as if that part
applied to that product, and reasonably
identifies a discontinued product that
corresponds to the new product for
purposes of such rate review.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same
health insurance issuer (within the
meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the
PHS Act) or member of the issuer’s
controlled group (as defined in
paragraph (e) of this section);
*
*
*
*
*
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61530
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
PART 153—STANDARDS RELATED TO
REINSURANCE, RISK CORRIDORS,
AND RISK ADJUSTMENT UNDER THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
11. The authority citation for part 153
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 1311, 1321, 1341–1343,
Pub. L. 111–148, 24 Stat. 119.
§ 153.20
[Amended]
12. Section 153.20 is amended by
removing the definition of ‘‘Large
employer’’.
■ 13. Section 153.320 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(1)(i) to
read as follows:
■
§ 153.320 Federally certified risk
adjustment methodology.
(a) * * *
(1) The risk adjustment methodology
is developed by HHS and published in
advance of the benefit year in
rulemaking; or
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Draft factors to be employed in the
model, including but not limited to
demographic factors, diagnostic factors,
and utilization factors, if any, the
dataset(s) to be used to calculate final
coefficients, and the date by which final
coefficients will be released in
guidance;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Section 153.610 is amended by
revising paragraph (f)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 153.610 Risk adjustment issuer
requirements.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
*
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(7) * * *
(iii) Beginning in the 2018 benefit
year, validating enrollee health status
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
PART 154—HEALTH INSURANCE
ISSUER RATE INCREASES:
DISCLOSURE AND REVIEW
REQUIREMENTS
16. The authority citation for part 154
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Section 2794 of the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg–94).
17. Section 154.102 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘product’’ to
read as follows:
■
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) Remit to HHS an amount equal to
the product of its monthly billable
enrollment in the risk adjustment
covered plan multiplied by the perenrollee-per-month risk adjustment user
fee specified in the annual HHS notice
of benefit and payment parameters for
the applicable benefit year.
■ 15. Section 153.630 is amended by—
■ a. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(7)(iii)
and (iv) as paragraphs (b)(7)(iv) and (v),
respectively;
■ b. Adding a new paragraph (b)(7)(iii);
and
■ c. Revising paragraph (d).
The addition and revision read as
follows:
§ 153.630 Data validation requirements
when HHS operates risk adjustment.
through review of all relevant paid
pharmacy claims;
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Risk adjustment data validation
disputes and appeals. (1) Within 15
calendar days of notification of the
initial validation audit sample
determined by HHS, in the manner set
forth by HHS, an issuer must confirm
the sample or file a discrepancy report
to dispute the initial validation audit
sample determined by HHS.
(2) Within 30 calendar days of
notification of the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a
risk score error rate, in the manner set
forth by HHS, an issuer must confirm
the audit or error rate, or file a
discrepancy report to dispute the
findings of a second validation audit or
the calculation of a risk score error rate
as result of risk adjustment data
validation.
(3) An issuer may appeal the findings
of a second validation audit or the
calculation of a risk score error rate as
result of risk adjustment data validation,
under the process set forth in § 156.1220
of this subchapter.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 154.102
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Product means a package of health
insurance coverage benefits with a
discrete set of rating and pricing
methodologies offered in a State. The
term product includes any product that
is discontinued and newly filed within
a 12-month period when the changes to
the product meet the standards of
§ 147.106(e)(2) or (3) of this subchapter
(relating to uniform modification of
coverage).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 155—EXCHANGE
ESTABLISHMENT STANDARDS AND
OTHER RELATED STANDARDS
UNDER THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
18. The authority citation for part 155
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care
Act, sections 1301, 1302, 1303, 1304, 1311,
1312, 1313, 1321, 1322, 1331, 1332, 1334,
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
1402, 1411, 1412, 1413, Pub. L. 111–148, 124
Stat. 119 (42 U.S.C. 18021–18024, 18031–
18033, 18041–18042, 18051, 18054, 18071,
and 18081–18083).
19. Section 155.20 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘standardized
option’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 155.20
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Standardized option means a QHP
offered for sale through an individual
market Exchange that either—
(1) Has a standardized cost-sharing
structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking; or
(2) Is a high deductible health plan
with a standardized cost-sharing
structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking or in HHS guidance issued
solely to modify the cost-sharing
structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking to the extent necessary to
align with high deductible health plan
requirements under section 223 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, and HHS actuarial value
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 20. Section 155.200 is amended by
adding paragraph (f)(4) to read as
follows:
§ 155.200
Functions of an Exchange.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(4) A State Exchange on the Federal
platform that utilizes the Federal
platform for certain SHOP functions, as
set forth in paragraphs (f)(4)(i) through
(vii), must—
(i) If utilizing the Federal platform for
SHOP eligibility, enrollment, or
premium aggregation functions,
establish standard processes for
premium calculation, premium
payment, and premium collection that
are consistent with the requirements
applicable in a Federally-facilitated
SHOP under § 155.705(b)(4);
(ii) If utilizing the Federal platform for
SHOP enrollment or premium
aggregation functions, require its QHP
issuers to make any changes to rates in
accordance with the timeline applicable
in a Federally-facilitated SHOP under
§ 155.705(b)(6)(i)(A);
(iii) If utilizing the Federal platform
for SHOP enrollment functions,
establish minimum participation rate
requirements and calculation
methodologies that are consistent with
those applicable in a Federallyfacilitated SHOP under § 155.705(b)(10);
(iv) If utilizing the Federal platform
for SHOP enrollment or premium
aggregation functions, establish
employer contribution methodologies
that are consistent with the
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
methodologies applicable in a
Federally-facilitated SHOP under
§ 155.705(b)(11)(ii);
(v) If utilizing the Federal platform for
SHOP enrollment functions, establish
annual employee open enrollment
period requirements that are consistent
with § 155.725(e)(2);
(vi) If utilizing the Federal platform
for SHOP enrollment functions,
establish effective dates of coverage for
an initial group enrollment or a group
renewal that are consistent with the
effective dates of coverage applicable in
a Federally-facilitated SHOP under
§ 155.725(h)(2); and
(vii) If utilizing the Federal platform
for SHOP eligibility, enrollment, or
premium aggregation functions,
establish policies for the termination of
SHOP coverage or enrollment that are
consistent with the requirements
applicable in a Federally-facilitated
SHOP under § 155.735.
■ 21. Section 155.205 is amended by
revising paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B)
to read as follows:
§ 155.205 Consumer assistance tools and
programs of an Exchange.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) * * *
(A) For Exchanges and QHP issuers,
beginning no later than the first day of
the individual market open enrollment
period for the 2017 benefit year, this
standard also includes taglines on Web
site content and any document that is
critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care
services through a QHP for qualified
individuals, applicants, qualified
employers, qualified employees, or
enrollees. A document is deemed to be
critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care
services through a QHP if it is required
to be provided by law or regulation to
a qualified individual, applicant,
qualified employer, qualified employee,
or enrollee. Such taglines must indicate
the availability of language services in at
least the top 15 languages spoken by the
limited English proficient population of
the relevant State or States, as
determined in guidance published by
the Secretary. If an Exchange is operated
by an entity operating multiple
Exchanges, or relies on an eligibility or
enrollment platform that is relied on by
multiple Exchanges, the Exchange may
aggregate the limited English proficient
populations across all the States served
by the entity that operates the Exchange
or its eligibility or enrollment platform
to determine the top 15 languages
required for taglines. A QHP issuer may
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
aggregate the limited English proficient
populations across all States served by
the health insurance issuers within the
issuer’s controlled group (as defined
under § 147.106(d)(3)(i) of this
subchapter), whether or not those health
insurance issuers offer plans through
the Exchange in each of those States, to
determine the top 15 languages required
for taglines. Exchanges and QHP issuers
may satisfy tagline requirements with
respect to Web site content if they post
a Web link prominently on their home
page that directs individuals to the full
text of the taglines indicating how
individuals may obtain language
assistance services, and if they also
include taglines on any critical
standalone document linked to or
embedded in the Web site.
(B) For an agent or broker subject to
§ 155.220(c)(3)(i), beginning on the first
day of the individual market open
enrollment period for the 2017 benefit
year, or when such entity has been
registered with the Exchange for at least
1 year, whichever is later, this standard
also includes taglines on Web site
content and any document that is
critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care
services through a QHP for qualified
individuals, applicants, qualified
employers, qualified employees, or
enrollees. A document is deemed to be
critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care
services through a QHP if it is required
to be provided by law or regulation to
a qualified individual, applicant,
qualified employer, qualified employee,
or enrollee. Such taglines must indicate
the availability of language services in at
least the top 15 languages spoken by the
limited English proficient population of
the relevant State or States, as
determined in guidance published by
the Secretary. An agent or broker subject
to § 155.220(c)(3)(i) that is licensed in
and serving multiple States may
aggregate the limited English
populations in the States it serves to
determine the top 15 languages required
for taglines. An agent or broker subject
to § 155.220(c)(3)(i) may satisfy tagline
requirements with respect to Web site
content if it posts a Web link
prominently on its home page that
directs individuals to the full text of the
taglines indicating how individuals may
obtain language assistance services, and
if it also includes taglines on any critical
standalone document linked to or
embedded in the Web site.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 22. Section 155.220 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (c)(3)(i)(E);
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61531
b. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (c)(3)(i)(F);
■ c. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (c)(3)(i)(G) and adding ‘‘;
and’’ in its place;
■ d. Adding paragraphs (c)(3)(i)(H)
through (M);
■ e. Revising paragraphs (c)(4)(i)(E); and
■ f. Revising paragraph (j)(2)(i).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
§ 155.220 Ability of States to permit agents
and brokers to assist qualified individuals,
qualified employers, or qualified employees
enrolling in QHPs.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3)(i) * * *
(E) Maintain audit trails and records
in an electronic format for a minimum
of ten years and cooperate with any
audit under this section;
*
*
*
*
*
(H) Differentially display all
standardized options in accordance
with the requirements under
§ 155.205(b)(1) in a manner consistent
with that adopted by HHS for display on
the Federally-facilitated Exchange Web
site, unless HHS approves a deviation;
(I) Prominently display information
provided by HHS pertaining to a
consumer’s eligibility for advance
payments of the premium tax credit or
cost-sharing reductions;
(J) Allow the consumer to select an
amount for advance payments of the
premium tax credit, if applicable, and
make related attestations in accordance
with § 155.310(d)(2);
(K) Support post-enrollment activities
necessary for the consumer to effectuate
his or her coverage or resolve issues
related to his or her enrollment,
including discrepancies related to
eligibility;
(L) Demonstrate operational readiness
and compliance with applicable
requirements prior to the agent or
broker’s Internet Web site being used to
complete the QHP selection; and
(M) HHS may immediately suspend
the agent or broker’s ability to transact
information with the Exchange if HHS
discovers circumstances that pose
unacceptable risk to Exchange
operations or Exchange information
technology systems until the incident or
breach is remedied or sufficiently
mitigated to HHS’s satisfaction.
*
*
*
*
*
(4)(i) * * *
(E) Report to HHS and applicable
State departments of insurance any
potential material breach of the
standards in paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section, or the agreement entered
into under § 155.260(b), by the agent or
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61532
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
broker accessing the Internet Web site,
should it become aware of any such
potential breach. An agent or broker that
provides access to its Web site or ability
to transact information with HHS to
another agent or broker Web site is
responsible for ensuring that the other
agent’s or broker’s Web site is in
compliance with this section; and
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(2)(i) Provide consumers with correct
information, without omission of
material fact, regarding the Federallyfacilitated Exchanges, QHPs offered
through the Federally-facilitated
Exchanges, and insurance affordability
programs, and refrain from marketing or
conduct that is misleading (including by
having a direct enrollment Web site that
HHS determines could mislead a
consumer into believing they are
visiting HealthCare.gov), coercive, or
discriminates based on race, color,
national origin, disability, age, sex,
gender identity, or sexual orientation;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 23. Section 155.230 is amended by
revising paragraph (d)(2) and adding
paragraph (d)(3) to read as follows:
§ 155.230
notices.
General standards for Exchange
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2) Unless otherwise required by
Federal or State law, the SHOP must
provide required notices electronically
or, if an employer or employee elects,
through standard mail. If notices are
provided electronically, the SHOP must
comply with the requirements for
electronic notices in 42 CFR
435.918(b)(2) through (5) for the
employer or employee.
(3) In the event that an individual
market Exchange or SHOP is unable to
send select required notices
electronically due to technical
limitations, it may instead send these
notices through standard mail, even if
an election has been made to receive
such notices electronically.
■ 24. Section 155.330 is amended by
revising paragraphs (d)(1)(ii), (e)(2)(i)
introductory text, and (g)(1) and adding
paragraph (e)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 155.330 Eligibility redetermination during
a benefit year.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) For an enrollee on whose behalf
advance payments of the premium tax
credit or cost-sharing reductions are
being provided, eligibility
determinations for or enrollment in
Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, or the Basic
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
Health Program, if a Basic Health
Program is operating in the service area
of the Exchange.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) of this section, if the Exchange
identifies updated information
regarding death, in accordance with
paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, or
regarding any factor of eligibility not
regarding income, family size, or family
composition, or tax filing status, the
Exchange must—
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) If the Exchange identifies updated
information that the tax filer for the
enrollee’s household or the tax filer’s
spouse did not comply with the
requirements described in
§ 155.305(f)(4), the Exchange when
redetermining and providing
notification of eligibility for advance
payments of the premium tax credit
must:
(A) Follow the procedures specified
in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section;
(B) Follow the procedures in guidance
published by the Secretary; or
(C) Follow alternative procedures
approved by the Secretary based on a
showing by the Exchange that the
alternative procedures would facilitate
continued enrollment in coverage with
financial assistance for which the
enrollee remains eligible, provide
appropriate information about the
process to the enrollee (including
regarding any action by the enrollee
necessary to obtain the most accurate
redetermination of eligibility), and
provide adequate program integrity
protections and safeguards for Federal
tax information under section 6103 of
the Internal Revenue Code with respect
to the confidentiality, disclosure,
maintenance, or use of such
information.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) When an eligibility
redetermination in accordance with this
section results in a change in the
amount of advance payments of the
premium tax credit for the benefit year,
the Exchange must:
(i) Recalculate the amount of advance
payments of the premium tax credit in
such a manner as to account for any
advance payments already made on
behalf of the tax filer for the benefit year
for which information is available to the
Exchange, such that the recalculated
advance payment amount is projected to
result in total advance payments for the
benefit year that correspond to the tax
filer’s total projected premium tax credit
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
for the benefit year, calculated in
accordance with 26 CFR 1.36B–3 (or, if
less than zero, be set at zero); or
(ii) For benefit years through 2023,
recalculate advance payments of the
premium tax credit using an alternate
method that has been approved by the
Secretary.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 25. Section 155.400 is amended by
adding paragraph (e)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 155.400 Enrollment of qualified
individuals into QHPs.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(2) Premium payment deadline
extension. Exchanges may, and the
Federally-facilitated Exchange will,
allow issuers experiencing billing or
enrollment problems due to high
volume or technical errors to implement
a reasonable extension of the binder
payment deadlines in paragraph (e)(1) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 26. Section 155.420 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (b)(2)(iii),
(d)(1)(i) and (iii), and (d)(8);
■ b. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (d)(10) and adding a
semicolon in its place; and
■ c. Adding paragraphs (d)(10), (11),
(12), and (13).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 155.420
Special enrollment periods.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In the case of a qualified
individual or enrollee eligible for a
special enrollment period as described
in paragraph (d)(4), (5), (9), (11), (12), or
(13) of this section, the Exchange must
ensure that coverage is effective on an
appropriate date based on the
circumstances of the special enrollment
period.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Loses minimum essential coverage.
The date of the loss of coverage is the
last day the consumer would have
coverage under his or her previous plan
or coverage;
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) Loses pregnancy-related coverage
described under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and
(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX)).
The date of the loss of coverage is the
last day the consumer would have
pregnancy-related coverage; or
*
*
*
*
*
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
(8) The qualified individual—
(i) Who gains or maintains status as
an Indian, as defined by section 4 of the
Indian Health Care Improvement Act,
may enroll in a QHP or change from one
QHP to another one time per month; or
(ii) Who is or becomes a dependent of
an Indian, as defined by section 4 of the
Indian Health Care Improvement Act
and is enrolled or is enrolling in a QHP
through an Exchange on the same
application as the Indian, may change
from one QHP to another one time per
month, at the same time as the Indian;
*
*
*
*
*
(10) A qualified individual or
enrollee—
(i) Is a victim of domestic abuse or
spousal abandonment, as defined by 26
CFR 1.36B–2T, as amended, including a
dependent or unmarried victim within a
household, is enrolled in minimum
essential coverage and seeks to enroll in
coverage separate from the perpetrator
of the abuse or abandonment; or
(ii) Is a dependent of a victim of
domestic abuse or spousal
abandonment, on the same application
as the victim, may enroll in coverage at
the same time as the victim;
(11) A qualified individual or
dependent—
(i) Applies for coverage on the
Exchange during the annual open
enrollment period or due to a qualifying
life event, is assessed by the Exchange
as potentially eligible for Medicaid or
the Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP), and is determined
ineligible for Medicaid or CHIP by the
State Medicaid or CHIP agency either
after open enrollment has ended or
more than 60 days after the qualifying
event; or
(ii) Applies for coverage at the State
Medicaid or CHIP agency during the
annual open enrollment period, and is
determined ineligible for Medicaid or
CHIP after open enrollment has ended;
(12) The qualified individual or
enrollee, or his or her dependent,
adequately demonstrates to the
Exchange that a material error related to
plan benefits, service area, or premium
influenced the qualified individual’s or
enrollee’s decision to purchase a QHP;
or
(13) At the option of the Exchange,
the qualified individual provides
satisfactory documentary evidence to
verify his or her eligibility for an
insurance affordability program or
enrollment in a qualified health plan
through the Exchange following
termination of Exchange enrollment due
to a failure to verify such status within
the time period specified in § 155.315 or
is under 100 percent of the Federal
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
poverty level and did not enroll in
coverage while waiting for HHS to
verify his or her citizenship, status as a
national, or lawful presence.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 27. Section 155.430 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(2)(iii) to read as
follows:
§ 155.430 Termination of Exchange
enrollment or coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) The enrollee’s coverage is
rescinded in accordance with § 147.128
of this subchapter, after a QHP issuer
demonstrates, to the reasonable
satisfaction of the Exchange, if required
by the Exchange, that the rescission is
appropriate;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 28. Section 155.505 is amended by
adding paragraph (h) to read as follows:
§ 155.505 General eligibility appeals
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Electronic requirements. If the
Exchange appeals entity cannot fulfill
the electronic requirements of subparts
C, D, F, and H of this part related to
acceptance of telephone- or Internetbased appeal requests, the provision of
appeals notices electronically, or the
secure electronic transfer of eligibility
and appeal records between appeals
entities and Exchanges or Medicaid or
CHIP agencies, the Exchange appeals
entity may fulfill those requirements
that it cannot fulfill electronically using
a secure and expedient paper-based
process.
■ 29. Section 155.555 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 155.555
Employer appeals process.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Exchange employer appeals
process. An Exchange may establish an
employer appeals process in accordance
with the requirements of this section
and §§ 155.505(f) through (h) and
155.510(a)(1) and (2) and (c). Where an
Exchange has not established an
employer appeals process, HHS will
provide an employer appeals process
that meets the requirements of this
section and §§ 155.505(f) through (h)
and 155.510(a)(1) and (2) and (c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 30. Section 155.725 is amended by
revising paragraphs (g)(1) and (2) and
(j)(2)(i) and adding paragraph (g)(3) to
read as follows:
§ 155.725
*
Enrollment periods under SHOP.
*
*
(g) * * *
PO 00000
Frm 00079
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 4702
61533
(1) The SHOP must provide an
employee who becomes a qualified
employee outside of the initial or
annual open enrollment period with a
30-day enrollment period beginning on
the date the qualified employer notifies
the SHOP about the newly qualified
employee. Qualified employers must
notify the SHOP about a newly qualified
employee on or before the thirtieth day
after the day that the employee becomes
eligible for coverage.
(2) The effective date of coverage for
a QHP selection received by the SHOP
from a newly qualified employee is the
first day of the month following plan
selection, unless the employee is subject
to a waiting period consistent with
§ 147.116 of this subchapter and
paragraph (g)(3) of this section, in which
case the effective date will be on the
first day of the month following the end
of the waiting period, but in no case
may the effective date fail to comply
with § 147.116 of this subchapter. If a
newly qualified employee’s waiting
period ends on the first day of a month
and the employee has already made a
plan selection by that date, coverage
must take effect on that date. If a newly
qualified employee makes a plan
selection on the first day of a month and
any applicable waiting period has ended
by that date, coverage must be effective
on that date. If a qualified employer
with variable hour employees makes
regularly having a specified number of
hours of service per period, or working
full-time, a condition of employee
eligibility for coverage offered through a
SHOP, any measurement period that the
qualified employer elects to use under
§ 147.116(c)(3)(i) to determine whether
an employee meets the applicable
eligibility conditions with respect to
coverage offered through the SHOP
must not exceed 10 months, beginning
on any date between the employee’s
start date and the first day of the first
calendar month following the
employee’s start date.
(3) Waiting periods in a SHOP are
calculated beginning on the date the
employee becomes eligible for coverage,
regardless of when a qualified employer
notifies the SHOP about the newly
qualified employee, and must not
exceed 60 days in length. Waiting
periods in a Federally-facilitated SHOP
or a State-based SHOP that uses the
Federal platform for SHOP eligibility or
enrollment functions must be 0, 15, 30,
45 or 60 days in length.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Experiences an event described in
§ 155.420(d)(1) (other than paragraph
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61534
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
(d)(1)(ii)), or experiences an event
described in § 155.420(d)(2), (4), (5), (7),
(8), (9), (10), (11), or (12);
*
*
*
*
*
■ 31. Section 155.740 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 155.740 SHOP employer and employee
eligibility appeals requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) The appeals entity must conduct
appeals in accordance with the
requirements established in this section
and §§ 155.505(e) through (h) and
155.510(a)(1) and (2) and (c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 32. Section 155.1090 is added to
subpart K to read as follows:
§ 155.1090
Request for reconsideration.
(a) Request for reconsideration of
denial of certification specific to a
Federally-facilitated Exchange—(1)
Request for reconsideration. The
Federally-facilitated Exchanges will
permit an issuer that has submitted a
complete application to a Federallyfacilitated Exchange for certification of
a health plan as a QHP and is denied
certification to request reconsideration
of such action.
(2) Form and manner of request. An
issuer submitting a request for
reconsideration under paragraph (a)(1)
of this section must submit a written
request for reconsideration to HHS, in
the form and manner specified by HHS,
within 7 calendar days of the date of the
written notice of denial of certification.
The issuer must include any and all
documentation the issuer wishes to
provide in support of its request with its
request for reconsideration.
(3) HHS reconsideration decision.
HHS will provide the issuer with a
written notice of the reconsideration
decision. The decision will constitute
HHS’s final determination.
(b) [Reserved]
PART 156—HEALTH INSURANCE
ISSUER STANDARDS UNDER THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT, INCLUDING
STANDARDS RELATED TO
EXCHANGES
33. The authority citation for part 156
continues to read as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
■
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care
Act, sections 1301–1304, 1311–1313, 1321–
1322, 1324, 1334, 1342–1343, 1401–1402,
Pub. L. 111–148, 124 Stat. 119 (42 U.S.C.
18021–18024, 18031–18032, 18041–18042,
18044, 18054, 18061, 18063, 18071, 18082,
26 U.S.C. 36B, and 31 U.S.C. 9701).
34. Section 156.80 is amended by
revising paragraph (d)(1) to read as
follows:
■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
§ 156.80
Single risk pool.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) In general. A health insurance
issuer must establish an index rate that
is effective January 1 of each calendar
year for a State market described in
paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
section.
(i) The index rate must be based on
the total combined claims costs for
providing essential health benefits
within the single risk pool of that State
market.
(ii) The index rate must be adjusted
on a market-wide basis for the State
based on the total expected market-wide
payments and charges under the risk
adjustment program and Exchange user
fees (expected to be remitted under
§ 156.50(b) or (c) and (d) as applicable
plus the dollar amount under
§ 156.50(d)(3)(i) and (ii) expected to be
credited against user fees payable for
that State market).
(iii) The index rate must be calibrated
on a market-wide basis to correspond to
an age rating factor of 1.0, a geographic
rating factor of 1.0, and a tobacco use
rating factor of 1.0, in a manner
specified by the Secretary in guidance.
(iv) The premium rate for all of the
health insurance issuer’s plans in the
relevant State market must use the
applicable market-wide adjusted index
rate, subject only to the plan-level
adjustments permitted in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 35. Section 156.140 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 156.140
Levels of coverage.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) De minimis variation. The
allowable variation in the AV of a health
plan that does not result in a material
difference in the true dollar value of the
health plan is ±2 percentage points,
except if a health plan under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section (a bronze health
plan) either covers and pays for at least
one major service, other than preventive
services, before the deductible or meets
the requirements to be a high deductible
high plan within the meaning of 26
U.S.C. 223(c)(2), in which case the
allowable variation in AV for such plan
is ¥2 percentage points and +5
percentage points.
■ 36. Section 156.200 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(1) to read as
follows:
§ 156.200 QHP issuer participation
standards.
*
*
*
(c) * * *
PO 00000
Frm 00080
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 4702
(1) At least one QHP in the silver
coverage level and at least one QHP in
the gold coverage level as described in
§ 156.140 throughout each service area
in which it offers coverage through the
Exchange; and,
*
*
*
*
*
■ 37. Section 156.235 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(i)
to read as follows:
§ 156.235
Essential community providers.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The network includes as
participating practitioners at least a
minimum percentage, as specified by
HHS, of available essential community
providers in each plan’s service area.
Multiple providers at a single location
will count as a single essential
community provider toward both the
available essential community providers
in the plan’s service area and the
issuer’s satisfaction of the essential
community provider participation
standard; and
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The number of its providers that
are located in Health Professional
Shortage Areas or five-digit zip codes in
which 30 percent or more of the
population falls below 200 percent of
the Federal Poverty Line satisfies a
minimum percentage, specified by HHS,
of available essential community
providers in the plan’s service area.
Multiple providers at a single location
will count as a single essential
community provider toward both the
available essential community providers
in the plan’s service area and the
issuer’s satisfaction of the essential
community provider participation
standard; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 38. Section 156.265 is amended by:
■ a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (b)(3)(ii);
■ b. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (b)(3)(iii) and adding ‘‘; and’’
in its place; and
■ c. Adding paragraph (b)(3)(iv).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 156.265 Enrollment process for qualified
individuals.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(iv) Differentially display all
standardized options in accordance
with the requirements under
§ 155.205(b)(1) of this subchapter in a
manner consistent with that adopted by
HHS for display on the Federally-
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
facilitated Exchange Web site, unless
HHS approves a deviation.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 39. Section 156.272 is added to read
as follows:
§ 156.272
year.
Issuer participation for full plan
(a) An issuer offering a QHP through
an individual market Exchange must
make the QHP available for enrollment
through the Exchange for the full plan
year for which the plan was certified,
including to eligible enrollees during
limited open enrollment periods, unless
a basis for suppression applies under
§ 156.815.
(b) Unless a basis for suppression
under section 156.815 applies, an issuer
offering a QHP through a SHOP must
make the QHP available for enrollment
through the SHOP for the full plan year
for which the QHP was certified.
(c) An issuer offering a QHP through
a Federally-facilitated Exchange or a
Federally-facilitated SHOP that does not
comply with paragraph (a) or (b) of this
section may, at the discretion of HHS,
be precluded from offering QHPs in a
Federally-facilitated Exchange or
Federally-facilitated SHOP for up to the
two succeeding plan years.
■ 40. Section 156.290 is amended by
revising the section heading and
paragraphs (a) introductory text and (b)
to read as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 156.290 Non-certification and
decertification of QHPs.
(a) Non-certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle. If a QHP
issuer elects not to seek certification for
a subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle with the Exchange, the QHP
issuer, at a minimum, must—
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Notice of QHP non-certification for
a subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle. (1) If a QHP issuer elects not to
seek certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle with the
Exchange for its QHP, the QHP issuer
must provide written notice to each
enrollee.
(2) If a QHP issuer is denied
certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle by the
Exchange, it must provide written
notice to each enrollee within 30 days
of the Exchange’s denial of certification.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 41. Section 156.350 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 156.350 Eligibility and enrollment
standards for Qualified Health Plan issuers
on State-based Exchanges on the Federal
platform.
(a) * * *
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
(2) Section 156.285(c)(5) and (c)(8)(iii)
regarding the enrollment process for
SHOP; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 42. Section 156.430 is amended by
adding paragraph (h) to read as follows:
§ 156.430 Payment for cost-sharing
reductions.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments
discrepancies and appeals. (1) If an
issuer reports a discrepancy and seeks
to dispute the notification of the amount
of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments,
it must report the discrepancy to HHS
within 30 calendar days of notification
of the amount of reconciliation of the
cost-sharing reduction portion of
advance payments as described in
paragraph (e) of this section, in the
manner set forth by HHS.
(2) An issuer may appeal the amount
of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments,
under the process set forth in
§ 156.1220.
■ 43. Section 156.715 is amended by
adding paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 156.715 Compliance reviews of QHP
issuer in Federally-facilitated Exchanges.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Failure to comply. A QHP issuer
that fails to comply with a compliance
review under this section may be
subject to enforcement remedies under
subpart I of this part.
■ 44. Section 156.1220 is amended by—
■ a. Removing the word ‘‘or’’ at the end
of paragraph (a)(1)(v);
■ b. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (a)(1)(vi) and adding ‘‘; or’’ in
its place;
■ c. Adding paragraph (a)(1)(vii) and
(viii); and
■ d. Revising paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3)(ii),
and (a)(4)(ii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 156.1220
Administrative appeals.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) The findings of a second
validation audit as a result of risk
adjustment data validation with respect
to risk adjustment data for the 2016
benefit year and beyond; or
(viii) The calculation of a risk score
error rate as a result of risk adjustment
data validation with respect to risk
adjustment data for the 2016 benefit
year and beyond.
(2) Materiality threshold.
Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, an issuer may file a request for
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
61535
reconsideration under this section only
if the amount in dispute under
paragraph (a)(1)(i) through (viii) of this
section, as applicable, is equal to or
exceeds 1 percent of the applicable
payment or charge listed in that
paragraph (a)(1)(i) through (viii) payable
to or due from the issuer for the benefit
year, or $10,000, whichever is less.
(3) * * *
(ii) For a risk adjustment payment or
charge, including an assessment of risk
adjustment user fees, the findings of a
second validation audit, or the
calculation of a risk score error rate as
a result of risk adjustment data
validation, within 30 calendar days of
the date of the notification under
§ 153.310(e) of this subchapter;
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(ii) Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(1)
of this section, a reconsideration with
respect to a processing error by HHS,
HHS’s incorrect application of the
relevant methodology, or HHS’s
mathematical error may be requested
only if, to the extent the issue could
have been previously identified, the
issuer notified HHS of the dispute
through the applicable process for
reporting a discrepancy set forth in
§§ 153.630(d)(2), 153.710(d)(2), and
156.430(h)(1) of this subchapter, it was
so identified and remains unresolved.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 45. Section 156.1230 is amended by
adding paragraphs (b)(1), (2), and (3) to
read as follows:
§ 156.1230 Direct enrollment with the QHP
issuer in a manner considered to be
through the Exchange.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) HHS may immediately suspend
the QHP issuer’s ability to transact
information with the Exchange if HHS
discovers circumstances that pose
unacceptable risk to Exchange
operations or Exchange information
technology systems until the incident or
breach is remedied or sufficiently
mitigated to HHS’s satisfaction.
(2) The QHP issuer must demonstrate
operational readiness and compliance
with applicable requirements prior to
the QHP issuer’s Internet Web site being
used to complete a QHP selection.
(3) The QHP issuer must provide
consumers with correct information,
without omission of material fact,
regarding the Federally-facilitated
Exchanges, QHPs offered through the
Federally-facilitated Exchanges, and
insurance affordability programs, and
refrain from marketing or conduct that
is misleading (including by having a
direct enrollment Web site that HHS
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
61536
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 / Proposed Rules
determines could mislead a consumer
into believing they are visiting
HealthCare.gov), coercive, or
discriminates based on race, color,
national origin, disability, age, sex,
gender identity, or sexual orientation.
■ 46. Section 156.1256 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 156.1256
Other notices.
As directed by a Federally-facilitated
Exchange, a health insurance issuer that
is offering QHP coverage through a
Federally-facilitated Exchange or a
State-based Exchange on the Federal
platform must notify its enrollees of
material plan or benefit display errors
and the enrollees’ eligibility for a
special enrollment period, included in
§ 155.420(d)(12) of this subchapter,
within 30 calendar days after being
notified by a Federally-facilitated
Exchange that the error has been fixed,
if directed to do so by a Federallyfacilitated Exchange.
PART 157—EMPLOYER
INTERACTIONS WITH EXCHANGES
AND SHOP PARTICIPATION
47. The authority citation for part 157
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care
Act, Sections 1311, 1312, 1321, 1411, 1412,
Pub. L. 111–148, 124 Stat. 199.
48. Section 157.205 is amended by
revising paragraph (f)(1) to read as
follows:
■
§ 157.205 Qualified employer participation
in a SHOP.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) Newly eligible dependents and, on
or before the thirtieth day after the day
that the employee becomes eligible for
coverage, newly qualified employees;
and
*
*
*
*
*
PART 158—ISSUER USE OF PREMIUM
REVENUE: REPORTING AND REBATE
REQUIREMENTS
49. The authority citation for part 158
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Section 2718 of the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg–18), as
amended.
50. Section 158.121 is revised to read
as follows:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
■
§ 158.121
Newer experience.
If, for any aggregation as defined in
§ 158.120, 50 percent or more of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:08 Sep 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
total earned premium for an MLR
reporting year is attributable to policies
newly issued in that MLR reporting
year, then the experience of these
policies may be excluded from the
report required under § 158.110 for that
same MLR reporting year. If an issuer
chooses to defer reporting of newer
business as provided in this section,
then the excluded experience must be
added to the experience reported in the
following MLR reporting year.
■ 51. Section 158.232 is amended by
revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) and
(e)(1) and (2) and adding paragraph (f)
to read as follows:
§ 158.232 Calculating the credibility
adjustment.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Each year in the aggregation
included experience of at least 1,000
life-years; and
(2) The issuer’s preliminary MLR, as
defined under paragraph (f) of this
section, for each year in the aggregation
was below the applicable MLR standard,
as established under §§ 158.210 and
158.211.
(e) * * *
(1) Each year in the aggregation
included experience of at least 1,000
life-years; and
(2) The issuer’s preliminary MLR, as
defined under paragraph (f) of this
section, for each year in the aggregation
was below the applicable MLR standard,
as established under §§ 158.210 and
158.211.
(f) Preliminary MLR. Preliminary MLR
means the ratio of the numerator, as
defined in § 158.221(b) and calculated
as of March 31st of the year following
the year for which the MLR report
required in § 158.110 is being
submitted, to the denominator, as
defined in § 158.221(c), calculated using
only a single year of experience, and
without applying any credibility
adjustment.
■ 52. Section 158.240 is amended by—
■ a. Revising paragraph (c)(1);
■ b. Redesignating paragraphs (d) and
(e) as paragraphs (e) and (f),
respectively; and
■ c. Adding a new paragraph (d).
The revision and addition read as
follows:
§ 158.240 Rebating premium if the
applicable medical loss ratio standard is
not met.
*
PO 00000
*
*
Frm 00082
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 9990
(c) * * *
(1) For each MLR reporting year, an
issuer must rebate to the enrollee,
subject to paragraph (d) of this section,
the total amount of premium revenue, as
defined in § 158.130, received by the
issuer from the enrollee, after
subtracting Federal and State taxes and
licensing and regulatory fees as
provided in §§ 158.161(a) and
158.162(a)(1) and (b)(1), and after
accounting for payments or receipts for
risk adjustment, risk corridors, and
reinsurance as provided in
§ 158.130(b)(5), multiplied by the
difference between the MLR required by
§ 158.210 or § 158.211, and the issuer’s
MLR as calculated under § 158.221.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Limitation on total rebate payable
for each year in the aggregation. For any
State and market, an issuer may elect to
limit the amount of rebate payable for
the MLR reporting year to the issuer’s
total outstanding rebate liability with
respect to all years included in the
aggregation. If an issuer elects this
option, the outstanding rebate liability
with respect to a specific year in the
aggregation must be calculated by
multiplying the denominator with
respect to that year, as defined in
§ 158.221(c), by the difference between
the MLR required by § 158.210 or
§ 158.211 for the MLR reporting year,
and the sum of the issuer’s preliminary
MLR for that year, as defined under
§ 158.232(f), and the credibility
adjustment applicable to the current
MLR reporting year. The outstanding
rebate liability with respect to a specific
year must be reduced by any rebate
payments applied against it in prior
MLR reporting years. A rebate paid for
an MLR reporting year must be applied
first to reduce the outstanding rebate
liability with respect to the earliest year
in the aggregation.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: August 11, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Dated: August 24, 2016.
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2016–20896 Filed 8–29–16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\06SEP2.SGM
06SEP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 172 (Tuesday, September 6, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 61455-61536]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-20896]
[[Page 61455]]
Vol. 81
Tuesday,
No. 172
September 6, 2016
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, 147, 148, et al.
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS Notice of Benefit and
Payment Parameters for 2018; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 172 / Tuesday, September 6, 2016 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 61456]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, 147, 148, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, and 158
[CMS-9934-P]
RIN 0938-AS95
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS Notice of Benefit
and Payment Parameters for 2018
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule sets forth payment parameters and
provisions related to the risk adjustment program; cost-sharing
parameters and cost-sharing reductions; and user fees for Federally-
facilitated Exchanges and State-based Exchanges on the Federal
platform. It also provides additional guidance relating to standardized
options; qualified health plans; consumer assistance tools; network
adequacy; the Small Business Health Options Program; stand-alone dental
plans; fair health insurance premiums; guaranteed renewability; the
medical loss ratio program; eligibility and enrollment; appeals; and
other related topics.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on October 6, 2016.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-9934-P. Because
of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (please choose only one
of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this
regulation to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a
comment'' instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-9934-P, P.O. Box 8016,
Baltimore, MD 21244-8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments to
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-9934-P, Mail
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. Alternatively, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments ONLY to the following addresses prior to
the close of the comment period: a. For delivery in Washington, DC--
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20201.
(Because access to the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey Building
is not readily available to persons without Federal government
identification, commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-
in clock is available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing
by stamping in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being
filed.) b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address,
call telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments erroneously mailed to the addresses indicated as
appropriate for hand or courier delivery may be delayed and received
after the comment period.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff Wu, (301) 492-4305, Lindsey
Murtagh, (301) 492-4106, or Michelle Koltov, (301) 492-4225 for general
information.
Lisa Cuozzo, (410) 786-1746, for matters related to fair health
insurance premiums, guaranteed renewability, and single risk pool.
Michael Cohen, (301) 492-4277, for matters related to the Pre-
Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program.
Kelly Drury, (410) 786-0558, or Krutika Amin, (301) 492-5153, for
matters related to risk adjustment.
Adrianne Patterson, (410) 786-0686, for matters related to
sequestration, risk adjustment data validation discrepancies, and
administrative appeals.
Emily Ames, (301) 492-4246, for matters related to language access.
Dana Krohn, (301) 492-4412, for matters related to periodic data
matching, redeterminations of advance payments of the premium tax
credit, and appeals.
Ryan Mooney, (301) 492-4405, for matters related to premium
payment, billing, and terminations due to fraud.
Christelle Jang, (410) 786-8438, for matters related to the Small
Business Health Options Program (SHOP).
Krutika Amin, (301) 492-5153, for matters related to the Federally-
facilitated Exchange user fee.
Leigha Basini, (301) 492-4380, for matters related to mid-year
withdrawals, and other standards for QHP issuers.
Ielnaz Kashefipour, (301) 492-4376, for matters related to
standardized options.
Rebecca Zimmermann, (301) 492-4396, for matters related to stand-
alone dental plans.
Cindy Chiou, (301) 492-5142, for matters related to QHP issuer
oversight and direct enrollment.
Allison Yadsko, (410) 786-1740, for matters related to levels of
coverage and actuarial value.
Pat Meisol, (410) 786-1917, for matters related to cost-sharing
reductions, reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of
advance payments discrepancies, and the premium adjustment percentage.
Christina Whitefield, (301) 492-4172, for matters related to the
medical loss ratio program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have been received: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the search instructions on that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document, at the headquarters of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to view public comments,
phone 1-800-743-3951.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview
B. Stakeholder Consultation and Input
C. Structure of Proposed Rule
III. Provisions of the Proposed HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment
Parameters for 2018
A. Part 144--Requirements Relating to Health Insurance Coverage
B. Part 146--Requirements for the Group Health Insurance Market
[[Page 61457]]
C. Part 147--Health Insurance Reform Requirements for the Group
and Individual Health Insurance Markets
D. Part 148--Requirements for the Individual Health Insurance
Market
E. Part 152--Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program
F. Part 153--Standards Related to Reinsurance, Risk Corridors,
and Risk Adjustment Under the Affordable Care Act
G. Part 154--Health Insurance Issuer Rate Increases: Disclosure
and Review Requirements
H. Part 155--Exchange Establishment Standards and Other Related
Standards Under the Affordable Care Act
I. Part 156--Health Insurance Issuer Standards Under the
Affordable Care Act, Including Standards Related to Exchanges
J. Part 157--Employer Interactions With Exchanges and Shop
Participation
K. Part 158--Issuer Use of Premium Revenue: Reporting and Rebate
Requirements
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
A. ICRs Regarding Upload of Risk Adjustment Data
B. ICRs Regarding Data Validation Requirements When HHS Operates
Risk Adjustment
C. ICR Regarding the Interim and Final Discrepancy Reporting
Processes for Risk Adjustment Data Validation When HHS Operates Risk
Adjustment
D. ICR Regarding Standardized Options in SBE-FPs
E. ICR Regarding Differential Display of Standardized Options on
the Web sites of Agents and Brokers and QHP Issuers
F. ICR Regarding Ability of States To Permit Agents and Brokers
To Assist Qualified Individuals, Qualified Employers, or Qualified
Employees Enrolling in QHPs
G. ICR Regarding Eligibility Redeterminations
H. ICR Regarding Termination of Exchange Enrollment or Coverage
I. ICR Regarding QHP Issuer Request for Reconsideration
J. ICR Regarding Notification by Issuers Denied Certification
K. ICR Regarding the Discrepancy Reporting Processes for the
Reconciliation of the Cost-Sharing Reduction Portion of Advance
Payments
L. ICRs Regarding Administrative Appeals
M. ICR Regarding Medical Loss Ratio
V. Response to Comments
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Impact Estimates of the Payment Notice Provisions and
Accounting Table
D. Regulatory Alternatives Considered
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act
F. Unfunded Mandates
G. Federalism
H. Congressional Review Act
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Affordable Care Act The collective term for the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148) and the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152), as amended
APTC Advance payments of the premium tax credit
AV Actuarial value
CBO Congressional Budget Office
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CHIP Children's Health Insurance Program
CMP Civil money penalties
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CPI Consumer price index
ECP Essential community provider
ED Enrollment duration
EDGE External data gathering environment
EHB Essential health benefits
ESRD End Stage Renal Disease
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFE Federally-facilitated Exchange
FF-SHOP Federally-facilitated Small Business Health Options Program
FPL Federal poverty level
FR Federal Register
FTE Full-time equivalent
HCC Hierarchical condition category
HDHP High deductible health plan
HHS United States Department of Health and Human Services
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(Pub. L. 104-191)
HMO Health maintenance organization
IRS Internal Revenue Service
LEP Limited English proficient/proficiency
MLR Medical loss ratio
NAIC National Association of Insurance Commissioners
NDC National Drug Code
NHEA National Health Expenditure Accounts
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PCIP Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan
PHS Act Public Health Service Act
PI Personal income
PMPM Per member per month
PPO Preferred provider organization
QHP Qualified health plan
QIA Quality improvement activities
RXC Prescription Drug Categories
SADP Stand-alone dental plan
SBC Summary of benefits and coverage
SBE-FP State-based Exchange on the Federal platform
SHOP Small Business Health Options Program
The Code Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1, et seq.)
USP United States Pharmacopeia
I. Executive Summary
The Affordable Care Act enacted a set of reforms that are making
high quality health insurance coverage and care more affordable and
accessible to millions of Americans. These reforms include the creation
of competitive marketplaces called Affordable Insurance Exchanges, or
``Exchanges'' (in this proposed rule, we also call an Exchange a Health
Insurance Marketplace \SM\,\1\ or Marketplace\SM\), through which
qualified individuals and qualified employers can purchase health
insurance coverage. In addition, many individuals who enroll in
qualified health plans (QHPs) through individual market Exchanges are
eligible to claim a premium tax credit to make health insurance
premiums more affordable, and reductions in cost-sharing payments to
reduce out-of-pocket expenses for health care services. These
Affordable Care Act reforms also include the risk adjustment program
and rules that are intended to mitigate the potential impact of adverse
selection and stabilize the price of health insurance in the individual
and small group markets. In previous rulemaking, we have outlined the
major provisions and parameters related to many Affordable Care Act
programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Health Insurance Marketplace\SM\ and Marketplace\SM\ are
service marks of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this proposed rule, to further promote stable premiums in the
individual and small group markets, we propose several updates to the
risk adjustment methodology based on our experience with the program to
date that are intended to refine the methodology's ability to estimate
risk. In particular, we propose updates to better estimate the risk
associated with enrollees who are not enrolled for a full 12 months, to
use prescription drug data to update the predictive ability of our risk
adjustment models, and to establish transfers that will better account
for the risk of high-cost enrollees. We propose a number of policies
relating to the use of external data gathering environment (EDGE)
server data for recalibration of our risk adjustment models, and the
use of more recent data for future calibrations. We also propose
several amendments to the risk adjustment data validation process,
including proposals relating to the review of prescription drug data
and the establishment of a discrepancy identification and
administrative appeals process.
In addition to provisions aimed at stabilizing premiums, we propose
several provisions related to cost-sharing parameters. First, we
propose the premium adjustment percentage for 2018, which is used to
set the rate of increase for several parameters detailed in the
Affordable Care Act, including the maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing for 2018. We also propose the maximum annual limitations on
cost sharing for the 2018 benefit year for cost-sharing reduction plan
variations. This proposed rule also proposes standards for stand-alone
dental plans (SADPs) related to the annual limitation on cost sharing.
We also propose a number of amendments that we believe would help
promote consumer choice in health
[[Page 61458]]
plans. These include a proposal specifying that at least one QHP in the
silver coverage level and at least one QHP in the gold coverage level
must be offered throughout each service area in which a QHP issuer
offers coverage through the Exchange; and a proposal to permit a
broader de minimis range for the actuarial value of bronze plans to
permit greater flexibility in benefit design and to accommodate
proposed updates to the 2018 Actuarial Value (AV) Calculator.
Our proposal requiring QHP issuers on an Exchange to participate in
the Exchange for a full plan year (unless a basis for suppression
applies) as a QHP certification requirement would help ensure that
individuals enrolling through special enrollment periods and newly
qualified employees have access to a range of plans that is generally
comparable to the range of plans that can be accessed by those who
enroll during an open enrollment period. We also seek comment on
whether to remove a requirement tying participation in the individual
market Federally-facilitated Exchanges to participation in the
Federally-facilitated Small Business Health Options Programs.
We also propose to expand the medical loss ratio (MLR) provision
allowing issuers to defer reporting of policies newly issued with a
full 12 months of experience (rather than policies newly issued and
with less than 12 months of experience) in that MLR reporting year, and
to limit the total rebate liability payable with respect to a given
calendar year. We propose several changes to our guaranteed
renewability regulations that would address instances where issuers may
inadvertently trigger a 5-year prohibition on re-entering an applicable
market. In these select instances, we believe it is appropriate to
allow issuers to remain in the applicable market, and believe allowing
so will improve the availability of choice for consumers. We also
propose a change to our age rating rules for children.
In this proposed rule, we propose several provisions regarding when
and how consumers may choose and enroll in plans. This rule includes
proposals relating to codifying several special enrollment periods that
are already available to consumers in order to ensure the rules are
clear and to limit abuse; the enrollment processes in the Small
Business Health Options Program (SHOP); and binder payment deadlines.
We also propose several amendments related to insurance affordability
programs, including regarding eligibility determinations, and periodic
data matching.
We are proposing a number of amendments to assist consumers in
selecting and enrolling in QHPs and insurance affordability programs.
In the HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2017 Final Rule
(2017 Payment Notice), we established standardized options, which we
will display on HealthCare.gov in a manner that distinguishes them from
other QHPs, and a categorization of network depth. We believe both
policies will make it easier for consumers to select health plans
through HealthCare.gov. In this proposed rule, we expand upon both
policies. For standardized options, we propose four bronze standardized
options (including one health savings account-eligible high deductible
health plan), and three standardized options at each of the silver,
silver cost-sharing reduction variations, and gold metal levels. We
propose to select one standardized option at each metal level and one
at each cost-sharing reduction plan variation level for use in each
State. We hope that by increasing the scope of potential standardized
designs, we will better accommodate State cost-sharing laws. We also
propose to make differential display of standardized options available
in State-based Exchanges on the Federal platform (SBE-FPs) at the
State's option, as well as to require differential display of
standardized options by QHP issuers and web-brokers using a direct
enrollment pathway to facilitate enrollment through a Federally-
facilitated Exchange (FFE) or SBE-FP. Additionally, we propose a number
of standards and consumer protections that would apply to a web-broker
or issuer using the direct enrollment pathway. We propose to augment
our network adequacy display policy to account for QHPs that are part
of an integrated delivery system. We also make proposals relating to
the essential community provider requirements and propose amendments to
the standards regarding providing taglines in non-English languages
indicating the availability of language services.
We seek comment on potential ways to further support the transition
of former Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP) Program
enrollees into the Exchange to ensure that they do not experience a
lapse in coverage.
We also propose several amendments that would strengthen Exchanges'
oversight capabilities. These include proposals requiring issuers
attempting to rescind coverage purchased through the Exchange to show
that the rescission is appropriate; and making explicit HHS's authority
to impose civil money penalties (CMPs) in situations where QHP issuers
are non-responsive or uncooperative with compliance reviews. We also
propose an avenue through which issuers can appeal a non-certification
or decertification.
Finally, in this proposed rule, we propose minor adjustments to our
rules governing the single risk pool, SHOP, user fees, and notices,
including notices related to SHOP, decertification, and appeals.
II. Background
A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148)
was enacted on March 23, 2010. The Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152), which amended and revised
several provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
was enacted on March 30, 2010. In this proposed rule, we refer to the
two statutes collectively as the ``Affordable Care Act.''
The Affordable Care Act reorganizes, amends, and adds to the
provisions of title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
relating to group health plans and health insurance issuers in the
group and individual markets.
Section 2701 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act,
restricts the variation in premium rates charged by a health insurance
issuer for non-grandfathered health insurance coverage in the
individual or small group market to certain specified factors. The
factors are: Family size, geographic area, age, and tobacco use.
Section 2701 of the PHS Act operates in coordination with section
1312(c) of the Affordable Care Act. Section 1312(c) of the Affordable
Care Act generally requires a health insurance issuer to consider all
enrollees in all health plans (except grandfathered health plans)
offered by such issuer to be members of a single risk pool for each of
its individual and small group markets. States have the option to merge
the individual and small group market risk pools under section
1312(c)(3) of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 2702 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act,
requires health insurance issuers that offer health insurance coverage
in the group or individual market in a State to offer coverage to and
accept every employer and individual in the State that applies for such
coverage, unless an exception applies.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Before enactment of the Affordable Care Act, the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 amended the PHS
Act (formerly section 2711) to generally require guaranteed
availability of coverage for employers in the small group market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 61459]]
Section 2703 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act,
and former section 2712 and section 2742 of the PHS Act, as added by
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA), require health insurance issuers that offer health insurance
coverage in the group or individual market to renew or continue in
force such coverage at the option of the plan sponsor or individual
unless an exception applies.
Section 2718 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act,
generally requires health insurance issuers to submit an annual medical
loss ratio report to HHS, and provide rebates to enrollees if the
issuers do not achieve specified MLR thresholds.
Section 2794 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act,
directs the Secretary of HHS (the Secretary), in conjunction with the
States, to establish a process for the annual review of unreasonable
increases in premiums for health insurance coverage.\3\ The law also
requires health insurance issuers to submit to the Secretary and the
applicable State justifications for unreasonable premium increases
prior to the implementation of the increases. Section 2794(b)(2) of the
PHS Act further directs the Secretary, in conjunction with the States,
to monitor premium increases of health insurance coverage offered
through an Exchange or outside of an Exchange beginning with plan years
starting in 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The implementing regulations in part 154 limit the scope of
the requirements under section 2794 of the PHS Act to health
insurance issuers offering health insurance coverage in the
individual market or small group market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1101 of the Affordable Care Act required the Secretary to
establish a temporary high-risk health insurance pool program to
provide health insurance coverage from the establishment of the program
until January 1, 2014 for eligible individuals, namely U.S. residents
who are U.S. citizens or lawfully present in the U.S.; did not have
other health insurance coverage in the 6 months preceding enactment;
and have a pre-existing condition. Section 1101 also requires that the
Secretary develop procedures to provide for the transition of eligible
individuals enrolled in this health insurance coverage into qualified
health plans offered through an Exchange to avoid a lapse in coverage.
Section 1302 of the Affordable Care Act provides for the
establishment of an essential health benefits (EHB) package that
includes coverage of EHB (as defined by the Secretary), cost-sharing
limits, and actuarial value (AV) requirements. The law directs that
EHBs be equal in scope to the benefits covered by a typical employer
plan and that they cover at least the following 10 general categories:
Ambulatory patient services; emergency services; hospitalization;
maternity and newborn care; mental health and substance use disorder
services, including behavioral health treatment; prescription drugs;
rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices; laboratory
services; preventive and wellness services and chronic disease
management; and pediatric services, including oral and vision care.
Section 1301(a)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act directs all
issuers of QHPs to cover the EHB package described in section 1302(a)
of the Affordable Care Act, including coverage of the services
described in section 1302(b) of the Affordable Care Act, to adhere to
the cost-sharing limits described in section 1302(c) of the Affordable
Care Act and to meet the AV levels established in section 1302(d) of
the Affordable Care Act. Section 2707(a) of the PHS Act, which is
effective for plan or policy years beginning on or after January 1,
2014, extends the coverage of the EHB package to non-grandfathered
individual and small group market coverage, irrespective of whether
such coverage is offered through an Exchange. In addition, section
2707(b) of the PHS Act directs non-grandfathered group health plans to
ensure that cost sharing under the plan does not exceed the limitations
described in section 1302(c)(1) of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 1302(d) of the Affordable Care Act describes the various
levels of coverage based on actuarial value. Consistent with section
1302(d)(2)(A) of the Affordable Care Act, AV is calculated based on the
provision of EHB to a standard population. Section 1302(d)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act directs the Secretary to develop guidelines that
allow for de minimis variation in AV calculations.
Section 1311(b)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act directs that the
Small Business Health Options Program assist qualified small employers
in facilitating the enrollment of their employees in qualified health
plans offered in the small group market. Sections 1312(f)(1) and (2) of
the Affordable Care Act define qualified individuals and qualified
employers. Under section 1312(f)(2)(B) of the Affordable Care Act,
beginning in 2017, States will have the option to allow issuers to
offer QHPs in the large group market through an Exchange.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ If a State elects this option, the rating rules in section
2701 of the PHS Act and its implementing regulations will apply to
all coverage offered in such State's large group market under
section 2701(a)(5) of the PHS Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1311(c)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary to establish minimum criteria for provider network adequacy
that a health plan must meet to be certified as a QHP.
Section 1311(c)(5) of the Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary to continue to operate, maintain, and update the Internet
portal developed under section 1103 of the Affordable Care Act to
provide information to consumers and small businesses on affordable
health insurance coverage options.
Section 1311(c)(6)(C) of the Affordable Care Act states that the
Secretary is to provide for special enrollment periods specified in
section 9801 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code) and other
special enrollment periods under circumstances similar to such periods
under part D of title XVIII of the Social Security Act (the Act).
Section 1312(e) of the Affordable Care Act directs the Secretary to
establish procedures under which a State may permit agents and brokers
to enroll qualified individuals and qualified employers in QHPs through
an Exchange, and to assist individuals in applying for financial
assistance for QHPs sold through an Exchange.
Section 1321(a) of the Affordable Care Act provides broad authority
for the Secretary to establish standards and regulations to implement
the statutory requirements related to Exchanges, QHPs and other
components of title I of the Affordable Care Act. Section 1321(a)(1)
directs the Secretary to issue regulations that set standards for
meeting the requirements of title I of the Affordable Care Act with
respect to, among other things, the establishment and operation of
Exchanges.
Sections 1313 and 1321 of the Affordable Care Act provide the
Secretary with the authority to oversee the financial integrity of
State Exchanges, their compliance with HHS standards, and the efficient
and non-discriminatory administration of State Exchange activities.
Section 1321 of the Affordable Care Act provides for State flexibility
in the operation and enforcement of Exchanges and related requirements.
When operating a Federally-facilitated Exchange under section
1321(c)(1) of the Affordable Care Act, HHS has the
[[Page 61460]]
authority under sections 1321(c)(1) and 1311(d)(5)(A) of the Affordable
Care Act to collect and spend user fees. In addition, 31 U.S.C. 9701
permits a Federal agency to establish a charge for a service provided
by the agency. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-25
Revised establishes Federal policy regarding user fees and specifies
that a user charge will be assessed against each identifiable recipient
for special benefits derived from Federal activities beyond those
received by the general public. Furthermore, these user fees are
appropriated to CMS in the CMS Program Management appropriation.
Section 1321(c)(2) of the Affordable Care Act authorizes the
Secretary to enforce the Exchange standards using CMPs on the same
basis as detailed in section 2723(b) of the PHS Act. Section 2723(b) of
the PHS Act authorizes the Secretary to impose CMPs as a means of
enforcing the individual and group market reforms contained in part A
of title XXVII of the PHS Act with respect to health insurance issuers
when a State fails to substantially enforce these provisions.
Section 1321(d) of the Affordable Care Act provides that nothing in
title I of the Affordable Care Act should be construed to preempt any
State law that does not prevent the application of title I of the
Affordable Care Act. Section 1311(k) of the Affordable Care Act
specifies that Exchanges may not establish rules that conflict with or
prevent the application of regulations issued by the Secretary.
Section 1343 of the Affordable Care Act establishes a risk
adjustment program in which States, or HHS on behalf of States,
collects charges from health insurance issuers that attract lower-risk
populations in order to use those funds to provide payments to health
insurance issuers that attract higher-risk populations, such as those
with chronic conditions, thereby reducing incentives for issuers to
avoid higher-risk enrollees.
Sections 1402 and 1412 of the Affordable Care Act provide for,
among other things, reductions in cost sharing for essential health
benefits for qualified low- and moderate-income enrollees in silver
level health plans offered through the individual market Exchanges.
These sections also provide for reductions in cost sharing for Indians
enrolled in QHPs at any metal level.
1. Premium Stabilization Programs
In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 41929), we published a
proposed rule outlining the framework for the premium stabilization
programs. We implemented the premium stabilization programs in a final
rule, published in the March 23, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 17219)
(Premium Stabilization Rule). In the December 7, 2012 Federal Register
(77 FR 73117), we published a proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2014 benefit year to expand the provisions
related to the premium stabilization programs and set forth payment
parameters in those programs (proposed 2014 Payment Notice). We
published the 2014 Payment Notice final rule in the March 11, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 15409).
In the December 2, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 72321), we
published a proposed rule outlining the benefit and payment parameters
for the 2015 benefit year to expand the provisions related to the
premium stabilization programs, setting forth certain oversight
provisions and establishing the payment parameters in those programs
(proposed 2015 Payment Notice). We published the 2015 Payment Notice
final rule in the March 11, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR 13743).
In the November 26, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR 70673), we
published a proposed rule outlining the benefit and payment parameters
for the 2016 benefit year to expand the provisions related to the
premium stabilization programs, setting forth certain oversight
provisions and establishing the payment parameters in those programs
(proposed 2016 Payment Notice). We published the 2016 Payment Notice
final rule in the February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 10749).
In the December 2, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 75487), we
published a proposed rule outlining the benefit and payment parameters
for the 2017 benefit year to expand the provisions related to the
premium stabilization programs, setting forth certain oversight
provisions and establishing the payment parameters in those programs
(proposed 2017 Payment Notice). We published the 2017 Payment Notice
final rule in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12203).
2. Program Integrity
In the June 19, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 37031), we published a
proposed rule that proposed certain program integrity standards related
to Exchanges and the premium stabilization programs (proposed Program
Integrity Rule). The provisions of that proposed rule were finalized in
two rules, the ``first Program Integrity Rule'' published in the August
30, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 54069) and the ``second Program
Integrity Rule'' published in the October 30, 2013 Federal Register (78
FR 65045).
3. Exchanges
We published a request for comment relating to Exchanges in the
August 3, 2010 Federal Register (75 FR 45584). We issued initial
guidance to States on Exchanges on November 18, 2010. We proposed a
rule in the July 15, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 41865) to implement
components of the Exchanges, and a rule in the August 17, 2011 Federal
Register (76 FR 51201) regarding Exchange functions in the individual
market, eligibility determinations, and Exchange standards for
employers. A final rule implementing components of the Exchanges and
setting forth standards for eligibility for Exchanges was published in
the March 27, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 18309) (Exchange
Establishment Rule).
We established standards for SHOP in the 2014 Payment Notice and in
the Amendments to the HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for
2014 interim final rule, published in the March 11, 2013 Federal
Register (78 FR 15541). We also set forth standards related to Exchange
user fees in the 2014 Payment Notice.
In the 2017 Payment Notice we established additional Exchange
standards, including requirements for State Exchanges using the Federal
platform and standardized options.
In an interim final rule with comment published in the May 11, 2016
Federal Register (81 FR 29146) we amended the parameters of certain
special enrollment periods.
4. Essential Health Benefits and Actuarial Value
On December 16, 2011, HHS released a bulletin \5\ (the EHB
Bulletin) that outlined an intended regulatory approach for defining
EHB, including a benchmark-based framework. HHS also published a
bulletin that outlined its intended regulatory approach to calculations
of AV on February 24, 2012.\6\ A proposed rule relating to EHBs and AVs
was published in the November 26, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 70643).
We established requirements relating to EHBs and AVs in the Standards
Related to Essential Health Benefits, Actuarial Value, and
[[Page 61461]]
Accreditation Final Rule, which was published in the February 25, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 12833) (EHB Rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Essential Health Benefits Bulletin. (Dec. 16, 2011).
Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/essential_health_benefits_bulletin.pdf.
\6\ Actuarial Value and Cost-Sharing Reductions Bulletin. Feb.
24, 2012. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/Av-csr-bulletin.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Market Rules
A proposed rule relating to the 2014 health insurance market rules
was published in the November 26, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 70584).
A final rule implementing the health insurance market rules was
published in the February 27, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 13406) (2014
Market Rules).
A proposed rule relating to Exchanges and Insurance Market
Standards for 2015 and Beyond was published in the March 21, 2014
Federal Register (79 FR 15808) (2015 Market Standards Proposed Rule). A
final rule implementing the Exchange and Insurance Market Standards for
2015 and Beyond was published in the May 27, 2014 Federal Register (79
FR 30240) (2015 Market Standards Rule).
6. Rate Review
A proposed rule to establish the rate review program was published
in the December 23, 2010 Federal Register (75 FR 81003). A final rule
with comment period implementing the rate review program was published
in the May 23, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 29963) (Rate Review Rule).
The provisions of the Rate Review Rule were amended in final rules
published in the September 6, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 54969), the
February 27, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 13405), the May 27, 2014
Federal Register (79 FR 30339), and the February 27, 2015 Federal
Register (80 FR 10749).
7. Medical Loss Ratio
We published a request for comment on section 2718 of the PHS Act
in the April 14, 2010 Federal Register (75 FR 19297), and published an
interim final rule relating to the MLR program on December 1, 2010 (75
FR 74863). A final rule was published in the December 7, 2011 Federal
Register (76 FR 76573). An interim final rule was published in the
December 7, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 76595). A final rule was
published in the Federal Register on May 16, 2012 (77 FR 28790).
8. Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program
We published an interim final rule in the July 30, 2010 Federal
Register (75 FR 45013) setting forth implementing regulations for the
Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program. An amendment to this
interim final rule was published in the August 30, 2012 Federal
Register (77 FR 52614). We published an interim final rule in the May
22, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 30218).
B. Stakeholder Consultation and Input
HHS has consulted with stakeholders on policies related to the
operation of Exchanges, including the SHOPs, and the premium
stabilization programs. We have held a number of listening sessions
with consumers, providers, employers, health plans, the actuarial
community, and State representatives to gather public input. We
consulted with stakeholders through regular meetings with the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), regular contact with
States through the Exchange Establishment grant and Exchange Blueprint
approval processes, and meetings with Tribal leaders and
representatives, health insurance issuers, trade groups, consumer
advocates, employers, and other interested parties.
On March 31, 2016, we hosted a public conference to discuss the
potential improvements to the Federally certified HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology. Prior to the conference, we published the
``March 31, 2016, HHS-Operated Risk Adjustment Methodology Meeting:
Discussion Paper'' (``White Paper''),\7\ on which we received public
comment. These comments are available at: https://www.regtap.info/uploads/library/RA_Onsite_Discussion_Paper_Comments_5CR_080916.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We considered all public input we received as we developed the
policies in this proposed rule.
C. Structure of Proposed Rule
The regulations outlined in this proposed rule would be codified in
45 CFR parts 144, 146, 147, 148, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157 and 158.
The proposed regulations in parts 144 and 154 would make conforming
revisions to the regulatory definitions of ``plan'' and ``product.''
The proposed regulations in parts 146, 147 and 148 would address
two scenarios in which the discontinuation of all coverage currently
offered by an issuer within a market and State will not be treated as a
market withdrawal for purposes of the guaranteed renewability
requirements. The proposed regulations in part 147 would also create
multiple child age bands for rating purposes, and would amend the
provision regarding limited open enrollment periods (also known as
special enrollment periods) in the individual market to reflect the
proposed amendments regarding special enrollment periods in the
Exchanges.
The discussion in part 152 seeks comment on potential approaches to
ensure the successful transition of former Pre-Existing Condition
Insurance Plan (PCIP) Program enrollees to the Exchange without a lapse
in coverage, under the PCIP statute.
The proposed regulations in part 153 include the risk adjustment
user fee for 2018 and outline a number of proposed modifications to the
HHS risk adjustment methodology, including modifications to: (1)
Address partial year enrollment; (2) use prescription drug data to
predict actuarial risk; and (3) alter the methodology to better account
for high-cost enrollees. We also propose to use EDGE server data to
recalibrate the risk adjustment models, and propose revisions to the
risk adjustment data validation process.
The proposed regulations in part 155 include several amendments
regarding standardized options, including the 2018 cost-sharing
structures for standardized options. Other proposals in part 155 are
related to the eligibility and verification processes for insurance
affordability programs. We propose to amend rules related to enrollment
of qualified individuals into QHPs and make various proposals related
to the SHOPs. We propose to amend the regulations requiring Exchanges,
QHP issuers, and web-brokers to provide taglines in non-English
languages. We propose the required contribution percentage for 2018. We
propose a new policy regarding appealing denials of QHP certification.
We also propose amendments to the standards applicable in State
Exchanges using the Federal platform for SHOP functions in parts 155
and 156. We also propose amendments to the regulations applicable to
qualified employers in the SHOPs in part 157.
The proposed regulations in part 156 set forth proposals related to
cost-sharing parameters, including the premium adjustment percentage,
the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing, and the reductions in
the maximum annual limitation for cost-sharing plan variations for
2018. We also propose the user fee rate applicable in the FFEs and SBE-
FPs. The proposed regulations also include an amendment providing for
calibration of the single risk pool index rate. We also propose changes
regarding AV, levels of coverage, and essential community provider
requirements.
The proposed amendments to the regulations in part 158 propose
[[Page 61462]]
revisions related to deferral of reporting of experience for newer
business, as well as revisions related to limiting the total rebate
liability payable with respect to a given calendar year.
III. Provisions of the Proposed HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment
Parameters for 2018
A. Part 144--Requirements Relating to Health Insurance Coverage
1. Definitions (Sec. 144.103)
We propose to revise the regulatory definitions of ``plan'' and
``product'' in Sec. 144.103. Specifically, we propose to remove
language from each definition that would restrict a plan or product
from being considered the same plan or product when it is no longer
offered by the same issuer, but is still offered by a different issuer
in the same controlled group. We also propose to add a second sentence
to clarify that, in the case of a product that has been modified,
transferred, or replaced, the product will be considered to be the same
product when it meets the standards for uniform modification of
coverage at Sec. 146.152(f), Sec. 147.106(e), or Sec. 148.122(g), as
applicable. For further discussion of the provisions of this proposed
rule related to the transfer or replacement of all products in a market
in a State, please see the preamble to Sec. 147.106. Finally, for
purposes of clarity, we propose to include examples of product network
types in the definition of ``product'' in Sec. 144.103, including
health maintenance organization (HMO), preferred provider organization
(PPO), exclusive provider organization, point of service, and
indemnity.
B. Part 146--Requirements for the Group Health Insurance Market
1. Guaranteed Renewability of Coverage for Employers in the Group
Market (Sec. 146.152)
For a discussion of the provisions of this proposed rule related to
part 146, please see the preamble to Sec. 147.106.
C. Part 147--Health Insurance Reform Requirements for the Group and
Individual Health Insurance Markets
1. Fair Health Insurance Premiums (Sec. 147.102)
Section 2701 of the PHS Act, as implemented at 45 CFR
147.102(a)(3), permits premium rates to vary based on age within a
ratio of 3 to 1 for adults. Section 147.102(d) provides for uniform age
bands, including a single age band for individuals age 0 through 20. In
the proposed 2017 Payment Notice (80 FR 75496), we stated that we
recognized that the Federal child age band and factor may need to be
updated to better reflect the health risk of children. While average
health care costs vary by the age of the child, in general, claim costs
are highest for children age 0 through 4, followed by individuals age
15 through 20. Children age 5 through 14 generally have lower claim
costs. Having one age band for individuals age 0 through 20, together
with the current child age factor, may result in significant premium
increases for an individual when reaching age 21. In general, the
premium at age 21 is 57% higher than the premium at age 20. Therefore,
we sought comment regarding age rating for children to inform our
reconsideration of the child age rating factor in the Federal uniform
age curve.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Under 45 CFR 147.102(e), each State may establish a uniform
age rating curve in the individual or small group market, or both
markets, for rating purposes. If a State does not establish a
uniform age rating curve or provide information on such age curve in
accordance with Sec. 147.103, a default uniform age rating curve
specified in guidance by the Secretary will apply in that State that
takes into account the rating variation permitted for age under
State law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most comments submitted to HHS in response to the proposed 2017
Payment Notice supported continuing to spread the cost of newborns
across a broader age band, and supported a more gradual transition in
premiums up to age 21. Some stakeholders also indicated that the
default child age factor of 0.635 should be higher, stating that the
relatively low child age factor currently leads to insufficient
premiums for children. We conducted an analysis of total annual cost
from a national commercial database that incorporates 2015 claims data
from the individual and small group markets. Based on this analysis, we
propose to amend Sec. 147.102(d) to create multiple child age bands
and propose a corresponding increase in the overall child age factor.
We propose one age band for individuals age 0 through 14 and then
single-year age bands for individuals age 15 through 20, effective for
plan years or policy years beginning on or after January 1, 2018.
Establishing single-year age bands beginning at age 15 would be likely
to result in small annual increases in premiums for children age 15 to
20, which would help mitigate large premium increases attributable to
age due to the transition from a child to an adult age rating. However,
we solicit comments on alternative approaches that would achieve these
objectives.
We recognize that age rating factors have a significant impact on
issuers' approach to developing health insurance rates and therefore
also propose age rating factors for the default Federal standard child
age curve. These factors, listed in Table 1, correspond to the proposed
change to child age bands. We solicit comments on these child age
rating factors and whether they should be implemented at one time or
phased in over a 3-year period. As stated in the preamble to the 2014
Market Rules (78 FR at 13413), we intend to revise the default Federal
standard age curve periodically in guidance, but no more frequently
than annually, to reflect market patterns in the individual and small
group markets. We propose to reflect this approach by amending Sec.
147.102(e). We intend to monitor the effect of these new age bands and
rating factors, if finalized, to determine whether further refinements
are needed.
Table 1--CMS Standard Age Curve for Children
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current Proposed
Age premium ratio premium ratio
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0-14.................................... 0.635 0.765
15...................................... 0.635 0.833
16...................................... 0.635 0.859
17...................................... 0.635 0.885
18...................................... 0.635 0.913
19...................................... 0.635 0.941
20...................................... 0.635 0.970
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Guaranteed Availability of Coverage (Sec. 147.104)
For a discussion of the provisions of this proposed rule related to
limited open enrollment periods (also known as special enrollment
periods) in Sec. 147.104, please see the preamble to Sec. 155.420.
The guaranteed availability requirement in section 2702 of the PHS
Act generally requires each health insurance issuer that offers health
insurance coverage in the group or individual market in a State to
accept every employer or individual in the State that applies for such
coverage. However, in the case of an issuer that offers coverage
through a network plan, the issuer may limit its offer of coverage to
individuals in the individual market who live or reside in the service
area of such network plan, and to employers in the small group or large
group market with employees who live, work, or reside in the service
area of such network plan.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ In the 2014 Market Rules, we codified in regulation the
ability of an issuer of a network plan to limit the availability to
individuals who live or reside in the service area, noting that
``[w]hile PHS Act section 2702(c)(1)(A) does not explicitly include
a corresponding exception allowing issuers to limit the sale of
individual market coverage to individuals who live or reside in the
individual market plan's service area, failing to recognize such an
exception would eliminate an issuer's ability to define a service
area for its individual market business within a State. Moreover,
references to persons with individual market coverage in paragraph
(c)(1) and subparagraph (c)(1)(B) of PHS Act section 2702 suggest
that such persons with individual market coverage also were intended
to be described in paragraph (c)(1)(A).''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 61463]]
This protection under Federal law does not require that the
employer have a principal business address within the issuer's service
area.\10\ In the 2017 Payment Notice, we amended Sec. 147.102 to
ensure that a network plan could be appropriately rated for sale to an
employer with employees in multiple geographical rating areas,
consistent with both the rating rules and the guaranteed availability
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ However, this provision does not require an issuer to offer
coverage to an employer whose place of business is located outside
the State in which the issuer is licensed to do business. Further,
this provision does not require an issuer to offer coverage to an
employer if doing so would exceed the scope of the issuer's State
licensure (for example, the issuer's product is not approved for
sale to an employer where the situs of the contract is outside the
issuer's service area).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We understand that some issuers have unique network sharing
agreements with other affiliated issuers through which an employer's
employees may access in-network coverage outside the service area of
the primary issuer, using the provider network of the affiliated
issuers. Under the terms of these agreements, the affiliated issuers
require the employer itself to be located in the issuer's service area
in order to be eligible to purchase coverage, and the issuers agree not
to offer products to an employer whose business headquarters is outside
of the primary issuer's service area. For example, affiliated issuers A
and B have service areas A and B, respectively. Under the terms of the
agreements, an employer with business headquarters in service area A
could purchase coverage from issuer A to cover its employees in both
service areas A and B, but that employer could not purchase coverage
from issuer B.
We understand these issuers believe issuer B satisfies the
guaranteed availability requirements because the employer is guaranteed
coverage from issuer A, and its employees in service area B can have
access to the coverage under the plan issued by issuer A using issuer
B's network. These issuers explain that this system promotes simplicity
for employers, who can purchase a single plan from one of the locally
affiliated issuers serving the employer's area to cover their employees
in multiple service areas.
We seek comment on whether and how restricting an employer's
ability to purchase coverage from an issuer, when the offering of such
coverage would not exceed the scope of the issuer's license from the
applicable State authority, may limit employers' options.
We also seek comments on these and other similar arrangements and
whether or how they could be structured, consistent with State
licensure requirements, to satisfy the guaranteed availability right of
employers to purchase all products that are approved for sale from an
issuer when the employer has employees who live, work, or reside within
the issuer's service area.
3. Guaranteed Renewability of Coverage (Sec. 147.106)
a. Market Withdrawal Exception to Guaranteed Renewability Requirements
PHS Act section 2703(c)(2)(B) provides that a health insurance
issuer that elects to discontinue all health insurance coverage in the
individual or group market in a State is prohibited from re-entering
the applicable market for at least 5 years. The 5-year ban on market
re-entry is codified at Sec. 147.106(d)(2). However, we recognize that
interpreting certain issuer transactions or reorganizations to be
withdrawals from the market, triggering the 5-year ban on market re-
entry, may have unintended effects and may not be necessary to ensure
the continuity of coverage for consumers, which is a primary focus of
the protections in the guaranteed renewability statute.
For example, as part of a corporate reorganization, an issuer could
transfer all of its products to another related issuer, where the
products otherwise would be considered the same products based on the
uniform modification standards at Sec. 147.106(e). More specifically,
an issuer with multiple lines of business, such as a Medicaid managed
care line and a commercial line, could decide to create a subsidiary
and transfer its commercial line of business to the subsidiary. In such
cases, enrollees in the commercial products maintain continuity of
coverage when their plans and products are not changed beyond what is
permitted by the scope of the uniform modification provisions. We also
note that several States evaluate transactions at the holding company
level and have informed HHS that a transaction of the type described in
this example would not trigger the 5-year ban on market re-entry and
corresponding notice requirement under State law.
We recognize that interpreting such a transfer to constitute a
market withdrawal could have the unintended consequences of potentially
raising conflicts with State approaches and unnecessarily limiting
issuer corporate structuring transactions. Therefore, to align with
State approaches to corporate structuring or other transactions within
a controlled group of issuers, and to avoid unintended market bans
where continuity of coverage is effectively provided, we propose to
amend Sec. 147.106(e)(3)(i) to provide that, for purposes of
guaranteed renewability, a product will be considered to be the same
product when offered by a different issuer within an issuer's
controlled group, provided it otherwise meets the standards for uniform
modification of coverage.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ As we explained in an FAQ related to Market Reforms,
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/qa_hmr.html, enrollees in a grandfathered product can maintain that
coverage if that coverage continues to be offered and the coverage
does not make a change that would cause the product to cease to be
grandfathered as provided for in regulations. See 26 CFR 54.9815-
1251(g)(1); 29 CFR 2590.715-1251(g)(1); and 45 CFR 147.140(g)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this purpose, we propose to use a definition based on the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) definition of controlled group that
applies for purposes of determining whether a group of two or more
persons is treated as a single covered entity under the health
insurance providers fee under section 9010 of the Affordable Care Act
and 26 CFR 57.2(c). Specifically, for purposes of guaranteed
renewability, we propose that ``controlled group'' means a group of two
or more persons that is treated as a single employer under section
52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended. We propose that definition for consistency with other
Affordable Care Act provisions, including sections 9008 and 9010, which
pertain to the branded prescription drug fee and health insurance
providers fee, respectively, and are familiar to health insurance
issuers. We note that the definition of issuer group under 45 CFR
156.20 is also familiar to issuers and we are considering whether to
use a similar definition for purposes of these regulations. That
section provides that the term issuer group means all entities treated
under subsection (a) or (b) of section 52 of the Code as a member of
the same controlled group of corporations as (or under common control
with) a health insurance issuer, or issuers affiliated by the common
use of a nationally licensed service mark. We solicit comment on
whether this or another definition would be appropriate.
As a result of this proposal, issuers transferring products to
another issuer in their controlled group that otherwise remain within
the scope of a uniform modification would not be required to
[[Page 61464]]
send discontinuation notices under paragraph (c)(1) or (d)(1), as
applicable. However, because this interpretation considers the
transferred product to be the same as the product previously offered,
the issuer of the coverage at the time notice must be provided (whether
the current issuer or the acquiring issuer) would be required to
provide a renewal notice in accordance with the timeframe specified in
the regulation. We also propose that States that interpret or apply
market withdrawal provisions differently under State law would not be
prohibited by this interpretation from considering products transferred
to a different issuer within a controlled group to be a new product and
the scenario a market withdrawal. We propose to make conforming
amendments at Sec. Sec. 146.152(f)(3)(i) and 148.122(g)(3)(i).
Because, under this interpretation, the products would be considered
the same products for purposes of continuity of coverage for the
enrollees, we also propose that the products be considered the same
products for purposes of the Federal rate review requirements, to the
extent applicable, and therefore we propose conforming amendments as
described in the preamble to Sec. 154.102. For States where HHS is
responsible for enforcement of the guaranteed renewability provisions
of the PHS Act, we propose to adopt this interpretation and not
consider the transfer of products to a different issuer within a
controlled group to be a market withdrawal when the conditions in this
proposed rule are met, where permitted under applicable State law.
There is a second situation where we have determined that it may
not be appropriate to interpret an issuer's actions to constitute a
market withdrawal resulting in a 5-year ban on market re-entry. When an
issuer discontinues offering all of its products and seeks to offer new
products within the same market, if the changes made to the new
products exceed the scope of a uniform modification of coverage, we
have considered such an action to be a market withdrawal, subject to
the 5-year ban on market re-entry.\12\ In such a scenario an issuer
might, for example, offer only products A, B, and C one year, but then
offer only products D, E, and F the next year, where products D, E and
F differ from products A, B and C in ways that do not meet the criteria
for uniform modification of coverage. This scenario is different from
the first scenario mentioned above because the new products are offered
by the same issuer that previously offered the discontinued products.
State regulators and other interested parties have indicated that this
scenario is not viewed by some States as a market withdrawal under
State law, as long as the issuer continues to provide a product in the
same market in which it previously offered the discontinued
products.\13\ As noted above, we believe ensuring continuity of
coverage for consumers is a primary focus of the protections in the
guaranteed renewability statute. Unlike the circumstances described in
the prior scenario, where the enrollee has continuity of the product,
but with a related issuer, in the situation described here, enrollees
would have continuity with the same issuer, but would not have the
protection of the limitations imposed by the uniform modification
provision. Notwithstanding our prior interpretation described in the
Uniform Modification and Plan/Product Withdrawal FAQ,\14\ we recognize
that the statute could be interpreted to mean that, as long as an
issuer has a product available in the applicable market (even if that
issuer discontinues all of its previously offered products), it has not
withdrawn from the applicable market. Adopting this interpretation may
be in the best interest of consumers, as imposing the 5-year ban on
market re-entry in these circumstances could diminish consumer choice
and market competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Uniform Modification and Plan/Product Withdrawal FAQ (Jun.
15, 2015), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/uniform-mod-and-plan-wd-FAQ-06-15-2015.pdf.
\13\ We also note that, in the context of reenrollment through
an Exchange in coverage under a different product, we stated that,
under certain limited circumstances, enrollments completed under the
hierarchy specified in 45 CFR 155.335(j) will be considered to be a
renewal of the enrollee's coverage.
\14\ Uniform Modification and Plan/Product Withdrawal FAQ (Jun.
15, 2015). Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/uniform-mod-and-plan-wd-FAQ-06-15-2015.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that, under our current interpretation requiring that the
issuer leave at least one product in place that meets uniform
modification standards to avoid the 5-year market ban on re-entry, the
issuer would remain subject to Federal rate review under section 2794
with respect to at least one product. Under the new interpretation, an
issuer would be able to avoid Federal rate review altogether without
triggering the 5-year ban by sufficiently altering all of its existing
products. To prevent issuers from avoiding Federal rate review
requirements in this manner, we propose to permit issuers to replace
their entire portfolio of products without triggering the 5-year ban
under the market withdrawal provision when an issuer replaces its
entire portfolio of products in a market with products that are
different in ways that are not within the scope of uniform
modifications, provided the issuer reasonably identifies which newly
offered product (or products) replace which discontinued product (or
products) and subjects the new product (or products) to the Federal
rate review process under part 154 (to the extent otherwise applicable
to coverage of the same type and in the same market (for example, the
Federal rate review process does not apply in the U.S. territories)) as
if it were the same product as the discontinued product it
replaces.\15\ An issuer's identification of which new product replaces
which discontinued product would be considered reasonable if it
reflects the issuer's expectations regarding significant transfer of
enrollment from one product to the other (for example, because the
products have been cross-walked for auto-reenrollment). We also propose
that States that interpret or apply market withdrawal provisions
differently under State law would not be prohibited from continuing to
consider the scenario described here as a market withdrawal. For States
where HHS is responsible for enforcement of the guaranteed renewability
provisions of the PHS Act, we propose to adopt this interpretation and
not consider this scenario to constitute a market withdrawal when the
conditions outlined in this proposed rule are met, where permitted
under applicable State law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Under this interpretation, issuers of health insurance
products offered in the U.S. territories would be able to replace
their products in those markets without subjecting the new products
to the Federal rate review process and without triggering the 5-year
ban.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that in the second scenario, consumers generally will still
get the protection required under the product discontinuance provision
under guaranteed renewability, including a special enrollment period
for loss of minimum essential coverage to select another product made
available by the same or a different issuer, and a notice from the
issuer of the product discontinuance at least 90 days in advance of the
termination of coverage.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ As noted earlier, under certain limited circumstances,
enrollments through an Exchange into a different product that are
completed under the hierarchy specified in 45 CFR 155.335(j) will be
considered to be a renewal of the enrollee's coverage. In such
cases, a special enrollment period is not available, and a renewal
notice is sent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To reflect our proposed interpretations in these two scenarios,
[[Page 61465]]
we propose to add a new paragraph (d)(3) to Sec. 147.106 to provide
that an issuer has not discontinued offering all health insurance
coverage in a market if a member of the issuer's controlled group
continues to offer and make available for enrollment at least one
product of the original issuer that is considered to be the same
product (as proposed to be amended in Sec. 144.103 of this proposed
rule), meaning that any change to the product is within the scope of a
uniform modification of coverage under Sec. 147.106(e), or if the
issuer continues to offer and make available a product in the
applicable market in a State and subjects the new product to the rate
review requirements under part 154 of this title (to the extent
otherwise applicable to coverage of the same type and in the same
market) as if that part applied to that product, and reasonably
identifies a discontinued product that corresponds to the new product
for purposes of such rate review. We also propose to make conforming
amendments to Sec. Sec. 146.152(d)(3) and 148.122(e)(4).
We solicit comment on all aspects of these proposals.
b. Guaranteed Renewability in the Individual Market and Medicare
Eligibility
The guaranteed renewability provision at Sec. 147.106(h)(2) states
that Medicare eligibility or entitlement is not a basis for nonrenewal
or termination of an individual's health insurance coverage in the
individual market. The anti-duplication provision at section 1882(d)(3)
of the Act prohibits the sale or issuance of an individual health
insurance policy to an individual entitled to benefits under Part A or
enrolled under Part B of Medicare \17\ with knowledge that the policy
duplicates health benefits to which the individual is otherwise
entitled under Medicare or Medicaid, but does not expressly prohibit
the renewal of individual health insurance coverage to someone who
becomes entitled to benefits under Part A or enrolls under Part B while
enrolled in the individual market coverage. There also is no
prohibition on issuers covering Medicare beneficiaries under group
health insurance policies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ For information on when individuals are entitled to,
eligible for, or able to enroll in Medicare, see https://www.cms.gov/medicare/eligibility-and-enrollment/origmedicarepartabeligenrol/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under 45 CFR 147.106, in certain circumstances, issuers can satisfy
their guaranteed renewability obligations by, at the end of a policy
year, reenrolling Medicare beneficiaries who were enrolled in
individual market health insurance coverage when they obtained Medicare
coverage into a different plan within the same individual health
insurance product, or into a different plan within a different
individual health insurance product issued by the same issuer of the
beneficiary's existing individual market coverage. This may occur, for
example, when an issuer makes revisions to a product that exceed the
scope of uniform modification of coverage, thus replacing the existing
product with a new product. Under our proposal earlier in this section
of the preamble, issuers also could satisfy their guaranteed
renewability obligations by reenrolling Medicare beneficiaries into
individual market health insurance coverage that is considered the same
product but that is issued by a different issuer within the issuer's
controlled group. We solicit comments on whether the guaranteed
renewability statute and the anti-duplication provision at section
1882(d)(3) of the Act should together be interpreted to require or
prohibit renewal of a Medicare beneficiary's individual market
coverage, if the issuer has knowledge that the renewed coverage would
duplicate the Medicare beneficiary's benefits: (1) In a plan under the
same contract of insurance; (2) under a plan that was modified but is
considered under the guaranteed renewability provisions to be the same
plan but that would require a new contract; (3) under a different plan
within the same product; (4) under a different product with the same
issuer; or, as discussed earlier in this preamble; (5) under the same
product offered by a different issuer within the issuer's controlled
group. We are particularly interested in information about how
requiring or prohibiting renewal in these circumstances could affect
individuals' decisions to enroll in the Medicare program, their
premiums and out-of-pocket costs if they were insured in the Medicare
program versus the individual market, and the effect on Medicare's and
the insurance plans' risk pools.
We have become aware of an issue that has arisen with respect to
coordination of benefits between Medicare and individual health
insurance coverage. Since Medicare Secondary Payer rules do not apply
to health coverage in the individual health insurance market, Medicare
always pays primary to individual health insurance coverage. Some
issuers have a provision in their individual health insurance policies
indicating that the coverage will pay secondary to Medicare not only
for individuals who are currently covered by Medicare but also for
those who could obtain Medicare coverage (such as those individuals who
must pay for Part A coverage) but who are not currently covered. We
solicit comments on the effects of such provisions on consumers, their
premiums, and out-of-pocket costs, how these provisions could affect
individuals' decisions to enroll in the Medicare program or individual
market coverage, and the effects these provisions and those decisions
could have on the Medicare and individual market risk pools, as well as
whether this is a permissible coordination of benefits provision with
respect to the individuals who could but do not have Medicare coverage.
Given that the Medicare Secondary Payer rules have different provisions
for End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) beneficiaries, we also welcome
comments on whether a legal basis exists to treat coordination of
benefit provisions that relate to coverage in the individual market for
Medicare beneficiaries differently for Medicare beneficiaries who are
entitled to benefits under Medicare Part A and eligible to enroll under
Part B under the ESRD provisions at 42 U.S.C. 426-1.
D. Part 148--Requirements for the Individual Health Insurance Market
1. Guaranteed Renewability of Individual Health Insurance Coverage
(Sec. 148.122)
For a discussion of the provisions of this proposed rule related to
part 148, please see the preamble to Sec. 147.106.
E. Part 152--Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program
1. Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan Program (Sec. 152.45)
Section 1101 of the Affordable Care Act directed HHS to establish a
temporary Federal high risk pool program in 2010 to provide health
insurance coverage to individuals who were U.S. citizens or nationals
or lawfully present in the United States, did not have other health
insurance coverage in the 6 months preceding enactment, and had a pre-
existing condition. Section 1101(g)(3)(B) directed HHS to develop
procedures to provide for the transition of eligible individuals
enrolled in health insurance coverage offered through the high risk
pool HHS established into qualified health plans offered through an
Exchange. Those procedures should, in particular, ensure that there is
no lapse in coverage with respect to the individual and may extend
coverage after the termination of the risk pool involved, if the
Secretary determines necessary to avoid such a lapse.
[[Page 61466]]
Starting in 2010, shortly after the Affordable Care Act was
enacted, HHS established and began operating the risk pool program
required under section 1101, which it called the Pre-Existing Condition
Insurance Plan (PCIP) Program, to provide health insurance coverage to
eligible individuals, as defined in the Affordable Care Act. Beginning
in 2013, HHS worked to enroll these individuals in QHPs through the
Exchanges. However, for a variety of reasons, individuals from the
high-risk pool established under section 1101 may find it difficult to
obtain and maintain coverage in QHPs without a lapse in coverage.
We are therefore seeking information regarding whether and how the
remaining funds provided under section 1101 might be used to ensure the
successful transition of former PCIP enrollees to the Exchange without
a lapse in coverage, consistent with section 1101(g)(3)(B) and its
objective of ensuring that high-risk individuals with preexisting
conditions are able to transition successfully into the new Exchanges
without a lapse in coverage. We seek information, in particular, on the
best ways to identify former PCIP enrollees in a QHP of an issuer that
has participated in the Exchange from 2014 to 2017, available methods
for determining their claims costs, and the necessity of taking steps
to ensure that they do not experience a lapse in coverage. If it is not
possible to identify former PCIP enrollees, HHS also seeks information
about other appropriate measures to assess the size and impact of
former PCIP enrollment on existing issuers.
F. Part 153--Standards Related to Reinsurance, Risk Corridors, and Risk
Adjustment Under the Affordable Care Act
1. Sequestration
In accordance with the OMB Report to Congress on the Joint
Committee Reductions for Fiscal Year 2017,\18\ both the transitional
reinsurance program and risk adjustment program are subject to the
fiscal year 2017 sequestration. The Federal government's 2017 fiscal
year will begin on October 1, 2016. The reinsurance program will be
sequestered at a rate of 6.9 percent for payments made from fiscal year
2017 resources (that is, funds collected during the 2017 fiscal year).
To meet the sequestration requirement for the risk adjustment program
for fiscal year 2017, HHS will sequester risk adjustment payments made
using fiscal year 2017 resources in all States where HHS operates risk
adjustment, at a sequestration rate of 7.1 percent. HHS estimates that
increasing the sequestration rate for all risk adjustment payments made
in fiscal year 2017 to all issuers in the States where HHS operates
risk adjustment by 0.16 percent will permit HHS to meet the required
national risk adjustment program sequestration percentage of 6.9
percent noted in the OMB Report to Congress.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ OMB Report to the Congress on the Joint Committee
Reductions for Fiscal Year 2017 (Feb. 9, 2016). Available at:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/legislative_reports/sequestration/jc_sequestration_report_2017_house.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HHS, in coordination with the OMB, has determined that, under
section 256(k)(6) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control
Act of 1985, as amended, and the underlying authority for these
programs, the funds that are sequestered in fiscal year 2017 from the
reinsurance and risk adjustment programs will become available for
payment to issuers in fiscal year 2018 without further Congressional
action. If the Congress does not enact deficit reduction provisions
that replace the Joint Committee reductions, these programs would be
sequestered in future fiscal years, and any sequestered funding would
become available in the fiscal year following that in which it was
sequestered.
2. Definition of Large Employer for the Risk Adjustment and Risk
Corridors Programs (Sec. 153.20)
We propose deleting the definition of ``large employer'' set forth
in Sec. 153.20, which defines a large employer as having the meaning
given to the term at 45 CFR 155.20.\19\ HHS provided notice of our
intent to propose these changes in a public FAQ \20\ which clarified
how an issuer should count an employer's employees to determine whether
an employer is a small employer or large employer for purposes of the
risk adjustment and risk corridors programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 45 CFR 155.20 defines a large employer, in connection with
a group health plan with respect to a calendar year and a plan year,
as an employer who employed an average of at least 51 employees on
business days during the preceding calendar year and who employs at
least 1 employee on the first day of the plan year. In the case of
an employer that was not in existence throughout the preceding
calendar year, the determination of whether the employer is a large
employer is based on the average number of employees that it is
reasonably expected the employer will employ on business days in the
current calendar year. A State may elect to define large employer by
substituting ``101 employees'' for ``51 employees.'' The number of
employees must be determined using the method set forth in section
4980H(c)(2) of the Code.
\20\ FAQs #15450 and #15449, published on April 12, 2016
available at: https://www.regtap.info/faq_viewu.php?id=15450 and
https://www.regtap.info/faq_viewu.php?id=15449.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In that FAQ, we clarified that for the risk adjustment program, the
issuer should use the employee counting method used to determine group
size under State law, unless that counting method does not account for
employees that are not full-time. If the State counting method does not
take non-full-time employees into account, then the issuer should use
the counting method under section 4980H(c)(2) of the Code.\21\ The FAQ
also noted that under section 1304(b)(4)(D) of the Affordable Care Act
and Sec. 155.710(d), when a small employer participating in a SHOP
ceases to be a small employer solely by reason of an increase in the
number of its employees, it will continue to be treated as a small
employer for purposes of SHOP participation for as long as it continues
to purchase coverage through the SHOP, and the issuer should treat such
an employer as a small employer for purposes of risk adjustment. We
note that nothing in this proposal supersedes or conflicts with the
option under section 1312(f)(2)(B)(i) of the Affordable Care Act, which
would allow large employers to participate in a SHOP, at the option of
a State.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See 79 FR 8544.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the FAQ, HHS also clarified that for the risk corridors program,
the issuer should use the employee counting method used to determine
group size under State law (see Sec. 153.510(f)). However, under
section 1304(b)(4)(D) of the Affordable Care Act and Sec. 155.710(d),
when a small employer participating in a SHOP ceases to be a small
employer solely by reason of an increase in the number of its
employees, it will continue to be treated as a small employer for
purposes of SHOP participation for as long as it continues to purchase
coverage through the SHOP, and the issuer should treat such an employer
as a small employer for purposes of risk corridors.
We seek comment on this proposal.
3. Provisions and Parameters for the Permanent Risk Adjustment Program
In subparts D and G of 45 CFR part 153, we established standards
for the administration of the risk adjustment program. The risk
adjustment program is a program created by section 1343 of the
Affordable Care Act that transfers funds from lower risk, non-
grandfathered plans to higher risk, non-grandfathered plans in the
individual and small group markets, inside and outside the Exchanges.
In accordance with Sec. 153.310(a), a State that is approved or
conditionally approved by
[[Page 61467]]
the Secretary to operate an Exchange may establish a risk adjustment
program, or have HHS do so on its behalf.
On March 31, 2016, HHS convened a public conference to discuss
potential updates to the HHS risk adjustment methodology for the 2018
benefit year and beyond. Prior to the conference, we also issued a
White Paper that was available for public comment.\22\ The conference
and White Paper focused on what we have learned from the 2014 benefit
year of the risk adjustment program, and specific areas of potential
refinements to the methodology, including prescription drug modeling,
addressing partial year enrollment, future recalibrations using risk
adjustment data, and a discussion of the risk adjustment transfer
formula. We received numerous thoughtful and substantive comments to
the White Paper and at the conference, which directly informed the
policy proposals in this Payment Notice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ March 31, 2016, HHS-Operated Risk Adjustment Methodology
Meeting: Discussion Paper (Mar. 24, 2016). Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Risk Adjustment Applied to Plans in the Individual and Small Group
Markets (Sec. 153.20)
Section 1312(c) of the Affordable Care Act directs issuers to use a
single risk pool for a market--the individual or small group market--
when developing rates and premiums. Section 1312(c)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act gives States the option to merge the individual and
small group market into a single risk pool. To align risk pools for the
risk adjustment program and rate development, we stated in the 2014
Payment Notice that we would merge markets when operating risk
adjustment on behalf of a State if the State elects to do the same for
single risk pool purposes.\23\ When the individual and small group
markets are merged, we stated that the State average premium would be
the average premium of all applicable individual and small group market
plans in the applicable risk pool, and calculations under the transfer
equation would occur across all plans in the applicable risk pool in
the individual and small group markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See 78 FR at 15419.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the section 1312(c)(3) definition of a merged market and its
implementing regulations at Sec. Sec. 156.80 and 147.104, issuers in a
merged individual and small group market must offer the same plans at
the same rates to all applicants in the merged market, must offer
coverage on a calendar year basis, and may not make quarterly rate
adjustments to rates for small group market plans. Some States with
markets that are not merged under the Federal merged market provisions
require issuers to use a combined individual and small group experience
to establish a market-adjusted index rate, but separate the markets for
applying plan adjustment factors and for other purposes. This allows
small group issuers to make quarterly rate changes that would not
otherwise be allowable under the definition at section 1312(c)(3).
Because States that use a combined individual and small group
experience to establish a market-adjusted index rate operate in large
part as a merged market for purposes of rate setting, we believe they
should be risk adjusted as merged markets if the State so elects. Risk
adjustment directly impacts rate setting, and as such, should reflect
the markets in which States allow issuers to set premiums. Beginning
for 2017 benefit year risk adjustment, when HHS will operate risk
adjustment on behalf of all States, we propose to expand our
interpretation of merged market for purposes of HHS risk adjustment as
described in the 2014 Payment Notice to include States that meet the
definition of merged market at section 1312(c)(3), as well as States
that use a combined individual and small group experience to establish
a market-adjusted index rate. HHS will communicate with States that use
a combined individual and small group experience to establish a market-
adjusted index rate to determine whether they elect to be treated as a
merged market for purposes of HHS risk adjustment. We seek comment on
this proposal.
b. Overview of the HHS Risk Adjustment Model (Sec. 153.320)
The HHS risk adjustment model predicts plan liability for an
average enrollee based on that person's age, sex, and diagnoses (risk
factors), producing a risk score. The HHS risk adjustment methodology
utilizes separate models for adults, children, and infants to account
for cost differences in each of these age groups. In each of the adult
and child models, the relative costs assigned to an individual's age,
sex, and diagnoses are added together to produce a risk score. Infant
risk scores are determined by inclusion in one of 25 mutually exclusive
groups, based on the infant's maturity and the severity of its
diagnoses. If applicable, the risk score for adults, children, or
infants is multiplied by a cost-sharing reductions adjustment.
The enrollment-weighted average risk score of all enrollees in a
particular risk adjustment covered plan, also referred to as the plan
liability risk score, within a geographic rating area is one of the
inputs into the risk adjustment payment transfer formula, which
determines the payment or charge that an issuer will receive or be
required to pay for that plan. Thus, the HHS risk adjustment model
predicts average group costs to account for risk across plans, which
accords with the Actuarial Standards Board's Actuarial Standards of
Practice for risk classification.
c. Proposed Updates to the Risk Adjustment Model (Sec. 153.320)
For the 2018 benefit year risk adjustment model, HHS will continue
to incorporate the methodological improvements finalized in the 2017
Payment Notice, such as incorporating preventive services in our
simulation of plan liability and using more granular trend rates that
better reflect the growth in specialty drug expenditures and drugs
generally as compared to medical and surgical expenditures. Consistent
with our discussion in the White Paper, we are proposing a number of
updates to the risk adjustment model, including: (1) Adjustment factors
for partial year enrollment; (2) prescription drug utilization factors;
and (3) modifying transfers to account for high-cost enrollees. We also
propose to recalibrate our risk adjustment models using the most recent
available data following the publication of the final Payment Notice
for the applicable benefit year, and seek comments on other
considerations to improve the model's risk prediction in future
rulemaking.
i. Partial Year Enrollment
After the 2014 benefit year of risk adjustment, we received
feedback indicating that some issuers experienced higher than expected
claims costs for partial year enrollees. We sought comment in the 2017
Payment Notice on how the risk adjustment methodology could be adjusted
to more directly reflect the experience of partial year enrollees, and
we received comments generally supporting an adjustment addressing
partial year enrollees in the risk adjustment model. We also received
feedback to the White Paper that some believe the methodology does not
fully capture the risk associated with enrollees with chronic
conditions who may not have accumulated diagnoses in their partial year
of enrollment.
In general, we believe that individual and small group health plans
are risk adjusted accurately under the HHS risk
[[Page 61468]]
adjustment methodology. In light of our experience with the 2014
benefit year, we have observed that risk adjustment may not fully
account for when a plan's enrollees differ substantially from the
market average with respect to characteristics that are not adjusted
for in the risk adjustment model. For example, if a plan has an
enrollee population with enrollment duration that differs from the
market average, and the risk associated with the enrollment duration is
not fully captured through other aspects of the methodology, then for
that plan, partial year enrollment may not be fully accounted for in
the HHS risk adjustment methodology. As we noted in the White Paper, if
the risk adjustment methodology does not fully capture risk for partial
year enrollment, and if the plan had lower than average enrollment
duration, the plan's risk score might be lower than it might have been
otherwise.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ White Paper at p. 36. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we discussed in the White Paper, we reviewed the predicted
expenditures, actual expenditures, and predictive ratios (that is, the
ratios of predicted to actual weighted mean plan liability
expenditures) by enrollment duration groups (for each: 1 Month, 2
months, and so on up to 12 months) annualized for 2014
MarketScan[supreg] adults in our risk adjustment concurrent modeling
sample. We found that actuarial risk for all adult enrollees with short
enrollment periods tends to be slightly under predicted, and for adult
enrollees with full enrollment periods (12 months) tends to be over
predicted in our methodology. One potential explanation for these
results is that because risk adjustment is calculated on a per member
per month basis, the model predicts costs for chronic conditions, which
are often spread more evenly over time, better than costs for sudden
acute events, which are often concentrated in a small number of months,
when the enrollment is only for part of the year.
We discussed various approaches to address this issue in the White
Paper, including the use of additional factors and the use of wholly
separate models that account for duration of enrollment and metal
level.
There was a broadly held preference among commenters to the White
Paper for adding enrollment duration (for each: 1 Month, 2 months, and
so on up to 11 months \25\) binary indicator variables as additional
risk factors, as opposed to separate models based on enrollment
duration. After reviewing this feedback, we announced on June 8, 2016,
that we intended to propose that, beginning for the 2017 benefit year,
the risk adjustment model include adjustment factors for partial year
enrollees in risk adjustment covered plans.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Twelve months is the reference group and therefore is not
included.
\26\ Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RA-OnsiteQA-060816.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on analysis we performed on the MarketScan[supreg] data, the
use of additional risk factors by number of enrollment months that
decrease monotonically as the number of months of enrollment increases
(with 12 months being the reference group) appears to best address
partial year enrollment in the risk adjustment model in the short term,
starting in 2017. We also believe that our proposal to add prescription
drug utilization in the risk adjustment model will capture additional
costs for partial year enrollees beginning in the 2018 benefit year
(see discussion below).
We are proposing to recalibrate the 2017 risk adjustment adult
model to reflect the incorporation of partial year enrollment duration
(ED) factors. Those factors are labeled ``ED_01 . . . ED_11'' in the
list of factors for the 2017 risk adjustment adult model at the bottom
of Table 3 below.\27\ We are proposing to incorporate partial year ED
factors in the risk adjustment model methodology for the reasons
discussed above, starting with the 2017 benefit year. We are proposing
to amend our regulations at Sec. 153.320(a)(1) to allow for HHS to
make this update for the 2017 benefit year. Currently, this provision
states that a risk adjustment methodology must be Federally certified,
and one way a risk adjustment methodology may become Federally
certified is to be developed by HHS and published in the annual HHS
notice of benefit and payment parameters for the applicable benefit
year. We propose to change this provision to state that the methodology
may be developed by HHS and published in rulemaking in advance of the
benefit year. While HHS would generally make changes to the risk
adjustment methodology in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the applicable benefit year, under this rule, in cases
where we have identified a change that we can implement prior to the
benefit year, and where we can provide issuers with sufficient notice
and detail on the proposed change so that issuers may reasonably
account for the change, HHS would have the authority to implement the
change prior to the beginning of the applicable benefit year in other
rulemaking. For our proposed change to address partial year enrollment,
we notified issuers of our intent to propose this change in prior
guidance, and provided significant detail on the policy.\28\ We seek
comment on this approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ This table replaces Table 1 published at 81 FR 12220-12223
as the final adult model for the 2017 benefit year.
\28\ See https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RA-OnsiteQA-060816.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are also proposing to incorporate partial year enrollment
duration factors in the 2018 risk adjustment adult model. Those factors
are labeled ``ED_01, . . . ED_11'' in the list of factors for the 2018
risk adjustment adult model near the bottom of Table 4. We seek comment
on recalibrating the adult models for the 2017 and 2018 benefit years
to address partial year enrollment.
We are not making this change in the child and infant models as
those models are based on a smaller dataset that does not provide
adequate representation of partial year enrollment in these
populations. We will reassess both the proposed partial year enrollment
adjustment methodology, and whether we can make this adjustment in the
child and infant models in the future. We also intend to continue to
explore approaches under which we would use separate models for
enrollees with different enrollment durations, rather than including
partial year enrollment factors in the risk adjustment model, and may
implement such an approach in future years. While we do not believe,
based on the current data available and the analyses we have been able
to perform, that using separate models for each enrollment duration is
currently feasible, we believe that using separate models may better
capture how the pattern of costs associated with particular diagnoses
varies across enrollees with different enrollment durations,
particularly for sudden acute events.
ii. Prescription Drug Hybrid Model
As discussed in the White Paper, HHS has been considering whether
to propose the incorporation of prescription drug utilization
indicators into the HHS risk adjustment model, beginning for the 2018
benefit year, to create a ``hybrid'' drug-diagnosis risk adjustment
model. We are aware that there are advantages and disadvantages to
including prescription drug utilization indicators in the HHS risk
adjustment model and we seek comment on our proposal.
[[Page 61469]]
Many commenters to the White Paper stated that drug information can
effectively indicate health risk in cases where diagnoses may be
missing. For example, diagnoses may be missing if clinicians fail to
enter the condition on a patient's chart, or if there is stigma
associated with certain health conditions that leads providers not to
record these diagnoses on claims, or if the enrollee simply does not
visit a physician during the term of his or her enrollment. However,
even in these cases, prescriptions may be filled, providing information
on health status.
Drug utilization patterns can also provide information on the
severity of the illness. The hierarchical condition categories (HCCs)
already capture information about illness severity from diagnoses, but
drugs can potentially measure the severity of illness within a given
HCC. A patient may receive first, second, or third lines of treatment
involving different medications that indicate increasing levels of
severity.
Additionally, commenters have noted that drug data can be available
sooner and more easily than diagnoses from medical claims. In addition,
commenters have noted that because prescription drug data is
standardized, it is particularly useful for calibrating and measuring
health risk because the prescription drug data will have less
variability in coding.
Incorporating prescription drug utilization into the risk
adjustment model will help reflect costs incurred by plans for
medications for their enrollees in plans' risk scores.
Adding drug data to a diagnosis-based model also introduces
operational complexities. Clinical indications for drugs can change
quickly, which requires frequent updates to the model calibration and
possibly to the therapeutic classification groupings as well. Because
the model is calibrated before the start of the benefit year, it may be
difficult to assess all updates or upcoming utilization pattern
changes. Additional data requirements increase the administrative
burden associated with calibrating and applying the model. Issuers of
risk adjustment covered plans would be required to report prescription
drug utilization as well as diagnoses, and audit and verification of
the reported data would be necessary.
We have also indicated our concern that incorporating prescription
drug utilization in the model may provide an incentive to overprescribe
medications. Drug models may be particularly susceptible to this sort
of behavior when there are inexpensive drugs included in therapeutic
classes that are statistically linked to high total medical
expenditures; in these situations, a small cost to the insurance plan
(reimbursement for the drug) can bring a relatively large increase in
revenue through the risk adjustment program.
In analyzing if and how to propose to use drug data in the risk
adjustment model, we sought to strike a reasonable balance between
increasing predictive accuracy and reducing incentives for
overprescription. One way we sought to do so was by focusing on drugs
for which guidelines on when they should be prescribed are clear.
However, substantial uncertainty or disagreement across providers
exists over the circumstances in which drugs should be prescribed.
In addition, incorporating drug utilization makes risk adjustment
sensitive to variations in drug utilization patterns that exist for
reasons other than enrollee health status. Health plans with lower
prescribing rates, for example health plans primarily covering
individuals in rural areas with low access to pharmacies, would
incorrectly appear to have healthier populations, and would pay higher
risk charges or receive lower risk payments. Other things being equal,
drug utilization is expected to be lower in plans with higher cost
sharing (such as bronze or silver plans) and with aggressive drug
utilization management, such as prior authorization, step therapy,
quantity limits, restrictive formularies, and more stringent
requirements to qualify for coverage of expensive drugs.
Furthermore, the lack of clear, one-to-one associations between
most drug classes and diagnoses makes development of a ``hybrid'' drug-
diagnosis risk adjustment model that incorporates and integrates drug
and diagnosis risk markers challenging.
Few drug classes are indicated for only one medical condition. Many
drug classes are widely prescribed ``off label'' for indications that
are not U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved. Utilization
of such drug classes can have very different implications for health
care expenditures depending on the reasons for which they are
prescribed. Presence of a drug class may not discriminate between high
and low cost individuals if it is used for both high and low cost
conditions. Some drug classes may be used both for diagnoses that have
been included in the HHS-HCC model, as well as for diagnoses that have
been intentionally excluded, making it problematic to maintain this
distinction in a hybrid drug-diagnosis risk adjustment model. Specific
drugs within a drug class may have varying indications; the utilization
of such drug classes may not unambiguously indicate the presence of a
specific diagnosis.
Acknowledging all of the above considerations, we indicated in the
June 8, 2016, guidance noted above that we intend to propose to
incorporate a small number of prescription drug classes as predictors
in the HHS risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year to
impute missing diagnoses and to indicate severity of illness.\29\ We
propose to incorporate a small number of prescription drugs in the risk
adjustment model for the 2018 benefit year. We are proposing this
change to the model with substantial attention to the concerns
presented above in determining which drug groups to include and
exclude, and the proposed model type used for each drug-diagnosis pair.
To ensure this change to the model does not inadvertently increase the
perverse incentives described above, we will monitor and evaluate the
impact of incorporating prescription drugs in the model on utilization
patterns. Using the enrollee-level data that we are proposing to
collect in Sec. 153.610, in addition to other relevant data sources,
we would seek to evaluate whether incorporation of drugs in the model
affects the utilization of drugs included in the model. Based on our
evaluation, we would add or remove drug diagnosis pairs to or from the
model for future benefit years through notice and comment rulemaking.
We seek comment on this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/RA-OnsiteQA-060816.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To develop hybrid drug-diagnosis risk adjustment models, we need a
manageable number of clinically and empirically cohesive drug classes.
We created several Prescription Drug Categories (RXCs) to select and
group the drugs to be included in a hybrid diagnoses-and-drugs risk
adjustment model.
Each prescription drug is assigned a National Drug Code (NDC)
maintained by the FDA. There are over 190,000 NDCs, which include
prescription drugs as well as over-the-counter medications. NDC codes
are reported in prescription drug claims data. Due to the large number
of individual NDCs, it is necessary to use a therapeutic classification
system that classifies individual NDCs into aggregated categories of
related drugs used for similar therapeutic purposes, or having similar
pharmacological properties.
In the White Paper, we had initially based the RXCs on the American
Hospital Formulary Service
[[Page 61470]]
Pharmacologic-Therapeutic Classification(copyright), which
is published by the Board of the American Society of Health-System
Pharmacists[supreg]. We chose at that point to use the American
Hospital Formulary Service classification because it is widely used,
widely available, comprehensive, and regularly updated. Because the
American Hospital Formulary Service classification and mappings from
NDCs are proprietary, however, we determined that using the United
States Pharmacopeia (USP) classification would be better suited for use
with HHS risk adjustment to maintain consistency with the essential
health benefits requirements and for public access and transparency.
The USP classification also provides chemical ingredient level
identifications for drug classifications; that is, unlike American
Hospital Formulary Service, USP includes comparable levels of detail to
identify and group drugs used for only one diagnosis with other drugs
used for multiple diagnosis codes. NDC codes are classified into 153
USP therapeutic classes. Drawing on the principles and criteria
described below, we selected appropriate USP therapeutic classes and
combined and edited those classes in order to create ``payment'' RXCs,
each of which is closely associated with a specific HCC or group of
HCCs that are potentially suitable for inclusion in a payment risk
adjustment model. Most USP classes are somewhat heterogeneous. To
designate a class of drugs to serve as an indicator that a medical
diagnosis is present, we needed to comprehensively review the drugs in
each USP class to select only those that are closely associated with
the diagnosis.
The development of a hybrid HHS-HCC risk adjustment model requires
selecting drug-diagnosis pairs (RXC-HCC pairs) to include in the model.
Similar to our approach in the 2014 Payment Notice when initially
determining the HCCs to be included in the HHS risk adjustment models,
we used a set of principles to guide our decision making. Development
of the RXC-HCC pairs was an iterative process that required recurring
consultations with a panel of clinician consultants.
Principle 1--RXC categories should be clinically meaningful. Each
RXC is composed of a set of NDCs. These codes should all relate to a
reasonably well-specified pharmacologic, therapeutic or chemical
characteristic that defines the category. RXCs must be sufficiently
clinically specific to minimize opportunities for discretionary coding.
Clinical meaningfulness improves the face validity of the
classification system to clinicians and the model's interpretability.
Principle 2--RXCs should predict total medical and drug
expenditures. NDCs in the same RXC should be reasonably homogeneous
with respect to their effect on current year costs.
Principle 3--RXCs that will affect payments should have adequate
sample sizes to permit accurate and stable estimates of expenditures.
RXCs used in establishing payments should have adequate sample sizes in
available datasets. For example, it is difficult to reliably determine
the expected cost of extremely rare categories.
Principle 4--In creating an individual's clinical profile,
hierarchies should be used to characterize the person's illness level
within each RXC where appropriate, while the effects of unrelated
prescriptions accumulate. Because each new medical event adds to an
individual's total disease burden, unrelated prescriptions in different
RXCs should increase predicted costs of care. However, the most severe
manifestation of a given disease process principally defines its impact
on costs. Therefore, related RXCs should be treated hierarchically,
with those associated with more severe manifestations of a condition
dominating (and eliminating the effect of) less serious ones.
Principle 5--Providers should not be penalized for prescribing
additional NDCs (monotonicity). This principle has two consequences for
modeling: (1) No RXC should carry a negative payment weight; and (2) an
RXC that is higher-ranked in a drug hierarchy (causing lower-rank drugs
in the same hierarchy to be excluded) should have at least as large a
payment weight as lower-ranked RXCs in the same hierarchy.
Principle 6--The classification should assign NDCs to only one RXC
(mutually exclusive classification). Because each NDC can map to more
than one RXC, the classification should map NDCs to the primary RXC
based on considerations such as route of administration, intended
application of the product, ingredient list identifier, label, dosage
form, and strength of the drug.
Principle 7--Discretionary and non-credible drug categories should
be excluded from payment models. RXCs that are particularly subject to
intentional or unintentional discretionary prescribing variation or
inappropriate prescribing by health plans or providers, or that are not
clinically or empirically credible as cost predictors, should not be
included. Excluding these RXCs reduces the sensitivity of the model to
prescribing variation, prescribing proliferation, and gaming.
We used clinical and statistical assessments to appropriately
balance all seven principles. In designing the RXCs, principles 5
(monotonicity) and 6 (mutually exclusive classification), were
generally followed. Clinical meaningfulness (principle 1) is often best
served by creating a very large number of detailed clinical groupings.
However, a large number of groupings conflicts with adequate sample
sizes for each category (principle 3). We approached the balancing of
our principles by designing a drug classification system using
empirical evidence on frequencies and predictive power; clinical
judgment on relatedness, specificity, and severity of RXCs; and
professional judgment on incentives and likely provider responses to
the classification system. The RXC risk adjustment model balances these
competing goals to achieve prescription drug-based classes for use in
risk adjustment.
In addition to following the set of principles described above, we
carefully considered selection of high-cost drugs, to avoid overly
reducing the incentives for issuers to strive for efficiency in
prescription drug utilization. We also carefully considered selection
of drugs in areas exhibiting a rapid rate of technological change, as a
drug class that is associated with a specific, costly diagnosis in one
year may no longer be commonly used for that condition the next, in
which case the cost predictions based on previous years of data would
be inaccurate.
Based on these considerations, we propose a small number of drug-
diagnosis pairs for the proposed hybrid model. We selected RXCs to
impute diagnoses and to indicate the severity of diagnoses otherwise
indicated through medical coding. We worked with clinician consultants
to tailor the RXCs used for imputation based on their expertise in
treatment patterns as well as statistical indicators such as positive
predictive value. Clinicians also informed our determination of RXCs
for use as severity-only indicators in the model. For the severity-only
RXCs, the presence of a prescription in the drug class signals a more
severe case of the related diagnosis, which is likely to incur greater
medical expenditures relative to someone with the same diagnosis, but
not the drug. Severity-only RXCs are not specified in the model to
impute the associated diagnosis when an HCC is not present. We are
proposing limiting the number of prescription drug classes included as
predictors to only those drug classes
[[Page 61471]]
where the risk of unintended effects on provider prescribing behavior
is low; as described above, we intend to monitor prescription drug
utilization for unintended effects and may remove drug classes based on
such evidence in future rulemaking.
Table 2 shows the list of RXC-HCC pairs that we propose to include
in the initial hybrid model. Each pair is designated as either an
imputation/severity or a severity-only relationship. For each pair,
Table 2 shows the coefficient for the diagnosis (HCC), the drug
utilization (RXC), and both.
The drug-diagnosis pairs can include more than one HCC. For
example, the list includes a diabetes drug-diagnosis relationship that
includes three HCCs (diabetes with acute complication, diabetes with
chronic complication, and diabetes without complication) which are
grouped together in the model estimation. This RXC can be interpreted
as an indication that the individual should have a diagnosis of one of
these three diabetes HCCs. In addition, an RXC can be linked in the
model to more than one HCC, and vice-versa. For example, RXC 8 (Immune
suppressants and immunomodulators) has an imputation/severity
relationship with HCC 056 (Rheumatoid arthritis and specified
autoimmune disorders), and also has a severity-only relationship with
HCC 048 (Inflammatory bowel disease).
While ten of the RXC-HCC pairs have three levels of incremental
predicted costs (diagnosis only, prescription drug only, both diagnosis
and prescription drug), indicating that they can be used to impute a
particular condition, the model also includes two RXC-HCC pairs that
will be used for severity only--that is, they will predict incremental
costs for enrollees with the diagnosis only, and with both the
diagnosis and the prescription drug. There are no additional costs
predicted for an enrollee taking the drug who lacks the associated
diagnosis. Table 2 lists the RXC-HCC pairs we are proposing to
incorporate in the adult models for the 2018 benefit year. Table 4
incorporates the full set of HCCs and RXC-HCCs and their associated
coefficients that we are proposing to implement in the 2018 adult
models.
Table 2--Drug-Diagnosis (RXC-HCC) Pairs Chosen for the Hybrid Risk Adjustment Models
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RXC RXC Label HCC HCC Label Proposed RXC use
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............... Hepatitis C 037C, 036, 035, 034.. Chronic Hepatitis C, imputation/severity.
Antivirals. Cirrhosis of Liver, End-
Stage Liver Disease, and
Liver Transplant Status/
Complications.
2............... HIV/AIDS Antivirals.. 001.................. HIV/AIDS.................. imputation/severity.
3............... Antiarrhythmics...... 142.................. Specified Heart imputation/severity.
Arrhythmias.
4............... End Stage Renal 184, 183, 187, 188... End Stage Renal Disease, imputation/severity.
Disease (ESRD) Kidney Transplant Status,
Phosphate Binders. Chronic Kidney Disease,
Stage 5, Chronic Kidney
Disease, Severe (Stage 4).
5............... Anti-inflammatories 048, 041............. Inflammatory Bowel imputation/severity.
for inflammatory Disease, Intestine
bowel disease (IBD). Transplant Status/
Complications.
6a.............. Anti-Diabetic Agents, 019, 020, 021, 018... Diabetes with Acute imputation/severity.
Except Insulin and Complications, Diabetes
Metformin Only. with Chronic
Complications, Diabetes
without Complication,
Pancreas Transplant
Status/Complications.
6b.............. Insulin.............. 019, 020, 021, 018... Diabetes with Acute imputation/severity.
Complications; Diabetes
with Chronic
Complications; Diabetes
without Complication,
Pancreas Transplant
Status/Complications.
7............... Multiple Sclerosis 118.................. Multiple Sclerosis........ imputation/severity.
Agents.
8............... Immune Suppressants 056, 057, 048, 041... Rheumatoid Arthritis and imputation/severity.
and Immunomodulators. Specified Autoimmune
Disorders, Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus and Other
Autoimmune Disorders,
Inflammatory Bowel
Disease, Intestine
Transplant Status/
Complications.
9............... Cystic Fibrosis 159, 158............. Cystic Fibrosis, Lung imputation/severity.
Agents. Transplant Status/
Complications.
10.............. Ammonia Detoxicants.. 036, 035, 034........ Cirrhosis of Liver, End- severity-only.
Stage Liver Disease,
Liver Transplant Status/
Complications.
11.............. Diuretics, Loop and 130, 129, 128........ Congestive Heart Failure, severity-only.
Select Potassium- Heart Transplant, Heart
Sparing. Assistive Device/
Artificial Heart.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We propose to incorporate the RXC-HCC pairs--some of which are used
to impute a diagnosis and calibrate the severity of the condition, and
others of which are used only as an indication of severity--into the
adult risk adjustment model, beginning in the 2018 benefit year. We
intend to evaluate the effects of this change to determine whether to
continue, broaden, or reduce this set of factors in the HHS risk
adjustment models. We seek comment on this approach, including comments
on the list of RXC-HCC pairs.
iii. High-Cost Risk Pooling
The HHS risk adjustment model reflects the average cost for
individuals with a given set of demographic characteristics and
diagnoses. Our experience with the 2014 benefit year risk adjustment
demonstrated the model may underpredict costs for extremely high-cost
enrollees since predicted plan liabilities reflect the average costs
for individuals with the set of demographic characteristics and
diagnoses included in the model. As a consequence, even with risk
adjustment in place, issuers may retain an incentive to engage in risk
selection in order to avoid these very high-cost enrollees (called
``high-cost enrollees'' throughout this proposal). Recent research has
shown that adjusting for high-cost enrollees in a risk adjustment model
benefits the model fit and predictive ability for the remaining risk
population.\30\ To mitigate any residual incentive for risk selection
[[Page 61472]]
to avoid high-cost enrollees, and to ensure that the actuarial risk of
a plan with high-cost enrollees is better reflected in the risk
adjustment transfers to issuers with high actuarial risk, we propose to
alter the risk adjustment methodology to better account for high-cost
enrollees so that transfers resulting from the risk adjustment
methodology from high actuarial risk plans to low actuarial risk plans
better reflect the actuarial risk of risk adjustment covered plans in a
market, across all States. We also seek to offset the need for issuers
to build large risk premiums into their rates to account for these
cases by giving issuers greater predictability on expenditures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Schillo, S., G. Lux, J. Wassem and F. Buchner (2016) ``High
Cost Pool or High Cost Groups--How to Handle Highest Cost Cases in a
Risk Adjustment Mechanism?'' Health Policy (120): 141-147.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To account for the incorporation of high-cost risk in the risk
adjustment model, we propose to adjust the risk adjustment model for
high-cost enrollees by excluding a percentage of costs above a certain
threshold level in the calculation of enrollee-level plan liability
risk scores so that risk adjustment factors are calculated without the
high-cost risk. Secondly, to account for the issuers' actuarial risk
for costs associated with the high-cost enrollees, we would apply an
adjustment for each issuer of a risk adjustment covered plan to account
for a percentage of all high-cost enrollees' costs above the threshold.
We would set the threshold and percentage of costs at a level that
would continue to incentivize issuers to control costs while improving
the risk prediction of the risk adjustment model. Issuers with the
high-cost enrollees would receive an adjustment to account for
actuarial risk for the percentage of costs above the threshold in their
respective transfers. Using claims data submitted to the EDGE server by
issuers of risk adjustment covered plans, HHS will calculate the total
amount of paid claims costs for high-cost enrollees above the
threshold. HHS would then calculate an adjustment as a percent of the
issuer's total premiums in the respective market, which would be
applied to the total transfer amount in that market, maintaining the
balance of payments and charges within the risk adjustment program. We
are proposing a uniform percentage of premium adjustment across all
States for the individual (including catastrophic and non-catastrophic
plans and merged market plans) and small group markets. We believe
pooling across all States for purposes of calculating this adjustment
would be most effective in reducing the impact of high-cost enrollees
to better reflect actuarial risk, and seek comment on this proposal.
Creating a uniform pool of high-cost enrollees, by risk pool or market,
could result in some States or geographic areas subsidizing issuers
with high-cost enrollees in other States or geographic areas, as we
discussed at the conference and commenters to the White Paper noted. We
believe pooling high-cost enrollees across all States on whose behalf
we are operating the risk adjustment program could prevent certain
States with high-cost enrollees from bearing a disproportionate amount
of unpredictable risk.
In the White Paper we discussed a threshold of $1 million and a
coinsurance rate of 80 percent (where the issuer would be liable for 20
percent of costs above $1 million for an enrollee). Commenters
expressed concerns about the potential for issuers to ``game'' this
policy by shifting costs to the risk adjustment program, and not pay
sufficient attention to cost containment for costs above the threshold.
While we believe these inordinately high costs reflect random risk
selection for certain issuers, we are sensitive to these concerns,
particularly in the first year of this adjustment in the risk
adjustment model. Therefore, beginning for the 2018 benefit year, we
are proposing a threshold of $2 million and a coinsurance rate of 60
percent (where the issuer would be liable for 40 percent of costs above
$2 million). Beginning with the 2018 benefit year recalibration, we
would also incorporate these parameters in our recalibration of the
model by truncating at 40 percent of costs above $2 million in our
dataset used to simulate plan liability. Doing so will produce more
accurate predictive coefficients that reflect the impact of the high-
cost enrollee pool. To help mitigate concerns raised, while still
helping protect issuers from the unpredictable risk of exceptionally
high costs, we have designed this proposal based on what we discussed
at the conference and comments received on the White Paper.
As discussed above, beginning for the 2018 benefit year, we propose
to adjust issuers' risk adjustment transfers by a percent of premium
amount that would be determined based on the aggregate costs of the
high-cost risk pool above $2 million at 60 percent coinsurance in the
benefit year. This adjustment to the transfer formula would be made for
all issuers of risk adjustment covered plans in the individual
(including catastrophic and non-catastrophic plans and merged market
plans), or small group market, across all States, based on total
premiums in the respective market. We would create two high-cost risk
pools across all States: One for the individual market (including
catastrophic, non-catastrophic, and merged market plans), and one for
the small group market. To calculate the adjustments, risk adjustment
covered plans would be assessed an adjustment to fund the applicable
pools and we would perform additional data quality metrics to determine
an issuer's eligibility for high-cost risk pool adjustments, even if
the issuer failed the data quality analysis for a risk adjustment
transfer and was assessed a default charge under Sec. 153.740(b) on
that basis. At the proposed threshold and coinsurance, we expect total
adjustments as a result of this policy nationally to be very small as a
percent of premiums (less than one tenth of one percent of total
premiums for either market). We believe the inclusion of this policy,
in combination with the transfers attributable to the plan liability
risk scores, will allow us to better assess total actuarial risk for
each risk adjustment eligible plan, and thereby to ensure that risk
adjustment is appropriately compensating issuers. We seek comment on
this proposal. We also seek comment on whether to cap the adjustments
if they exceed a certain amount.
iv. Other Considerations
We had previously reported that based on the commercial
MarketScan[supreg] data, the HHS risk adjustment models slightly
underpredict risk for low-cost enrollees, and slightly overpredict risk
for enrollees with high expenditures.\31\ We have received feedback
that HHS should adjust the risk adjustment models for the
underprediction of risk for low cost enrollees, and the overprediction
of risk for enrollees with high expenditures, which affects the plan
liability risk scores of plans that enroll more healthy individuals or
plans that enroll more individuals with the most extreme chronic health
conditions. We are considering the implementation of the following
policies, beginning with the 2018 benefit year, in order to improve
model performance for these subpopulations, and seek comment on these
approaches. We are considering use of a constrained regression
approach, under which we would estimate the adult risk adjustment model
using only the age-sex variables. We would then re-estimate the model
using the full set of HCCs, while constraining the value of the age-sex
coefficients to be same as those from the first estimation. We believe
that this two-step estimation approach would result in age-sex
coefficients of greater magnitude, potentially helping us
[[Page 61473]]
predict the risk of the healthiest subpopulations more accurately.
Similarly, we are considering approaches in which our first estimation
of the model would include additional independent variables intended to
account for potential non-linearities in risk for the highest-risk
subpopulations, and then removing those additional variables in the
second estimation. We are considering creating separate models for
enrollees with and without HCCs to derive two separate sets of age-sex
coefficients. We believe such an approach could also help improve the
models' predictive ratios for the healthiest subpopulations, though
this model would have a separate set of age-sex coefficients for
individuals with no HCCs and the individuals with HCCs. Finally, we are
evaluating an approach in which we would directly adjust plan liability
risk scores outside of the model for these subpopulations. For example,
we could potentially make an adjustment to the plan liability risk
scores calculated through the HHS risk adjustment models that would
adjust for such an underprediction or overprediction in actuarial risk
by directly increasing low plan liability risk scores and directly
reducing high plan liability risk scores in order to better match the
relative risks of these subpopulations. We note that while we believe
modifications of this type could improve the model's performance along
this specific dimension, there is a risk that such modifications could
unintentionally worsen model performance along other dimensions on
which the model currently performs well. For this reason, we are
continuing to evaluate the effect of these types of modifications on
all aspects of the model's performance before choosing to implement
such an approach, and would not implement these types of modifications
if we determined that doing so would have material unintended
consequences for the model's performance along other dimensions. We
seek comment on methods discussed above as well as other methods to
improve the predictive ratios of the HHS risk adjustment models.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Available at: https://www.cms.gov/mmrr/Downloads/MMRR2014_004_03_a03.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, we have received feedback regarding our transfer
methodology in community rated States. In the 2014 Payment Notice, we
stated that billable members exclude children who do not count towards
family rates. In the second Program Integrity Rule, we clarified the
modification to the transfer formula to accommodate community rated
States that utilize family tiering rating factors. In the case of
family tiering States, billable members are based on the number of
children that implicitly count towards the premium under a State's
family rating factors. We have received feedback that there may be
alternative methodologies for calculating billable member months in
family tiering States, such as by adjusting for the expected actual
number of members on the policy, not the number of members that
implicitly count towards the premium. We seek comment on whether our
methodology for calculating billable member months in family tiering
States should be altered, and how.
v. Data Timing for Risk Adjustment Recalibrations
We have used the three most recent years of MarketScan[supreg] data
to recalibrate the 2016 and 2017 benefit year risk adjustment models.
This approach has allowed for using the blended, or averaged,
coefficients from three years of separately solved models, which
promotes stability for the risk adjustment coefficients year-to-year,
particularly for conditions with small sample sizes. This approach in
previous years has also required that we finalize coefficients based on
data that does not become available until after the publication of the
proposed Payment Notice. We received several comments to the 2017
Payment Notice proposed rule requesting that the Payment Notice
schedule be moved up to accommodate substantive comments and to permit
issuers more time between the publication of the Payment Notice and the
commencement of issuers' certification activities. In order to
accommodate commenters' request for an earlier Payment Notice schedule,
we would not be able to incorporate an additional recent year of data.
We also received many comments on how to best address the data lag for
HHS risk adjustment and better reflect new treatments that may be
associated with high-cost conditions. We had discussed in the White
Paper the use of only 2014 MarketScan[supreg] data for the 2018 benefit
year recalibration; using blended, three year data coefficients would
mitigate any introductions of new costs for particular conditions by
two years of older data. However, commenters to the White Paper
supported continuing to use a 3-year blend for 2018 benefit year
recalibration. We are proposing to continue to use the 3-year blend for
2018 benefit year recalibration.
We noted at the conference that we were considering releasing more
recent, updated final coefficients closer to the respective risk
adjustment benefit year using more recent data available in guidance
after the risk adjustment methodology for the corresponding benefit
year has been finalized in the applicable Payment Notice. Commenters
supported releasing coefficients closer to the benefit year that
reflect the most recent data. We are proposing to amend our regulations
at Sec. 153.320(b)(1)(i) to allow for HHS to provide draft
coefficients in an annual Payment Notice, as well as the intended
datasets to be used to calculate final coefficients and the date by
which the final coefficients will be released in guidance. We are
considering using 2015, 2016, and 2017 MarketScan[supreg] data for 2018
risk adjustment, publishing the final, blended coefficients in the
early spring of 2019, prior to final 2018 benefit year risk adjustment
calculations. We have previously finalized the risk adjustment
methodology, including the final coefficients prior to rate setting and
benefits being provided to members. We seek comment on this proposal,
specifically the timing of the release of final coefficients and
whether such a practice would affect issuer expectations with respect
to the methodology to be applied.
We also seek comment on the timing of the publication of the final
coefficients, providing a few options to reduce the data lag as much as
possible. As the first option, we could release final coefficients for
the 2018 benefit year risk adjustment model in the spring of 2017 that
would reflect the incorporation of 2015 MarketScan[supreg] data, after
it becomes available, blended with 2013 and 2014 MarketScan[supreg]. On
the other hand, we could release final coefficients for the 2018
benefit year risk adjustment model in the spring of 2019, prior to the
April 30, 2019, data submission deadline for the 2018 benefit year that
would reflect 2015, 2016, and 2017 blended MarketScan[supreg] data. We
could also provide interim coefficients in the spring of 2018 using
2014, 2015 and 2016 blended MarketScan[supreg] data, in addition to the
interim coefficients that would be published in the 2018 Payment Notice
final rule using 2013 and 2014 data. As noted above, we would continue
to finalize the risk adjustment methodology for the corresponding year
through notice and comment in the applicable annual Payment Notice.
We seek comment on this proposal.
d. List of Factors To Be Employed in the Model (Sec. 153.320)
For the 2018 benefit year, in addition to the RXCs we are proposing
to include in the adult risk adjustment model, we are also proposing to
separate the
[[Page 61474]]
Chronic Hepatitis HCC into two new HCCs for Hepatitis C and Hepatitis A
and B, in the adult, child, and infant models. This would increase the
total HCCs in the HHS risk adjustment methodology from 127 to 128. The
proposed factors resulting from the blended factors from the 2013 and
2014 separately solved models (with the incorporation of partial year
enrollment and prescription drugs reflected in the adult models only)
are shown in the Tables 4 through 9. The adult, child, and infant
models have been truncated to account for the high-cost enrollee pool
payment parameters ($2 million threshold, 60 percent coinsurance).
Table 4 contains factors for each adult model, including the
interactions.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ We note that the interaction factors are additive, and not
hierarchical in nature--that is, an enrollee could have several,
additive interactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5 contains the HHS HCCs in the severity illness indicator
variable. Table 6 contains the factors for each child model. Table 6
contains the factors for each infant model.
Table 3--Final Adult Risk Adjustment Model Factors for 2017 Benefit Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Factor Platinum Gold Silver Bronze Catastrophic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Demographic Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 21-24, Male................. 0.199 0.148 0.092 0.056 0.055
Age 25-29, Male................. 0.189 0.137 0.080 0.043 0.043
Age 30-34, Male................. 0.245 0.180 0.107 0.059 0.059
Age 35-39, Male................. 0.312 0.234 0.147 0.089 0.088
Age 40-44, Male................. 0.391 0.301 0.199 0.130 0.129
Age 45-49, Male................. 0.471 0.369 0.253 0.174 0.173
Age 50-54, Male................. 0.611 0.492 0.355 0.260 0.258
Age 55-59, Male................. 0.701 0.567 0.414 0.306 0.304
Age 60-64, Male................. 0.810 0.654 0.478 0.349 0.347
Age 21-24, Female............... 0.339 0.262 0.171 0.111 0.110
Age 25-29, Female............... 0.399 0.308 0.203 0.132 0.130
Age 30-34, Female............... 0.539 0.428 0.305 0.224 0.222
Age 35-39, Female............... 0.633 0.513 0.380 0.294 0.292
Age 40-44, Female............... 0.713 0.579 0.433 0.336 0.335
Age 45-49, Female............... 0.724 0.585 0.432 0.327 0.325
Age 50-54, Female............... 0.821 0.671 0.501 0.382 0.379
Age 55-59, Female............... 0.829 0.672 0.495 0.367 0.364
Age 60-64, Female............... 0.876 0.706 0.513 0.372 0.370
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Diagnosis Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HIV/AIDS........................ 8.943 8.450 8.099 8.142 8.143
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic 10.685 10.510 10.404 10.460 10.461
Inflammatory Response Syndrome/
Shock..........................
Central Nervous System 6.636 6.535 6.470 6.491 6.492
Infections, Except Viral
Meningitis.....................
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis. 4.664 4.428 4.269 4.227 4.227
Opportunistic Infections........ 8.507 8.406 8.340 8.322 8.321
Metastatic Cancer............... 24.307 23.874 23.573 23.632 23.633
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe 12.629 12.295 12.061 12.065 12.066
Cancers, Including Pediatric
Acute Lymphoid Leukemia........
Non-Hodgkin`s Lymphomas and 5.852 5.617 5.440 5.393 5.392
Other Cancers and Tumors.......
Colorectal, Breast (Age < 50), 5.159 4.924 4.743 4.695 4.694
Kidney, and Other Cancers......
Breast (Age 50+) and Prostate 2.965 2.792 2.655 2.602 2.601
Cancer, Benign/Uncertain Brain
Tumors, and Other Cancers and
Tumors.........................
Thyroid Cancer, Melanoma, 1.459 1.304 1.167 1.076 1.074
Neurofibromatosis, and Other
Cancers and Tumors.............
Pancreas Transplant Status/ 5.458 5.236 5.093 5.115 5.115
Complications..................
Diabetes with Acute 1.192 1.053 0.929 0.825 0.824
Complications..................
Diabetes with Chronic 1.192 1.053 0.929 0.825 0.824
Complications..................
Diabetes without Complication... 1.192 1.053 0.929 0.825 0.824
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition.... 13.677 13.685 13.695 13.756 13.757
Mucopolysaccharidosis........... 2.285 2.165 2.066 2.013 2.013
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis...... 2.285 2.165 2.066 2.013 2.013
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and 2.285 2.165 2.066 2.013 2.013
Other Metabolic Disorders......
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other 2.285 2.165 2.066 2.013 2.013
Significant Endocrine Disorders
Liver Transplant Status/ 16.044 15.870 15.760 15.773 15.773
Complications..................
End-Stage Liver Disease......... 7.110 6.870 6.712 6.730 6.731
Cirrhosis of Liver.............. 3.856 3.694 3.572 3.538 3.537
Chronic Hepatitis............... 3.856 3.694 3.572 3.538 3.537
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, 4.429 4.268 4.158 4.147 4.147
Including Neonatal Hepatitis...
Intestine Transplant Status/ 32.610 32.560 32.521 32.564 32.563
Complications..................
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal 11.825 11.566 11.387 11.416 11.417
Perforation/Necrotizing
Enterocolitis..................
Intestinal Obstruction.......... 6.542 6.277 6.105 6.124 6.124
[[Page 61475]]
Chronic Pancreatitis............ 5.458 5.236 5.093 5.115 5.115
Acute Pancreatitis/Other 2.710 2.522 2.385 2.337 2.336
Pancreatic Disorders and
Intestinal Malabsorption.......
Inflammatory Bowel Disease...... 3.667 3.401 3.197 3.105 3.103
Necrotizing Fasciitis........... 6.581 6.382 6.243 6.258 6.258
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/ 6.581 6.382 6.243 6.258 6.258
Necrosis.......................
Rheumatoid Arthritis and 4.854 4.592 4.399 4.389 4.389
Specified Autoimmune Disorders.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and 1.212 1.077 0.957 0.872 0.871
Other Autoimmune Disorders.....
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and 3.126 2.927 2.766 2.706 2.705
Other Osteodystrophies.........
Congenital/Developmental 3.126 2.927 2.766 2.706 2.705
Skeletal and Connective Tissue
Disorders......................
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate.......... 1.310 1.149 1.020 0.952 0.951
Hemophilia...................... 46.447 46.159 45.940 45.946 45.947
Myelodysplastic Syndromes and 12.671 12.534 12.439 12.449 12.449
Myelofibrosis..................
Aplastic Anemia................. 12.671 12.534 12.439 12.449 12.449
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, 9.742 9.580 9.457 9.448 9.448
Including Hemolytic Disease of
Newborn........................
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS)...... 9.742 9.580 9.457 9.448 9.448
Thalassemia Major............... 9.742 9.580 9.457 9.448 9.448
Combined and Other Severe 5.438 5.290 5.186 5.188 5.188
Immunodeficiencies.............
Disorders of the Immune 5.438 5.290 5.186 5.188 5.188
Mechanism......................
Coagulation Defects and Other 2.810 2.712 2.631 2.603 2.603
Specified Hematological
Disorders......................
Drug Psychosis.................. 3.832 3.576 3.381 3.288 3.286
Drug Dependence................. 3.832 3.576 3.381 3.288 3.286
Schizophrenia................... 3.196 2.940 2.749 2.685 2.684
Major Depressive and Bipolar 1.720 1.552 1.408 1.312 1.311
Disorders......................
Reactive and Unspecified 1.720 1.552 1.408 1.312 1.311
Psychosis, Delusional Disorders
Personality Disorders........... 1.190 1.054 0.920 0.823 0.822
Anorexia/Bulimia Nervosa........ 2.704 2.537 2.400 2.342 2.341
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, 2.648 2.517 2.414 2.364 2.364
and Autosomal Deletion
Syndromes......................
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other 1.073 0.965 0.861 0.788 0.787
Chromosomal Anomalies, and
Congenital Malformation
Syndromes......................
Autistic Disorder............... 1.190 1.054 0.920 0.823 0.822
Pervasive Developmental 1.190 1.054 0.920 0.823 0.822
Disorders, Except Autistic
Disorder.......................
Traumatic Complete Lesion 12.012 11.856 11.742 11.739 11.740
Cervical Spinal Cord...........
Quadriplegia.................... 12.012 11.856 11.742 11.739 11.740
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal 9.161 9.003 8.889 8.877 8.877
Spinal Cord....................
Paraplegia...................... 9.161 9.003 8.889 8.877 8.877
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries.. 5.641 5.430 5.278 5.249 5.249
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 3.027 2.790 2.623 2.583 2.583
and Other Anterior Horn Cell
Disease........................
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy..... 1.229 1.016 0.855 0.791 0.790
Cerebral Palsy, Except 0.135 0.073 0.039 0.016 0.015
Quadriplegic...................
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/ 0.077 0.022 0.000 0.000 0.000
Spinal/Nervous System
Congenital Anomalies...........
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural 5.252 5.104 4.998 4.975 4.975
Disorders and Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic
Neuropathy.....................
Muscular Dystrophy.............. 2.150 1.984 1.862 1.787 1.786
Multiple Sclerosis.............. 13.598 13.194 12.910 12.956 12.957
Parkinson`s, Huntington`s, and 2.150 1.984 1.862 1.787 1.786
Spinocerebellar Disease, and
Other Neurodegenerative
Disorders......................
Seizure Disorders and 1.503 1.344 1.213 1.143 1.142
Convulsions....................
Hydrocephalus................... 6.394 6.272 6.171 6.144 6.144
Non-Traumatic Coma, and Brain 9.200 9.064 8.958 8.953 8.952
Compression/Anoxic Damage......
Respirator Dependence/ 34.709 34.699 34.698 34.764 34.765
Tracheostomy Status............
Respiratory Arrest.............. 10.541 10.391 10.296 10.360 10.361
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and 10.541 10.391 10.296 10.360 10.361
Shock, Including Respiratory
Distress Syndromes.............
Heart Assistive Device/ 35.115 34.870 34.711 34.771 34.772
Artificial Heart...............
Heart Transplant................ 35.115 34.870 34.711 34.771 34.772
Congestive Heart Failure........ 3.281 3.173 3.096 3.090 3.090
Acute Myocardial Infarction..... 10.133 9.797 9.582 9.693 9.695
Unstable Angina and Other Acute 5.231 4.955 4.782 4.796 4.797
Ischemic Heart Disease.........
Heart Infection/Inflammation, 6.303 6.168 6.068 6.046 6.046
Except Rheumatic...............
Specified Heart Arrhythmias..... 2.834 2.685 2.569 2.515 2.515
Intracranial Hemorrhage......... 9.426 9.147 8.956 8.965 8.965
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke.. 3.167 2.982 2.870 2.875 2.876
[[Page 61476]]
Cerebral Aneurysm and 3.947 3.748 3.605 3.563 3.563
Arteriovenous Malformation.....
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis.......... 5.466 5.372 5.315 5.358 5.359
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic 3.457 3.324 3.230 3.211 3.211
Syndromes......................
Atherosclerosis of the 10.936 10.837 10.782 10.850 10.852
Extremities with Ulceration or
Gangrene.......................
Vascular Disease with 7.731 7.546 7.419 7.419 7.420
Complications..................
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein 3.845 3.678 3.558 3.531 3.531
Thrombosis.....................
Lung Transplant Status/ 36.420 36.228 36.104 36.181 36.182
Complications..................
Cystic Fibrosis................. 18.022 17.696 17.452 17.474 17.474
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary 0.951 0.833 0.723 0.648 0.646
Disease, Including
Bronchiectasis.................
Asthma.......................... 0.951 0.833 0.723 0.648 0.646
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung 1.894 1.774 1.685 1.644 1.643
Disorders......................
Aspiration and Specified 7.595 7.521 7.472 7.486 7.486
Bacterial Pneumonias and Other
Severe Lung Infections.........
Kidney Transplant Status........ 10.187 9.922 9.747 9.738 9.738
End Stage Renal Disease......... 38.453 38.219 38.071 38.191 38.193
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5. 2.087 1.988 1.924 1.919 1.919
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe 2.087 1.988 1.924 1.919 1.919
(Stage 4)......................
Ectopic and Molar Pregnancy, 1.357 1.170 0.991 0.806 0.803
Except with Renal Failure,
Shock, or Embolism.............
Miscarriage with Complications.. 1.357 1.170 0.991 0.806 0.803
Miscarriage with No or Minor 1.357 1.170 0.991 0.806 0.803
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy With Major 3.651 3.168 2.877 2.726 2.727
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy With 3.651 3.168 2.877 2.726 2.727
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy with No or 3.651 3.168 2.877 2.726 2.727
Minor Complications............
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except 2.360 2.236 2.153 2.137 2.137
Pressure.......................
Hip Fractures and Pathological 9.462 9.246 9.102 9.137 9.138
Vertebral or Humerus Fractures.
Pathological Fractures, Except 2.011 1.880 1.766 1.695 1.694
of Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus..
Stem Cell, Including Bone 31.030 31.024 31.019 31.037 31.037
Marrow, Transplant Status/
Complications..................
Artificial Openings for Feeding 10.041 9.948 9.888 9.926 9.927
or Elimination.................
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/ 5.262 5.111 5.014 5.043 5.044
Amputation Complications.......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interaction Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Severe illness x Opportunistic 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Infections.....................
Severe illness x Metastatic 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Cancer.........................
Severe illness x Lung, Brain, 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
and Other Severe Cancers,
Including Pediatric Acute
Lymphoid Leukemia..............
Severe illness x Non-Hodgkin`s 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Lymphomas and Other Cancers and
Tumors.........................
Severe illness x Myasthenia 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Gravis/Myoneural Disorders and
Guillain-Barre Syndrome/
Inflammatory and Toxic
Neuropathy.....................
Severe illness x Heart Infection/ 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Inflammation, Except Rheumatic.
Severe illness x Intracranial 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
Hemorrhage.....................
Severe illness x HCC group G06 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
(G06 is HCC Group 6 which
includes the following HCCs in
the blood disease category: 67,
68)............................
Severe illness x HCC group G08 10.392 10.618 10.787 10.882 10.884
(G08 is HCC Group 8 which
includes the following HCCs in
the blood disease category: 73,
74)............................
Severe illness x End-Stage Liver 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
Disease........................
Severe illness x Acute Liver 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
Failure/Disease, Including
Neonatal Hepatitis.............
Severe illness x Atherosclerosis 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
of the Extremities with
Ulceration or Gangrene.........
Severe illness x Vascular 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
Disease with Complications.....
Severe illness x Aspiration and 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
Specified Bacterial Pneumonias
and Other Severe Lung
Infections.....................
Severe illness x Artificial 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
Openings for Feeding or
Elimination....................
Severe illness x HCC group G03 1.899 2.034 2.136 2.220 2.221
(G03 is HCC Group 3 which
includes the following HCCs in
the musculoskeletal disease
category: 54, 55)..............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 61477]]
Enrollment Duration Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One month of enrollment......... 0.515 0.441 0.396 0.386 0.386
Two months of enrollment........ 0.454 0.381 0.329 0.318 0.318
Three months of enrollment...... 0.387 0.321 0.270 0.258 0.258
Four months of enrollment....... 0.316 0.264 0.221 0.211 0.211
Five months of enrollment....... 0.273 0.228 0.188 0.176 0.176
Six months of enrollment........ 0.248 0.208 0.170 0.156 0.156
Seven months of enrollment...... 0.217 0.186 0.155 0.145 0.144
Eight months of enrollment...... 0.166 0.142 0.118 0.110 0.109
Nine months of enrollment....... 0.114 0.103 0.092 0.089 0.089
Ten months of enrollment........ 0.114 0.103 0.092 0.089 0.089
Eleven months of enrollment..... 0.100 0.092 0.084 0.082 0.082
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE 4--Draft Adult Risk Adjustment Model Factors for 2018 Benefit Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCC or RXC No. Factor Platinum Gold Silver Bronze Catastrophic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Demographic Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 21-24, Male.... 0.176 0.140 0.095 0.052 0.049
Age 25-29, Male.... 0.160 0.125 0.080 0.036 0.033
Age 30-34, Male.... 0.206 0.160 0.105 0.048 0.044
Age 35-39, Male.... 0.270 0.215 0.148 0.079 0.074
Age 40-44, Male.... 0.337 0.273 0.196 0.114 0.108
Age 45-49, Male.... 0.408 0.335 0.249 0.155 0.149
Age 50-54, Male.... 0.533 0.447 0.346 0.234 0.227
Age 55-59, Male.... 0.608 0.510 0.397 0.272 0.264
Age 60-64, Male.... 0.702 0.588 0.460 0.312 0.304
Age 21-24, Female.. 0.303 0.249 0.179 0.106 0.101
Age 25-29, Female.. 0.351 0.286 0.207 0.122 0.116
Age 30-34, Female.. 0.485 0.405 0.312 0.214 0.209
Age 35-39, Female.. 0.572 0.483 0.383 0.280 0.275
Age 40-44, Female.. 0.644 0.545 0.434 0.320 0.315
Age 45-49, Female.. 0.652 0.549 0.434 0.310 0.304
Age 50-54, Female.. 0.738 0.627 0.501 0.361 0.353
Age 55-59, Female.. 0.742 0.626 0.496 0.347 0.339
Age 60-64, Female.. 0.780 0.654 0.513 0.351 0.341
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Diagnosis Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCC001........................... HIV/AIDS........... 6.183 5.760 5.473 5.469 5.539
HCC002........................... Septicemia, Sepsis, 9.552 9.383 9.283 9.330 9.368
Systemic
Inflammatory
Response Syndrome/
Shock.
HCC003........................... Central Nervous 6.422 6.330 6.272 6.293 6.313
System Infections,
Except Viral
Meningitis.
HCC004........................... Viral or 4.503 4.287 4.163 4.106 4.139
Unspecified
Meningitis.
HCC006........................... Opportunistic 7.320 7.228 7.177 7.153 7.165
Infections.
HCC008........................... Metastatic Cancer.. 22.731 22.324 22.054 22.096 22.169
HCC009........................... Lung, Brain, and 11.734 11.425 11.226 11.215 11.265
Other Severe
Cancers, Including
Pediatric Acute
Lymphoid Leukemia.
HCC010........................... Non-Hodgkin's 5.463 5.251 5.110 5.051 5.077
Lymphomas and
Other Cancers and
Tumors.
HCC011........................... Colorectal, Breast 4.767 4.556 4.412 4.350 4.375
(Age <50), Kidney,
and Other Cancers.
HCC012........................... Breast (Age 50+) 2.781 2.627 2.522 2.457 2.472
and Prostate
Cancer, Benign/
Uncertain Brain
Tumors, and Other
Cancers and Tumors.
HCC013........................... Thyroid Cancer, 1.329 1.199 1.101 0.996 1.002
Melanoma,
Neurofibromatosis,
and Other Cancers
and Tumors.
HCC018........................... Pancreas Transplant 4.775 4.576 4.459 4.475 4.514
Status/
Complications.
HCC019........................... Diabetes with Acute 0.647 0.575 0.511 0.432 0.430
Complications.
HCC020........................... Diabetes with 0.647 0.575 0.511 0.432 0.430
Chronic
Complications.
HCC021........................... Diabetes without 0.647 0.575 0.511 0.432 0.430
Complication.
HCC023........................... Protein-Calorie 12.908 12.906 12.897 12.961 12.969
Malnutrition.
HCC026........................... Mucopolysaccharidos 2.037 1.934 1.861 1.798 1.806
is.
HCC027........................... Lipidoses and 2.037 1.934 1.861 1.798 1.806
Glycogenosis.
[[Page 61478]]
HCC029........................... Amyloidosis, 2.037 1.934 1.861 1.798 1.806
Porphyria, and
Other Metabolic
Disorders.
HCC030........................... Adrenal, Pituitary, 2.037 1.934 1.861 1.798 1.806
and Other
Significant
Endocrine
Disorders.
HCC034........................... Liver Transplant 11.899 11.778 11.711 11.700 11.720
Status/
Complications.
HCC035........................... End-Stage Liver 3.843 3.664 3.556 3.533 3.561
Disease.
HCC036........................... Cirrhosis of Liver. 1.336 1.218 1.144 1.089 1.101
HCC037C.......................... Chronic Viral 0.913 0.801 0.726 0.667 0.677
Hepatitis C.
HCC037B.......................... Chronic Hepatitis, 0.913 0.801 0.726 0.667 0.677
Other/Unspecified.
HCC038........................... Acute Liver Failure/ 3.843 3.664 3.556 3.533 3.561
Disease, Including
Neonatal Hepatitis.
HCC041........................... Intestine 30.139 30.077 30.019 30.075 30.090
Transplant Status/
Complications.
HCC042........................... Peritonitis/ 10.733 10.494 10.340 10.353 10.395
Gastrointestinal
Perforation/
Necrotizing
Enterocolitis.
HCC045........................... Intestinal 6.002 5.756 5.611 5.611 5.654
Obstruction.
HCC046........................... Chronic 4.775 4.576 4.459 4.475 4.514
Pancreatitis.
HCC047........................... Acute Pancreatitis/ 2.419 2.255 2.152 2.092 2.112
Other Pancreatic
Disorders and
Intestinal
Malabsorption.
HCC048........................... Inflammatory Bowel 2.046 1.872 1.751 1.655 1.669
Disease.
HCC054........................... Necrotizing 6.007 5.828 5.710 5.716 5.748
Fasciitis.
HCC055........................... Bone/Joint/Muscle 6.007 5.828 5.710 5.716 5.748
Infections/
Necrosis.
HCC056........................... Rheumatoid 2.278 2.137 2.035 1.968 1.982
Arthritis and
Specified
Autoimmune
Disorders.
HCC057........................... Systemic Lupus 1.030 0.918 0.836 0.737 0.740
Erythematosus and
Other Autoimmune
Disorders.
HCC061........................... Osteogenesis 2.905 2.727 2.600 2.526 2.543
Imperfecta and
Other
Osteodystrophies.
HCC062........................... Congenital/ 2.905 2.727 2.600 2.526 2.543
Developmental
Skeletal and
Connective Tissue
Disorders.
HCC063........................... Cleft Lip/Cleft 1.143 1.002 0.908 0.827 0.839
Palate.
HCC066........................... Hemophilia......... 42.231 41.976 41.792 41.785 41.825
HCC067........................... Myelodysplastic 12.207 12.080 11.999 12.004 12.026
Syndromes and
Myelofibrosis.
HCC068........................... Aplastic Anemia.... 12.207 12.080 11.999 12.004 12.026
HCC069........................... Acquired Hemolytic 8.782 8.635 8.534 8.511 8.532
Anemia, Including
Hemolytic Disease
of Newborn.
HCC070........................... Sickle Cell Anemia 8.782 8.635 8.534 8.511 8.532
(Hb-SS).
HCC071........................... Thalassemia Major.. 8.782 8.635 8.534 8.511 8.532
HCC073........................... Combined and Other 4.911 4.779 4.696 4.688 4.709
Severe
Immunodeficiencies.
HCC074........................... Disorders of the 4.911 4.779 4.696 4.688 4.709
Immune Mechanism.
HCC075........................... Coagulation Defects 2.568 2.480 2.417 2.380 2.388
and Other
Specified
Hematological
Disorders.
HCC081........................... Drug Psychosis..... 3.749 3.517 3.368 3.255 3.277
HCC082........................... Drug Dependence.... 3.749 3.517 3.368 3.255 3.277
HCC087........................... Schizophrenia...... 3.103 2.871 2.722 2.639 2.668
HCC088........................... Major Depressive 1.630 1.484 1.381 1.273 1.282
and Bipolar
Disorders.
HCC089........................... Reactive and 1.630 1.484 1.381 1.273 1.282
Unspecified
Psychosis,
Delusional
Disorders.
HCC090........................... Personality 1.142 1.028 0.930 0.819 0.820
Disorders.
HCC094........................... Anorexia/Bulimia 2.692 2.539 2.431 2.367 2.382
Nervosa.
HCC096........................... Prader-Willi, 2.409 2.290 2.211 2.148 2.159
Patau, Edwards,
and Autosomal
Deletion Syndromes.
HCC097........................... Down Syndrome, 0.849 0.756 0.680 0.594 0.595
Fragile X, Other
Chromosomal
Anomalies, and
Congenital
Malformation
Syndromes.
HCC102........................... Autistic Disorder.. 1.142 1.028 0.930 0.819 0.820
HCC103........................... Pervasive 1.142 1.028 0.930 0.819 0.820
Developmental
Disorders, Except
Autistic Disorder.
HCC106........................... Traumatic Complete 11.189 11.036 10.934 10.921 10.945
Lesion Cervical
Spinal Cord.
HCC107........................... Quadriplegia....... 11.189 11.036 10.934 10.921 10.945
HCC108........................... Traumatic Complete 8.762 8.617 8.520 8.501 8.523
Lesion Dorsal
Spinal Cord.
HCC109........................... Paraplegia......... 8.762 8.617 8.520 8.501 8.523
HCC110........................... Spinal Cord 5.523 5.325 5.201 5.163 5.191
Disorders/Injuries.
HCC111........................... Amyotrophic Lateral 2.567 2.353 2.220 2.162 2.191
Sclerosis and
Other Anterior
Horn Cell Disease.
HCC112........................... Quadriplegic 1.020 0.881 0.784 0.706 0.716
Cerebral Palsy.
HCC113........................... Cerebral Palsy, 0.168 0.111 0.070 0.030 0.033
Except
Quadriplegic.
HCC114........................... Spina Bifida and 0.046 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
Other Brain/Spinal/
Nervous System
Congenital
Anomalies.
[[Page 61479]]
HCC115........................... Myasthenia Gravis/ 5.158 5.020 4.933 4.905 4.924
Myoneural
Disorders and
Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/
Inflammatory and
Toxic Neuropathy.
HCC117........................... Muscular Dystrophy. 2.075 1.927 1.838 1.751 1.763
HCC118........................... Multiple Sclerosis. 3.652 3.459 3.335 3.267 3.289
HCC119........................... Parkinson's, 2.075 1.927 1.838 1.751 1.763
Huntington's, and
Spinocerebellar
Disease, and Other
Neurodegenerative
Disorders.
HCC120........................... Seizure Disorders 1.447 1.308 1.211 1.127 1.137
and Convulsions.
HCC121........................... Hydrocephalus...... 5.884 5.771 5.685 5.652 5.667
HCC122........................... Non-Traumatic Coma, 8.606 8.480 8.389 8.378 8.396
and Brain
Compression/Anoxic
Damage.
HCC125........................... Respirator 32.063 32.042 32.021 32.093 32.106
Dependence/
Tracheostomy
Status.
HCC126........................... Respiratory Arrest. 9.458 9.316 9.223 9.280 9.312
HCC127........................... Cardio-Respiratory 9.458 9.316 9.223 9.280 9.312
Failure and Shock,
Including
Respiratory
Distress Syndromes.
HCC128........................... Heart Assistive 31.966 31.751 31.611 31.636 31.677
Device/Artificial
Heart.
HCC129........................... Heart Transplant... 31.966 31.751 31.611 31.636 31.677
HCC130........................... Congestive Heart 2.074 1.978 1.912 1.873 1.883
Failure.
HCC131........................... Acute Myocardial 9.396 9.079 8.878 8.975 9.044
Infarction.
HCC132........................... Unstable Angina and 4.759 4.510 4.368 4.366 4.412
Other Acute
Ischemic Heart
Disease.
HCC135........................... Heart Infection/ 5.703 5.585 5.507 5.477 5.492
Inflammation,
Except Rheumatic.
HCC142........................... Specified Heart 2.065 1.948 1.869 1.802 1.811
Arrhythmias.
HCC145........................... Intracranial 8.616 8.359 8.198 8.189 8.231
Hemorrhage.
HCC146........................... Ischemic or 2.891 2.725 2.634 2.629 2.660
Unspecified Stroke.
HCC149........................... Cerebral Aneurysm 3.677 3.501 3.391 3.335 3.357
and Arteriovenous
Malformation.
HCC150........................... Hemiplegia/ 4.955 4.864 4.808 4.848 4.869
Hemiparesis.
HCC151........................... Monoplegia, Other 3.104 2.983 2.909 2.881 2.899
Paralytic
Syndromes.
HCC153........................... Atherosclerosis of 9.488 9.411 9.360 9.434 9.459
the Extremities
with Ulceration or
Gangrene.
HCC154........................... Vascular Disease 7.268 7.097 6.989 6.978 7.005
with Complications.
HCC156........................... Pulmonary Embolism 3.480 3.331 3.236 3.195 3.215
and Deep Vein
Thrombosis.
HCC158........................... Lung Transplant 31.358 31.201 31.097 31.176 31.215
Status/
Complications.
HCC159........................... Cystic Fibrosis.... 7.004 6.736 6.550 6.529 6.569
HCC160........................... Chronic Obstructive 0.897 0.797 0.718 0.631 0.634
Pulmonary Disease,
Including
Bronchiectasis.
HCC161........................... Asthma............. 0.897 0.797 0.718 0.631 0.634
HCC162........................... Fibrosis of Lung 1.730 1.624 1.557 1.508 1.518
and Other Lung
Disorders.
HCC163........................... Aspiration and 6.798 6.731 6.689 6.697 6.711
Specified
Bacterial
Pneumonias and
Other Severe Lung
Infections.
HCC183........................... Kidney Transplant 7.065 6.838 6.705 6.674 6.710
Status.
HCC184........................... End Stage Renal 23.772 23.578 23.450 23.516 23.559
Disease.
HCC187........................... Chronic Kidney 0.395 0.326 0.286 0.280 0.292
Disease, Stage 5.
HCC188........................... Chronic Kidney 0.395 0.326 0.286 0.280 0.292
Disease, Severe
(Stage 4).
HCC203........................... Ectopic and Molar 1.283 1.127 1.008 0.814 0.806
Pregnancy, Except
with Renal
Failure, Shock, or
Embolism.
HCC204........................... Miscarriage with 1.283 1.127 1.008 0.814 0.806
Complications.
HCC205........................... Miscarriage with No 1.283 1.127 1.008 0.814 0.806
or Minor
Complications.
HCC207........................... Completed Pregnancy 3.466 3.027 2.823 2.625 2.694
With Major
Complications.
HCC208........................... Completed Pregnancy 3.466 3.027 2.823 2.625 2.694
With Complications.
HCC209........................... Completed Pregnancy 3.466 3.027 2.823 2.625 2.694
with No or Minor
Complications.
HCC217........................... Chronic Ulcer of 2.003 1.903 1.843 1.825 1.840
Skin, Except
Pressure.
HCC226........................... Hip Fractures and 9.015 8.812 8.682 8.709 8.747
Pathological
Vertebral or
Humerus Fractures.
HCC227........................... Pathological 2.028 1.913 1.830 1.750 1.758
Fractures, Except
of Vertebrae, Hip,
or Humerus.
HCC251........................... Stem Cell, 28.116 28.117 28.113 28.139 28.143
Including Bone
Marrow, Transplant
Status/
Complications.
[[Page 61480]]
HCC253........................... Artificial Openings 9.095 9.005 8.946 8.979 8.999
for Feeding or
Elimination.
HCC254........................... Amputation Status, 4.508 4.378 4.298 4.323 4.351
Lower Limb/
Amputation
Complications.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interaction Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEVERE x HCC006.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Opportunistic
Infections.
SEVERE x HCC008.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Metastatic Cancer.
SEVERE x HCC009.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Lung, Brain, and
Other Severe
Cancers, Including
Pediatric Acute
Lymphoid Leukemia.
SEVERE x HCC010.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Non-Hodgkin`s
Lymphomas and
Other Cancers and
Tumors.
SEVERE x HCC115.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Myasthenia Gravis/
Myoneural
Disorders and
Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/
Inflammatory and
Toxic Neuropathy.
SEVERE x HCC135.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Heart Infection/
Inflammation,
Except Rheumatic.
SEVERE x HCC145.................. Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
Intracranial
Hemorrhage.
SEVERE x G06..................... Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
HCC group G06 (G06
is HCC Group 6
which includes the
following HCCs in
the blood disease
category: 67, 68).
SEVERE x G08..................... Severe illness x 9.355 9.550 9.669 9.785 9.768
HCC group G08 (G08
is HCC Group 8
which includes the
following HCCs in
the blood disease
category: 73, 74).
SEVERE x HCC035.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
End-Stage Liver
Disease.
SEVERE x HCC038.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
Acute Liver
Failure/Disease,
Including Neonatal
Hepatitis.
SEVERE x HCC153.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
Atherosclerosis of
the Extremities
with Ulceration or
Gangrene.
SEVERE x HCC154.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
Vascular Disease
with Complications.
SEVERE x HCC163.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
Aspiration and
Specified
Bacterial
Pneumonias and
Other Severe Lung
Infections.
SEVERE x HCC253.................. Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
Artificial
Openings for
Feeding or
Elimination.
SEVERE x G03..................... Severe illness x 1.895 2.007 2.070 2.170 2.164
HCC group G03 (G03
is HCC Group 3
which includes the
following HCCs in
the
musculoskeletal
disease category:
54, 55).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enrollment Duration Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
One month of 0.526 0.470 0.427 0.411 0.414
enrollment.
Two months of 0.434 0.381 0.335 0.316 0.319
enrollment.
Three months of 0.386 0.337 0.291 0.270 0.272
enrollment.
Four months of 0.303 0.264 0.226 0.209 0.211
enrollment.
Five months of 0.263 0.229 0.194 0.175 0.176
enrollment.
Six months of 0.241 0.212 0.180 0.163 0.163
enrollment.
Seven months of 0.214 0.190 0.163 0.148 0.148
enrollment.
Eight months of 0.166 0.148 0.128 0.115 0.116
enrollment.
Nine months of 0.111 0.100 0.089 0.085 0.085
enrollment.
Ten months of 0.106 0.098 0.089 0.085 0.085
enrollment.
Eleven months of 0.088 0.083 0.079 0.077 0.077
enrollment.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prescription Drug Utilization Indicators
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RXC 01........................... Anti-Hepatitis C 23.898 23.451 23.158 23.236 23.320
(HCV) Agents.
RXC 02........................... Anti-HIV Agents.... 6.331 5.889 5.594 5.432 5.482
RXC 03........................... Antiarrhythmics.... 2.320 2.226 2.149 2.079 2.083
RXC 04........................... Phosphate Binders.. 13.417 13.308 13.238 13.249 13.271
RXC 05........................... Inflammatory Bowel 1.990 1.822 1.708 1.541 1.543
Disease Agents.
RXC 06b.......................... Insulin............ 1.379 1.258 1.134 0.975 0.966
[[Page 61481]]
RXC 06a.......................... Anti-Diabetic 0.575 0.502 0.428 0.326 0.319
Agents, Except
Insulin and
Metformin Only.
RXC 07........................... Multiple Sclerosis 16.971 16.286 15.836 15.832 15.945
Agents.
RXC 08........................... Immune Suppressants 10.134 9.586 9.234 9.242 9.339
and
Immunomodulators.
RXC 09........................... Cystic Fibrosis 17.443 17.133 16.931 17.071 17.144
Agents.
RXC 01 x HCC37C, 036, 035, 034... Additional effect 3.212 3.350 3.439 3.522 3.512
for enrollees with
RXC Anti-Hepatitis
C (HCV) Agents and
HCC (Liver
Transplant Status/
Complications or
End-Stage Liver
Disease or
Cirrhosis of Liver
or Chronic Viral
Hepatitis).
RXC 02 x HCC001.................. Additional effect -2.238 -1.888 -1.645 -1.437 -1.465
for enrollees with
RXC Anti-HIV
Agents and HCC HIV/
AIDS.
RXC 03 x HCC142.................. Additional effect -0.102 -0.076 -0.035 0.037 0.046
for enrollees with
RXC
Antiarrhythmics
and HCC Specified
Heart Arrhythmias.
RXC 04 x HCC184, 183, 187, 188... Additional effect 7.775 7.850 7.890 7.978 7.973
for enrollees with
RXC Phosphate
Binders and HCC
(End Stage Renal
Disease or Kidney
Transplant Status
or Chronic Kidney
Disease, Stage 5
or Chronic Kidney
Disease, Severe
(Stage 4)).
RXC 05 x HCC048, 041............. Additional effect -1.296 -1.208 -1.126 -1.028 -1.026
for enrollees with
RXC Inflammatory
Bowel Disease
Agents and (HCC
Inflammatory Bowel
Disease or
Intestine
Transplant Status/
Complications).
RXC 06b x HCC018, 019, 020, 021.. Additional effect 0.265 0.233 0.289 0.371 0.397
for enrollees with
RXC Insulin and
(HCC Pancreas
Transplant Status/
Complications or
Diabetes with
Acute
Complications or
Diabetes with
Chronic
Complications or
Diabetes without
Complication).
RXC 06a x HCC018, 019, 020, 021.. Additional effect -0.203 -0.184 -0.141 -0.118 -0.116
for enrollees with
RXC Anti-Diabetic
Agents, Except
Insulin and
Metformin Only and
(HCC Pancreas
Transplant Status/
Complications or
Diabetes with
Acute
Complications or
Diabetes with
Chronic
Complications or
Diabetes without
Complication).
RXC 07 x HCC118.................. Additional effect -1.213 -0.849 -0.619 -0.449 -0.484
for enrollees with
RXC Multiple
Sclerosis Agents
and HCC Multiple
Sclerosis.
RXC 08 x HCC056 or 057, and 048 Additional effect 0.022 0.024 0.038 0.012 0.009
or 041. for enrollees with
RXC Immune
Suppressants and
Immunomodulators
and (HCC
Inflammatory Bowel
Disease or
Intestine
Transplant Status/
Complications) and
(HCC Rheumatoid
Arthritis and
Specified
Autoimmune
Disorders or
Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus and
Other Autoimmune
Disorders).
RXC 08 x HCC056.................. Additional effect -1.934 -1.747 -1.615 -1.481 -1.495
for enrollees with
RXC Immune
Suppressants and
Immunomodulators
and HCC Rheumatoid
Arthritis and
Specified
Autoimmune
Disorders.
RXC 08 x HCC057.................. Additional effect -0.891 -0.759 -0.656 -0.522 -0.526
for enrollees with
RXC Immune
Suppressants and
Immunomodulators
and HCC Systemic
Lupus
Erythematosus and
Other Autoimmune
Disorders.
RXC 08 x HCC048, 041............. Additional effect 0.948 1.194 1.330 1.513 1.493
for enrollees with
RXC Immune
Suppressants and
Immunomodulators
and (HCC
Inflammatory Bowel
Disease or
Intestine
Transplant Status/
Complications).
[[Page 61482]]
RXC 09 x HCC159, 158............. Additional effect 18.100 18.294 18.402 18.379 18.340
for enrollees with
RXC Cystic
Fibrosis Agents
and (HCC Cystic
Fibrosis or Lung
Transplant Status/
Complications).
RXC 10 x HCC036, 035, 034........ Additional effect 7.113 7.080 7.054 7.145 7.164
for enrollees with
RXC Ammonia
Detoxicants and
(HCC Liver
Transplant Status/
Complications or
End-Stage Liver
Disease or
Cirrhosis of
Liver).
RXC 11 x HCC130, 129, 128........ Additional effect 2.263 2.270 2.284 2.369 2.382
for enrollees with
RXC Diuretics,
Loop and Select
Potassium-sparing
and (HCC Heart
Assistive Device/
Artificial Heart
or Heart
Transplant or
Congestive Heart
Failure).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5--HHS HCCs in the Severity Illness Indicator Variable
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/Shock.
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal Perforation/Necrotizing Enter colitis.
Seizure Disorders and Convulsions.
Non-Traumatic Coma, Brain Compression/Anoxic Damage.
Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status.
Respiratory Arrest.
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock, Including Respiratory Distress
Syndromes.
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein Thrombosis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 6--Draft Child Risk Adjustment Model Factors for 2018 Benefit Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Factor Platinum Gold Silver Bronze Catastrophic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Demographic Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 2-4, Male................... 0.207 0.151 0.085 0.029 0.025
Age 5-9, Male................... 0.142 0.102 0.053 0.011 0.008
Age 10-14, Male................. 0.204 0.160 0.103 0.057 0.053
Age 15-20, Male................. 0.271 0.220 0.158 0.102 0.098
Age 2-4, Female................. 0.163 0.114 0.058 0.015 0.012
Age 5-9, Female................. 0.116 0.081 0.039 0.008 0.006
Age 10-14, Female............... 0.192 0.150 0.099 0.059 0.056
Age 15-20, Female............... 0.309 0.250 0.177 0.109 0.104
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Diagnosis Factors
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HIV/AIDS........................ 4.686 4.277 4.006 3.895 3.948
Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic 15.212 15.056 14.964 14.980 15.011
Inflammatory Response Syndrome/
Shock..........................
Central Nervous System 9.957 9.790 9.682 9.681 9.708
Infections, Except Viral
Meningitis.....................
Viral or Unspecified Meningitis. 2.484 2.302 2.192 2.092 2.112
Opportunistic Infections........ 20.790 20.728 20.685 20.673 20.682
Metastatic Cancer............... 32.805 32.584 32.417 32.401 32.434
Lung, Brain, and Other Severe 11.049 10.801 10.617 10.544 10.573
Cancers, Including Pediatric
Acute Lymphoid Leukemia........
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas and 8.747 8.507 8.333 8.231 8.255
Other Cancers and Tumors.......
Colorectal, Breast (Age <50), 3.175 2.986 2.846 2.724 2.737
Kidney, and Other Cancers......
Breast (Age 50+) and Prostate 2.813 2.640 2.513 2.398 2.408
Cancer, Benign/Uncertain Brain
Tumors, and Other Cancers and
Tumors.........................
Thyroid Cancer, Melanoma, 1.561 1.423 1.311 1.190 1.194
Neurofibromatosis, and Other
Cancers and Tumors.............
Pancreas Transplant Status/ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Complications..................
Diabetes with Acute 2.340 2.054 1.887 1.622 1.632
Complications..................
Diabetes with Chronic 2.340 2.054 1.887 1.622 1.632
Complications..................
Diabetes without Complication... 2.340 2.054 1.887 1.622 1.632
Protein-Calorie Malnutrition.... 12.106 12.025 11.965 11.995 12.012
Mucopolysaccharidosis........... 8.087 7.841 7.660 7.612 7.644
Lipidoses and Glycogenosis...... 8.087 7.841 7.660 7.612 7.644
Congenital Metabolic Disorders, 8.087 7.841 7.660 7.612 7.644
Not Elsewhere Classified.......
[[Page 61483]]
Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and 8.087 7.841 7.660 7.612 7.644
Other Metabolic Disorders......
Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other 8.087 7.841 7.660 7.612 7.644
Significant Endocrine Disorders
Liver Transplant Status/ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Complications..................
End-Stage Liver Disease......... 11.991 11.852 11.762 11.751 11.773
Cirrhosis of Liver.............. 9.308 9.167 9.070 9.044 9.062
Chronic Viral Hepatitis C....... 4.024 3.889 3.787 3.730 3.743
Chronic Hepatitis, Other/ 2.271 2.151 2.049 1.965 1.971
Unspecified....................
Acute Liver Failure/Disease, 11.991 11.852 11.762 11.751 11.773
Including Neonatal Hepatitis...
Intestine Transplant Status/ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Complications..................
Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal 13.534 13.230 13.022 13.021 13.071
Perforation/Necrotizing
Enterocolitis..................
Intestinal Obstruction.......... 4.748 4.541 4.395 4.297 4.317
Chronic Pancreatitis............ 9.837 9.629 9.502 9.493 9.527
Acute Pancreatitis/Other 2.186 2.075 1.987 1.889 1.892
Pancreatic Disorders and
Intestinal Malabsorption.......
Inflammatory Bowel Disease...... 6.044 5.699 5.465 5.348 5.386
Necrotizing Fasciitis........... 3.999 3.795 3.647 3.572 3.596
Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/ 3.999 3.795 3.647 3.572 3.596
Necrosis.......................
Rheumatoid Arthritis and 3.788 3.572 3.404 3.301 3.321
Specified Autoimmune Disorders.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and 1.335 1.216 1.112 0.990 0.989
Other Autoimmune Disorders.....
Osteogenesis Imperfecta and 1.489 1.379 1.285 1.201 1.206
Other Osteodystrophies.........
Congenital/Developmental 1.489 1.379 1.285 1.201 1.206
Skeletal and Connective Tissue
Disorders......................
Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate.......... 1.502 1.322 1.192 1.064 1.075
Hemophilia...................... 55.750 55.302 54.985 54.945 55.012
Myelodysplastic Syndromes and 15.915 15.761 15.654 15.632 15.652
Myelofibrosis..................
Aplastic Anemia................. 15.915 15.761 15.654 15.632 15.652
Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, 7.294 7.048 6.875 6.784 6.812
Including Hemolytic Disease of
Newborn........................
Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS)...... 7.294 7.048 6.875 6.784 6.812
Thalassemia Major............... 7.294 7.048 6.875 6.784 6.812
Combined and Other Severe 6.252 6.092 5.982 5.915 5.931
Immunodeficiencies.............
Disorders of the Immune 6.252 6.092 5.982 5.915 5.931
Mechanism......................
Coagulation Defects and Other 4.546 4.429 4.333 4.257 4.264
Specified Hematological
Disorders......................
Drug Psychosis.................. 5.380 5.147 4.999 4.923 4.952
Drug Dependence................. 5.380 5.147 4.999 4.923 4.952
Schizophrenia................... 5.083 4.726 4.492 4.375 4.420
Major Depressive and Bipolar 1.873 1.677 1.527 1.350 1.356
Disorders......................
Reactive and Unspecified 1.873 1.677 1.527 1.350 1.356
Psychosis, Delusional Disorders
Personality Disorders........... 0.729 0.624 0.520 0.377 0.372
Anorexia/Bulimia Nervosa........ 2.892 2.708 2.576 2.504 2.524
Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, 3.492 3.304 3.194 3.154 3.180
and Autosomal Deletion
Syndromes......................
Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other 1.736 1.577 1.469 1.376 1.390
Chromosomal Anomalies, and
Congenital Malformation
Syndromes......................
Autistic Disorder............... 1.671 1.512 1.383 1.224 1.226
Pervasive Developmental 0.835 0.726 0.612 0.447 0.437
Disorders, Except Autistic
Disorder.......................
Traumatic Complete Lesion 12.558 12.507 12.489 12.562 12.579
Cervical Spinal Cord...........
Quadriplegia.................... 12.558 12.507 12.489 12.562 12.579
Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal 12.180 12.010 11.883 11.877 11.912
Spinal Cord....................
Paraplegia...................... 12.180 12.010 11.883 11.877 11.912
Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries.. 4.250 4.044 3.905 3.816 3.836
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 7.619 7.407 7.257 7.196 7.221
and Other Anterior Horn Cell
Disease........................
Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy..... 2.991 2.764 2.631 2.634 2.675
Cerebral Palsy, Except 0.778 0.617 0.514 0.422 0.436
Quadriplegic...................
Spina Bifida and Other Brain/ 1.275 1.146 1.054 0.976 0.986
Spinal/Nervous System
Congenital Anomalies...........
Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural 8.788 8.631 8.520 8.481 8.502
Disorders and Guillain-Barre
Syndrome/Inflammatory and Toxic
Neuropathy.....................
Muscular Dystrophy.............. 2.941 2.765 2.650 2.563 2.580
Multiple Sclerosis.............. 7.769 7.471 7.263 7.206 7.246
Parkinson`s, Huntington`s, and 2.941 2.765 2.650 2.563 2.580
Spinocerebellar Disease, and
Other Neurodegenerative
Disorders......................
Seizure Disorders and 1.905 1.753 1.628 1.483 1.486
Convulsions....................
Hydrocephalus................... 4.590 4.479 4.408 4.389 4.406
Non-Traumatic Coma, and Brain 6.647 6.522 6.434 6.385 6.397
Compression/Anoxic Damage......
[[Page 61484]]
Respirator Dependence/ 34.991 34.882 34.817 34.931 34.967
Tracheostomy Status............
Respiratory Arrest.............. 11.820 11.625 11.511 11.500 11.535
Cardio-Respiratory Failure and 11.820 11.625 11.511 11.500 11.535
Shock, Including Respiratory
Distress Syndromes.............
Heart Assistive Device/ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Artificial Heart...............
Heart Transplant................ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Congestive Heart Failure........ 6.567 6.472 6.394 6.342 6.348
Acute Myocardial Infarction..... 9.084 8.927 8.826 8.828 8.852
Unstable Angina and Other Acute 5.051 4.971 4.917 4.926 4.938
Ischemic Heart Disease.........
Heart Infection/Inflammation, 14.351 14.240 14.165 14.137 14.149
Except Rheumatic...............
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome 5.764 5.584 5.432 5.305 5.313
and Other Severe Congenital
Heart Disorders................
Major Congenital Heart/ 1.573 1.475 1.361 1.239 1.235
Circulatory Disorders..........
Atrial and Ventricular Septal 1.097 1.010 0.908 0.808 0.807
Defects, Patent Ductus
Arteriosus, and Other
Congenital Heart/Circulatory
Disorders......................
Specified Heart Arrhythmias..... 3.684 3.526 3.401 3.320 3.333
Intracranial Hemorrhage......... 14.176 13.948 13.803 13.784 13.820
Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke.. 7.895 7.786 7.721 7.720 7.739
Cerebral Aneurysm and 3.545 3.356 3.235 3.172 3.192
Arteriovenous Malformation.....
Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis.......... 4.484 4.389 4.333 4.314 4.330
Monoplegia, Other Paralytic 3.148 3.018 2.937 2.899 2.917
Syndromes......................
Atherosclerosis of the 14.633 14.377 14.225 14.131 14.168
Extremities with Ulceration or
Gangrene.......................
Vascular Disease with 16.113 15.969 15.873 15.876 15.899
Complications..................
Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein 14.661 14.521 14.435 14.448 14.475
Thrombosis.....................
Lung Transplant Status/ 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Complications..................
Cystic Fibrosis................. 19.127 18.718 18.428 18.452 18.522
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary 0.396 0.334 0.249 0.153 0.147
Disease, Including
Bronchiectasis.................
Asthma.......................... 0.396 0.334 0.249 0.153 0.147
Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung 4.160 4.036 3.936 3.862 3.873
Disorders......................
Aspiration and Specified 10.367 10.322 10.287 10.315 10.324
Bacterial Pneumonias and Other
Severe Lung Infections.........
Kidney Transplant Status........ 15.081 14.777 14.581 14.566 14.616
End Stage Renal Disease......... 38.217 38.061 37.962 38.031 38.065
Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5. 3.038 2.903 2.802 2.685 2.688
Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe 3.038 2.903 2.802 2.685 2.688
(Stage 4)......................
Ectopic and Molar Pregnancy, 1.033 0.878 0.754 0.549 0.541
Except with Renal Failure,
Shock, or Embolism.............
Miscarriage with Complications.. 1.033 0.878 0.754 0.549 0.541
Miscarriage with No or Minor 1.033 0.878 0.754 0.549 0.541
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy With Major 2.991 2.587 2.391 2.161 2.216
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy With 2.991 2.587 2.391 2.161 2.216
Complications..................
Completed Pregnancy with No or 2.991 2.587 2.391 2.161 2.216
Minor Complications............
Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except 2.057 1.969 1.888 1.819 1.823
Pressure.......................
Hip Fractures and Pathological 5.729 5.486 5.302 5.192 5.214
Vertebral or Humerus Fractures.
Pathological Fractures, Except 1.351 1.233 1.116 0.982 0.977
of Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus..
Stem Cell, Including Bone 26.035 25.914 25.841 25.846 25.867
Marrow, Transplant Status/
Complications..................
Artificial Openings for Feeding 13.409 13.305 13.251 13.357 13.391
or Elimination.................
Amputation Status, Lower Limb/ 7.806 7.556 7.407 7.306 7.336
Amputation Complications.......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 7--Draft Infant Risk Adjustment Model Factors for 2018 Benefit Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group Platinum Gold Silver Bronze Catastrophic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Extremely Immature * Severity 336.506 335.265 334.332 334.271 334.459
Level 5 (Highest)..............
Extremely Immature * Severity 183.468 182.244 181.331 181.224 181.402
Level 4........................
Extremely Immature * Severity 70.513 69.447 68.657 68.493 68.642
Level 3........................
Extremely Immature * Severity 29.465 28.557 27.854 27.519 27.614
Level 2........................
Extremely Immature * Severity 29.465 28.557 27.854 27.519 27.614
Level 1 (Lowest)...............
Immature * Severity Level 5 178.009 176.784 175.861 175.795 175.980
(Highest)......................
Immature * Severity Level 4..... 80.832 79.582 78.649 78.554 78.740
Immature * Severity Level 3..... 45.204 44.114 43.299 43.140 43.289
Immature * Severity Level 2..... 29.465 28.557 27.854 27.519 27.614
Immature * Severity Level 1 26.402 25.374 24.608 24.351 24.477
(Lowest).......................
Premature/Multiples * Severity 133.590 132.392 131.511 131.378 131.555
Level 5 (Highest)..............
Premature/Multiples * Severity 30.629 29.458 28.605 28.391 28.552
Level 4........................
[[Page 61485]]
Premature/Multiples * Severity 16.302 15.378 14.694 14.308 14.399
Level 3........................
Premature/Multiples * Severity 8.445 7.691 7.131 6.599 6.637
Level 2........................
Premature/Multiples * Severity 5.825 5.277 4.774 4.196 4.187
Level 1 (Lowest)...............
Term * Severity Level 5 115.287 114.176 113.343 113.147 113.297
(Highest)......................
Term * Severity Level 4......... 16.144 15.252 14.603 14.155 14.235
Term * Severity Level 3......... 6.053 5.490 4.998 4.409 4.397
Term * Severity Level 2......... 3.715 3.284 2.849 2.209 2.166
Term * Severity Level 1 (Lowest) 1.570 1.351 0.965 0.436 0.387
Age 1 * Severity Level 5 49.286 48.692 48.242 48.122 48.198
(Highest)......................
Age 1 * Severity Level 4........ 8.659 8.213 7.871 7.641 7.678
Age 1 * Severity Level 3........ 3.182 2.901 2.635 2.374 2.380
Age 1 * Severity Level 2........ 1.997 1.779 1.544 1.267 1.257
Age 1 * Severity Level 1 0.529 0.441 0.299 0.196 0.189
(Lowest).......................
Age 0 Male...................... 0.601 0.558 0.540 0.494 0.490
Age 1 Male...................... 0.140 0.123 0.112 0.085 0.084
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 8--HHS HCCs Included in Infant Model Maturity Categories
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maturity category HCC/Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Extremely Immature........... Extremely Immature Newborns, Birthweight
< 500 Grams.
Extremely Immature........... Extremely Immature Newborns, Including
Birthweight 500-749 Grams.
Extremely Immature........... Extremely Immature Newborns, Including
Birthweight 750-999 Grams.
Immature..................... Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight
1000-1499 Grams.
Immature..................... Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight
1500-1999 Grams.
Premature/Multiples.......... Premature Newborns, Including Birthweight
2000-2499 Grams.
Premature/Multiples.......... Other Premature, Low Birthweight,
Malnourished, or Multiple Birth
Newborns.
Term......................... Term or Post-Term Singleton Newborn,
Normal or High Birthweight.
Age 1........................ All age 1 infants.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 9--HHS HCCs Included in Infant Model Severity Categories
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Severity category HCC
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Severity Level 5 (Highest)... Metastatic Cancer.
Severity Level 5............. Pancreas Transplant Status/Complications.
Severity Level 5............. Liver Transplant Status/Complications.
Severity Level 5............. End-Stage Liver Disease.
Severity Level 5............. Intestine Transplant Status/
Complications.
Severity Level 5............. Peritonitis/Gastrointestinal Perforation/
Necrotizing Enterocolitis.
Severity Level 5............. Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy
Status.
Severity Level 5............. Heart Assistive Device/Artificial Heart.
Severity Level 5............. Heart Transplant.
Severity Level 5............. Congestive Heart Failure.
Severity Level 5............. Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome and Other
Severe Congenital Heart Disorders.
Severity Level 5............. Lung Transplant Status/Complications.
Severity Level 5............. Kidney Transplant Status.
Severity Level 5............. End Stage Renal Disease.
Severity Level 5............. Stem Cell, Including Bone Marrow,
Transplant Status/Complications.
Severity Level 4............. Septicemia, Sepsis, Systemic Inflammatory
Response Syndrome/Shock.
Severity Level 4............. Lung, Brain, and Other Severe Cancers,
Including Pediatric Acute Lymphoid
Leukemia.
Severity Level 4............. Mucopolysaccharidosis.
Severity Level 4............. Major Congenital Anomalies of Diaphragm,
Abdominal Wall, and Esophagus, Age < 2.
Severity Level 4............. Myelodysplastic Syndromes and
Myelofibrosis.
Severity Level 4............. Aplastic Anemia.
Severity Level 4............. Combined and Other Severe
Immunodeficiencies.
Severity Level 4............. Traumatic Complete Lesion Cervical Spinal
Cord.
Severity Level 4............. Quadriplegia.
Severity Level 4............. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Other
Anterior Horn Cell Disease.
Severity Level 4............. Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy.
Severity Level 4............. Myasthenia Gravis/Myoneural Disorders and
Guillain-Barre Syndrome/Inflammatory and
Toxic Neuropathy.
Severity Level 4............. Non-Traumatic Coma, Brain Compression/
Anoxic Damage.
Severity Level 4............. Respiratory Arrest.
Severity Level 4............. Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock,
Including Respiratory Distress
Syndromes.
Severity Level 4............. Acute Myocardial Infarction.
Severity Level 4............. Heart Infection/Inflammation, Except
Rheumatic.
Severity Level 4............. Major Congenital Heart/Circulatory
Disorders.
Severity Level 4............. Intracranial Hemorrhage.
Severity Level 4............. Ischemic or Unspecified Stroke.
[[Page 61486]]
Severity Level 4............. Vascular Disease with Complications.
Severity Level 4............. Pulmonary Embolism and Deep Vein
Thrombosis.
Severity Level 4............. Aspiration and Specified Bacterial
Pneumonias and Other Severe Lung
Infections.
Severity Level 4............. Chronic Kidney Disease, Stage 5.
Severity Level 4............. Hip Fractures and Pathological Vertebral
or Humerus Fractures.
Severity Level 4............. Artificial Openings for Feeding or
Elimination.
Severity Level 3............. HIV/AIDS.
Severity Level 3............. Central Nervous System Infections, Except
Viral Meningitis.
Severity Level 3............. Opportunistic Infections.
Severity Level 3............. Non-Hodgkin`s Lymphomas and Other Cancers
and Tumors.
Severity Level 3............. Colorectal, Breast (Age < 50), Kidney and
Other Cancers.
Severity Level 3............. Breast (Age 50+), Prostate Cancer, Benign/
Uncertain Brain Tumors, and Other
Cancers and Tumors.
Severity Level 3............. Lipidoses and Glycogenosis.
Severity Level 3............. Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Significant
Endocrine Disorders.
Severity Level 3............. Acute Liver Failure/Disease, Including
Neonatal Hepatitis.
Severity Level 3............. Intestinal Obstruction.
Severity Level 3............. Necrotizing Fasciitis.
Severity Level 3............. Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis.
Severity Level 3............. Osteogenesis Imperfecta and Other
Osteodystrophies.
Severity Level 3............. Cleft Lip/Cleft Palate.
Severity Level 3............. Hemophilia.
Severity Level 3............. Disorders of the Immune Mechanism.
Severity Level 3............. Coagulation Defects and Other Specified
Hematological Disorders.
Severity Level 3............. Prader-Willi, Patau, Edwards, and
Autosomal Deletion Syndromes.
Severity Level 3............. Traumatic Complete Lesion Dorsal Spinal
Cord.
Severity Level 3............. Paraplegia.
Severity Level 3............. Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries.
Severity Level 3............. Cerebral Palsy, Except Quadriplegic.
Severity Level 3............. Muscular Dystrophy.
Severity Level 3............. Parkinson`s, Huntington`s, and
Spinocerebellar Disease, and Other
Neurodegenerative Disorders.
Severity Level 3............. Hydrocephalus.
Severity Level 3............. Unstable Angina and Other Acute Ischemic
Heart Disease.
Severity Level 3............. Atrial and Ventricular Septal Defects,
Patent Ductus Arteriosus, and Other
Congenital Heart/Circulatory Disorders.
Severity Level 3............. Specified Heart Arrhythmias.
Severity Level 3............. Cerebral Aneurysm and Arteriovenous
Malformation.
Severity Level 3............. Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis.
Severity Level 3............. Cystic Fibrosis.
Severity Level 3............. Fibrosis of Lung and Other Lung
Disorders.
Severity Level 3............. Pathological Fractures, Except of
Vertebrae, Hip, or Humerus.
Severity Level 2............. Viral or Unspecified Meningitis.
Severity Level 2............. Thyroid, Melanoma, Neurofibromatosis, and
Other Cancers and Tumors.
Severity Level 2............. Diabetes with Acute Complications.
Severity Level 2............. Diabetes with Chronic Complications.
Severity Level 2............. Diabetes without Complication.
Severity Level 2............. Protein-Calorie Malnutrition.
Severity Level 2............. Congenital Metabolic Disorders, Not
Elsewhere Classified.
Severity Level 2............. Amyloidosis, Porphyria, and Other
Metabolic Disorders.
Severity Level 2............. Cirrhosis of Liver.
Severity Level 2............. Chronic Pancreatitis.
Severity Level 2............. Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Severity Level 2............. Rheumatoid Arthritis and Specified
Autoimmune Disorders.
Severity Level 2............. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Other
Autoimmune Disorders.
Severity Level 2............. Congenital/Developmental Skeletal and
Connective Tissue Disorders.
Severity Level 2............. Acquired Hemolytic Anemia, Including
Hemolytic Disease of Newborn.
Severity Level 2............. Sickle Cell Anemia (Hb-SS).
Severity Level 2............. Drug Psychosis.
Severity Level 2............. Drug Dependence.
Severity Level 2............. Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Other
Chromosomal Anomalies, and Congenital
Malformation Syndromes.
Severity Level 2............. Spina Bifida and Other Brain/Spinal/
Nervous System Congenital Anomalies.
Severity Level 2............. Seizure Disorders and Convulsions.
Severity Level 2............. Monoplegia, Other Paralytic Syndromes.
Severity Level 2............. Atherosclerosis of the Extremities with
Ulceration or Gangrene.
Severity Level 2............. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease,
Including Bronchiectasis.
Severity Level 2............. Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Pressure.
Severity Level 1 (Lowest).... Chronic Hepatitis.
Severity Level 1............. Acute Pancreatitis/Other Pancreatic
Disorders and Intestinal Malabsorption.
Severity Level 1............. Thalassemia Major.
Severity Level 1............. Autistic Disorder.
[[Page 61487]]
Severity Level 1............. Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Except
Autistic Disorder.
Severity Level 1............. Multiple Sclerosis.
Severity Level 1............. Asthma.
Severity Level 1............. Chronic Kidney Disease, Severe (Stage 4).
Severity Level 1............. Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation
Complications.
Severity Level 1............. No Severity HCCs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Cost-Sharing Reductions (Sec. 153.320)
We propose to continue including an adjustment for the receipt of
cost-sharing reductions in the model to account for increased plan
liability due to increased utilization of health care services by
enrollees receiving cost-sharing reductions. The proposed cost-sharing
reductions adjustment factors for 2018 risk adjustment are unchanged
from those finalized in the 2017 Payment Notice and are set forth in
Table 10. These adjustments are effective for 2016, 2017, and 2018 risk
adjustment, and are multiplied against the sum of the demographic,
diagnosis, and interaction factors. We anticipate adjusting these
factors in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment parameters for
the 2019 benefit year as additional enrollee-level data from the
individual market becomes available. We seek comment on this approach.
Table 10--Cost-Sharing Reductions Adjustment
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Induced
Household income Plan AV utilization
factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Silver Plan Variant Recipients
------------------------------------------------------------------------
100-150% of FPL................ Plan Variation 94%..... 1.12
150-200% of FPL................ Plan Variation 87%..... 1.12
200-250% of FPL................ Plan Variation 73%..... 1.00
>250% of FPL................... Standard Plan 70%...... 1.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zero Cost-Sharing Recipients
------------------------------------------------------------------------
<300% of FPL................... Platinum (90%)......... 1.00
<300% of FPL................... Gold (80%)............. 1.07
<300% of FPL................... Silver (70%)........... 1.12
<300% of FPL................... Bronze (60%)........... 1.15
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Limited Cost-Sharing Recipients
------------------------------------------------------------------------
>300% of FPL................... Platinum (90%)......... 1.00
>300% of FPL................... Gold (80%)............. 1.07
>300% of FPL................... Silver (70%)........... 1.12
>300% of FPL................... Bronze (60%)........... 1.15
------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Model Performance Statistics (Sec. 153.320)
To evaluate the model's performance, we examined its R-squared and
predictive ratios. The R-squared statistic, which calculates the
percentage of individual variation explained by a model, measures the
predictive accuracy of the model overall. The predictive ratios measure
the predictive accuracy of a model for different validation groups or
subpopulations. The predictive ratio for each of the HHS risk
adjustment models is the ratio of the weighted mean predicted plan
liability for the model sample population to the weighted mean actual
plan liability for the model sample population. The predictive ratio
represents how well the model does on average at predicting plan
liability for that subpopulation. A subpopulation that is predicted
perfectly would have a predictive ratio of 1.0. For each of the HHS
risk adjustment models, the R-squared statistic and the predictive
ratio are in the range of published estimates for concurrent risk
adjustment models.\33\ Because we are proposing to blend the
coefficients from separately solved models based on MarketScan[supreg]
2013 and 2014 data in the proposed rule, we are publishing the R-
squared statistic for each model and year separately to verify their
statistical validity. The R-squared statistic for each model is shown
in Table 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Winkleman, Ross and Syed Mehmud. ``A Comparative Analysis
of Claims-Based Tools for Health Risk Assessment.'' Society of
Actuaries. April 2007.
[[Page 61488]]
Table 11--R-Squared Statistic for HHS Risk Adjustment Models
------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-Squared statistic
Risk adjustment model -------------------------------
2013 2014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Platinum Adult.......................... 0.4070 0.4005
Platinum Child.......................... 0.2947 0.2908
Platinum Infant......................... 0.3354 0.3200
Gold Adult.............................. 0.4026 0.3956
Gold Child.............................. 0.2902 0.2860
Gold Infant............................. 0.3335 0.3180
Silver Adult............................ 0.3993 0.3918
Silver Child............................ 0.2866 0.2821
Silver Infant........................... 0.3324 0.3168
Bronze Adult............................ 0.3971 0.3893
Bronze Child............................ 0.2836 0.2789
Bronze Infant........................... 0.3323 0.3165
Catastrophic Adult...................... 0.3975 0.3898
Catastrophic Child...................... 0.2839 0.2792
Catastrophic Infant..................... 0.3326 0.3168
------------------------------------------------------------------------
g. Overview of the Payment Transfer Formula (Sec. 153.320)
In order to maintain the balance of payments and charges that net
to zero within each State market, we propose to account for high-cost
enrollees through transfer terms (a payment term and a charge term)
that would be calculated separately from the State transfer formula.
Thus, the non-outlier pooling portion of plan risk will continue to be
calculated as the member month-weighted average of individual enrollee
risk scores. We previously defined the calculation of plan average
actuarial risk and the calculation of payments and charges in the
Premium Stabilization Rule. In the 2014 Payment Notice, we combined
those concepts into a risk adjustment payment transfer formula. Risk
adjustment transfers (total payments and charges including outlier
pooling) will be calculated after issuers have completed risk
adjustment data reporting. The payment transfer formula includes a set
of cost adjustment terms that require transfers to be calculated at the
geographic rating area level for each plan (that is, HHS will calculate
two separate transfer amounts for a plan that operates in two rating
areas).
The payment transfer formula is designed to provide a per member
per month (PMPM) transfer amount. The PMPM transfer amount derived from
the payment transfer formula would be multiplied by each plan's total
member months for the benefit year to determine the total payment due
or charge owed by the issuer for that plan in a rating area.
The total payment or charge is thus calculated to balance the State
market risk pool in question. In addition to the total charge collected
and payment made for the State market risk pool, we propose to add to
the risk adjustment methodology additional transfers that would reflect
the payments and charges assessed with respect to the costs of high-
risk enrollees. In particular, we would add one term that would reflect
60 percent of costs above $2 million, the proposed threshold for our
payments for these enrollees, and another term that would reflect a
percentage of PMPM premium adjustment to the transfer formula for the
high-cost enrollee pool to maintain the balance of payment and charges
within the risk adjustment program. We seek comment on this approach to
balance transfers between high and low risk plans.
We received feedback in the 2017 Payment Notice and the White Paper
from commenters who believe that the inclusion of administrative costs
in the Statewide average premium incorrectly increases risk adjustment
transfers based on costs that are unrelated to the risk of the enrollee
population. Comments ranged from requesting that administrative
expenses be removed entirely from the Statewide average premium to
requesting that HHS consider basing risk adjustment transfers on a
portion of Statewide average premium--namely, the portion representing
the sum of claims, claims adjustment expenses, and taxes that are
calculated on premiums after risk adjustment transfers by using a
specified percentage of Statewide average premiums. While commenters
have stated that the inclusion of administrative costs in the Statewide
average premium harms efficient plans, we note that low cost plans do
not necessarily indicate efficient plans. Should a plan be low cost
with low claims costs, it is likely an indication of mispricing, as the
issuer should be pricing for average risk. However, we recognize that
commenters are concerned that including fixed administrative costs in
the Statewide average premium may increase risk adjustment transfers
for all issuers based on a percentage of costs that are not dependent
on enrollee risk. We have considered some of the potential effects of
excluding certain fixed administrative costs from the Statewide average
premium. This modification to the treatment of administrative costs in
the Statewide average premium would lower absolute risk adjustment
transfers for all issuers by an equal percentage. We also note that
administrative costs are affected by claims costs and that correctly
measuring the portion of administrative costs unaffected by claims
costs may be difficult. An incorrect measurement of administrative
costs could then result in plans with high risk enrollees being
undercompensated. We are continuing to evaluate the impact of
administrative expenses on risk adjustment transfers, and seek comment
on removing a portion of administrative expenses from the Statewide
average premium for the 2018 benefit year or for future benefit years.
i. The Payment Transfer Formula
The payment transfer formula is unchanged from what was finalized
in the 2014 Payment Notice (78 FR 15430 through 15434). We believe it
useful to republish the formula in its entirety, since, as noted above,
we are proposing to recalibrate the HHS risk adjustment model.
Transfers (payments and charges) will be calculated as the difference
between the plan premium estimate reflecting risk selection and the
plan premium estimate not reflecting risk selection. As finalized in
the 2014 Payment Notice, the HHS risk adjustment payment transfer
formula is:
[[Page 61489]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06SE16.000
Where:
PS = State average premium;
PLRSt = plan i's plan liability risk score;
AVi = plan i's metal level AV;
ARFi = allowable rating factor;
IDFi = plan i's induced demand factor;
GCFi = plan i's geographic cost factor;
si = plan i's share of State enrollment.
The denominator is summed across all plans in the risk pool in the
market in the State.
The difference between the two premium estimates in the payment
transfer formula determines whether a plan pays a risk adjustment
charge or receives a risk adjustment payment. Note that the value of
the plan average risk score by itself does not determine whether a plan
would be assessed a charge or receive a payment--even if the risk score
is greater than 1.0, it is possible that the plan would be assessed a
charge if the premium compensation that the plan may receive through
its rating (as measured through the allowable rating factor) exceeds
the plan's predicted liability associated with risk selection. Risk
adjustment transfers are calculated at the risk pool level, and
catastrophic plans are treated as a separate risk pool for purposes of
risk adjustment.
This existing formula would be multiplied by the number of member
months to determine the total payment or charge assessed with respect
to plan average risk scores for a plan's geographic rating area for the
market for the State and this payment or charge will be added to the
transfer terms described above to account for the costs of high-risk
enrollees.
h. Risk Adjustment Issuer Data Requirements (Sec. 153.610)
In the 2014 Payment Notice, HHS established an approach for
obtaining the necessary data for reinsurance and risk adjustment
calculations through a distributed data collection model that prevented
the transfer of individuals' protected health information. Under Sec.
153.700, each issuer must establish an EDGE server through which it
provides HHS access to enrollment, claims, and encounter data. To
safeguard enrollees' privacy, each issuer must establish a unique
masked enrollee identification number for each enrollee, and may not
include personally identifiable information in such masked enrollee
identification number. Under the EDGE server approach issuers currently
provide plan-level data to HHS.
The lack of enrollee-level data under this approach limits HHS's
ability to use that enrollee-level data from risk adjustment covered
plans to improve the risk adjustment model recalibration. As we
discussed in the White Paper, access to enrollee-level data with masked
enrollee IDs would permit HHS to recalibrate the risk adjustment model
using actual data from issuers' individual and small group populations,
as opposed to the MarketScan[supreg] commercial database that
approximates individual and small group market populations, while
continuing to safeguard the privacy and security of protected health
information. Therefore, beginning for the 2019 benefit year, while
maintaining the underlying goals of the distributed data approach,
including information privacy and security, we propose to recalibrate
the risk adjustment model using masked, enrollee-level EDGE server data
from the 2016 benefit year. A separate report would be run on issuers'
EDGE servers to access select data elements in the enrollee, medical
claim, pharmacy claim and supplemental diagnosis files, with masked
enrollee ID, plan/issuer ID, rating area, and State. This approach
would allow for the creation of a masked, enrollee-level dataset and
would not permit HHS to know the identity of the enrollee, the plan ID,
the issuer ID, rating area, State or the EDGE server from which the
data was extracted. HHS would provide additional information regarding
the data elements it would collect and the related process
considerations in future guidance.
HHS would use the enrollee-level dataset to recalibrate the risk
adjustment model and inform development of the Actuarial Value
Calculator and Methodology, which HHS releases annually, to describe
how issuers of non-grandfathered health plans in the individual and
small group markets are to calculate actuarial value for purposes of
determining metal levels. We believe this data could prove a valuable
source for calibrating other HHS programs in the individual and small
group markets, and that a public use file derived from these data could
be a valuable tool for governmental entities and independent
researchers to better understand these markets.
We believe that the proposal described above, which minimizes the
burden from the issuer by only requiring issuers to execute a new EDGE
command for the report to be run on issuers' EDGE servers, permits
important improvements to the HHS-operated risk adjustment program
while continuing to safeguard privacy and security. We request comment
on this proposal.
i. Risk Adjustment User Fee (Sec. 153.610(f))
As noted above, if a State is not approved to operate or chooses to
forgo operating its own risk adjustment program, HHS will operate risk
adjustment on the State's behalf. As described in the 2014 Payment
Notice, HHS's operation of risk adjustment on behalf of States is
funded through a risk adjustment user fee. Section 153.610(f)(2)
provides that an issuer of a risk adjustment covered plan, as defined
in Sec. 153.20, must remit a user fee to HHS equal to the product of
its monthly enrollment in the plan and the per enrollee per month risk
adjustment user fee specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit and
payment parameters for the applicable benefit year.
To promote operational efficiency, we propose to amend Sec.
153.610(f)(2) to revise the calculation of the risk adjustment user fee
to be equal to the product of an issuer's billable monthly enrollment
(billable member months) and the per enrollee per month risk adjustment
user fee specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters. Billable member months exclude children who do not count
toward family rates or family policy premiums.\34\ This revision to
base the total user fee on billable member months rather than
enrollment member months ensures consistency with calculating user fees
based on premium revenue generated by issuers, which aligns with the
FFE user fee policy. We note that this change would not affect the PMPM
risk adjustment user fee rate due to the small relative difference
between billable member months and enrollee member months. Therefore,
we propose to implement this change beginning for the 2016 benefit year
risk adjustment user fee collection, which will be collected in 2017,
maintaining the user fee rate set in the 2016 and 2017 Payment Notices.
We seek comment on this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ 78 FR 15432.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OMB Circular No. A-25R establishes Federal policy regarding user
fees, and
[[Page 61490]]
specifies that a user charge will be assessed against each identifiable
recipient for special benefits derived from Federal activities beyond
those received by the general public. The risk adjustment program will
provide special benefits as defined in section 6(a)(1)(b) of Circular
No. A-25R to issuers of risk adjustment covered plans because it will
mitigate the financial instability associated with potential adverse
risk selection. The risk adjustment program will also contribute to
consumer confidence in the health insurance industry by helping to
stabilize premiums across the individual and small group health
insurance markets.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we estimated Federal administrative
expenses of operating the risk adjustment program to be $1.56 per
enrollee per year, or $0.13 PMPM, based on our estimated contract costs
for risk adjustment operations. For the 2018 benefit year, we propose
to use the same methodology to estimate our administrative expenses to
operate the program. These contracts cover development of the model and
methodology, collections, payments, account management, data
collection, data validation, program integrity and audit functions,
operational and fraud analytics, stakeholder training, and operational
support. To calculate the user fee, we divide HHS's projected total
costs for administering the risk adjustment programs on behalf of
States by the expected number of billable member months in risk
adjustment covered plans (other than plans not subject to market
reforms and student health plans, which are not subject to payments and
charges under the risk adjustment methodology HHS uses when it operates
risk adjustment on behalf of a State) in HHS-operated risk adjustment
programs for the benefit year.
We estimate that the total cost for HHS to operate the risk
adjustment program on behalf of States for the 2018 benefit year will
be approximately $35 million, and that the risk adjustment user fee
would be $1.32 per billable enrollee per year (assuming we finalize our
proposal to assess these costs by billable member months discussed
above), or $0.12 PMPM. The risk adjustment user fee contract costs for
2018 include costs related to 2018 risk adjustment data validation, and
are higher than the 2017 contract costs because some contracts were
modified and rebid. However, because enrollment is estimated to be
higher in 2018 than 2017, the PMPM amount is lower than that finalized
for the 2017 benefit year. We seek comment on this proposal.
j. Data Validation Requirements When HHS Operates Risk Adjustment
(Sec. 153.630)
HHS will conduct risk adjustment data validation in any State where
HHS is operating risk adjustment on a State's behalf under Sec.
153.630. The purpose of risk adjustment data validation is to ensure
issuers are providing accurate high-quality information to HHS, which
is crucial for the proper functioning of the risk adjustment program.
Risk adjustment data validation consists of an initial validation audit
and a second validation audit. Under Sec. 153.630, each issuer of a
risk adjustment covered plan must engage an independent initial
validation audit entity. The issuer provides demographic, enrollment,
and medical record documentation for a sample of enrollees selected by
HHS to its initial validation audit entity for data validation.
i. Materiality Threshold for Risk Adjustment Data Validation
HHS has been evaluating the burden associated with the risk
adjustment data validation program, particularly considering the fixed
costs associated with hiring an initial validation audit entity and
submitting results to HHS, which may be a large portion of some
issuers' administrative costs. Beginning for the 2017 benefit year risk
adjustment data validation program, HHS is proposing to implement a
materiality threshold. This would mean that issuers that fall below a
certain threshold would not be required to conduct risk adjustment data
validation each year and would instead be subject to random and
targeted sampling. We would expect the random sampling to include
issuers below the threshold being subject to an initial validation
audit approximately every 3 years, barring any risk-based triggers that
would warrant annual participation. Potential risk-based metrics we are
considering using to select issuers at or below this threshold for more
frequent initial validation audits include the issuer's prior risk
adjustment data validation results, and material changes in risk
adjustment data submission, as measured by our quality metrics. We are
proposing to use a threshold of total premiums of $15 million--a
threshold at which 1 percent of an issuer's premiums would cover the
estimated $150,000 cost of the initial validation audit. Issuers at or
below this threshold would not be subject to annual initial validation
audit requirements. We estimate that issuers above this threshold
represent risk adjustment covered plans that cover approximately 98.5
percent of membership nationally and as such, annual audit of issuers
at or below the threshold is not material for purposes of risk
adjustment data validation. We seek comment on this proposal, including
with respect to the appropriate threshold and the risk-based metrics we
should use.
Because risk adjustment data validation error rates are applied to
the subsequent year's data, we are considering whether to base the
participation requirement metric on the benefit year or the subsequent
benefit year. On the one hand, risk adjustment data validation is
measuring the accuracy of risk scores from the benefit year. On the
other hand, risk adjustment data validation results directly adjust the
risk adjustment transfers of issuers participating in risk adjustment
in the following benefit year. We note that, even if an issuer is
exempt from initial validation audit requirements using the proposed
materiality threshold, HHS may require issuers to make records
available for review or to comply with an audit by the Federal
government under Sec. 153.620. We seek comment on this approach.
We propose that issuers not materially affecting risk adjustment
data validation that are not required to perform an initial validation
audit would still have their payments adjusted based on an error rate.
We are considering an error rate for an issuer not subject to an
initial validation audit in a particular year that could be the average
negative error rate nationally, or the average negative error rate
within a State, or its error rate in past audits. We seek comment on
this approach.
ii. Inclusion of Pharmacy Claims in Risk Adjustment Data Validation
Beginning with the 2018 benefit year, as discussed above, the
proposed HHS risk adjustment methodology would take into account
prescription drug utilization for purposes of determining an enrollee's
risk score. HHS proposes to use a hybrid model that employs
prescription drug data to supplement diagnostic data by serving as a
proxy for a missing diagnosis in cases where diagnostic data are likely
to be incomplete and as an indicator of the severity of an enrollee's
illness. We propose to require that, with respect to validation of
prescription drug utilization of sampled enrollees, an issuer must
provide an initial validation audit entity all paid pharmacy claims for
an enrollee, against which the initial validation audit entity will
validate the associated prescription drug class in the HHS risk
adjustment methodology and the impact on the enrollee's risk score.
[[Page 61491]]
Therefore, we propose to amend the first sentence of Sec.
153.630(b)(7)(ii) to include enrollees' paid pharmacy claims.
iii. Risk Adjustment Data Validation Discrepancy and Administrative
Appeals Process
Under Sec. 153.630(d), an issuer may appeal the findings of a
second validation audit or the application of a risk score error rate
to its risk adjustment payments and charges. In the 2015 Payment
Notice, we stated that we would ``provide additional guidance on the
appeals process and schedule in future rulemaking.'' \35\ As we noted
in the 2015 Payment Notice, HHS will not permit an issuer to appeal the
results of the initial validation audit, as the initial validation
audit entity is under contract with the issuer and HHS does not produce
the initial validation audit results. We are proposing to amend Sec.
153.630(d) to clarify that an issuer may appeal the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate.
We make this clarification to distinguish the calculation of a risk
score error rate from the application of a risk score error rate as the
calculation is a separate reason for which an issuer could appeal. We
further propose to clarify that if an issuer intends to appeal the
application of a risk score error rate to its risk adjustment payments
and charges, HHS would deem this a risk adjustment payment or charge
amount appeal under Sec. 156.1220(a)(1)(ii). In this proposed rule, we
also propose an interim and final discrepancy reporting process for the
risk adjustment data validation program and we propose codification of
the process by which an issuer may file an appeal of the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2015, 79
FR 13768
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, we propose an interim discrepancy reporting process by which
an issuer must confirm the risk adjustment data validation initial
audit sample provided by HHS under Sec. 153.630(b)(1) or file a
discrepancy report. We propose amending Sec. 153.630 by removing the
introductory language and adding paragraph (d)(1) to provide that in
the manner set forth by HHS, within 15 calendar days of notification of
the initial validation audit sample set forth by HHS, an issuer must
confirm the sample or file a discrepancy report to dispute the HHS risk
adjustment data validation initial validation audit sample set forth by
HHS. In light of the timing of this interim discrepancy reporting
process, we do not propose to permit issuers to appeal the resolution
of any interim discrepancy disputing the sample. We believe that
providing an interim administrative appeals process or permitting
issuers to appeal the HHS risk adjustment data validation initial
validation audit sample after completion of the entire risk adjustment
data validation process for a benefit year would delay the HHS risk
adjustment data validation process. Additionally, we believe that it
could be efficient to resolve any issues related to the risk adjustment
data validation initial audit sample provided by HHS under Sec.
153.630(b)(1) during an interim discrepancy reporting process. We
propose to require confirmation of the sample, in the form of an
attestation, in order to ensure that issuers thoroughly review the
initial validation audit sample determined by HHS.
Second, we propose a final, formal discrepancy reporting process,
by which an issuer must confirm the findings of the second validation
audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate, or notify us if
the issuer identifies a discrepancy with the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate. We
propose adding paragraph (d)(2) to Sec. 153.630 to provide that in the
manner set forth by HHS, an issuer must attest to or report a
discrepancy within 15 calendar days of notification of the findings of
a second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate
to dispute the findings of a second validation audit or the calculation
of a risk score error rate. We believe this discrepancy reporting
process will enable HHS to work with issuers to resolve discrepancies
prior to the notification or risk adjustment payments or charges due
under Sec. 153.310(e) and application of the risk score error rate to
the issuer's risk adjustment payments and charges.
As we will discuss in further detail in the preamble to Sec.
156.1220(a), we also propose requiring issuers to report a discrepancy
if the issue is identifiable prior to filing a request for
reconsideration as set forth in 45 CFR 156.1220. As such, we propose to
amend Sec. 156.1220(a)(4)(ii), to provide that notwithstanding Sec.
156.1220(a)(1), a reconsideration with respect to a processing error by
HHS, HHS's incorrect application of the relevant methodology, or HHS's
mathematical error may be requested only if, to the extent the issue
could have been previously identified by the issuer to HHS under Sec.
153.630(d)(2) or Sec. 153.710(d)(2), it was so identified and remains
unresolved.
Third, we propose to amend Sec. 153.630 to add paragraph (d)(3) to
clarify the process by which an issuer can appeal the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate.
We propose requiring issuers to use the administrative appeals process
set forth in Sec. 156.1220. We believe issuers will appreciate a
discrepancy reporting window and leveraging the existing administrative
appeals processes.
HHS will provide in future guidance the process for issuers to
report discrepancies. We believe that providing issuers 15 calendar
days to review the HHS risk adjustment data validation sample set, will
provide adequate time for issuers to notify HHS prior to the execution
of the initial validation audit. Additionally, we believe providing
issuers 30 calendar days from the results of the second validation
audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate based on risk
adjustment data validation, will provide adequate time for issuers to
notify HHS prior to filing a formal request for reconsideration of such
discrepancy. As with the discrepancy reporting process set forth in
Sec. 153.710(d), HHS will work with issuers to resolve any
discrepancies related to risk adjustment data validation prior to final
risk adjustment payments and charges for a benefit year. We seek
comment on these timeframes and these discrepancy reporting and appeal
proposals.
G. Part 154--Health Insurance Issuer Rate Increases: Disclosure and
Review Requirements
1. Definitions (Sec. 154.102)
We propose to revise the definition of ``product'' in Sec.
154.102. Specifically, we propose to remove language that would
restrict a product's being considered the same product when it is no
longer offered by the same issuer, but by a different issuer in the
same controlled group. This amendment is necessary in light of our
proposed interpretation of guaranteed renewability provisions, as
discussed in the preamble to Sec. 147.106. We are not proposing
changes to the definition of ``plan'' because the definition for that
term in Sec. 154.102 cross-references the definition in Sec. 144.103.
Therefore, if finalized as proposed, the amendments to the definition
of ``plan'' in Sec. 144.103 would also apply for purposes of the rate
review requirements under 45 CFR part 154. For further discussion of
the reason for this proposed amendment, please see the preamble to
Sec. 147.106.
[[Page 61492]]
H. Part 155--Exchange Establishment Standards and Other Related
Standards Under the Affordable Care Act
1. Standardized Options (Sec. 155.20)
a. Standardized Options Approach for 2018
In the 2017 Payment Notice, HHS finalized six standardized options
(also now referred to as Simple Choice plans), one at each of the
bronze, silver, silver cost-sharing reduction variation, and gold
levels of coverage, designed to be similar to the most popular
(enrollment-weighted) QHPs in the 2015 individual market FFEs. We
propose to change the standardized options from the 2017 versions in
order to reflect changes in QHP enrollment-weighted data from 2015 to
2016, including SBE-FP QHP enrollment-weighted data, and to the extent
practicable, to comply with various State cost-sharing standards.
Therefore, for the 2018 plan year, HHS proposes three new sets of
standardized options, based on an analysis of enrollment-weighted 2016
individual market FFE and SBE-FP QHPs (see Tables 12, 13 and 14). The
second and third sets are different from the first set only to the
extent necessary to comply with State cost-sharing laws. The second set
of standardized options is designed to work in States that: (1) Require
that cost sharing for physical therapy, occupational therapy, or speech
therapy be no greater than the cost sharing for primary care visits;
(2) limit the amount that can be charged for each drug tier; or (3)
require that all drug tiers carry a copayment rather than coinsurance.
The third set of standardized options is designed to work in a State
with maximum deductible requirements and other cost-sharing standards.
Like the 2017 standardized options, the proposed 2018 standardized
options each have a single provider tier, fixed deductible, fixed
annual limitation on cost sharing, and fixed copayment or coinsurance
for a key set of essential health benefits that comprise a large
percentage of the total allowed costs for a typical population of
enrollees. These fixed cost-sharing values are for in-network care
only. Unlike the 2017 standardized options, the proposed 2018 options
at the silver, silver cost-sharing reduction variations, and gold
levels of coverage have separate medical and drug deductibles,
reflecting the commonality of this cost-sharing structure in QHPs at
these levels of coverage. The proposed standardized options at the
silver 87 percent cost-sharing reduction plan variation, silver 94
percent cost-sharing reduction plan variation, and gold levels of
coverage have a drug deductible equal to $0, meaning no deductible
applies to the drugs.
The bronze standardized options as proposed rely on finalization of
the proposal discussed in the preamble to Sec. 156.140 to permit a
broader de minimis range for bronze plans. If that proposal is not
adopted, the plans would be revised to comply with the de minimis range
in our regulations, while still reflecting 2016 enrollment weighted
data, and State cost-sharing requirements for the second set of
standardized options.
For 2018, we also propose a fourth standardized option at the
bronze level of coverage that qualifies as a high deductible health
plan (HDHP) under section 223 of the Code, eligible for use with a
health savings account (HSA). HDHPs are an option valued by many
consumers--enrollment in HDHPs across 2016 individual market FFE and
SBE-FP QHPs constituted 9.2 percent of all FFE and SBE-FP QHP
enrollment in 2016. Pursuant to the terms of the Code, the IRS releases
the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing and minimum annual
deductible for HDHPs annually in the spring, subsequent to the annual
HHS notice of benefit and payment parameters rulemaking process.
Therefore, we propose that if any changes to the HDHP standardized
option would be required to reflect differences between the HDHP
standardized option finalized in the 2018 Payment Notice and the
subsequently released maximum annual limitation on cost sharing and
minimum annual deductible for HDHPs, HHS would publish those changes in
guidance. Accordingly, we propose to amend the definition of
``standardized option'' at Sec. 155.20 to provide for a plan to be
considered a standardized option if it is: (1) A QHP offered for sale
through an individual market Exchange with a standardized cost-sharing
structure specified by HHS in rulemaking; or (2) an HDHP QHP offered
for sale through an individual market Exchange with a standardized
cost-sharing structure specified by HHS in guidance issued solely to
modify the cost-sharing structure specified by HHS in rulemaking to the
extent necessary to align with requirements to qualify as an HDHP under
section 223 of the Code and meet HHS AV requirements.
b. Standardized Options in SBE-FPs
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we designed a set of standardized
options based on enrollment-weighted 2015 FFE QHP data, and indicated
we anticipated differentially displaying these HHS-designed
standardized options. We noted that SBE-FPs may have their own State-
designed standardized plans that differ from HHS-designed standardized
options, but that the HealthCare.gov platform would not be able to
differentially display these State-designed standardized plans.
For 2018, the HealthCare.gov platform remains unable to provide
differential display to State-designed standardized plans that differ
from the HHS-designed standardized options. However, we propose that
SBE-FPs may choose to allow HHS-designed standardized options to
receive differential display on HealthCare.gov, just as the plans would
if offered through an FFE. We propose that an SBE-FP must notify HHS if
it wants HHS-designed standardized options to receive differential
display by a date to be specified in guidance that will be set to
provide sufficient time to operationalize the State's choice on
HealthCare.gov. We seek comment on this proposal.
c. State Customization
In the 2017 Final Payment Notice, HHS explained that it would not
be possible for HealthCare.gov to accommodate customization of
standardized options by State in 2017. Specifically, to reduce
operational complexity, HHS did not vary the standardized options by
State or by region, and instead finalized one set of standardized
options across all FFEs that issuers would have the option to offer in
2017.
As noted above, some States regulate cost sharing on specific
benefits under State authorities. We seek to accommodate, to the extent
practicable, State cost-sharing requirements under our proposed 2018
standardized options. To do so, we have designed three bronze
standardized options (in addition to the bronze HDHP), and three
standardized options at each of the silver, silver cost-sharing
reduction plan variations, and gold levels of coverage, as set forth in
Tables 13 and 14. We propose to select for each FFE State one of the
three standardized options at each level of coverage (plus the HDHP
option at the bronze level, if permissible under State cost-sharing
standards) that meets any existing State cost-sharing requirements. We
propose that this selection will be published in the final 2018 Payment
Notice. We propose to do the same for each SBE-FP State that notifies
HHS that it chooses to have HHS standardized options receive
differential display on the HealthCare.gov platform. If issuers in the
FFE States and those in the SBE-FP States that choose to have
differential
[[Page 61493]]
display of HHS standardized options offer the standardized options
selected for the State (that is, the one standardized option at each
level of coverage selected for the State, in addition to the HDHP
option if permissible under State standards), those plans would receive
differential display in the Exchange for the 2018 plan year.
Additionally, many States have oral chemotherapy access laws, which
require coverage of oral chemotherapy at parity with intravenous
chemotherapy or cap patients' monthly cost sharing for chemotherapy
drugs (both oral and intravenous). We propose to clarify that these
chemotherapy access requirements do not conflict with the HHS
standardized plan designs because issuers can design benefit packages
that comply with both the standardized options requirements and State
oral chemotherapy access laws.
We believe that the proposals discussed above will allow issuers in
States with cost-sharing laws that would conflict with a single set of
standardized options to offer standardized options. Furthermore, by
making it possible for issuers to offer standardized options while
complying with State cost-sharing rules, we believe this limited State
customization will enhance the shopping experience of consumers in more
States than was previously possible. We welcome comments from each
State regarding the standardized option at each level of coverage that
the State believes would be most suitable for that State, and whether
modifications should be made to any of the proposed State-customized
standardized options to further accommodate State cost-sharing rules.
We also seek comment from States, issuers, and other stakeholders on
State cost-sharing requirements that would affect the design of
standardized options, as well as comments generally on this approach
for standardized options in 2018.
Table 12--2018 Proposed Standardized Options
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HSA-eligible Silver 73% CSR Silver 87% CSR Silver 94% CSR
Bronze bronze HDHP Silver plan variation plan variation plan variation Gold
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actuarial Value (%).......... 62.68%.......... 61.97%.......... 71.05%.......... 73.95%.......... 87.61.......... 94.69.......... 80.65%.
Deductible (Med/Rx).......... $6,650.......... $6,000.......... $3,500/$500..... $3,000/$200..... $700/$0........ $250/$0........ $1,400/$0.
Annual Limitation on Cost $7,350.......... $6,000.......... $7,350.......... $5,850.......... $2,450......... $1,250......... $5,000.
Sharing.
Emergency Room Services...... 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
Urgent Care.................. $75 (*)......... No charge after $75 (*)......... $75 (*)......... $40 (*)........ $25 (*)........ $60 (*).
deductible.
Inpatient Hospital Services.. 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
Primary Care Visit........... $35 (*)......... No charge after $30 (*)......... $30 (*)......... $10 (*)........ $5 (*)......... $20 (*).
deductible.
Specialist Visit............. $75 (*)......... No charge after $65 (*)......... $65 (*)......... $25 (*)........ $10 (*)........ $50 (*).
deductible.
Mental Health/Substance Use $35 (*)......... No charge after $30 (*)......... $30 (*)......... $10 (*)........ $5 (*)......... $20 (*).
Disorder Outpatient Office deductible.
Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET Scans, MRIs). 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
Speech Therapy............... 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
Occupational Therapy/Physical 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
Therapy. deductible.
Laboratory Services.......... 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
X-rays and Diagnostic Imaging 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
**. deductible.
Skilled Nursing Facility..... 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
deductible.
Outpatient Facility Fee (for 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
example, Ambulatory Surgery deductible.
Center).
Outpatient Surgery Physician/ 40%............. No charge after 20%............. 20%............. 20%............ 5%............. 20%.
Surgical Services. deductible.
Generic Drugs................ $35 (*)......... No charge after $15 (*)......... $15 (*)......... $5 (*)......... $3 (*)......... $10 (*).
deductible.
Preferred Brand Drugs........ 35%............. No charge after $50 (*)......... $50 (*)......... $25 (*)........ $5 (*)......... $40 (*).
deductible.
Non-Preferred Brand Drugs.... 40%............. No charge after $100 (*)........ $100 (*)........ $50 (*)........ $10 (*)........ $75 (*).
deductible.
Specialty Drugs.............. 45%............. No charge after 40%............. 40%............. 30%............ 25%............ 30%.
deductible.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(*) = not subject to the deductible
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits (except for high-deductible health plans (HDHPs).
[[Page 61494]]
Table 13--2018 Proposed Standardized Options for States Requiring Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, or Speech Therapy Cost-Sharing Parity with
Primary Care Visits or States Requiring Copayments or Copayment Limits on Drugs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Silver 73% CSR Silver 87% CSR Silver 94% CSR
Bronze Silver plan variation plan variation plan variation Gold
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actuarial Value (%)............. 62.79%............ 71.03%............ 73.88%............ 87.70............. 94.68............. 80.60%.
Deductible (Med/Rx)............. $6,650............ $3,500/$500 Rx.... $3,000/$200 Rx.... $700/$0........... $250/$0........... $1,400/$0.
Annual Limitation on Cost $7,350............ $7,350............ $5,850............ $2,450............ $1,250............ $5,000.
Sharing.
Emergency Room Services......... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Urgent Care..................... $75 (*)........... $75 (*)........... $75 (*)........... $40 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $60 (*).
Inpatient Hospital Services..... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Primary Care Visit.............. $35 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $20 (*).
Specialist Visit................ $75 (*)........... $65 (*)........... $65 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $50 (*).
Mental Health/Substance Use $35 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $20 (*).
Disorder Outpatient Office
Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET Scans, MRIs).... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Speech Therapy.................. $35 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $20 (*).
Occupational Therapy/Physical $35 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $20 (*).
Therapy.
Laboratory Services............. 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
X-rays and Diagnostic Imaging ** 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Skilled Nursing Facility........ 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Outpatient Facility Fee (e.g., 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Ambulatory Surgery Center).
Outpatient Surgery Physician/ 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 20%.
Surgical Services.
Generic Drugs................... $35 (*)........... $15 (*)........... $15 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $3 (*)............ $10 (*).
Preferred Brand Drugs........... $40 (copay applies $50 (*)........... $50 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $40 (*).
only after
deductible).
Non-Preferred Brand Drugs....... $45 (copay applies $100 (*).......... $100 (*).......... $50 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $75 (*).
only after
deductible).
Specialty Drugs................. $50 (copay applies $150 (copay $150 (copay $75 (*)........... $20 (*)........... $100(*).
only after applies only applies only
deductible). after deductible). after deductible).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(*) = not subject to the deductible.
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits.
Table 14--2018 Proposed Standardized Options for States with Deductible Maximums and Other Cost-Sharing Requirements
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Silver 73% CSR Silver 87% CSR Silver 94% CSR
Bronze Silver plan variation plan variation plan variation Gold
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actuarial Value (%)............. 64.84%............ 70.28%............ 73.94%............ 87.61%............ 94.53%............ 80.80%.
Deductible...................... $3,000............ $3,000............ $3,000............ $700.............. $250.............. $1,000.
Annual Limitation on Cost $7,150............ $7,000............ $5,850............ $2,450............ $1,250............ $5,000.
Sharing.
Emergency Room Services......... 50%............... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
Urgent Care..................... $50 (*)........... $50 (*)........... $50 (*)........... $40 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $40 (*).
Inpatient Hospital Services..... $500 (per day; 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
applies only
after deductible).
Primary Care Visit.............. $35 (*first 3 $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $25 (*).
visits; then
subject to
deductible and
$35 copay after
deductible).
Specialist Visit................ $75 (applies only $60 (*)........... $60 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $40 (*).
after deductible).
Mental Health/Substance Use $35 (applies only $30 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $25 (*).
Disorder Outpatient Office after deductible).
Visit.
Imaging (CT/PET Scans, MRIs).... $100 (applies only $100 (*).......... $100 (*).......... $75 (*)........... $40 (*)........... $100 (*).
after deductible).
Speech Therapy.................. $35 (applies only $50 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $25 (*).
after deductible).
Occupational Therapy/Physical $35 (applies only $50 (*)........... $30 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $25 (*).
Therapy. after deductible).
[[Page 61495]]
Laboratory Services............. 50%............... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
X-rays and Diagnostic Imaging**. 50%............... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
Skilled Nursing Facility........ $500 (per day; 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
applies only
after deductible).
Outpatient Facility Fee (e.g., 50%............... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
Ambulatory Surgery Center).
Outpatient Surgery Physician/ 50%............... 40%............... 20%............... 20%............... 5%................ 30%.
Surgical Services.
Generic Drugs................... $25 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $15 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $3 (*)............ $10 (*).
Preferred Brand Drugs........... 50%............... $75 (*)........... $75 (*)........... $25 (*)........... $5 (*)............ $25 (*).
Non-Preferred Brand Drugs....... 50%............... $75 (*)........... $75 (*)........... $50 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $50 (*).
Specialty Drugs................. 50%............... $75 (*)........... $75 (*)........... $50 (*)........... $10 (*)........... $50 (*).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(*) = not subject to the deductible
** Note: Excludes x-rays and diagnostic imaging associated with office visits.
2. General Functions of an Exchange
a. Functions of an Exchange (Sec. 155.200)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we established that a State Exchange
could elect to enter into a Federal platform agreement through which it
agrees to rely on HHS for services related to the individual market
Exchange, the SHOP Exchange, or both. In Sec. 155.200(f)(2), we
required an SBE-FP to establish and oversee certain requirements for
its QHPs and QHP issuers that are no less strict than the requirements
that apply to QHPs and QHP issuers in an FFE. Requiring QHPs and QHP
issuers in SBE-FPs to meet these same requirements ensures that all
QHPs on HealthCare.gov meet a consistent minimum standard and that
consumers obtaining coverage as a result of applying through
HealthCare.gov are guaranteed plans that meet these minimum standards.
We propose to amend Sec. 155.200(f) by adding a new paragraph
(f)(4) that would require State Exchanges that use the Federal platform
for certain SHOP functions to establish standards and policies
consistent with certain Federally-facilitated Small Business Health
Options Program (FF-SHOP) requirements. In contrast to the requirements
contained in Sec. 155.200(f)(2), which pertain primarily to ensuring a
consistent experience on HealthCare.gov, compliance with the
requirements we propose to include in Sec. 155.200(f)(4) would be
necessary because the FF-SHOP requirements listed in paragraph (f)(4)
are an integral part of the FF-SHOP platform's functionality and system
build, making compliance with the requirements necessary from an
operational perspective for State Exchanges to use the Federal platform
for these SHOP functions. Additionally, requiring compliance with these
requirements, rather than customizing the FF-SHOP platform's system
build, would avoid sizeable costs associated with permitting State-
based Exchanges to use the Federal platform for SHOP functions.
Therefore, we propose to add a new paragraph (f)(4) to require that
SBE-FPs that utilize the Federal platform for certain SHOP functions
establish standards and policies with respect to the following topics
that are consistent with the following rules applicable in FF-SHOPs:
Premium calculation, payment, and collection requirements
as specified at Sec. 155.705(b)(4) (for SBE-FPs using the Federal
platform for SHOP eligibility, enrollment, or premium aggregation
functions);
The timeline for rate changes set forth at Sec.
155.705(b)(6)(i)(A) (for SBE-FPs using the Federal platform for SHOP
enrollment or premium aggregation functions);
Minimum participation rate requirements and calculation
methodologies set forth at Sec. 155.705(b)(10) (for SBE-FPs using the
Federal platform for SHOP enrollment functions);
Employer contribution methodologies set forth at Sec.
155.705(b)(11)(ii) (for SBE-FPs using the Federal platform for SHOP
enrollment or premium aggregation functions);
Annual employee open enrollment period requirements set
forth at Sec. 155.725(e)(2) (for SBE-FPs using the Federal platform
for SHOP enrollment functions);
Initial group enrollment or renewal coverage effective
date requirements set forth at Sec. 155.725(h)(2) (for SBE-FPs using
the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment functions); and
Termination of SHOP coverage or enrollment rules set forth
at Sec. 155.735 (for SBE-FPs using the Federal platform for SHOP
eligibility, enrollment, or premium aggregation functions).
These amendments would become effective with the effective date of
the final rule.
We seek comment on this proposal, including on whether it would
conflict with current State requirements, and on whether other FF-SHOP
requirements should apply in SBE-FPs utilizing the Federal platform for
SHOP functions, for the reasons discussed above.
b. Consumer Assistance Tools and Programs of an Exchange (Sec.
155.205)
Section 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) require Exchanges, QHP
issuers, and agents or brokers subject to Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i)
(``web-brokers'') to provide taglines in non-English languages
indicating the availability of language services. These entities must
include taglines on Web site content and documents that are critical
for obtaining health insurance coverage or access to health care
services through a QHP for qualified individuals, applicants, qualified
employers, qualified employees, or enrollees. The taglines must
indicate the availability of language services in at least the top 15
languages spoken by the limited English proficient (LEP) population of
the relevant State, as determined in HHS guidance. In March 2016, HHS
issued guidance providing language data and sample taglines in the top
15 languages spoken by the LEP population in each State.\36\ A similar
tagline requirement
[[Page 61496]]
appears in the final rule implementing section 1557 of the Affordable
Care Act (81 FR 31376 (May 18, 2016)), which prohibits discrimination
on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disability
in certain health programs and activities.\37\ The section 1557
implementing regulation applies to every health program or activity
administered by an Exchange, every health program or activity
administered by HHS, and every health program or activity, any part of
which receives Federal financial assistance provided or made available
by HHS.\38\ The section 1557 implementing regulation, as well as other
applicable Federal civil rights laws, apply independently of the
regulations governing Exchanges and health insurance issuers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Ctr. Consumer Info. & Ins. Oversight, Ctrs. for Medicaid &
Medicare Serv., Guidance and Population Data for Exchanges,
Qualified Health Plan Issuers, and Web-Brokers to Ensure Meaningful
Access by Limited-English Proficient Speakers Under 45 CFR
155.205(c) and 156.250 (March 30, 2016), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Language-access-guidance.pdf; Appendix A--Top 15 Non-English
Languages by State, available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Appendix-A-Top-15.pdf;
Appendix B--Sample Translated Taglines, available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Appendix-B-Sample-Translated-Taglines.pdf.
\37\ 42 U.S.C. 18116; 45 CFR part 92. Section 92.8(d)(1)
requires each covered entity to ``post taglines in at least the top
15 languages spoken by individuals with limited English proficiency
of the relevant State or States.'' The principle of aggregation with
respect to the tagline requirement at Sec. 92.8(d)(1) is discussed
in the section 1557 final rule at 81 FR 31376, 31400.
\38\ 45 CFR 92.2(a). In addition to the tagline requirement at
Sec. 92.8(d)(1), the section 1557 implementing regulation
identifies other obligations of a covered entity, such as the
obligation to have marketing practices and benefit designs in a
health-related insurance plan or policy or other health-related
coverage that are nondiscriminatory. See id. Sec. 92.207.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the preamble to the 2016 Payment Notice, we stated that if an
entity's service area covers multiple States, the top 15 languages
spoken by LEP individuals may be determined by aggregating the top 15
languages spoken by all LEP individuals among the total population of
the relevant States (80 FR 10788). We also restated this policy in the
March 2016 guidance. We propose to amend Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii) to
provide more specificity about when entities subject to Sec.
155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) would be permitted to aggregate LEP
populations across States to determine the languages in which taglines
must be provided, in light of questions that have arisen about this
issue since publication of the 2016 Payment Notice.
At Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), we propose that if an Exchange is
operated by an entity operating multiple Exchanges, or relies on an
eligibility or enrollment platform that is relied on by multiple
Exchanges, the Exchange may aggregate the LEP populations across all
the States served by the entity that operates the Exchange or its
eligibility or enrollment platform to determine the top 15 languages
required for taglines under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A). For example,
under this proposal, all Exchanges that use the eligibility and
enrollment platform on which the FFEs (including FFEs where States
perform plan management functions) and SBE-FPs rely would be permitted
to aggregate languages across the States with Exchanges that rely on
this platform.
At Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), we also propose that a QHP issuer
would be permitted to aggregate the LEP populations across all States
served by the health insurance issuers within the issuer's controlled
group, whether or not those health insurance issuers offer plans
through the Exchange in each of those States, to determine the top 15
languages in which it must provide taglines. For consistency, we
propose to define an issuer's controlled group using the definition in
Sec. 147.106(d)(3)(i) of this proposed rule, which would define a
controlled group as a group of two or more persons that is treated as a
single employer under section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the
Code. Therefore, a QHP issuer that is a subsidiary of a corporate
entity or holding company that is treated as a single employer under
section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the Code, and whose
subsidiary health insurance issuers serve multiple States, would be
permitted to meet the tagline requirement by including taglines on Web
sites and critical documents in at least the top 15 languages spoken by
the aggregated LEP populations of all States served by the corporate
entity's or holding company's subsidiary health insurance issuers,
rather than in the top 15 languages spoken by the limited English
proficient population of each individual QHP issuer's State of
licensure or State served. On the other hand, a QHP issuer association
or federation comprised of multiple companies that are not treated as a
single employer under section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or 414(o) of the
Code, and are thus not considered to be a controlled group, would not
be permitted to aggregate across the States served by the health
insurance issuers in its entire association or federation; rather, the
QHP issuer members of the association or federation would be permitted
to aggregate only across the States served by the health insurance
issuers within each issuer's controlled group.
With respect to summaries of benefits and coverage (SBCs) provided
under section 2715 of the PHS Act, consistent with the SBC Instruction
Guide for Individual Health Insurance Coverage \39\ and the SBC
Instruction Guide for Group Coverage,\40\ QHP issuers would still be
required to provide an addendum with their SBCs with language taglines
in the top 15 languages spoken by the LEP populations of the relevant
State or States for QHPs offered through an Exchange. Any additional
taglines required under section 2715 of the PHS Act and the
implementing regulations \41\ must also be included in this addendum.
However, any taglines that are included in the addendum are not
required to also be included in the SBC document. The addendum, which
must only include tagline information required by the applicable
language access standards, must be provided along with the SBC and is
not considered a part of the SBC document. Therefore, the addendum will
not count towards the four double-sided page limit for the SBC under
PHS Act section 2715(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Summary of Benefits and Coverage: Instruction Guide for
Individual Health Insurance Coverage (April 2017), available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/Individual-Instructions-508-MM.pdf.
\40\ Summary of Benefits and Coverage: Instruction Guide for
Group Coverage (April 2017), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/Group-Instructions-4-4-clean-MM-508.pdf
\41\ 45 CFR 147.200(a)(5) requires that group health plans and
health insurance issuers offering group and individual health
insurance coverage provide taglines in a particular non-English
language if 10 percent or more of the population residing in the
county is literate only in that same non-English language.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, our proposed policy related to aggregating LEP
populations to determine the top 15 languages in which taglines must be
provided does not apply to the tagline requirements under rules
implementing sections 2715 and 2719 of the PHS Act. This means, for
example, that a QHP issuer that is a member of a controlled group whose
health insurance issuers serve three States, and that therefore
aggregates the LEP populations across those three States to determine
the top 15 languages in which it must provide taglines in its SBC
addendum under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A), must still include in its
SBC addendum taglines in all of the languages triggered by the
threshold under Sec. 147.200(a)(5), which requires a tagline when 10
percent or more of the population residing in a county is
[[Page 61497]]
literate only in a particular non-English language, without aggregating
the LEP populations across the counties in its service area. The same
would apply to tagline requirements under section 2719 of the PHS Act
and its implementing regulations.
We also propose amendments to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B), to
specify that web-brokers that are licensed in and serving multiple
States would be permitted to aggregate the LEP populations in the
States they serve to determine the top 15 languages in which they must
provide taglines under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B).
We believe our proposed approach balances two important policy
objectives: Ensuring that LEP individuals have notice of language
assistance services, and minimizing burden on the entities subject to
the rule, including by minimizing the potential need for costly
information systems changes. This approach would establish a floor, and
if it is finalized, QHP issuers, web-brokers, and Exchanges would be
permitted to provide non-aggregated, State-specific taglines, or
taglines in more than the required 15 languages. We believe our
proposed approach would help promote consistency with the tagline
requirements at 45 CFR 92.8(d)(1) and 81 FR 31400, which permit covered
entities that serve individuals in more than one State to aggregate the
number of individuals with limited English proficiency in those States
to determine the top 15 languages required by Sec. 92.8(d)(1). We seek
comment on whether the proposed approach strikes the appropriate
balance.
We are also proposing amendments to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and
(B) to specify that Exchanges, QHP issuers, and web-brokers may satisfy
tagline requirements with respect to Web site content if they post a
Web link prominently on their home page that directs individuals to the
full text of the taglines indicating how individuals may obtain
language assistance services, and if they also include taglines on any
standalone document linked to or embedded in the Web site, such as one
in portable document format (PDF) or word processing software format,
that is critical within the meaning of the rule. Thus, for example, if
a QHP issuer included a link to a PDF of its provider directory or
formulary drug list on its Web site, it would be required to provide a
link to taglines on its Web site home page and to provide taglines on
that PDF document. In HHS's view, providing a prominent link to
taglines on the home page of a Web site gives sufficient notice to
consumers that language services are available. We note that entities
subject to section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act are still required
to comply with the section 1557 requirements regarding taglines placed
on their home pages.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ In particular, we note the separate requirement for
entities covered under section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act that
links to taglines from the home page of a covered entity's Web site
must be posted as ``in language'' Web links, which are links written
in each of the 15 non-English languages posted conspicuously on the
home page that direct the individual to the full text of the tagline
indicating how the individual may obtain language assistance
services. For instance, a tagline directing an individual to a Web
site with the full text of a tagline written in Haitian Creole
should appear as ``Kreyol'' rather than ``Haitian Creole.'' (45 CFR
92.8(1)(iii); 81 FR 31396.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the case of ``critical'' standalone documents linked to or
embedded in the Web site, there is a good chance that a consumer might
land on such documents without going through an entity's home page
first (for example, from a link on another Web site), and it is also
likely that such documents would not contain a link to the entity's
home page. In contrast, Web pages within the Web site that are not
standalone linked or embedded documents are more likely to contain a
prominent link to the home page. Under this proposal, if an entity
subject to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) or (B) includes the required
taglines in a standalone ``critical'' document linked to or embedded in
the Web site of another entity subject to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A)
or (B), then the taglines standard will be deemed to be met by the
entity that links to or embeds the ``critical'' document in its Web
site, for purposes of that document. For example, if a web-broker posts
a ``critical'' document provided to it by an affiliated QHP issuer, and
the QHP issuer includes the taglines in that document that the issuer
would be required to include, then the web-broker can rely on those
taglines for purposes of compliance with Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(B)
when it posts that document (as provided by the QHP issuer with the
required taglines), even if the QHP issuer and web-broker are not
required to provide taglines in the same 15 languages.
We solicit comments on all aspects of these proposals. In
particular, we seek comments on whether we should consider alternative
standards for identifying the States across which Exchanges, QHP
issuers, and web-brokers may aggregate languages for purposes of Sec.
155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B), and on whether our proposed approach
strikes an appropriate balance between facilitating access for LEP
populations and minimizing burden on the entities subject to the rule.
Additionally, because the final rule implementing section 1557 of
the Affordable Care Act (81 FR 31376 (May 18, 2016)) imposes on the
covered entities to which that rule applies a similar set of
obligations with respect to language access taglines, we are
considering whether there is a need for the separate language access
tagline requirements for Exchanges, QHP issuers, and web-brokers under
Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B). We seek comment on what, if any,
additional protections for LEP consumers the standards under Sec.
155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) provide that are not included in the
section 1557 implementing regulation, and on whether the Sec.
155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) requirements are largely duplicative of
the section 1557 implementing regulation. We note that not every entity
subject to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) or (B) is a ``covered entity''
subject to section 1557 and its implementing regulation. We are
committed to ensuring that LEP consumers have sufficient notice of
language assistance services, while also seeking to minimize the burden
on the entities subject to both the section 1557 implementing
regulation and Exchange language access requirements, including by
minimizing duplicative requirements and the potential need for costly
information systems changes. For these reasons, and for continuity with
our existing requirements and the principle that LEP consumers should
have notice of language access services whether they are being served
by an Exchange, QHP issuer, or a web-broker,\43\ we are considering
amending Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii) to replace the tagline requirements
currently set forth at Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) with a
provision requiring Exchanges, QHP issuers, and web-brokers to follow
certain standards under Sec. 92.8 when providing the taglines required
under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii). Under this alternative proposal, to the
extent that any entity subject to existing Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A)
and (B) is not a covered entity within the meaning of section 1557 and
its implementing regulation, the standards under Sec. 92.8 would apply
as if such entity were a covered entity. We are also considering
limiting the cross-reference such that Exchanges, QHP issuers, and web-
brokers would have to comply only with the standards related to
taglines at Sec. 92.8(d)(1) and (f) when providing the taglines
required under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii), and would not have
[[Page 61498]]
to comply with other notice requirements in Sec. 92.8, such as Sec.
92.8(a). This approach would be similar to our existing regulations and
would not require documents to include additional information, such as
nondiscrimination disclosures and grievance processes, that are not
contemplated by Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B), unless the entity
providing taglines is separately subject to Sec. 92.8. Under this
alternative proposal, we are also considering retaining the requirement
that taglines must be provided on critical documents within the meaning
of Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and (B), rather than applying the
requirement at Sec. 92.8(f)(1)(i) related to significant publications
and significant communications. However, we seek comment on this
approach and on whether describing the types of materials on which
taglines must be provided by Exchanges, QHP issuers, and web-brokers by
instead referring to significant publications and significant
communications at Sec. 92.8(f)(1)(i) would help streamline these
requirements for entities subject to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and
(B). We are also considering removing Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii)(A) and
(B) entirely. In any case, as noted above, the section 1557
implementing regulation applies independently of the regulations
governing Exchanges and health insurance issuers. We request comments
on all of these considerations, including with respect to what other
conforming changes to Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii) or other regulations
such as Sec. 156.250 might be advisable in order to implement a policy
of relying upon the substantive standards under section 1557 and
associated rulemaking and guidance for the language access protections
under Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See 80 FR 10788.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Ability of States To Permit Agents and Brokers To Assist Qualified
Individuals, Qualified Employers, or Qualified Employees Enrolling in
QHPs (Sec. 155.220)
Consistent with section 1312(e) of the Affordable Care Act, we
established procedures under Sec. 155.220 to support the States'
ability to permit agents and brokers to assist individuals, employers
or employees with enrollment in QHPs offered through an Exchange,
subject to applicable Federal and State requirements. At Sec.
155.220(c), we established parameters for enrollment of qualified
individuals through an Exchange with the assistance of an agent or
broker. At Sec. 155.220(c)(1), we established that an agent or broker
who assists with enrollment through the Exchange must ensure completion
of an eligibility verification and enrollment application through the
Exchange Web site as described Sec. 155.405. In Sec. 155.220(c)(3),
we established standards that apply when using the direct enrollment
pathway and a Web site of an agent or broker is used to complete the
QHP selection. As described at Sec. 155.220(d), an agent or broker
that enrolls qualified individuals through an Exchange, or assists
individuals in applying for Exchange financial assistance, must comply
with the terms of a general agreement with the Exchange, as well as
register with the Exchange and receive training in the range of QHP
options and insurance affordability programs. In addition, all agents
and brokers must execute the applicable privacy and security agreement
required by Sec. 155.260(b) to provide assistance with enrollment
through the Exchange. We also established FFE standards of conduct
under Sec. 155.220(j) for agents and brokers that assist consumers in
enrolling in coverage through the FFEs to protect consumers and ensure
the proper administration of the FFEs. In this rulemaking, we propose
to build on this foundation with the adoption of new procedures and
additional consumer protection standards for agents and brokers that
assist with enrollments through Exchanges. We also solicit additional
comments to help further inform the development and implementation of
the enhanced direct enrollment pathway.
i. Differential Display of Standardized Options on the Web Sites of
Agents and Brokers
Under current rules, web-brokers and issuers that use the direct
enrollment pathway to facilitate enrollment through an Exchange that
offers standardized options are not required to give differential
display to standardized options. In the 2017 Payment Notice, we noted
that we would be conducting consumer testing to help us evaluate ways
in which standardized options, when certified by an FFE, could be
displayed on our consumer-facing plan comparison features in a manner
that makes it easier to find and identify them, including
distinguishing them from non-standardized plans. We noted that we
anticipate differentially displaying the standardized options to allow
consumers to compare plans based on differences in price and quality
rather than cost-sharing structure, as well as providing information to
explain the standardized options concept to consumers.
We added a new provision to Sec. 155.205(b)(1) codifying the
Exchange's authority to differentially display standardized options on
our consumer-facing plan comparison and shopping tools. We did not
require QHP issuers or web-brokers to adhere to differential display
requirements of standardized options when using a non-Exchange Web site
to facilitate enrollment in a QHP through an Exchange for the 2017 plan
year, but we noted that we would consider whether to propose such a
requirement in the future. Elsewhere in this document, we propose for
the 2018 plan year and beyond, to allow SBE-FPs to choose to allow HHS-
designed standardized options to receive differential display on
HealthCare.gov, just as the plans would if offered through an FFE.
For the 2018 plan year and beyond, we propose to require web-
brokers and issuers that use the direct enrollment pathway to
differentially display standardized options when they facilitate
enrollment through an FFE or an SBE-FP that has elected to implement
differential display; however, we would not require the manner of
differentiation to be identical to the one adopted for displaying
standardized options on HealthCare.gov. We recognize that web-brokers
and issuers may have system constraints that prevent them from
mirroring the HealthCare.gov display approach, and so propose that if a
web-broker or issuer that uses the direct enrollment pathway wants to
deviate from the manner adopted by HHS for display on HealthCare.gov,
such deviations would be permitted, subject to approval by HHS. In
approving deviations, HHS would consider whether the same level of
differentiation and clarity is being provided under the deviation
requested by the web-broker or issuer as is provided on HealthCare.gov.
Therefore, we propose to amend Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i) governing web-
brokers by adding new paragraph (c)(3)(i)(H), and to amend Sec.
156.265(b)(3) governing QHP issuers engaged in direct enrollment by
adding new paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to require differential display of all
standardized options in accordance with the requirements under Sec.
155.205(b)(1) in a manner consistent with that adopted by HHS for
display on the FFE Web site, unless HHS approves a deviation.
ii. Enhanced Direct Enrollment Process
In the 2017 Payment Notice (81 FR at 12258), we discussed a
proposal to implement an enhanced direct enrollment process to
facilitate enrollment through Exchanges that rely on the Federal
platform for their eligibility and enrollment functions, namely FFEs or
SBE-FPs. If we were to
[[Page 61499]]
implement this process, it would be an additional option for a web-
broker or QHP issuer to conduct direct enrollment activities; those
entities could also continue to conduct direct enrollment through the
current process, which requires a consumer to be redirected to
HealthCare.gov in order to apply for coverage and receive an
eligibility determination. In the 2017 Payment Notice, we discussed
establishing an enhanced direct enrollment pathway, and stated that HHS
would continue to analyze the necessary protections that need to be in
place before moving forward with that new process. We now seek
additional comments from the public as described below.
Under the direct enrollment process today, a consumer is redirected
from the Web site of the direct enrollment partner (issuer or web-
broker) to HealthCare.gov to complete the eligibility application and
obtain an eligibility determination. Under the enhanced direct
enrollment process that we are considering, a consumer might remain on
the Web site of the direct enrollment partner (QHP issuer or web-
broker) to submit information necessary for an eligibility
determination without being redirected to HealthCare.gov. The enhanced
direct enrollment partner would pass information collected for the
eligibility application to the Exchange. The Exchange would then
generate the eligibility determination and pass the eligibility results
back to the enhanced direct enrollment partner. The consumer could see
the results on the direct enrollment partner's Web site. Just as with
the current direct enrollment process, the Exchanges would continue to
make the eligibility determination under enhanced direct enrollment,
and eligibility verification information the Exchanges receive from
other government agencies would not be disclosed to the enhanced direct
enrollment partner. We believe that an enhanced direct enrollment
process would allow the consumer to have a more streamlined experience
and would permit the Exchange to offer a diverse set of enrollment
channels to reach consumers.
Although offering additional enrollment channels may make it easier
for consumers to access coverage under qualified health plans, we must
consider any additional risks this enrollment channel may pose to
consumer privacy and the security of the consumer data that will be
provided to enhanced direct enrollment partners. We solicit comment on
these additional risks, as well as comment on any additional privacy
and security safeguards and other consumer protections that should be
implemented. We intend to conduct a privacy impact assessment as
required by OMB Memorandum M-10-23. These comments will inform our
identification and assessment of privacy and security risks presented
by the enhanced direct enrollment pathway. This assessment will also
help us to identify necessary safeguards that need to be in place to
protect the personal data that consumers would entrust to enhanced
direct enrollment partners.
iii. Additional Protections for the Current Direct Enrollment Process
and FFE Standard of conduct for Agents and Brokers
We also propose in this rule a number of modifications to existing
requirements and the establishment of new requirements for agents and
brokers that use the current direct enrollment process to ensure
adequate consumer protection if a web-broker is facilitating enrollment
through an FFE or SBE-FP. We propose to make a number of the same
changes to Sec. 156.1230, which governs QHP issuers using direct
enrollment, to ensure that consumers have similar protections when
enrolling through a direct enrollment channel, whether they enroll
using a web-broker, or a QHP issuer, and seek comment on whether any
additional requirements should apply, or if any of these requirements
should be modified, removed, or enhanced when applied to QHP issuers
using the direct enrollment channel. First, we propose to add Sec.
155.220(c)(3)(i)(I) to require web-brokers to display information
provided by HHS pertaining to eligibility for the advance payments of
the premium tax credit (APTC) and cost-sharing reductions in a
prominent manner. This will increase the likelihood that consumers
understand their potential eligibility for APTC and cost-sharing
reductions and potential liability for excess APTC repayment, and can
factor those determinations into their QHP selection and the amount of
APTC they elect to take.
Second, under Sec. 155.310(d)(2), an Exchange may only provide
APTC if the Exchange receives certain attestations from the tax filer,
and must permit an enrollee to accept less than the full amount of APTC
for which the enrollee is eligible. Therefore, in order for an Exchange
to provide APTC to a consumer who enrolls through the enhanced direct
enrollment pathway, the direct enrollment partner must provide
enrollees with an opportunity to input their desired amount of APTC and
provide the required APTC-related attestations. HHS is aware that some
web-brokers are not consistently permitting enrollees to select an
amount for APTC under the existing direct enrollment pathway, and
believes that permitting such would streamline the current direct
enrollment pathway for consumers. Accordingly, we propose to add Sec.
155.220(c)(3)(i)(J) to require web-brokers to allow consumers to select
an APTC amount and make related attestations in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 155.310(d)(2). We note that this would be
consistent with 45 CFR 156.1230(a)(1)(v), under which QHP issuer direct
enrollment partners are currently required to allow consumers to select
an APTC amount and make related attestations.
Third, we propose to add Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i)(K) to require the
agent or broker of record who assisted the consumer with enrollment
through the Exchange (that is, the agent or broker whose National
Producer Number is listed on the Exchange application) to support post-
enrollment activities necessary for the consumer to effectuate his or
her coverage or resolve issues related to his or her enrollment,
including discrepancies related to eligibility. For example, we are
aware of situations when consumers inadvertently failed to make their
binder payments and lost their coverage without their knowledge. HHS
would require the agent or broker to support the consumer to help
ensure that consumers are educated about how to make the binder
payment. Similarly, we would require the agent or broker to support the
resolution of open data matching issues. We understand that many agents
and brokers provide this type of assistance today to their clients
after initial enrollment, helping with questions or problems that may
arise regarding billing, claims or appeals. We believe that this
proposal will help ensure that consumers who access an agent or
broker's direct enrollment channel would have access to the skilled
assistance and expertise of licensed agents and brokers beyond the
initial QHP selection and enrollment process. We intend to provide
further guidance on the extent of this required post-enrollment
support, and solicit comment on types and extent of support that agents
and brokers should be required to provide. We also solicit comments on
what additional safeguards, if any, should be put in place to protect
consumers and their data.
Fourth, we propose to add Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i)(L) to require web-
brokers to demonstrate operational readiness, including compliance with
applicable privacy and security
[[Page 61500]]
requirements, prior to accessing either the current or enhanced direct
enrollment pathway. This is intended to build upon the onboarding and
testing process that web-brokers undergo under existing procedures for
the current direct enrollment process. This process would require the
web-broker to demonstrate that it has implemented required privacy and
security measures and that it satisfies the technical specifications,
testing requirements, and onboarding procedures applicable to the
direct enrollment process that the web broker is using prior to
accessing the Exchange. Consistent with Sec. 155.220(c)(5), we intend
to conduct ongoing monitoring and audits to verify that compliance
throughout the term of the web-broker's registration with the Exchange.
Fifth, we propose adding Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i)(M), to allow HHS to
immediately suspend the agent or broker's ability to transact
information with the Exchange as part of the direct enrollment pathway
if HHS discovers circumstances that pose unacceptable risk to Exchange
operations or its information technology systems. The suspension would
last until HHS is satisfied that the risk has been removed or
sufficiently mitigated. For example, a web-broker's access to the
direct enrollment pathway may be suspended if it is determined that the
web-broker is using an enrollment process other than the HHS-approved
processes, presenting a risk of inaccurate eligibility determinations
or presenting unacceptable security or privacy risks to consumer data.
We note that this direct enrollment requirement is similar to the one
at Sec. 155.220(c), which applies to agents or brokers making their
Web site available to another agent or broker. We seek comment on
whether these or other similar requirements should be combined. In
addition, we propose to add language to Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i)(E) to
require an agent or broker to cooperate with any audit under this
section. This would include responding to requests for information in a
timely fashion, as well as providing access upon request to documents
or other materials necessary to confirm compliance with applicable
requirements.
Sixth, consistent with Sec. 155.220(c)(4), web-brokers are
permitted to provide access, through a contract or other arrangement,
to their direct enrollment pathway to another agent or broker to help
an applicant complete the QHP selection process, and must comply with
certain obligations when doing so. We understand that a number of web-
brokers provide access to their direct enrollment pathway to other
agents and brokers who host their own third-party Web sites. To better
protect consumers accessing these downstream third-party Web sites that
connect to the web-broker's direct enrollment pathway, we are proposing
to add language to Sec. 155.220(c)(4)(i)(E) to require web-brokers
that provide this access to be responsible for ensuring those Web sites
are compliant with this section.
HHS is also considering different methods for completing the
monitoring and audits authorized by Sec. 155.220(c)(5). For example,
HHS, its designee, or an approved third party could perform the
onboarding testing or audit. Where approved third parties perform
onboarding reviews and audits, we anticipate that they would be
approved by HHS and would need the capability to audit web-brokers'
ability to securely collect, maintain, and transmit eligibility
application information in a manner determined by HHS and to otherwise
review compliance with HHS rules. For third parties to be approved to
conduct these activities, we expect that the auditor would need to
submit an application to HHS demonstrating prior experience in
verifying these sorts of capabilities, and, if approved, enter into an
agreement with HHS governing the auditor's compliance with HHS audit
and verification standards, interface with HHS systems, and data use.
The auditor would be required to collect, store, and share data with
HHS on these verifications, and protect that data in accordance with
HHS standards. The auditor would be subject to monitoring and periodic
certification by HHS, and would be compensated by the agents or brokers
who engaged the auditor. If HHS elects to allow third parties to
perform such verifications, we would establish a process for evaluating
and approving third party vendors in a manner similar to the one
established in Sec. 155.222. We solicit comment on our proposal to
allow third parties to perform monitoring and audits authorized by
Sec. 155.220(c). We also seek comment on whether we should establish a
process for recognizing third parties to perform such monitoring, what
protections are needed, and the factors HHS should consider in
evaluating and approving organizations for this type of role.
Finally, we propose to amend Sec. 155.220(j)(2)(i) to provide that
an agent or broker that assists with or facilitates enrollment of
qualified individuals in a manner that constitutes enrollment through
an FFE or SBE-FP, or assists individuals in applying for APTC and cost-
sharing reductions for QHPs sold through an FFE or SBE-FP, must refrain
from having a Web site that HHS determines could mislead consumers into
believing they are visiting HealthCare.gov. For example, our experience
shows that Web sites that utilize combinations of colors, text sizes
and fonts or layout similar to those used on HealthCare.gov have caused
confusion among consumers. Web sites whose URL address or marketing
name could suggest the Web site is owned or endorsed by HealthCare.gov
would also be inappropriate. We believe that it is important to avoid
consumer confusion around which Web sites are operated by the FFE or
SBE-FP, and which ones are operated by issuers, or agents or brokers.
We would be interested in feedback on criteria for determining whether
a Web site is misleading to consumers.
We seek comment on all aspects of this proposal and specifically
seek comment on whether direct enrollment with a QHP issuer should be
permitted for enrollments through all SBE-FPs, or at the option of SBE-
FPs.
d. General Standards for Exchange Notices (Sec. 155.230)
Section 155.230 outlines standards for notices required to be sent
by the Exchange to individuals or employers. We propose amending
paragraph Sec. 155.230(d)(2) to specify that electronic notices would
be the default method for sending required SHOP Exchange notices,
unless otherwise required by Federal or State law. The proposed
amendment would make mailed paper notices optional, at the election of
the employer or employee, as applicable, unless other Federal or State
law would not permit this.\44\ We propose this change because we have
received feedback from SHOP consumers and issuers that electronic
notices are the preferred method of communication. In addition,
electronic notices provide a more cost effective way for SHOPs to
distribute required notices. However, we are aware that some people
(and employers) may still prefer mailed paper notices, and therefore
propose that paper notices distributed through standard mail would
continue to be available for those that select paper notices as the
preferred method of communication. Employers and employees
participating in FF-SHOPs or in SBE-FPs utilizing the Federal platform
for SHOP functions will continue to be able to select their preferred
communication method when
[[Page 61501]]
completing the eligibility applications online at HealthCare.gov. We
note that to the extent that a SHOP is required to provide notices in a
particular format to meet its obligation to perform effective
communication with an individual with a disability under the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. Ch. 126), section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, or section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, a SHOP
should comply with those requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Federally-facilitated Marketplace (FFM) and Federally-
facilitated Small Business Health Options Program (FF-SHOP)
Enrollment Manual available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/ENR_FFMSHOP_Manual_080916.pdf,
for a list of the FF-SHOP Exchange notices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that this amendment would not change the requirement that a
SHOP comply with the requirements for electronic notices in 42 CFR
435.918(b)(2) through (5) for the employer or employee. We seek comment
on this proposal.
We also propose to add a new paragraph Sec. 155.230(d)(3) to give
individual market Exchanges and SHOPs flexibility to send notices
through standard mail, instead of electronically, if an individual
market Exchange or SHOP is unable to send select notices electronically
due to technical limitations, even if an election has been made to
receive such notices electronically. Our regulation currently requires
that, should an individual's, employee's, or employer's notice
preference be electronic notices, an individual market Exchange must
send required notices according to this preference, and our proposed
amendment to paragraph (d)(2) would require that a SHOP provide
electronic notices unless paper notices are selected as the preferred
communication method. However, Exchanges or SHOPs may have
technological limitations that prevent them from sending certain
notices electronically. In these situations, we would like to provide
flexibility for an individual market Exchange or SHOP to instead notify
the individual, employee, or employer through standard mail. We
encourage individual market Exchanges or SHOPs who might need to
exercise this option to explain to individuals, employees, or employers
that some required notices may be sent through standard mail, and
encourage additional outreach be conducted, as needed, so the
individual, employee, or employer understands the content of the
standard mail notice itself. We seek comment on this proposal.
e. Payment of Premiums (Sec. 155.240)
When an enrollee stops receiving the benefit of advance payments of
the premium tax credit, for example as a result of a data matching
inconsistency period expiring, the enrollee will be responsible for a
greater premium amount. For individuals who have agreed to pay premiums
via electronic funds transfer (EFT), this could mean the withdrawal of
a larger than expected amount from the enrollee's bank account, and
could result in financial hardship. We recognize that issuers have
different procedures in place to provide notice to enrollees affected
by a larger-than-expected EFT withdrawal and to avoid potential
consumer hardship. We are considering future rulemaking that would
require safeguards for consumers, such as reversal or termination of
EFTs, with or without simultaneous paper-billing, when EFT amounts are
of a larger-than-expected amount. We seek comment regarding the scope
of any potential problem related to larger-than-expected EFT
withdrawals, issuers' experience with these withdrawals, industry best
practices, State regulations in this area, and whether Federal
rulemaking is needed.
3. Exchange Functions in the Individual Market: Eligibility
Determinations for Exchange Participation and Insurance Affordability
Programs
a. Eligibility Redetermination During a Benefit Year (Sec. 155.330)
Paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of Sec. 155.330 requires the Exchange to
periodically examine available data sources for eligibility
determinations for certain government health programs, including
Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP),
for Exchange enrollees on whose behalf APTC or the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments are being paid. We are proposing
to amend paragraph (d)(1)(ii) to require the Exchange to periodically
examine data sources for information on either eligibility
determinations for or enrollment in the specified government programs.
The proposed change would provide Exchanges with flexibility to use
information about enrollment in the specified government health
programs, rather than information about eligibility determinations.
Having this flexibility may be particularly valuable if data on
eligibility determinations (as distinct from enrollment) are not
available. When deciding whether to examine data sources for
eligibility determinations or enrollment information, Exchanges should
consider which data source best meets the criteria of timeliness,
accuracy, and availability.
We propose to add a new paragraph Sec. 155.330(e)(2)(iii) related
to periodic examination of data sources. Currently, paragraph (e)(2)(i)
describes the procedures for redetermination and notification of
eligibility when, through a data matching process under Sec.
155.330(d), an Exchange identifies updated information regarding death
or any factor of eligibility not regarding income, family size, or
family composition. Our regulations have not previously addressed how
an Exchange should use updated information regarding compliance with
the income tax filing and reconciliation requirement under Sec.
155.305(f)(4). Due to certain operational and legal impediments
explained below, we believe that the procedures in paragraph (e)(2)(i)
may not be appropriate in these cases. Proposed new paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) would require an Exchange to choose among three
alternatives for when the Exchange identifies updated information
regarding compliance with the income tax filing and reconciliation
requirement under Sec. 155.305(f)(4): (A) Follow the procedures
specified in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section; (B) follow
alternative procedures specified by the Secretary in guidance; or (C)
follow an alternative process proposed by the Exchange and approved by
the Secretary based on a showing that the process meets the approval
criteria outlined below.
An Exchange enrollee's continued eligibility for APTC may be
jeopardized when the person responsible for reconciling the tax credit
on a tax return fails to do so as required in Sec. 155.305(f)(4).
However, Exchange operational concerns, the need for close cooperation
with the IRS, timelines for tax filing (including requesting an
extension of the tax filing deadline), timelines for updating the IRS
database that provides information about income tax return filing and
reconciliation, and restrictions on the disclosure of Federal tax
information affect an Exchange's processes for making redeterminations
and communicating with enrollees regarding redeterminations.
In light of these complexities, specific procedures for handling
these redeterminations may be warranted that balance Exchange
operational flexibility, the need for program integrity protections and
procedural protections for enrollees and tax filers. Accordingly, under
proposed paragraph (e)(2)(iii), Exchanges must follow the procedures
specified in Sec. 155.330(e)(2)(i) (provided the Exchange is able to
maintain adequate safeguards for Federal tax information consistent
with section 6103 of the Code with respect to the confidentiality,
disclosure, maintenance, or use of such information), procedures
described in guidance published by the Secretary, or alternative
procedures approved by the
[[Page 61502]]
Secretary. The guidance established by the Secretary could, for
example, provide that an Exchange would follow specified procedures for
providing notice and, if there is a dispute about the IRS tax filing
data regarding the tax filer (or his or her spouse, if applicable),
provide an opportunity for the enrollee to contest.
An Exchange would also be permitted to choose alternative
procedures for periodic data matching to verify whether a tax filer has
complied with the filing and reconciliation requirement, subject to
approval by the Secretary. Approval would require a showing by the
Exchange that the alternative procedures would facilitate continued
enrollment in coverage with financial assistance for which the enrollee
remains eligible, provide appropriate information about the process to
the enrollee (including regarding any action by the enrollee necessary
to obtain the most accurate redetermination of eligibility), and
provide adequate program integrity protections and safeguards for
Federal tax information under section 6103 of the Code with respect to
the confidentiality, disclosure, maintenance, or use of such
information.
Additionally, in paragraph (g), we propose to allow alternate
methods of recalculating APTC during the benefit year. Currently,
paragraph (g) provides that when an Exchange makes an eligibility
redetermination in accordance with Sec. 155.330 that results in a
change in the amount of APTC, the Exchange must recalculate the amount
of APTC to account for any payments already made on behalf of the tax
filer for the benefit year. The goal of the recalculation is to provide
the total advance payments for the benefit year that correspond to the
tax filer's total projected and allowed premium tax credit for the
benefit year.
We propose for coverage years through 2023 to permit the Exchange
to recalculate APTC in accordance with an eligibility redetermination
under Sec. 155.330 using an alternate method approved by the
Secretary. Approval would require a showing by the Exchange that the
alternative procedure provides adequate program integrity protections,
minimizes administrative burden on the Exchange, and limits negative
impacts on consumers, where possible. We make this change based on
Exchange feedback and believe the proposed change will account for the
differences in Exchange systems and mitigate complexities. We believe
this change balances the need for Exchange flexibility in the near term
with the goal of providing accurate determinations for APTC and
protecting tax filers from the potential for an excess APTC repayment,
where possible. We seek comment on this proposal and on the period of
time for which it should be available.
We seek comment on these proposals.
4. Exchange Functions in the Individual Market: Enrollment in Qualified
Health Plans
a. Enrollment of Qualified Individuals into QHPs (Sec. 155.400)
We propose to amend Sec. 155.400 to add additional flexibility to
the binder payment rules. Specifically, we propose to add Sec.
155.400(e)(2) to give Exchanges the discretion to allow issuers
experiencing billing or enrollment problems due to high volume or
technical errors to implement a reasonable extension of the binder
payment deadlines the issuer has set under Sec. 155.400(e)(1). We
propose that the FFEs and SBE-FPs will, and State Exchanges may, allow
these reasonable extensions, which in the case of most high volume
situations or technical errors we would not expect to be more than 45
calendar days' duration. Based on our experience from multiple open
enrollment periods, billing or enrollment problems, particularly in
cases where an issuer experienced technical errors or a processing
backlog caused by a large volume of enrollments, can affect enrollees'
ability to submit timely binder payments. We believe providing issuers
with the option to allow reasonable binder payment deadline extensions,
which must be implemented in a uniform and nondiscriminatory manner,
would prevent enrollees from having their coverage cancelled due to
non-payment when those enrollees did not have adequate time to make
their binder payments and appropriately balances issuer flexibility and
consumer protectiveness.
We also propose to specify that all binder payment rules, including
the proposed amendment, in Sec. 155.400(e) apply to SBE-FPs in
addition to FFEs. We believe that all entities on the Federal platform
should utilize the same binder payment rules in order to simplify
operational implementation of enrollment processing and confirmation
using the Federal platform, and consider these rules to fall within the
regulations pertaining to issuer eligibility and enrollment functions
that a QHP issuer must comply with in order to participate in an SBE-
FP, under Sec. 156.350. We seek comment on this proposal.
Additionally, in the preamble to Sec. 156.270 in the 2017 Payment
Notice, we stated as part of our interpretation of Sec. 156.270(d)
that a binder payment is not necessary when an enrollee enrolls, either
actively or passively, in a plan within the same insurance product. We
understand that this may be different than issuer practice prior to the
Affordable Care Act and that issuers may have operational challenges in
distinguishing between enrollment in the same product versus a
different product. To minimize operational concerns, we seek comment on
whether we should amend the binder payment requirement in Sec.
155.400(e) to not require a binder payment when a current enrollee
enrolls, either actively or passively, in any plan with the same
issuer, and on the appropriate timeframe for making such a change.
b. Special Enrollment Periods (Sec. 155.420)
Special enrollment periods, a longstanding feature of employer-
sponsored coverage, exist to ensure that people who lose health
insurance during the year, or who experience other qualifying events,
have the opportunity to enroll in coverage. We are committed to making
sure that special enrollment periods are available to those who are
eligible for them and equally committed to avoiding any misuse or abuse
of special enrollment periods.
In 2016, we added warnings on HealthCare.gov about inappropriate
use of special enrollment periods, eliminated special enrollment
periods that are no longer needed as the Exchanges mature, and
tightened eligibility rules. In addition, we introduced a special
enrollment confirmation process under which consumers enrolling through
the most common special enrollment periods are directed to provide
documentation to confirm their eligibility for the special enrollment
period.
We have heard competing concerns about how these actions are
affecting the Exchange risk pools. Some have stated that additional
changes are needed to prevent individuals from misusing special
enrollment periods to sign up for coverage only after they become
sick.\45\ Others have stated that any differential costs for the
special enrollment period
[[Page 61503]]
population reflect the very low take-up rates for special enrollment
periods among eligible individuals. They claim that verification
processes worsen the problem by creating new barriers to enrollment,
with healthier, less motivated individuals, the most likely to be
deterred.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ We have heard similar concerns about potential gaming and
adverse selection that could result from the grace period for
payment of premiums for qualified individuals receiving advance
payments of the premium tax credit. While we seek additional
information on this concern as well, we expect that changes to grace
period policy would require legislation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We seek comment on these issues, especially data that could help
distinguish misuse of special enrollment periods from low take-up of
special enrollment periods among healthier eligible individuals,
evidence on the impact of eligibility verification approaches,
including pre-enrollment verification, on health insurance enrollment,
continuity of coverage, and risk pools (whether in the Exchange or
other contexts), and input on what special enrollment period-related
policy or outreach changes, including in the final rule, could help
strengthen risk pools.
In this rule, we also seek to ensure transparency, stability, and
appropriate utilization of special enrollment periods by codifying
certain special enrollment periods that were made available through
prior guidance. Therefore, in order to provide clarity and certainty to
all stakeholders, we propose to codify:
Paragraph (d)(8)(ii) for the special enrollment period for
dependents of Indians who are enrolled or are enrolling in a QHP
through an Exchange at the same time as an Indian;
Paragraph (d)(10) for the special enrollment period for
victims of domestic abuse or spousal abandonment and their dependents
who seek to apply for coverage apart from the perpetrator of the abuse
or abandonment;
Paragraph (d)(11) for the special enrollment period for
consumers and their dependents who apply for coverage and are later
determined ineligible for Medicaid or CHIP;
Paragraph (d)(12) for the special enrollment period that
may be triggered by material plan or benefit display errors on the
Exchange Web site, including errors related to service areas, covered
services, and premiums; and
Paragraph (d)(13) for the special enrollment period that
may be triggered when a consumer resolves a data matching issue
following the expiration of an inconsistency period.
We propose to codify the special enrollment period for dependents
of Indians who are enrolling at the same time as the Indian, as defined
by section 4 of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, in paragraph
(d)(8)(ii) so that Indians and non-Indian members of the household may
maintain the same coverage and so that this special enrollment period
is consistently applied across Exchanges. This special enrollment
period has enabled mixed status Indian families to enroll in or change
coverage together through the Exchange. We propose to codify the
special enrollment period for victims of domestic abuse or spousal
abandonment in paragraph (d)(10) so that, as specified in July 2015
guidance,\46\ victims of domestic abuse or spousal abandonment, along
with their dependents, can enroll in coverage separate from their
abuser or abandoner. This special enrollment period has provided a
needed pathway to new coverage for consumers in these situations. We
propose to codify the special enrollment period for consumers who apply
for coverage during the Exchange annual open enrollment period or due
to a qualifying event and are determined ineligible for Medicaid or
CHIP in paragraph (d)(11), so that consumers who applied for coverage
when they were eligible to do so can ultimately enroll in coverage
through the Exchange. This special enrollment period has ensured that
consumers who were incorrectly assessed potentially eligible for
Medicaid or CHIP have a pathway to coverage. We propose to codify the
special enrollment period for material plan or benefit display errors
in paragraph (d)(12), so that consumers who enrolled in a plan based on
incorrect plan or benefit information can select a new plan that better
suits their needs. We propose to codify the special enrollment period
for data matching issues that are cleared after the deadline for
resolving has passed in paragraph (d)(13), so that consumers who submit
required documents to prove that they are qualified individuals may
enroll in coverage through the Exchange. This special enrollment period
has enabled consumers who are not able to submit required documents
prior to the deadline associated with their data matching issue to
enroll in coverage upon submitting sufficient documents. We seek
comments on these proposals to codify existing special enrollment
periods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Updated Guidance on Victims of Domestic Abuse and Spousal
Abandonment (Jul. 27, 2015). Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Updated-Guidance-on-Victims-of-Domestic-Abuse-and-Spousal-Abandonment_7.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also propose to make a variety of technical corrections to
correct punctuation in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (iii), and to update
the cross-references in paragraph (b)(2)(iii) (regarding coverage
effective dates) to reflect the applicable newly codified special
enrollment periods. All of these changes reflect existing FFE practice
in implementing special enrollment periods authorized by the Affordable
Care Act and existing regulations, and do not create new special
enrollment periods for consumers.
We note that certain special enrollment periods in Sec. 155.420
are incorporated into the individual market guaranteed availability
regulations at Sec. 147.104(b) and apply to all issuers offering non-
grandfathered individual market coverage, whether through or outside of
an Exchange. Additionally, certain special enrollment periods in Sec.
155.420 also apply in the SHOPs and are incorporated into the SHOP
regulations at Sec. Sec. 155.725(j) and 156.285(b). Except for the
proposed additions of paragraphs (d)(8)(ii) and (d)(13), which are
applicable only with respect to coverage offered through an Exchange,
the proposed changes to special enrollment periods in this notice of
proposed rulemaking would apply throughout the individual market, and
we therefore propose conforming amendments to Sec. 147.104(b). We seek
comment on this approach to aligning the proposed amendments with the
individual-market-wide and SHOP special enrollment periods.
c. Termination of Exchange Enrollment or Coverage (Sec. 155.430)
We propose to amend Sec. 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to specify that when
an issuer seeks to rescind coverage, in accordance with Sec. 147.128,
in a QHP purchased through an Exchange, the issuer must first
demonstrate, to the reasonable satisfaction of the Exchange, that the
rescission is appropriate, if so required by the Exchange. In FFEs and
SBE-FPs, HHS anticipates generally requiring such a demonstration.
Section 2712 of the PHS Act and Sec. 147.128 prohibit an issuer from
rescinding coverage unless the individual (or a person seeking coverage
on behalf of the individual) performs an act, practice, or omission
that constitutes fraud, or makes an intentional misrepresentation of
material fact, as prohibited by the terms of the plan or coverage. We
do not seek to restrict issuers' ability to rescind coverage when an
individual or a party seeking coverage on behalf of an individual
fraudulently enrolls the individual in coverage. However, because the
Exchanges generally must be involved in all enrollment processes,
including the process of rescinding coverage for plans purchased
through the Exchange, it is necessary for the issuer to provide
information to the Exchange in order to implement the rescission.
Additionally, it is important for consumer protection and the orderly
functioning of Exchanges that
[[Page 61504]]
individuals whose eligibility has been verified and enrollments
processed according to Exchange rules can be sure that their coverage
will not be rescinded by issuers without a showing that the enrollment
was fraudulent, or due to an intentional misrepresentation of material
fact, as prohibited by the terms of the plan or coverage, meeting the
requirements for rescission under Sec. 147.128. The FFEs or SBE-FPs
would not hinder an issuer seeking to rescind on grounds demonstrating
fraud or intentional misrepresentation of material fact, such as the
enrollment of a non-existent or deceased person. We seek comment on
this proposal.
5. Appeals of Eligibility Determinations for Exchange Participation and
Insurance Affordability Programs
a. General Eligibility Appeals Requirements (Sec. 155.505)
In Sec. 155.505, we propose to add paragraph (h) permitting the
Exchange appeals entity to utilize paper-based appeals processes for
the acceptance of appeal requests, the provision of appeals notices,
and the secure transmission of appeals-related information between
entities, when the Exchange appeals entity is unable to establish and
perform otherwise required related electronic functions, as further
described below. In the first Program Integrity Rule, 78 FR 54069 (Aug.
30, 2013), we provided flexibility for Exchanges to implement a paper-
based appeals process for the first year of operations (October 1, 2013
through December 31, 2014). Our goal was to allow Exchanges to operate
efficient, effective paper-based appeals processes, while providing
time to modernize their appeals programs. We believed this approach
balanced the interests of both appellants and Exchanges.
We extended this flexibility through December 31, 2016 in guidance
published on October 23, 2014 \47\ and March 22, 2016.\48\ In these
documents, we acknowledged that Exchanges face many challenges and
competing priorities regarding system development. Currently, some
Exchange appeals entities are continuing to work towards full
compliance with the regulatory requirements related to electronic
appeals processes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ Subregulatory Guidance Memorandum (Oct. 23, 2014),
available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-andGuidance/Downloads/Paper-based-Appeals-Process-Guidance.pdf.
\48\ Subregulatory Guidance Memorandum (Mar. 22, 2016),
available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Extension-for-paper-based-appeals-3-22-2016.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, we are proposing to add Sec. 155.505(h) so the
Exchange appeals entity may establish secure and expedient paper-based
appeals processes that ensure appropriate procedural protections for
appellants when it is unable to fulfill the electronic requirements
related to individual market eligibility appeals, employer appeals, and
SHOP employer and employee appeals as described in part 155, subparts
C, D, F, and H. These electronic requirements include: Accepting appeal
requests submitted by telephone or internet (Sec. 155.520(a)(1)(i) and
(iv)), sending electronic notices (Sec. 155.230(d)), and establishing
secure electronic interfaces to transfer eligibility and appeal records
between appeals entities and Exchanges or Medicaid or CHIP agencies
(Sec. 155.345(i)(1); Sec. 155.510(b)(1)(ii) and (b)(2); Sec.
155.520(d)(1)(ii) and (iii) and (d)(3) and (4); Sec. 155.545(b)(3);
Sec. 155.555(e)(1); and Sec. 155.740(h)(1)). We are also proposing
corresponding amendments to Sec. 155.555(b) (regarding employer
appeals) and Sec. 155.740(b)(2) (regarding SHOP appeals) to include
cross-references to proposed Sec. 155.505(h).
This proposal addresses the ongoing challenge of implementing
complex electronic appeals processes, while adequately protecting
appellants' procedural rights. We expect that appeals entities will
continue to work towards modernizing and automating their appeals
processes, and that they will implement electronic appeals processes as
they are able, to the extent such processes may enhance appellants'
experience or the overall efficiency of eligibility appeals.
We seek comment on this proposal.
b. Employer Appeals Process (Sec. 155.555)
Section 155.555(b) sets forth the requirements for employer appeals
processes established either by an Exchange or HHS. As described above,
we propose to amend Sec. 155.555(b) to include cross-references to
proposed Sec. 155.505(h), which would permit an employer appeals
process to utilize paper-based appeals processes for the acceptance of
appeal requests, the provision of appeals notices, and the secure
transmission of appeals-related information between entities, when the
Exchange appeals entity is unable to establish and perform otherwise
required related electronic functions.
6. Required Contribution Percentage (Sec. 155.605(e)(3))
Under section 5000A of the Code, an individual must have minimum
essential coverage for each month, qualify for an exemption, or make a
shared responsibility payment with his or her Federal income tax
return. Under section 5000A(e)(1) of the Code, an individual is exempt
if the amount that he or she would be required to pay for minimum
essential coverage (the required contribution) exceeds a particular
percentage (the required contribution percentage) of his or her actual
household income for a taxable year. In addition, under Sec.
155.605(d)(2), an individual is exempt if his or her required
contribution exceeds the required contribution percentage of his or her
projected household income for a year. Finally, under Sec.
155.605(d)(2)(iv), certain employed individuals are exempt if, on an
individual basis, the cost of self-only coverage is less than the
required contribution percentage, but the aggregate cost of individual
coverage through employers exceeds the required contribution
percentage, and no family coverage is available through an employer at
a cost less than the required contribution percentage.
Section 5000A established the 2014 required contribution percentage
at 8 percent. For plan years after 2014, section 5000A(e)(1)(D) of the
Code and 26 CFR 1.5000A-3(e)(2)(ii) provide that the required
contribution percentage is the percentage determined by the Secretary
of HHS that reflects the excess of the rate of premium growth between
the preceding calendar year and 2013, over the rate of income growth
for that period.
We established a methodology for determining the excess of the rate
of premium growth over the rate of income growth for plan years after
2014 in the 2015 Market Standards Rule (79 FR 30302), and we said
future adjustments would be published annually in the HHS notice of
benefit and payment parameters.
Under the HHS methodology, the rate of premium growth over the rate
of income growth for a particular calendar year is the quotient of (x)
1 plus the rate of premium growth between the preceding calendar year
and 2013, carried out to ten significant digits, divided by (y) 1 plus
the rate of income growth between the preceding calendar year and 2013,
carried out to ten significant digits.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ We also defined the required contribution percentage at
Sec. 155.600(a) to mean the product of 8 percent and the rate of
premium growth over the rate of income growth for the calendar year,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth of one percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the measure of premium growth for a calendar year, we
established in the 2015 Market Standards Rule that we would use the
premium adjustment percentage. The premium adjustment
[[Page 61505]]
percentage is based on projections of average per enrollee employer-
sponsored insurance premiums from the National Health Expenditure
Accounts (NHEA), which are calculated by the CMS Office of the
Actuary.\50\ (Below, in Sec. 156.130, we propose the 2018 premium
adjustment percentage of 16.17303196 (or an increase of about 16.2
percent) over the period from 2013 to 2017. This reflects an increase
of about 2.6 percent over the 2017 premium adjustment percentage
(1.1617303196/1.1325256291).)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ For any given year the premium adjustment percentage is the
percentage (if any) by which the most recent NHEA projection of per
enrollee employer-sponsored insurance premiums for the current year
exceeds the most recent NHEA projection of per enrollee employer-
sponsored insurance premiums for 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the measure of income growth for a calendar year, we established
in the 2017 Payment Notice that we would use per capita personal income
(PI). Under the approach finalized in the 2017 Payment Notice, and
using the NHEA data, the rate of income growth for 2018 is the
percentage (if any) by which the most recent projection of per capita
PI for the preceding calendar year ($51,388 for 2017) exceeds per
capita PI for 2013 ($44,528), carried out to ten significant digits.
The ratio of per capita PI for 2017 over the per capita PI for 2013 is
estimated to be 1.1540603665 (that is, per capita income growth of
about 15.4 percent). This reflects an increase of about 4.0 percent
relative to the increase for 2013 to 2016 (1.1540603665/1.1101836394).
Thus, using the 2018 premium adjustment percentage proposed in this
rule, the excess of the rate of premium growth over the rate of income
growth for 2013 to 2017 is 1.1617303196/1.1540603665, or 1.0066460588.
This results in a proposed required contribution percentage for 2018 of
8.00*1.0066460588, or 8.05 percent, when rounded to the nearest one-
hundredth of one percent, a decrease of 0.11 percentage points from
2017 (8.05317 - 8.16100). The excess of the rate of premium growth over
the rate of income growth also is used for determining the applicable
percentage in section 36B(b)(3)(A) and the required contribution
percentage in section 36B(c)(2)(C).
7. Enrollment Periods Under SHOP (Sec. 155.725)
Section 155.725(g) describes the process for newly qualified
employees to enroll in coverage through a SHOP and the coverage
effective date for newly qualified employees. We propose to amend
paragraphs (g)(1) and (2) and add new paragraph (g)(3).
Currently, Sec. 155.725(g)(1) requires both that: (1) The
enrollment period for an employee who becomes a qualified employee
outside of the initial or annual open enrollment period starts on the
first day of becoming a newly qualified employee; and (2) a newly
qualified employee must have at least 30 days from the beginning of his
or her enrollment period to make a plan selection. The latter
requirement is intended to guarantee that the employee has sufficient
time to make an informed decision about his or her health coverage
needs. We do not propose changes to this latter requirement, but we
propose to change the day the enrollment period begins.
Before a newly qualified employee may make a plan selection through
a SHOP, his or her employer must notify the SHOP about the newly
qualified employee. Qualified employers in an FF-SHOP or SBE-FP using
the Federal platform for SHOP eligibility or enrollment functions
generally report newly qualified employees by adding the employee to
the employee roster or by calling the FF-SHOP call center. If, however,
a qualified employer waits to take either action, a newly qualified
employee might not be able to begin the enrollment process until after
the date upon which the employee became eligible, and might not have a
full 30 days to make a coverage decision, as contemplated by the
current regulations. We are concerned that there might be a similar
delay in State-based SHOPs.
To ensure that newly qualified employees have the full 30 days to
enroll, we propose, at Sec. 155.725(g)(1), that SHOPs would be
required to provide an employee who becomes a qualified employee
outside of the initial or annual open enrollment period with a 30-day
enrollment period that begins on the date the qualified employer
notifies the SHOP about the newly qualified employee. We also propose
that qualified employers would be required to notify the SHOP about a
newly qualified employee on or before the 30th day after the day that
the employee becomes eligible for coverage, and are also proposing a
conforming amendment to the requirements for qualified employers at
Sec. 157.205(f)(1). Together with the other proposed amendments to
paragraph (g) discussed below, this proposal would ensure that the
proposed policy of starting the 30-day enrollment period on the date of
the qualified employer's notice to the SHOP would not delay the
effective date of coverage beyond the limits on waiting periods imposed
under Sec. 147.116, and would also ensure that newly qualified
employees are provided with a full 30 days to make their health
coverage decisions after their employer has notified the SHOP about
them.
We also propose to remove the requirement in current Sec.
155.725(g)(1) that enrollment periods for newly qualified employees
must end no sooner than 15 days prior to the date that any applicable
employee waiting period longer than 45 days would end if the employee
made a plan selection on the first day of becoming eligible. We are
proposing to remove this requirement because the proposed amendments at
paragraphs (g)(2) and (3) discussed below are expected to minimize the
risk of employers exceeding waiting period limitations, as defined at
Sec. 147.116, and because we believe that removing this requirement
will in some circumstances give newly qualified employees a longer
period of time to make coverage decisions. For example, suppose that a
new employee who is not a variable hour employee is hired and offered
coverage by the qualified employer on April 25 and that the qualified
employer imposes a 60-day waiting period that begins on the date of
hire (and under Sec. 147.116 and the proposed amendments to paragraph
(g)(3) discussed below ends June 23). The qualified employer notifies
the SHOP on May 25 about the newly qualified employee, and the
enrollment period begins on that date and will end on June 23. The
newly qualified employee makes a plan selection on May 26. If we
maintained the requirements that coverage effective dates for newly
qualified employees must generally be determined in accordance with
Sec. 155.725(h) (see discussion below of proposed amendments to this
requirement) and that enrollment periods for newly qualified employees
must begin on the date that the employee becomes eligible, and end no
sooner than 15 days prior to the date that any applicable employee
waiting period longer than 45 days would end if the employee made a
plan selection on the first day of becoming eligible, the newly
qualified employee's enrollment period would have ended on June 9 and
the employee would have a coverage effective date of July 1. However,
under the proposed amendments we are making to this section, the newly
qualified employee would be provided a full 30-day enrollment period
with the same coverage effective date of July 1.
Current paragraph (g)(2) provides that a newly qualified employee's
coverage effective date must always be the first day of a month, and
must generally be determined in accordance with
[[Page 61506]]
paragraph (h), unless the employee is subject to a waiting period
consistent with Sec. 147.116, in which case the effective date may be
on the first day of a later month, but in no case may the effective
date fail to comply with Sec. 147.116. Thus, in an FF-SHOP, under the
current rule, coverage for a newly qualified employee generally takes
effect the first day of the following month for a plan selection made
on or before the 15th day of a month, and takes effect the first day of
the second following month for a plan selection made after the 15th day
of a month, unless coverage must take effect on a later date due to the
application of a waiting period consistent with Sec. 147.116. We
propose to modify paragraph (g)(2) to specify that the coverage
effective date for a newly qualified employee would be the first day of
the month following the plan selection, (rather than being determined
in accordance with paragraph (h)), unless the employee is subject to a
waiting period consistent with Sec. 147.116 and proposed paragraph
(g)(3), in which case the effective date would be on the first day of
the month following the end of the waiting period, but in no case may
the effective date fail to comply with Sec. 147.116. The proposed
amendments to paragraph (g)(2) also specify that: (1) If a newly
qualified employee's waiting period ends on the first day of a month
and the employee has already made a plan selection by that date,
coverage would also be effective on that date; and (2) if a newly
qualified employee makes a plan selection on the first day of a month
and any applicable waiting period has ended by that date, coverage
would be effective on that date. These amendments would minimize the
risk of an employer exceeding the limitations on waiting period length
at Sec. 147.116 due to SHOP enrollment timelines and processes.
Additionally, in order to ensure that SHOP operations consistent
with these proposed amendments would not cause a qualified employer to
exceed the limits on waiting periods under Sec. 147.116, we propose to
amend Sec. 155.725(g)(2) to require that if a qualified employer with
variable hour employees makes regularly having a specified number of
hours of service per period (or working full-time) a condition of
employee eligibility for coverage offered through a SHOP, any
measurement period that the qualified employer uses to determine
eligibility under Sec. 147.116(c)(3)(i) must not exceed 10 months with
respect to coverage offered through the SHOP (rather than the 12-month
measurement period otherwise allowed under Sec. 147.116(c)(3)(i)).
This aspect of the proposal is intended to ensure that coverage takes
effect within the limitations on waiting period length at Sec.
147.116(c)(3)(i) for variable hour employees, under which coverage must
take effect no later than 13 months from the employee's start date,
plus, if the employee's start date is not the first day of a calendar
month, the time remaining until the first day of the next calendar
month. Specifically, for qualified employers that condition eligibility
for coverage on an employee regularly having a specified number of
hours of service per period (or working full-time), if it cannot be
determined that a newly-hired employee is reasonably expected to
regularly work that number of hours per period (or work full-time), the
qualified employer may take a reasonable period of time, not to exceed
10 months and beginning on any date between the employee's start date
and the first day of the first calendar month following the employee's
start date, to determine whether the employee meets the eligibility
condition.
We seek comment on whether any of the proposed timeframes might
result in a situation in which an employer or issuer falls out of
compliance with Sec. 147.116.
Consistent with Sec. 147.116, as long as the employee subject to a
waiting period may make a plan selection that results in coverage
becoming effective within the timeframes required under Sec. 147.116,
coverage that begins later as a result of the employee's delay in
making a plan selection would not constitute a failure to comply with
the waiting period limitations under Sec. 147.116. As a result of our
proposal at paragraph (g)(2) of this section, when a newly qualified
employee subject to a waiting period makes a plan selection, coverage
would begin the first day of the first month that follows the
expiration of the waiting period, as long as that date is consistent
with the requirements in Sec. 147.116. However, if the first day of
the first month following the expiration of the waiting period for this
employee would be outside the limits under Sec. 147.116, the SHOP
would be required under paragraph (g)(2) to ensure that coverage takes
effect within the required timeframe. To avoid this scenario and the
operational complications it would cause for SHOPs, we are also
proposing to specify in a new paragraph (g)(3) that waiting periods in
a SHOP may not exceed 60 days in length. If an individual subject to a
waiting period could have had an effective date within the timeframes
in Sec. 147.116 by making a plan selection at the beginning of the
enrollment period, but delays making a plan selection, consistent with
Sec. 147.116(a), coverage would begin the first day of the first month
following the end of the waiting period, even if this would not be
within the timeframes in Sec. 147.116.
In addition to specifying that waiting periods in SHOPs would not
exceed 60 days, proposed paragraph (g)(3) would also specify the
calculation methodology for waiting periods in SHOPs. Under this
proposed amendment, waiting periods in SHOPs would be calculated
beginning on the date the employee becomes eligible--regardless of when
the qualified employer notifies the SHOP about the newly qualified
employee. For example, a 60-day waiting period would be calculated as
the date an employee becomes otherwise eligible plus 59 days. Under
this methodology, the date the employee becomes otherwise eligible
counts as the first day of the waiting period. We propose this
amendment to ensure that employers will remain in compliance with Sec.
147.116 when factoring in certain aspects of the SHOP enrollment
timeline, such as the 30 days employers would have under these proposed
amendments to notify the SHOP about a newly qualified employee, the 30
days newly qualified employees have to make a plan selection, and the
coverage effective dates that would apply under these proposed
amendments to Sec. 155.725(g). To minimize operational complexity in
the Federal platform build for the SHOP, we are also proposing
amendments to paragraph (g)(3) to specify that a Federally-facilitated
SHOP or a State-based SHOP that uses the Federal platform for SHOP
eligibility or enrollment functions would only allow waiting periods of
0, 15, 30, 45, and 60 days.
Nothing in this proposal would change the rule that in no case may
the effective date for a newly qualified employee fail to comply with
Sec. 147.116. This proposal would not change Sec. 147.116 and the
proposals described in this section of the preamble apply only for
purposes of the SHOPs.
We propose to amend paragraph (j)(2)(i) to reflect the proposed
codification of existing special enrollment periods discussed in the
preamble to Sec. 155.420, specifically those proposed to be codified
at Sec. 155.420(d)(10), (11) and (12).
We seek comment on all aspects of these proposals.
[[Page 61507]]
8. SHOP Employer and Employee Eligibility Appeals Requirements (Sec.
155.740)
We propose to amend Sec. 155.740(b)(2) to include a cross-
reference to proposed Sec. 155.505(h). This amendment would permit
SHOP employer and employee eligibility appeals processes to use a
secure and expedient paper-based process if the appeals entity cannot
fulfill certain electronic requirements.
9. Request for Reconsideration (Sec. 155.1090)
We propose a new section Sec. 155.1090 to allow an issuer to
request reconsideration of denial of certification of a plan as a QHP
for sale through an FFE. We propose that an issuer that has applied to
an FFE for certification of QHPs and has been denied certification must
submit to HHS a written request for reconsideration within 7 calendar
days of the date of written notice of denial of certification in the
form and manner specified by HHS in order to obtain a reconsideration.
We further propose that the issuer must include any and all
documentation in support of its request when it submits its request for
reconsideration. We propose that requests may be submitted and
considered only after an issuer has submitted a complete, initial
application for certification and been denied. In Sec. 155.1090(a)(3),
we propose that HHS would provide the issuer with a written
reconsideration decision, and that decision would constitute HHS's
final determination. We believe this approach would afford issuers an
opportunity to furnish any additional facts and information that might
not have been considered as part of an FFE's initial decision to deny
certification. We believe the short timeline is required to permit us
to implement a decision to certify a plan following a request for
reconsideration in time for open enrollment. We intend to provide
future guidance on the form and manner by which issuers should submit
requests for reconsideration. We intend for the Office of Personnel
Management to maintain authority over reconsideration of applications
from issuers to offer a multi-State plan. We invite comments on this
reconsideration proposal.
I. Part 156--Health Insurance Issuer Standards Under the Affordable
Care Act, Including Standards Related to Exchanges
1. General Provisions
a. FFE User Fee for the 2018 Benefit Year (Sec. 156.50)
Section 1311(d)(5)(A) of the Affordable Care Act permits an
Exchange to charge assessments or user fees on participating health
insurance issuers as a means of generating funding to support its
operations. In addition, 31 U.S.C. 9701 permits a Federal agency to
establish a charge for a service provided by the agency. If a State
does not elect to operate an Exchange or does not have an approved
Exchange, section 1321(c)(1) of the Affordable Care Act directs HHS to
operate an Exchange within the State. Accordingly, at Sec. 156.50(c),
we specify that a participating issuer offering a plan through an FFE
must remit a user fee to HHS each month that is equal to the product of
the monthly user fee rate specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit
and payment parameters for FFEs for the applicable benefit year and the
monthly premium charged by the issuer for each policy under the plan
where enrollment is through an FFE.
OMB Circular No. A-25R establishes Federal policy regarding user
fees, and specifies that a user charge will be assessed against each
identifiable recipient for special benefits derived from Federal
activities beyond those received by the general public. As in benefit
years 2014 to 2017, issuers seeking to participate in an FFE in benefit
year 2018 will receive two special benefits not available to the
general public: (1) The certification of their plans as QHPs; and (2)
the ability to sell health insurance coverage through an FFE to
individuals determined eligible for enrollment in a QHP. These special
benefits are provided to participating issuers through the following
Federal activities in connection with the operation of FFEs:
Provision of consumer assistance tools.
Consumer outreach and education.
Management of a Navigator program.
Regulation of agents and brokers.
Eligibility determinations.
Enrollment processes.
Certification processes for QHPs (including ongoing
compliance verification, recertification and decertification).
Administration of a SHOP Exchange.
OMB Circular No. A-25R further states that user fee charges should
generally be set at a level so that they are sufficient to recover the
full cost to the Federal government of providing the service when the
government is acting in its capacity as sovereign (as is the case when
HHS operates an FFE). Accordingly, we propose to set the 2018 user fee
rate for all participating FFE issuers at 3.5 percent. This user fee
rate assessed on FFE issuers is the same as the 2014 through 2017 user
fee rate. In addition, we intend to seek an exception from OMB Circular
No. A-25R, which requires that the user fee charge be sufficient to
recover the full cost to the Federal government of providing the
special benefit. We seek this exception to ensure that the FFE can
support many of the goals of the Affordable Care Act, including
improving the health of the population, reducing health care costs, and
providing access to health coverage, in cases where user fee
collections do not cover the full cost of the special benefit. We seek
comment on this proposal.
Additionally, we note that some commenters have suggested that the
FFE would be able to increase enrollment by allocating more funds to
outreach and education, or reallocating resources from other funding
sources when available to pay for those expenses if necessary. We seek
comment on how much funding to devote to outreach and education, the
method to determine such funding, and the effectiveness of certain
outreach investments to inform future FFE funding allocations. We also
seek comment on whether HHS should expressly designate a specific
portion or amount of the FFE user fee to be allocated directly to
outreach and education activities, recognizing the need for HHS to
continue to adequately fund other critical Exchange operations such as
the call center, HealthCare.gov, and eligibility and enrollment
activities.
State-based Exchanges on the Federal platform enter into a Federal
platform agreement with HHS to leverage the systems established by the
FFE to perform certain Exchange functions, and to enhance efficiency
and coordination between State and Federal programs. Accordingly, in
Sec. 156.50(c)(2), we specify that an issuer offering a plan through
an SBE-FP must remit a user fee to HHS, in the timeframe and manner
established by HHS, equal to the product of the sum of the monthly user
fee rate specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for State-based Exchanges that use the Federal platform for
the applicable benefit year, unless the State-based Exchange and HHS
agree on an alternative mechanism to collect the funds. The functions
provided to issuers in the SBE-FPs include the Federal Exchange
information technology and call center infrastructure used in
connection with eligibility determinations for enrollment in QHPs and
other applicable State health subsidy programs, as defined at section
1413(e) of the Affordable Care Act; and enrollment in QHPs under Sec.
155.400. As
[[Page 61508]]
previously discussed, OMB Circular No. A-25R establishes Federal policy
regarding user fees, and specifies that a user charge will be assessed
against each identifiable recipient for special benefits derived from
Federal activities beyond those received by the general public. The
user fee rate for SBE-FPs is calculated based on the proportion of FFE
costs that are associated with the FFE information technology
infrastructure, the consumer call center, and eligibility and
enrollment services, and allocating a share of those costs to issuers
in the relevant SBE-FPs. A significant portion of expenditures for FFE
services are associated with the information technology, call center
infrastructure, and eligibility determinations for enrollment in QHPs
and other applicable State health subsidy programs as defined at
section 1413(e) of the Affordable Care Act, and personnel who perform
the functions set forth in Sec. 155.400 to facilitate enrollment in
QHPs. Based on this methodology, we propose to charge issuers offering
QHPs through an SBE-FP a user fee rate of 3.0 percent of the monthly
premium charged by the issuer for each policy under a plan offered
through an SBE-FP. This fee would recover funding to support FFE
operations incurred by the Federal government associated with providing
the services described above. We seek comment on this proposal. In the
2017 Payment Notice, we set the user fee rate for SBE-FPs at 1.5
percent of premiums charged, rather than the full rate of 3.0, in order
to provide a transition year during which States could adjust to the
assessment of a user fee in SBE-FP States. We seek comment on whether
the impact of increasing the SBE-FP user fee rate to the full rate
should be spread over one additional year.
We note that we intend to review the costs incurred to provide
these special benefits each year, and revise the user fee rate for
issuers in the FFEs and SBE-FPs accordingly in the annual HHS notice of
benefit and payment parameters.
b. Single Risk Pool (Sec. 156.80)
Under Sec. 156.80, an issuer must establish an index rate for each
State market in the single risk pool. The index rate must be based on
the total combined claims costs for providing essential health benefits
within the single risk pool of that State market. The index rate also
must be adjusted on a market-wide basis for the State based on the
total expected market-wide payments and charges under the risk
adjustment program and Exchange user fees. We propose to amend Sec.
156.80(d) to remove the reference to the transitional reinsurance
program, which was for benefit years 2014 through 2016.
As stated in the Unified Rate Review Instructions, calibration for
age, geography, and tobacco use is permissible as long as the
calibration is applied uniformly in the single risk pool. These
calibration adjustments generally allow for the permissible rating
factors under section 2701 of the PHS Act and 45 CFR 147.102 to be
applied correctly to the issuer's plans. For example, we use the term
``age calibration'' to refer to an adjustment to the index rate, made
uniformly for all plans in the risk pool, to reflect the fact that
without calibration, the plan-adjusted index rate reflects the average
age of the issuer's risk pool and the uniform age rating curve does
not. Therefore, age calibration is necessary in order to correctly
apply the age curve and calculate the premium rates. The same rationale
applies when applying geographic and tobacco rating factors to the
plan-adjusted index rate.
To more explicitly reflect how the rating factors under 45 CFR
147.102 and the index rating methodology under 45 CFR 156.80 work
together, we propose to restructure paragraph (d)(1) as paragraphs
(d)(1)(i) through (iv), adding new paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to provide
that the index rate must be calibrated on a market-wide basis to
correspond to an age rating factor of 1.0, a geographic rating factor
of 1.0, and a tobacco rating factor of 1.0, in a manner specified by
the Secretary in guidance. Because it is essentially an adjustment to
the index rate, the calibration from the single risk pool index rate to
the allowable rating factors may not vary by plan; it must be made
uniformly for all plans in a State and market. We would provide
detailed technical guidance through Unified Rate Review Instructions to
ensure accurate and uniform application of the calibration methodology
proposed here. We seek comment on this proposed codification.
2. Essential Health Benefits Package
a. Premium Adjustment Percentage (Sec. 156.130)
Section 1302(c)(4) of the Affordable Care Act directs the Secretary
to determine an annual premium adjustment percentage, which is used to
set the rate of increase for three parameters detailed in the
Affordable Care Act: The maximum annual limitation on cost sharing
(defined at Sec. 156.130(a)), the required contribution percentage
used to determine eligibility for certain exemptions under section
5000A of the Code, and the assessable payment amounts under section
4980H(a) and (b) of the Code. Section 156.130(e) provides that the
premium adjustment percentage is the percentage (if any) by which the
average per capita premium for health insurance coverage for the
preceding calendar year exceeds such average per capita premium for
health insurance for 2013, and that this percentage will be published
annually in the HHS notice of benefit and payment parameters.
Under the methodology established in the 2015 Payment Notice and
amended in the 2015 Market Standards Rule for estimating average per
capita premium for purposes of calculating the premium adjustment
percentage, the premium adjustment percentage is calculated based on
the projections of average per enrollee employer-sponsored insurance
premiums from the NHEA, which is calculated by the CMS Office of the
Actuary. Accordingly, using the employer-sponsored insurance data, the
premium adjustment percentage for 2018 is the percentage (if any) by
which the most recent NHEA projection of per enrollee employer-
sponsored insurance premiums for 2017 ($5,962) exceeds the most recent
NHEA projection of per enrollee employer-sponsored insurance premiums
for 2013 ($5,132).\51\ Using this formula, the proposed premium
adjustment percentage for 2018 is 16.17303196 percent. We note that the
2013 premium used for this calculation has been updated to reflect the
latest NHEA data. Based on the proposed 2018 premium adjustment
percentage, we propose the following cost-sharing parameters for
calendar year 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See ``NHE Projections 2015-2025--Tables'' available at:
https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/NationalHealthAccountsProjected.html in Tables 1 and 17. A detailed
description of the NHE projection methodology is available at
https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/Downloads/ProjectionsMethodology.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum Annual Limitation on Cost Sharing for Calendar Year 2018.
Under Sec. 156.130(a)(2), for the 2018 calendar year, cost sharing for
self-only coverage may not exceed the dollar limit for calendar year
2014 increased by an amount equal to the product of that amount and the
premium adjustment percentage for 2018, and for other than self-only
coverage, the limit is twice the dollar limit for self-only coverage.
Under Sec. 156.130(d), these amounts must be rounded down to the next
lowest multiple of 50. Using the premium adjustment percentage of
16.17303196 percent for 2018 that we propose above, and the 2014
maximum annual
[[Page 61509]]
limitation on cost sharing of $6,350 for self-only coverage, which was
published by the IRS on May 2, 2013,\52\ we propose that the 2018
maximum annual limitation on cost sharing would be $7,350 for self-only
coverage and $14,700 for other than self-only coverage. This represents
a 2.8 percent increase above the 2017 parameters of $7,150 for self-
only coverage and $14,300 for other than self-only coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rp-13-25.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Reduced Maximum Annual Limitation on Cost Sharing (Sec. 156.130)
Sections 1402(a) through (c) of the Affordable Care Act direct
issuers to reduce cost sharing for essential health benefits for
eligible individuals enrolled in a silver level QHP. In the 2014
Payment Notice, we established standards related to the provision of
cost-sharing reductions. Specifically, in 45 CFR part 156, subpart E,
we specified that QHP issuers must provide cost-sharing reductions by
developing plan variations, which are separate cost-sharing structures
for each eligibility category that change how the cost sharing required
under the QHP is to be shared between the enrollee and the Federal
government. At Sec. 156.420(a), we detailed the structure of these
plan variations and specified that QHP issuers must ensure that each
silver plan variation has an annual limitation on cost sharing no
greater than the applicable reduced maximum annual limitation on cost
sharing specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters. Although the amount of the reduction in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing is specified in section 1402(c)(1)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act, section 1402(c)(1)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care
Act states that the Secretary may adjust the cost-sharing limits to
ensure that the resulting limits do not cause the AVs of the health
plans to exceed the levels specified in section 1402(c)(1)(B)(i) of the
Affordable Care Act (that is, 73 percent, 87 percent, or 94 percent,
depending on the income of the enrollee). Accordingly, we propose to
continue to use a method we established in the 2014 Payment Notice for
determining the appropriate reductions in the maximum annual limitation
on cost sharing for cost-sharing plan variations. As we proposed above,
the 2018 maximum annual limitation on cost sharing would be $7,350 for
self-only coverage and $14,700 for other than self-only group coverage.
We analyzed the effect on AV of the reductions in the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing described in the statute to determine
whether to adjust the reductions so that the AV of a silver plan
variation will not exceed the AV specified in the statute. Below, we
describe our analysis for the 2018 benefit year and our proposed
results.
Consistent with our analysis in the past four Payment Notices, we
developed three test silver level QHPs, and analyzed the impact on AV
of the reductions described in the Affordable Care Act to the estimated
2018 maximum annual limitation on cost sharing for self-only coverage
($7,350). The test plan designs are based on data collected for 2017
plan year QHP certification to ensure that they represent a range of
plan designs that we expect issuers to offer at the silver level of
coverage through the Exchanges. For 2018, the test silver level QHPs
included a PPO with typical cost-sharing structure ($7,350 annual
limitation on cost sharing, $2,215 deductible, and 20 percent in-
network coinsurance rate), a PPO with a lower annual limitation on cost
sharing ($4,950 annual limitation on cost sharing, $2,895 deductible,
and 20 percent in-network coinsurance rate), and an HMO ($7,350 annual
limitation on cost sharing, $3,375 deductible, 20 percent in-network
coinsurance rate, and the following services with copayments that are
not subject to the deductible or coinsurance: $500 inpatient stay per
day, $350 emergency department visit, $25 primary care office visit,
and $55 specialist office visit). All three test QHPs meet the AV
requirements for silver level health plans.
We then entered these test plans into the proposed 2018 AV
Calculator developed by HHS and observed how the reductions in the
maximum annual limitation on cost sharing specified in the Affordable
Care Act affected the AVs of the plans. We found that the reduction in
the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing specified in the
Affordable Care Act for enrollees with a household income between 100
and 150 percent of the Federal poverty line (FPL) (\2/3\ reduction in
the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing), and 150 and 200 percent
of the FPL (\2/3\ reduction), would not cause the AV of any of the
model QHPs to exceed the statutorily specified AV level (94 and 87
percent, respectively). In contrast, the reduction in the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing specified in the Affordable Care Act
for enrollees with a household income between 200 and 250 percent of
FPL (\1/2\ reduction), would cause the AVs of two of the test QHPs to
exceed the specified AV level of 73 percent. As a result, we propose
that the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing for enrollees in the
2018 benefit year with a household income between 200 and 250 percent
of FPL be reduced by approximately \1/5\, rather than \1/2\, consistent
with what we have proposed in previous years. This would allow issuers
the flexibility in designing innovative plans with varying lower
maximum annual limitation on cost sharing and deductibles for the 73
percent plans. We further propose that the maximum annual limitation on
cost sharing for enrollees with a household income between 100 and 200
percent of the FPL be reduced by approximately \2/3\, as specified in
the statute, and as shown in Table 15. These proposed reductions in the
maximum annual limitation on cost sharing should adequately account for
unique plan designs that may not be captured by our three model QHPs.
We also note that selecting a reduction for the maximum annual
limitation on cost sharing that is less than the reduction specified in
the statute would not reduce the benefit afforded to enrollees in
aggregate because QHP issuers are required to further reduce their
annual limitation on cost sharing, or reduce other types of cost
sharing, if the required reduction does not cause the AV of the QHP to
meet the specified level. We welcome comment on this analysis and the
proposed reductions in the maximum annual limitation on cost sharing
for 2018.
We note that for 2018, as described in Sec. 156.135(d), States are
permitted to submit for approval by HHS State-specific datasets for use
as the standard population to calculate AV. The deadline for submitting
a dataset for the 2018 plan year is September 1, 2016.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ The annual deadline for submitting State specific data for
the actuarial value calculator was announced August 15, 2014. See
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/final-state-avc-guidance.pdf.
[[Page 61510]]
Table 15--Reductions in Maximum Annual Limitation on Cost Sharing for
2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced maximum
Reduced maximum annual limitation
annual limitation on cost sharing for
Eligibility category on cost sharing for other than self-
self-only coverage only coverage for
for 2018 2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Individuals eligible for $2,450 $4,900
cost-sharing reductions
under Sec.
155.305(g)(2)(i) (that is,
100-150 percent of FPL)....
Individuals eligible for 2,450 4,900
cost-sharing reductions
under Sec.
155.305(g)(2)(ii) (that is,
150-200 percent of FPL)....
Individuals eligible for 5,850 11,700
cost-sharing reductions
under Sec.
155.305(g)(2)(iii) (that
is, 200-250 percent of FPL)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Levels of Coverage: Bronze Plans (Sec. 156.140)
Section 2707(a) of the PHS Act and section 1302 of the Affordable
Care Act direct issuers of non-grandfathered health insurance in the
individual and small group markets, including QHPs, to ensure that
plans meet a level of coverage specified in section 1302(d)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act. A plan's level of coverage, referred to as the
plan's actuarial value, is determined on the basis of the essential
health benefits provided to a standard population. Section 1302(d)(1)
of the Affordable Care Act requires the level of coverage for a bronze
plan to have an AV of 60 percent, a silver plan to have an AV of 70
percent; a gold plan to have an AV of 80 percent; and a platinum plan
to have an AV of 90 percent. In addition, section 1302(d)(3) states
that the Secretary is to develop guidelines to provide for a de minimis
variation in the actuarial valuations used in determining the level of
coverage of a plan to account for differences in actuarial estimates.
Currently, Sec. 156.140(c) permits a de minimis variation of +/-2
percentage points.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Under Sec. 156.400, the de minimis variation for a silver
plan variation means a single percentage point.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All plans subject to the annual limitation on cost sharing at
section 1302(c) of the Affordable Care Act have a minimum level of
generosity that limits the lowest AV that a plan can achieve. For
instance, a plan with a deductible of $7,350 that is equal to the
annual limitation on cost sharing of $7,350 (which is the proposed 2018
annual limitation on cost sharing) with no services covered until the
deductible and annual limitation on cost sharing are met, other than
preventive services required to be covered without cost sharing under
section 2713 of the PHS Act and 45 CFR 147.130, has an AV of 58.54
percent based on the draft 2018 AV Calculator. Because of the annual
limitation on cost sharing, the AV for this type of plan is within the
de minimis range of a bronze level of coverage. This type of plan does
not have first dollar coverage (except for certain required preventive
services), and is not a HDHP under 26 U.S.C. 223(c)(2) eligible for use
with a health savings account because the annual limit on cost sharing
under the plan is likely higher than the annual out of pocket expense
limit for HDHPs for 2018. Furthermore, the bronze plan described above
is less generous than a catastrophic plan, because a catastrophic plan
is required by section 1302(e)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act and
Sec. 156.155(a)(4) to provide at least three primary care visits
before reaching the deductible.
We note that in future recalibrations of the AV Calculator, if
claims costs increase faster than the annual limitation on cost
sharing, issuers' flexibility in designing different bronze plans may
be reduced. In order to address this difficulty in designing bronze
plans that are at least as generous as catastrophic plans and meet the
AV requirements using future AV Calculators, we propose to permit a
broader de minimis range for bronze plans. The purpose of the current
de minimis variation of +/- 2 percentage points is to give issuers the
flexibility to set cost-sharing rates while ensuring consumers can
easily compare plans of similar generosity. Thus, the de minimis range
is intended to allow plans to float within a reasonable range and is
not intended to freeze plan designs, which could prevent innovation in
the market. However, we do recognize the unique challenges that may be
posed for bronze plan designs under future AV Calculators, and we
therefore propose to amend Sec. 156.140(c) to increase the allowable
de minimis range for bronze plans under certain circumstances.
Outside of HDHPs, which have separate cost-sharing requirements,
under future AV Calculators, if actuarial values increase
significantly, bronze plans may be required to limit the services for
which the plan pays before the deductible is reached. Enrollment data
from the FFEs show that consumers have a preference for plans that
cover and pay for services below the deductible. Because we believe
that the Affordable Care Act did not intend for bronze plans to be less
generous than catastrophic plans, which are required to provide at
least three primary care visits before the deductible, we believe that
it is important to allow bronze plans to retain at least one service
before the deductible. Therefore, through our authority under section
1302(d)(3) of the Affordable Care Act, which directs the Secretary to
develop guidelines to provide for a de minimis variance in the
actuarial valuations used in determining the level of coverage of a
plan to account for differences in actuarial estimates, and section
1321(a)(1)(A) and (D) of the Affordable Care Act, which allows the
Secretary to issue regulations setting standards for meeting the
requirements for the establishment and operation of Exchanges, as well
as such other requirements as the Secretary determines appropriate, we
propose to allow bronze plans that cover and pay for at least one major
service before the deductible, other than preventive services (some of
which are required by Federal laws and regulations to have zero cost
sharing) to have an allowable variance in AV of -2 percentage points
and +5 percentage points. The purpose of this proposal is to ensure
flexibility in bronze plan designs--particularly, to permit the design
of bronze plans that will satisfy AV requirements and still remain at
least as generous as catastrophic plans.
We therefore propose that the major services covered and paid for
by the plan before the deductible that trigger the increased de minimis
range be similar in scope and magnitude to the three primary care
visits before the deductible required under catastrophic coverage. To
permit issuers the flexibility to address enrollees' varying health
needs, we propose that the major
[[Page 61511]]
services an issuer may elect to cover and pay for before the deductible
in order to access the broader de minimis range be: Primary care
visits; specialist visits; inpatient hospital services; generic,
specialty, or preferred branded drugs; or emergency room services. We
selected these services as they can be used by individuals with a wide
variety of conditions and they have a significant AV impact. We solicit
comments on this proposal and the proposed definition of major
services, as well as comments on whether any of these major services
should be excluded from the list or other major services should added
to this list. We also solicit comments on whether major services should
be defined based on all or some of the service inputs listed in the AV
Calculator. This policy does not exempt issuers from their obligations
to comply with mental health and substance use disorder parity
requirements, including the rule that a deductible cannot be applied to
mental health or substance use disorder benefits in a classification
unless it is no more restrictive than the predominant deductible
applicable to substantially all medical/surgical benefits in the same
classification.
We also propose that the major service covered and paid for before
the deductible must apply a reasonable cost-sharing rate to the service
to ensure that the service is reasonably covered. We also solicit
comments on what should be considered a reasonable cost-sharing rate
for the major service. Lastly, to ensure that a bronze plan can be as
least as generous as a catastrophic plan, we propose that a bronze plan
with at least three primary care services under the deductible would
qualify as having a major service under the deductible.
In addition to ensuring that bronze plans can remain at least as
generous as catastrophic coverage, we believe it is important to ensure
that bronze plans can remain eligible to be HDHPs that may be paired
with a health savings account. Therefore, we propose that if a bronze
plan meets the Federal requirements to be an HDHP, the allowable
variation in AV for those plans is -2 percentage points and +5
percentage points. These HDHPs would not be required to cover at least
one major service before the deductible, outside of certain preventive
services, to meet the requirements for the extended bronze plan de
minimis range, but instead, these plans would be required to meet the
requirements to be a HDHP within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 223(c)(2),
including the annual out-of-pocket expense limit for HDHPs. We solicit
comments on this proposal.
We also seek comment on the proposed size of the de minimis range,
which is proposed as -2 percentage points and +5 percentage points, and
whether the +5 percentage points should be higher or lower. Based on
our initial analysis of 2017 bronze plans submitted for QHP
certification in the FFEs, most 2017 bronze plans are either HDHPs or
are plans providing one of the major services defined above before
deductible. We believe that this policy will not be disruptive to the
current bronze plan market as it will allow more flexibility in
designing bronze plans within the increased de minimis range as well as
allow more options for issuers to leave 2017 cost-sharing structures
unchanged.
In connection with the release of the proposed 2018 Payment Notice,
we are also releasing the draft versions of the 2018 AV Calculator,
including the 2018 AV Calculator Methodology and User Guide, for
comment on the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight
Web site.\55\ As part of the draft 2018 AV Calculator, we added the
option to calculate AV for a bronze plan with an extended de minimis
range to align with this proposed policy. (We note that under this
option, the AV Calculator will not automatically flag a plan in the
bronze extended de minimis range that does not comply with the
requirement to cover one major service before the deductible.) Our
intention will be to align the final 2018 AV Calculator with any
provisions that are finalized through this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ The draft 2018 AV Calculator and Methodology will be posted
under the ``Plan Management'' section of CCIIO's Web site at:
https://www.cms.gov/cciio/resources/regulations-and-guidance/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Application to Stand-Alone Dental Plans Inside the Exchange (Sec.
156.150)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we finalized Sec. 156.150(a), which
establishes a formula to increase the annual limitation on cost sharing
for stand-alone dental plans. Specifically, we finalized that for plan
years beginning after 2017, the annual limitation for an SADP for one
covered child is $350 increased by the percentage increase of the
consumer price index (CPI) for dental services for the year two years
prior to the applicable plan year over the CPI for dental services for
2016; and, the annual limitation for an SADP for two or more covered
children is twice that.
The formula increases the dollar limit for one covered child
(currently set at $350) by the percentage increase of the CPI for
dental services for the year two years prior to the applicable plan
year over the CPI for 2016. For plan year 2018, the percentage increase
of the CPI for dental services for the two years prior to the
applicable plan year would be equal to the CPI for 2016, resulting in a
zero percent increase for plan year 2018. Therefore, for plan year
2018, the dental annual limitation on cost sharing would be $350 for
one child and $700 for one or more children. The annual limitation on
cost sharing for plan year 2019 will be addressed in the annual HHS
notice of benefit and payment parameters for the 2019 benefit year.
3. Qualified Health Plan Minimum Certification Standards
a. QHP Issuer Participation Standards (Sec. 156.200)
Section 156.200(c)(1) implements section 1301(a)(1)(C)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act to require as part of QHP participation standards
that each QHP issuer offer at least one QHP in the silver coverage
level and at least one QHP in the gold coverage level.
As evidenced by QHP application submissions to the FFEs, QHP
issuers have generally interpreted this requirement to apply at the
service area level, as opposed to at the Exchange level, meaning that
an issuer must offer at least one QHP in the silver coverage level and
at least one QHP in the gold coverage level throughout each service
area in which it will offer a QHP through the Exchange (that is, one
QHP that has an AV of 70 percent and one QHP that has an AV of 80
percent, plus or minus two percentage points). If the requirement were
to be interpreted at the Exchange level, a QHP issuer could be in
technical compliance with the requirement by offering one QHP in the
silver coverage level and at least one QHP in the gold coverage level
in a very limited service area, and not offer such coverage through the
Exchange in a meaningful way. We believe that the Affordable Care Act
did not intend to allow an issuer to offer a silver and gold QHP
through the Exchange in merely one service area in a State, while
offering other products through the Exchange, such as bronze or
catastrophic QHPs, in other service areas. The proposal seeks to
eliminate the possibility of such gaming. Provisions of the Affordable
Care Act sought to ensure an adequate choice of QHPs and coverage to
consumers. We are proposing this change to ensure that consumers have
an adequate choice of QHPs at different coverage levels. Further, the
Affordable Care Act also assumed calculation of the advance payment of
the premium tax credit based on the availability of a second
[[Page 61512]]
lowest cost silver plan. As such, we propose to modify our regulations
to more accurately align with QHP issuer practice and our
interpretation of the intention of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 1311(c)(1) and 1321(a)(1)(A) and (B) of the Affordable Care
Act provide the Secretary of HHS with the authority to establish
certification criteria for QHPs and Exchanges. Therefore, we are
proposing to require QHP issuers to offer at least one silver and one
gold coverage level QHP through the Exchange throughout each service
area in which the issuer offers coverage through the Exchange. The
offering of both silver and gold level QHPs is important to ensure
adequate choice to Exchange consumers, as well as to ensure that a
second lowest cost silver plan is available for calculating advance
payments of the premium tax credit for consumers. We further clarify
that an issuer can meet this standard by offering a multi-State plan in
both silver coverage and gold coverage levels throughout each service
area in which it offers other QHPs through an Exchange. We seek to
establish this policy by proposing amendments to existing paragraph
(c)(1).
Specifically, we propose to amend paragraph (c)(1) to require a QHP
issuer to offer through the Exchange at least one QHP in the silver
coverage level and at least one QHP in the gold coverage level, as
described in Sec. 156.140, throughout each service area in which it
offers coverage through the Exchange. This added specificity will
ensure that issuers applying for certification of their QHPs offer a
silver and gold plan throughout each service area in which they offer
coverage through the Exchange.
In the 2014 Payment Notice, in order to help ensure that qualified
employers and qualified employees enrolling through an FF-SHOP are
offered a robust set of QHP choices, we finalized a policy at Sec.
156.200(g) under which an individual market FFE will certify a QHP only
if the QHP issuer (or an issuer in the same issuer group) offers
through the FF-SHOP of the State at least one QHP in the silver
coverage level and at least one QHP in the gold coverage level, unless
no issuer in the issuer group has at least a 20 percent share of the
small group market share in the State, based on earned premiums. This
policy is intended to leverage issuers' participation in the FFEs to
promote fuller issuer participation in the FF-SHOPs, particularly in
the initial years of the FF-SHOPs. We indicated in the preamble of the
2014 Payment Notice, in response to a commenter who suggested we
reevaluate the policy in two years, that we would evaluate the
effectiveness of the tying provision on an ongoing basis.
We now seek comment, based on feedback from stakeholders, on
whether the policy at Sec. 156.200(g) is still necessary or
appropriate in the FF-SHOPs. We did not finalize this policy to apply
to State-based SHOPs, nor are we aware of any State-based SHOPs that
have implemented a similar policy. We are also cognizant that the
policy may be discouraging issuer participation on the individual
market FFEs. We therefore seek comment on whether we should eliminate
this policy for the FF-SHOPs, for plan years beginning on or after
January 1, 2018.
We recognize that eliminating the SHOP participation provision
could have the effect of reducing FF-SHOP issuer participation in
States, and seek comment on the implications for small businesses and
how to accommodate such an effect. For example, in such a circumstance,
in consideration of the ongoing investments that would be required to
maintain the FF-SHOPs, including for premium aggregation services, we
are considering providing for elimination of enrollment through FF-SHOP
Web sites and providing for alternative means of enrollment into SHOP
QHPs, either in States that would be particularly affected by this
change or in all FF-SHOPs. An FF-SHOP Web site would still be
maintained, consistent with section 1311(d)(4)(C) of the Affordable
Care Act, but would not support online enrollment, except perhaps for
the continuation of services for existing groups in the FF-SHOP through
the end of any plan year that began before January 1, 2018. In
addition, we seek comment on how entities such as web-brokers or third
party administrators could help to facilitate enrollment in available
SHOP QHPs. We seek comment on what other regulatory provisions would
need to be modified or eliminated in such a circumstance, and on
whether provisions relating to the operation of enrollment through a
SHOP Web site should generally be optional at the election of the
Exchanges, including State-based SHOPs.
b. Network Adequacy Standards (Sec. 156.230)
At Sec. 156.230, we established the minimum criteria for network
adequacy that issuers must meet to have plans certified as QHPs,
including SADPs, in accordance with the Secretary's authority in
section 1311(c)(1)(B) of the Affordable Care Act. Included at Sec.
156.230(a)(2) is the requirement that all issuers maintain a network
that is sufficient in number and types of providers to assure that all
services will be accessible without unreasonable delay. Section
156.230(b) sets forth standards for access to provider directories
requiring issuers to publish an up-to-date, accurate, and complete
provider directory for plan years beginning on or after January 1,
2016.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, HHS finalized a policy to provide
information about QHP network breadth on HealthCare.gov in order to
assist consumers with plan selection. For the 2017 benefit year, we
intend to pilot a network breadth indicator in certain States on
HealthCare.gov to denote a QHP's relative network coverage.\56\ HHS
will make this network breadth classification available to consumers in
those States at the point of plan comparison. The results of the pilot
will determine if HHS expands the pilot to more States for 2018. The
specifics of how the network breadth indicator is calculated are
described in the Final 2017 Letter to Issuers in the Federally-
facilitated Marketplaces.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ Network Breadth Pilot (August 19, 2016), available at
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Network-Classification-Pilot-Guidance-81916.pdf.
\57\ Final 2017 Letter to Issuers in the Federally facilitated
Marketplaces (Feb. 29, 2016) available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Final-2017-Letter-to-Issuers-2-29-16.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the 2018 plan year, HHS is considering whether to incorporate
more specificity into these indicators, and, in particular, how to
identify for consumers whether a particular plan is offered as part of
an integrated delivery system. For integrated delivery systems, the
breadth of the network for a plan as calculated through the network
breadth methodology may not accurately describe the ability of a
consumer to access providers relative to consumers enrolled in plans
that are not part of an integrated delivery system in the same county.
We propose to incorporate this specificity into the network information
displayed for plan year 2018 in all States where network breadth is
displayed in 2018.
To define which plans utilize an integrated delivery system, we
propose to use the alternate essential community provider standard in
45 CFR 156.235(b). Thus, we would identify a plan as part of an
integrated delivery system if it provides a majority of covered
professional services through physicians employed by the issuer, or
through a single contracted medical group. If HHS finalizes this
policy, we would provide additional details in the 2018 Letter to
[[Page 61513]]
Issuers in the Federally-facilitated Marketplace.
We seek comment on all aspects of this proposal. In particular, we
seek comment on whether we should make such a differentiation, and how
best to indicate that a plan has an integrated delivery system--
including on whether we should provide additional explanatory text to
the current indicator that the plan receives, or whether we should
establish a separate indicator. We seek comment on what words to use in
either case to best convey the value of this classification to
consumers. We also seek comment on our proposal to identify integrated
delivery systems by using the alternate essential community provider
standard, and whether there are plans that would not meet this
definition but are best categorized in this group; and, if there is a
continuum of plan arrangements to consider with respect to network
integration, how best to classify those plans and provide that
information to consumers.
Also, as a reminder, the requirement established in the 2017
Payment Notice at Sec. 156.230(e) that QHP issuers count an essential
health benefit provided by an out-of-network ancillary provider at an
in-network facility towards the in-network annual limitation on cost
sharing for QHPs in certain circumstances begins applying in benefit
year 2018. That is, if a QHP enrollee received an EHB in an in-network
setting, such as an in-network hospital, but as part of the provision
of the EHB the enrollee was charged out-of-network cost sharing for an
EHB provided by an out-of-network ancillary provider, that cost sharing
would apply towards the annual limitation on cost sharing.
Alternatively, the plan could provide a written notice to the
enrollee by the longer of when the issuer would typically respond to a
timely submitted prior authorization request, or 48 hours before the
provision of the benefit. The written notice would state that
additional costs may be incurred for the EHB provided by an out-of-
network ancillary provider in an in-network setting, including balance
billing charges, unless such costs are prohibited under State law; and
that any additional charges may not count toward the in-network annual
limitation on cost sharing. This alternative would not be available if
the issuer does not meet the timeframe established in regulation. We
are proposing that this policy applies to QHPs, both on and off
Exchanges, regardless of whether the QHP covers out-of-network
services, and seek comment on other policy changes that could limit
``surprise bills'' for consumers. As stated in the 2017 Payment Notice,
we intend to continue to monitor these situations, including issuers'
timely compliance with this provision, to consider whether further
rulemaking is needed.
c. Essential Community Providers (Sec. 156.235)
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we finalized that, for QHP
certification cycles beginning with the 2018 benefit year, HHS would
credit issuers for multiple contracted or employed full-time equivalent
(FTE) practitioners at a single location, up to the number of available
FTE practitioners reported to HHS by the essential community provider
(ECP) facility through the ECP petition process and published on the
HHS ECP list. As HHS conducts additional provider outreach to collect
provider data necessary to implement a methodology that would credit
issuers for multiple contracted or employed full-time equivalent
practitioners at a single location, we propose in Sec.
156.235(a)(2)(i) to continue the 2017 benefit year calculation
methodology that a plan applying for QHP certification to be offered
through a Federally-facilitated Exchange must demonstrate in its QHP
application that its network includes as participating providers at
least a minimum percentage, as specified by HHS, of available ECPs in
each plan's service area, with multiple providers at a single location
counting as a single ECP toward both the available ECPs in the plan's
service area and the issuer's satisfaction of the ECP participation
standard. Similarly, in Sec. 156.235(b)(2)(i), we propose to continue
the 2017 benefit year calculation methodology that a plan described in
Sec. 156.235(a)(5) applying for QHP certification to be offered
through a Federally-facilitated Exchange demonstrate in its QHP
application that the number of its providers that are located in Health
Professional Shortage Areas or five-digit zip codes in which 30 percent
or more of the population falls below 200 percent of the Federal
Poverty Line satisfies a minimum percentage, specified by HHS, of
available ECPs in the plan's service area with multiple providers at a
single location counting as a single ECP. We seek comment on these
proposals. We are also considering changes to the counting of hospital
ECPs for the 2019 benefit year and seek comment on the best approach
for measuring hospital participation.
d. Enrollment Process for Qualified Individuals (Sec. 156.265)
We propose an amendment to Sec. 156.265 requiring differential
display of standardized options. A discussion of the proposed provision
is contained in the preamble discussion regarding Sec. 155.220, which
concerns standards for agents and brokers using the direct enrollment
process.
We solicit comments on this proposal.
e. Issuer Participation for the Full Plan Year (Sec. 156.272)
We propose adding Sec. 156.272 to provide as a condition of
certification that QHP issuers in all individual market Exchanges must
make their QHPs available for enrollment through the Exchange for the
full plan year for which the plan was certified, unless a basis for
suppression under Sec. 156.815 applies. We also propose that issuers
in all SHOP Exchanges must make their QHPs available for enrollment
through the SHOP Exchange for the full plan year for which the plan was
certified, unless a basis for suppression under Sec. 156.815 applies.
This requirement would ensure that consumers enrolling in the
individual market during limited open enrollment periods have the same
plan choice as those who enrolled during open enrollment, and that
qualified employers and qualified employees would have generally
consistent plan choices throughout the plan year.
If this proposal is finalized, under our existing civil money
penalty authority at Sec. 156.805(a)(1), QHP issuers in FFEs and FF-
SHOPs that do not comply with Sec. 156.272(a) and (b) could be subject
to CMPs. (Issuers would not be subject to CMPs if a basis for
suppression under Sec. 156.815 applies.) We also propose at Sec.
156.272(c) that if an issuer fails to comply with those sections, HHS
could, at its discretion, preclude that issuer from participating in
the FFEs and FF-SHOPs, for up to the two succeeding years.
We seek comments on this proposal, including the applicability of
this section to all Exchanges and the potential use of CMPs for QHP
issuers in the FFEs and FF-SHOPs.
f. Non-Certification and Decertification of QHPs (Sec. 156.290)
Currently, under Sec. 156.290(b), when a QHP issuer elects to not
seek certification for a subsequent, consecutive certification cycle
with the Exchange, it is required to provide notification to enrollees.
However, a QHP issuer is not required to provide notification to
enrollees when it seeks
[[Page 61514]]
but is denied certification for a subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle by the Exchange. We propose to require that QHP issuers provide
such notice within 30 days of the date of an Exchange's denial of
certification for a subsequent, consecutive certification cycle.
Requiring notice in a timely manner would allow enrollees to be
prepared to participate in the upcoming open enrollment period. We also
propose to amend the section title from Non-renewal and decertification
of QHPs to Non-certification and Decertification of QHPs, and revise
the paragraph headings for Sec. 156.290(a) and (b) to reflect that
QHPs are certified on an annual basis rather than renewed. We seek
comment on these proposals.
g. Other Considerations
Increasingly, the Exchanges serve as laboratories for innovations
through which QHPs develop new ways to provide quality, cost-effective
health care that responds to consumers' preferences and needs. We have
heard from issuers about innovations around paying for high-quality
care, working with health care professionals to encourage coordinated
care, standardizing benefits in ways that promote high-value care, and
using data analytics to engage with consumers in creative ways that
improve their health and bolster retention. We also continue to seek to
foster market-driven programs in the Exchanges that can improve the
management of costs and care, and that provide consumers with quality,
person-centered coverage. As we stated in the 2017 Payment Notice, we
believe that innovative issuer, provider, Exchange, and local programs
or strategies can successfully promote and manage care, in a manner
that contributes to better health outcomes and lower rates while
creating important differentiation opportunities for market
participants. We seek comment on ways in which we can facilitate such
innovation, and in particular on whether there are regulations or
policies in place that we should modify for 2018 in order to better
meet the goals of affordability, quality, and access to care.
4. Eligibility and Enrollment Standards for Qualified Health Plan
Issuers on State-Based Exchanges on the Federal Platform (Sec.
156.350)
In the 2017 Payment Notice we established, in Sec. 156.350, that
in order to participate in an SBE-FP, a QHP issuer must comply with HHS
regulations and guidance pertaining to issuer eligibility and
enrollment functions as if the issuer were an issuer of a QHP in an
FFE. These regulations and guidance include those requirements
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) of Sec. 156.350, which
currently include Sec. 156.285(c)(8)(iii). For the same reasons that
we propose to add new paragraph Sec. 155.200(f)(4), we also propose to
amend paragraph Sec. 156.350(a)(2) to specify that, in order to
participate in an SBE-FP using the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions, a QHP issuer would be required to send enrollment
reconciliation files on at least a monthly basis according to a
process, timeline, and file format established by the FF-SHOPs,
consistent with Sec. 156.285(c)(5). Issuers in States operating an
SBE-FP for SHOP enrollment functions would be required to follow the
process applicable in the FF-SHOPs, as described in Sec.
156.285(c)(5). This amendment would become effective with the effective
date of the final rule. We seek comment on this proposal.
5. Reconciliation of the Cost-Sharing Reduction Portion of Advance
Payments Discrepancies and Appeals (Sec. 156.430(h))
As implemented in the regulations at 45 CFR 156.430, HHS reconciles
the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance payment amounts by
comparing what the enrollee in a cost-sharing reduction plan variation
actually paid in cost sharing to what the enrollee would have paid if
enrolled in a standard plan. In order to facilitate reconciliation of
the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance payments to the actual
amount provided for enrollees in cost-sharing reduction variation
plans, issuers must report the amount they paid for each eligible
medical claim, the amount enrollees paid for the claims, and the amount
of cost sharing that would have been paid for the same services under
the corresponding standard plan. This information is used to reconcile
the actual cost-sharing amounts provided for each policy in a plan
variation to the estimated payments that the issuer had been paid in
advance. As set forth at Sec. 156.410(d)(3), issuers are not
reimbursed for any cost-sharing reductions provided to enrollees who
were erroneously assigned to a plan variation more generous than the
one for which they are eligible. As set forth at Sec. 155.430(d)(4),
any cost-sharing reductions, to the extent thereby or otherwise
erroneously provided (such as cost-sharing reductions for non-EHB or
non-covered services or cost-sharing reductions provided after a policy
has been terminated) must be excluded from the reconciliation process.
In order to ensure the integrity of reconciliation of the cost-
sharing reduction portion of advance payments for the 2014 and 2015
benefit years, we implemented automatic system checks that validated
data at the time of data submission, for example matching QHP or
subscriber IDs to HHS data for a benefit year, and verifying the issuer
used the applicable methodology and submitted applicable attestations.
This resulted in the rejection of some cost-sharing reduction amounts
submitted by issuers. Additionally, some issuers were unable to prepare
complete data files in time to meet the cost-sharing reduction data
submission deadline. In order to provide issuers with an opportunity to
address potential errors that would have directly impacted the
calculation of their reconciled cost-sharing reduction amounts, HHS
implemented a process for reporting data discrepancies for the 2014 and
2015 benefit year.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ On June 23, 2016 CMS released FAQs and technical
specifications on the discrepancy resolution process for issuers to
follow to report a discrepancy related to reconciliation of the
cost-sharing reduction portion of advance payments. The technical
specifications are available on the Center for Consumer Information
and Insurance Oversight Web site: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Cost-Sharing-Reduction-Reconciliation-Discrepancy-Resolution-Inbound-Specification.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We propose adding new paragraph (h)(1) to Sec. 156.430 to require
that any issuer that reports a discrepancy and seeks to dispute the
notification of the amount of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments, in the manner set forth by HHS,
must report the discrepancy to HHS within 30 calendar days of
notification of the amount of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments as described in Sec. 156.430(e).
We further propose to codify in Sec. 156.430(h)(2) that an issuer
may appeal the amount of reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction
portion of advance payments, under the process set forth in Sec.
156.1220 of this subchapter, only if it has submitted a discrepancy
report for its cost-sharing reduction reconciled amounts for the
applicable benefit year. We note that irrespective of whether an issuer
has filed a discrepancy report under Sec. 156.430, a request for
reconsideration under Sec. 156.1220 may only be filed to contest a
processing error by HHS, HHS's incorrect application of the relevant
methodology, or HHS's mathematical error, as required under Sec.
156.1220.
We seek comment on these proposals.
[[Page 61515]]
6. Compliance Reviews of QHP Issuers in Federally-Facilitated Exchanges
(Sec. 156.715)
At Sec. 156.715, we previously established that a QHP issuer is
subject to compliance reviews to ensure ongoing compliance with
Exchange requirements and standards. In Sec. 156.715(b), we require
QHP issuers to make available to HHS records that pertain to their
activities in an FFE. In the first few years of FFE operations, the
vast majority of QHP issuers were responsive and cooperative with the
compliance reviews. QHP issuers generally submitted requested documents
on time and were responsive to requests for additional information.
However, a few QHP issuers were less responsive to HHS, which resulted
in unnecessary delays of the compliance reviews. We propose to amend
this section to specify HHS's authority to impose remedies authorized
under subpart I of part 156 in situations where the QHP issuer is non-
responsive or uncooperative with the compliance reviews authorized
under this section.
7. Qualified Health Plan Issuer Responsibilities
a. Administrative Appeals (Sec. 156.1220)
As discussed in the preamble to Sec. 153.630, we propose adding
paragraphs (a)(1)(vii) and (viii) to Sec. 156.1220, providing an
administrative appeals right to issuers to contest only a processing
error by HHS, HHS's incorrect application of the relevant methodology,
or HHS's mathematical error with respect to the findings of a second
validation audit as a result of risk adjustment data validation; or the
calculation of a risk score error rate as a result of risk adjustment
data validation, respectively. Also as discussed in the preamble to
Sec. Sec. 153.630 and 156.430(h), we propose requiring issuers to file
a report for discrepancies related to risk adjustment data validation
and discrepancies related the reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments, if the issue is identifiable,
prior to filing a request for reconsideration as set forth at Sec.
156.1220. As such, we propose to amend Sec. 156.1220(a)(4)(ii), to
provide that, notwithstanding Sec. 156.1220(a)(1), a reconsideration
with respect to a processing error by HHS, HHS's incorrect application
of the relevant methodology, or HHS's mathematical error may be
requested only if, to the extent the issue could have been previously
identified, the issuer notified HHS of the dispute through the
applicable process for reporting a discrepancy set forth in Sec.
153.630(d)(2), Sec. 153.710(d)(2), or Sec. 156.430(h)(1), and the
dispute has not been resolved.
Because risk adjustment payments and charges for the 2015 benefit
year will not be adjusted as a result of the risk adjustment data
validation process, we do not believe an administrative appeal right is
necessary for the 2015 benefit year. Therefore, we propose that the
first year of risk adjustment data validation appeals would begin with
the 2016 benefit year, which is the first year that risk adjustment
data validation will affect the amount of risk adjustment payments and
charges. As such, we propose to limit the proposed new Sec.
156.1220(a)(1)(vii) and (viii) (specifying that an issuer may file a
request for reconsideration under this section to contest a processing
error by HHS, HHS's incorrect application of the relevant methodology,
or HHS's mathematical error, with respect to the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate as a
result of risk adjustment data validation) to administrative appeals
with respect to risk adjustment data for the 2016 benefit year and
beyond.
We propose to amend Sec. 156.1220(a)(2) regarding the materiality
threshold for filing a request for reconsideration to include a
reference to the administrative appeals related to the risk adjustment
data validation process. We also propose to amend Sec.
156.1220(a)(3)(ii) to add a reference to risk adjustment data
validation and to provide that issuers have 30 calendar days to request
reconsideration from the date of the notification of the findings of a
second validation audit and the calculation of a risk score error rate
as a result of risk adjustment data validation. We believe 30 calendar
days is sufficient for issuers to review the findings of a second
validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate as a
result of risk adjustment data validation and to submit a request for
reconsideration. We seek comment on these timeframes and the appeal
proposal.
b. Direct Enrollment With the QHP Issuer in a Manner Considered To Be
Through the Exchange (Sec. 156.1230)
In this rule, we proposed a number of modifications and new
requirements in Sec. 155.220 which would apply to web-brokers using
the direct enrollment channel. We propose to add a number of these
standards to Sec. Sec. 156.265 and 156.1230(b) so that they also apply
to issuers using direct enrollment on a Federally-facilitated Exchange.
Specifically, in Sec. 156.1230, we propose to: (1) Specify that HHS
may immediately suspend the QHP issuer's ability to transact
information with the Exchange if HHS discovers circumstances that pose
unacceptable risk to Exchange operations or Exchange information
technology systems until the incident or breach is remedied or
sufficiently mitigated to HHS's satisfaction; (2) require QHP issuers
to demonstrate operational readiness and compliance with applicable
requirements prior to their Web sites being used to complete QHP
selections; and (3) require QHP issuers to provide consumers with
correct information regarding FFEs, QHPs offered through the FFEs and
insurance affordability programs, and refrain from marketing or conduct
that is misleading, coercive, or discriminatory. A more detailed
discussion of these proposed provisions is contained in the preamble
discussion regarding Sec. 155.220.
We solicit comments on these proposals and specifically seek
comment on whether direct enrollment with a QHP issuer should be
permitted for enrollments through all SBE-FPs, or at the option of SBE-
FPs.
c. Other Notices (Sec. 156.1256)
Section 156.1256 requires health insurance issuers offering
coverage through an FFE or an SBE-FP to notify enrollees of material
plan or benefit display errors under certain circumstances. We propose
to change the paragraph cross-referenced in Sec. 156.1256 from Sec.
155.420(d)(4) to Sec. 155.420(d)(12) to reflect our proposal to codify
in Sec. 155.420(d)(12) the special enrollment period for material plan
or benefit display errors. Since the noticing requirement in Sec.
156.1256 is limited to material plan or benefit display errors and
resulting special enrollment periods, proposed Sec. 155.420(d)(12) is
a more appropriate reference for this section. We also propose to make
some minor non-substantive changes to the regulation text. We seek
comments on this proposal.
J. Part 157--Employer Interactions With Exchanges and Shop
Participation
For a discussion of the provisions of this proposed rule related to
part 157, please see the preamble to Sec. 155.725.
K. Part 158--Issuer Use of Premium Revenue: Reporting and Rebate
Requirements
1. Newer Experience (Sec. 158.121)
a. Deferred Reporting of Newer Business
Section 2718(c) of the PHS Act provides that, subject to the
certification of the Secretary, the NAIC is to establish standardized
medical loss ratio methodologies that take into consideration (among
other things) the
[[Page 61516]]
special circumstances of newer plans. Consistent with the NAIC's
recommendation to HHS,\59\ the MLR December 1, 2010 interim final rule
(75 FR 74863) allows issuers to defer reporting of experience of
policies newly issued and with fewer than 12 months of experience until
the following reporting year, if such policies contribute to 50 percent
or more of the issuer's total earned premium for the MLR reporting
year. As explained in the interim final rule, the rationale for
deferring experience of newly issued policies is that claims experience
can be substantially lower than the premium revenue from those policies
during the year in which the coverage is issued (although this may
occur to a lesser extent in the current environment than prior to
introduction of the Affordable Care Act market reforms), and could
create a barrier to the entry of new issuers into a market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ National Association of Insurance Commissioners--Model
Regulation Service, Regulation for Uniform Definitions and
Standardized Methodologies for Calculation of the Medical Loss Ratio
for Plan Years 2011, 2012 and 2013 per Section 2718(b) of the Public
Health Service Act (Oct 27, 2010), available athttps://www.naic.org/documents/committees_ex_mlr_reg_asadopted.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, the NAIC's recommendation was developed in 2010, prior to
implementation of many Affordable Care Act market reforms. As a result,
the current MLR regulation allows issuers to defer reporting the
experience of new policies that were in effect for fewer than 12
months, but not for those in effect for the full 12 months. This
limitation does not account for the fact that beginning in 2014,
issuers of non-grandfathered health insurance coverage in the
individual and small group markets generally must offer coverage for a
consecutive 12-month period (which may be on a calendar year basis or
otherwise). Consequently, issuers entering these markets in substantial
part in 2014 or later whose policies contribute to 50 percent or more
of the issuer's total earned premium for the MLR reporting year are
unable to defer reporting of this new business for MLR purposes because
such coverage has a full 12 months of experience. Therefore, to align
MLR reporting with the requirement that non-grandfathered coverage
generally must provide coverage for a consecutive 12-month period, we
propose to modify Sec. 158.121 to allow issuers to defer, for MLR
purposes, reporting of data for newer experience if 50 percent or more
of the issuer's total earned premium for the MLR reporting year is
attributable to newly issued policies with 12 full months of
experience, rather than policies with less than 12 months of
experience. We seek comments on this proposal.
2. Rebating Premium if the Applicable Medical Loss Ratio Standard Is
Not Met (Sec. Sec. 158.232, 158.240)
a. Limit on Rebate Liability
Section 2718(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the PHS Act requires, beginning on
January 1, 2014, the MLR to be calculated as an average of 3
consecutive years of experience. When an established issuer's MLR falls
below the applicable MLR standard in a given year, the 3-year averaging
spreads the actual payment of the rebate over the period of 3 years.
This allows issuers to offset low and high MLRs within any 3-year
period, enabling issuers to potentially pay a lower overall rebate.
However, issuers that newly enter the market in 2014 or later are only
able to calculate their first two MLRs based on 1 or 2 years of
experience. Consequently, the experience of the first 1 or 2 years can
have a disproportionate and overlapping impact on such issuers' average
MLRs in their first 3 years in the market, and the 3-year averaging
required by section 2718(b)(1)(B)(ii) can lead to distorted MLR
calculations and could be a barrier to the entry of new issuers into a
market. As a result of the 3-year averaging rule, a new issuer that has
an MLR that is initially low but increases within the first 3 years in
the market may end up paying a higher total rebate over those initial 3
years than an established issuer with stable enrollment with the same
experience in each of those 3 years. In addition, the 3-year averaging
rule can have a similar impact on an established issuer that rapidly
and significantly expands its presence in the market.
We note that only a narrow subset of issuers are affected in this
way by 3-year averaging: Specifically, new issuers and established
issuers that experience rapid growth (either by entering a new market
or rapidly and significantly expanding their presence in an existing
market) and whose MLR falls below the standard in one year and
increases within the following 2 years.
Consistent with the requirement under section 2718(c) of the PHS
Act to design standardized MLR methodologies that take into
consideration (among other things) the special circumstances of smaller
and newer plans, we propose to amend Sec. Sec. 158.240 and 158.232 to
mitigate the impact of 3-year averaging on these issuers and thereby
reduce barriers to entry and promote competition in health insurance
markets. Specifically, we propose to modify Sec. 158.240 by adding a
new paragraph (d) and redesignating the existing paragraphs (d) and (e)
as paragraphs (e) and (f), respectively, to provide flexibility to
limit in appropriate cases an issuer's total rebate liability payable
with respect to a given calendar year. We also propose conforming
amendments to paragraph (c) to recognize the proposed new flexibility
under new paragraph (d). Under this proposal, if an issuer elects this
flexibility, the maximum single-year rebate liability attributable to a
given calendar year would be limited to no more than the amount
determined based on the issuer's MLR calculated using only that year's
experience. In these circumstances, we propose to adjust the maximum
rebate liability attributable to a given calendar year in each of the
two subsequent reporting years to reflect restatement of claims
incurred in that calendar year as of March 31 following each of those 2
subsequent reporting years. The restatement of incurred claims would
ensure that the rebate liability with respect to the calendar year in
question is corrected either upward or downward, as appropriate, in the
two subsequent years in order to implement the 3-year averaging
requirement. Similarly, we propose that an issuer that elects this
option would have to adjust the maximum rebate liability attributable
to a given calendar year in the 2 subsequent reporting years to reflect
the credibility adjustment applicable in each of those 2 subsequent
reporting years. That is, the rebate liability attributable to year 1
would be recalculated in year 2 using a credibility adjustment based on
the sum of life-years for years 1 and 2. This approach is consistent
with the manner in which the credibility adjustment was applied with
respect to all issuers when the MLR requirements were first
implemented. We seek comments on this proposal.
We also propose that for an issuer that elects this option, for
each reporting year, after the issuer recalculates the maximum rebate
liability with respect to each calendar year in the aggregation using
restated incurred claims and updated credibility adjustment (as
applicable), the outstanding rebate liability with respect to each year
in the aggregation would be determined by reducing the maximum rebate
liability with respect to that year by any rebate payments made toward
it in the two prior years (as applicable). Any rebate payable for a
given reporting year would be applied toward the outstanding
[[Page 61517]]
rebate liability of the earliest year in the relevant aggregation
first. If the rebate calculated for the reporting year based on a
multi-year average MLR (2- or 3-year average, as applicable) exceeds
the combined outstanding rebate liability for all calendar years
included in the aggregation, then under our proposal, the actual rebate
payable by the issuer for that reporting year would be limited to the
amount of the combined outstanding rebate liability. Conversely, if the
total rebate calculated for the reporting year based on a multi-year
average MLR is lower than the combined outstanding rebate liability for
all years included in the aggregation, then we propose that the actual
rebate payable by the issuer for that reporting year be limited to the
amount calculated for the reporting year based on a multi-year average
MLR. Therefore, our proposal would generally prevent the total rebate
amount paid by an issuer with respect to any given calendar year over
the course of 3 consecutive years from exceeding the rebate amount
resulting from the ratio of the issuer's incurred claims and quality
improvement activity expenses to the issuer's after-tax earned premium
for that calendar year, with applicable adjustments, falling below the
applicable MLR standard. At the same time, our proposal is designed to
benefit only new issuers and established issuers that experience rapid
growth whose MLR falls below the standard in one year and increases
within the following 2 years. This is because the combined outstanding
rebate liability for all years included in the aggregation will
generally equal or exceed the rebate calculated for the reporting year
based on a 3-year average MLR for established issuers that do not
experience rapid growth. Therefore, our proposed limit on the rebate
liability would not benefit such issuers.
For a simplified illustration of our proposal, suppose that a new,
fully-credible individual market issuer reports year 1 incurred claims
and quality improvement activity expenses (QIA) of $500,000 and premium
adjusted for applicable taxes and fees of $1,000,000 (and no other
relevant revenue or expenses relevant to the MLR calculation); year 2
incurred claims and QIA of $700,000 and after-tax premium of
$1,000,000; and incurred claims and QIA of $800,000 and after-tax
premium of $1,000,000 thereafter. Under our proposal, the rebate
liability for year 1 would be calculated as (80% - $500,000/$1,000,000)
* $1,000,000 = $300,000; and the issuer would consequently pay a
$300,000 rebate for year 1. Suppose that after year 2, the issuer
determines that its year 1 incurred claims and QIA were in fact
$550,000 rather than $500,000. The issuer's 2-year average MLR would
equal ($550,000 + $700,000)/($1,000,000 + $1,000,000) = 62.5% and the
corresponding rebate would equal (80% - 62.5%) * $1,000,000 = 175,000.
Under our proposal, the issuer's preliminary MLR with respect to year 1
as adjusted by the newer incurred claims and QIA data would be
calculated as $550,000/$1,000,000 = 55% and the corresponding rebate
liability as (80% - 55%) * $1,000,000 = $250,000. The preliminary MLR
with respect to year 2 would be calculated as $700,000/$1,000,000 = 70%
and the corresponding rebate liability as (80% - 70%) * $1,000,000 =
$100,000. The $300,000 rebate initially paid for year 1 would be
applied first against the year 1 rebate liability of $250,000, with the
remaining $50,000 applied against the year 2 rebate liability of
$100,000, resulting in a combined outstanding rebate liability of
$250,000 + $100,000 - $300,000 = $50,000. Because the combined
outstanding rebate liability is lower than the rebate based on the 2-
year average MLR, the rebate payable for year 2 is limited to the lower
amount, or $50,000; whereas under the current MLR regulations, the
issuer would be required to pay $175,000 in rebates for year 2. In year
3, the rebate based on the 3-year average MLR would be $116,667, while
the combined outstanding rebate liability would be zero, resulting in
no rebate payable for year 3.
In recognition of the fact that, as discussed above, only a limited
subset of issuers may be disadvantaged by the three-year averaging rule
and would be able to benefit from this proposal, we propose to make the
use of the rebate liability limit optional for issuers. To further
facilitate application of this proposal in the least burdensome manner,
as well as to address an existing ambiguity regarding applicability of
the credibility adjustment, we additionally propose to clarify Sec.
158.232 by defining the term ``preliminary MLR'' to refer to an MLR
calculated without applying any credibility adjustment, and by
explicitly specifying instances where Sec. 158.232 is intended to
refer to experience of a single year, rather than 3 years. These
proposed amendments to Sec. 158.232(d), (e), and (f) will enable
issuers that wish to take advantage of the rebate liability limit to
rely on the single-year, preliminary MLRs that issuers already
calculate as part of determining their credibility adjustment, and
minimize the additional reporting associated with calculating the
outstanding rebate liability if an issuer elects to exercise the
flexibility proposed in Sec. 158.240(d). We seek comments on all
aspects of this proposal.
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget for review and approval. This
proposed rule contains information collection requirements (ICRs) that
are subject to review by OMB. A description of these provisions is
given in the following paragraphs with an estimate of the annual
burden, summarized in Table 16. To fairly evaluate whether an
information collection should be approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A)
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we solicit comment
on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the affected public, including automated collection
techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on each of these issues for the
following sections of this proposed rule that contain ICRs. We
generally used data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to derive
average labor costs (including a 100 percent increase for fringe
benefits and overhead) for estimating the burden associated with the
ICRs.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See May 2015 Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational
Employment Statistics, National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates at https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_stru.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. ICRs Regarding Upload of Risk Adjustment Data (Sec. 153.610)
Under the HHS-operated risk adjustment program, HHS uses a
distributed data collection approach for enrollee-level enrollment,
claims and encounter data that reside on an issuer's dedicated data
environment. Under Sec. 153.710(a), an issuer of a risk adjustment
covered plan in a State where HHS is operating the risk adjustment or
reinsurance program on behalf of the State, as applicable, must provide
HHS, through the dedicated data environment, access to enrollee-
[[Page 61518]]
level plan enrollment data, enrollee claims data, and enrollee
encounter data, as specified by HHS. Under Sec. 153.610(a), HHS is
proposing that an issuer must submit or make accessible all required
risk adjustment data for its risk adjustment covered plans in
accordance with the risk adjustment data collection approach
established by the State, or by HHS on behalf of the State, including
any data that is ``protected health information'' as that term is
defined at 45 CFR 160.103 for purposes of recalibrating the HHS risk
adjustment model, in the form and manner specified by HHS. This
proposal entails HHS sending a command to all issuers' EDGE servers
that issuers must execute, which would provide HHS a dataset that does
not identify the EDGE server, plan, issuer, geographic rating area,
State, or enrollee, for purposes of obtaining enrollee-level data upon
which we can recalibrate the HHS risk adjustment models. Because this
EDGE report requires no new data elements and only requires an issuer
to execute the command, we do not believe this provision imposes
additional burden on issuers of risk adjustment covered plans described
under the information collection currently approved under OMB Control
Number 0938-1155.
B. ICRs Regarding Data Validation Requirements When HHS Operates Risk
Adjustment (Sec. 153.630)
Under Sec. 153.630(b), an issuer that offers at least one risk
adjustment covered plan in a State where HHS is operating risk
adjustment on behalf of the State for the applicable benefit year must
have an initial validation audit performed on its risk adjustment data.
The cost associated with this requirement is the issuer's time and
effort to provide HHS with source claims, records, and enrollment
information to validate enrollee demographic information for initial
and second validation audits and the issuer's cost to employ an
independent auditor to perform the initial validation audit on a
statistically valid sample of enrollees. We estimate that each issuer
sample will consist of approximately 200 enrollees, and we anticipate
that this audit will affect approximately 825 issuers. Beginning with
2018 risk adjustment data validation, HHS proposes to require the
review of paid pharmacy claims for all sample enrollees in the initial
validation audit. Based on 2015 EDGE reinsurance data, we believe
approximately half of all enrollees have pharmacy claims, and of those
that do, we would expect approximately six pharmacy claims per
enrollee. Therefore, we expect that it would require 30 minutes for an
auditor (at a labor cost of $72 per hour) and cost approximately $36
per enrollee to validate paid pharmacy claims. We assume that an
initial validation audit would be performed on 165,000 enrollees, with
half of them, or 82,500 enrollees, having pharmacy claims. Based on the
information above, we estimate that the total additional burden per
issuer for initial validation auditors to review and validate paid
pharmacy claims would be 50 hours and cost approximately $3,600.
Therefore, for 825 issuers, the total annual burden of conducting
initial validation audits would be 41,250 hours with an equivalent cost
of approximately $2.97 million. We will revise the information
collection currently approved under OMB Control Number 0938-1155 with
an October 31, 2017 expiration date to account for this additional
burden.
C. ICR Regarding the Interim and Final Discrepancy Reporting Processes
for Risk Adjustment Data Validation When HHS Operates Risk Adjustment
(Sec. 153.630(d))
Under Sec. 153.630(d)(1), we propose that in the manner set forth
by HHS, an issuer must confirm the sample or file a discrepancy report
within 15 calendar days to dispute the HHS risk adjustment data
validation sample set forth by HHS in the HHS-RADV Final Reports. In
Sec. 153.630(d)(2), we propose that in the manner set forth by HHS, an
issuer may file a discrepancy report within 30 calendar days to dispute
the findings of a second validation audit or the calculation of a risk
score error rate.
We estimate that 825 issuers of risk adjustment covered plans would
be subject to this requirement, and that issuers would review the HHS-
risk adjustment data validation final reports, specifically the initial
validation audit sample set for the interim discrepancy reporting
process. For the final discrepancy reporting process, set forth in
proposed Sec. 153.630(d)(2), issuers would review the results of the
second validation audit and the calculation of a risk score error rate.
On average, we estimate that it would take a business operations
specialist (at an hourly labor cost of $78) approximately 2 hours to
respond to an interim report and 6 hours to respond to the interim and
final discrepancy reporting process. The total burden for each issuer
would be 8 hours with an equivalent cost of $624. Therefore, we
estimate an aggregate annual burden of 6,600 hours with an equivalent
cost of $514,800 for 825 issuers as a result of these requirements. We
will revise the information collection currently approved under OMB
Control Number 0938-1155 with an October 31, 2017 expiration date to
account for this additional burden.
D. ICR Regarding Standardized Options in SBE-FPs (Sec. 155.20)
In proposed Sec. 155.20, we propose that an SBE-FP must notify HHS
if it wants HHS-designed standardized options to receive differential
display, by a date to be specified in guidance. We anticipate that
fewer than 10 SBE-FPs would submit this information to HHS annually.
Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to the PRA as it
would affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month period.
E. ICR Regarding Differential Display of Standardized Options on the
Web Sites of Agents and Brokers (Sec. 155.220) and QHP Issuers (Sec.
156.265)
We propose to require web-brokers and QHP issuers that utilize the
direct enrollment pathway to differentially display standardized
options in the 2018 plan year and beyond, consistent with the approach
adopted by HHS for display on the Exchange Web site, unless HHS
approved a deviation. This policy would require direct enrollment
entities to prominently display standardized options in a manner that
makes them clear to consumers. We estimate that a total of 160 web-
brokers and QHP issuers participate in the FFEs and SBE-FPs and would
be required to comply with the standard. We estimate it would take a
mid-level software developer (at a rate of $96.82 per hour)
approximately 2 hours annually to develop a differential display for
standardized options. We estimate an annual cost burden of
approximately $193.64 per direct enrollment entity. The total annual
burden will be 320 hours with an equivalent cost of approximately
$30,982.40.
We anticipate that fewer than 10 web-brokers and issuers would
submit a request to deviate from the manner adopted by HHS for display
on HealthCare.gov. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to
the PRA as it would affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month period.
F. ICR Regarding Ability of States To Permit Agents and Brokers To
Assist Qualified Individuals, Qualified Employers, or Qualified
Employees Enrolling in QHPs (Sec. 155.220)
We propose a number of requirements for web-brokers related to the
direct enrollment process such as prominently displaying information
regarding consumers' eligibility for APTC, allowing consumers to make
attestations regarding APTC, and providing for the
[[Page 61519]]
maintenance of electronic records for purposes of audit. At Sec. Sec.
156.265 and 156.1230, we propose a number of parallel provisions for
issuers using the direct enrollment channel. We would provide
additional detail regarding the specific requirements under these rules
in guidance in the future. At that time, we would estimate the burden
associated with these requirements, solicit public comment, and request
OMB approval in accordance with the PRA, as may be necessary.
G. ICR Regarding Eligibility Redeterminations (Sec. 155.330)
We propose to permit an Exchange to choose among three alternatives
when the Exchange identifies updated information regarding compliance
with the income tax filing and reconciliation requirement under Sec.
155.305. An Exchange may either follow the process described in
paragraph (e)(2)(i), a process specified by the Secretary in guidance,
or an alternative process proposed by the Exchange and approved by the
Secretary. HHS anticipates that it would require Exchanges requesting
approval for an alternative process to submit a brief description of
the alternative process, and a justification for how the process
satisfies the approval criteria outlined in Sec.
155.330(e)(2)(iii)(C). Given the availability of two alternative
processes, we anticipate that fewer than 10 Exchanges would submit a
proposal. Therefore, under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject
to the PRA as it would affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month
period.
We also propose to permit the Exchange to recalculate APTC using
the procedure described in Sec. 155.330(g)(1) or an alternate
procedure approved by HHS on a transitional basis. HHS anticipates that
it would require participating Exchanges to submit a brief description
of the alternate procedure and the extent to which the alternate
procedure would protect tax filers from an excess APTC repayment. Here
too, we anticipate that fewer than 10 Exchanges would submit a
proposal. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to the PRA
as it would affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month period.
H. ICR Regarding Termination of Exchange Enrollment or Coverage (Sec.
155.430(b)(2)(iii))
We are proposing to amend Sec. 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to clarify that
when an issuer seeks termination of a QHP purchased on an Exchange via
a rescission under Sec. 147.128, it must first demonstrate, to the
reasonable satisfaction of the Exchange, that the basis for the
rescission is appropriate, if the Exchange requires such a
demonstration. This would require the issuer to provide information
related to the termination to the Exchange. We do not anticipate that
all Exchanges will subject issuers to this requirement. We anticipate
that fewer than 10 issuers would be subject to this requirement
annually. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to the PRA
as it would affect fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month period.
I. ICR Regarding QHP Request for Reconsideration (Sec. 155.1090)
We propose to add Sec. 155.1090 to create a process for an issuer
that has applied to an FFE for certification of QHPs and has been
denied certification to request reconsideration. We anticipate that
fewer than 10 issuers per year would request reconsideration. Under 5
CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this ICR is not subject to the PRA as it would affect
fewer than 10 entities in a 12-month period.
J. ICR Regarding Notification by Issuers Denied Certification (Sec.
156.290)
In proposed Sec. 156.290 we propose that QHP issuers would be
required to provide a notification to enrollees within 30 days of the
date of HHS's denial of certification for a subsequent, consecutive
certification cycle. We anticipate that fewer than 10 issuers would be
subject to this requirement annually. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(c)(4), this
ICR is not subject to the PRA as it would affect fewer than 10 entities
in a 12-month period.
K. ICR Regarding the Discrepancy Reporting Processes for the
Reconciliation of the Cost-sharing Reduction Portion of Advance
Payments (Sec. 156.430(h))
Under Sec. 156.430(h)(1), we proposed that, if an issuer files a
discrepancy report to dispute the notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance
payments, it must file the discrepancy report within 30 calendar days
of notification of the amount of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments as described in Sec. 156.430(e),
in the manner set forth by HHS.
We estimate that of approximately 360 QHP issuers that submit cost-
sharing reduction reconciliation data, less than \1/3\ would file a
discrepancy report to dispute the notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance
payments. Issuers would review the notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance
payments for this discrepancy reporting process. On average, we
estimate that it would take a business operations specialist (at an
hourly labor cost of $78) approximately 6 hours to review the
requirements of the discrepancy reporting process, to determine whether
the issuer should submit a discrepancy report, to categorize the
discrepancy, and to write a description of the discrepancy for
submission to HHS. Additionally, we estimate that it would take a
computer programmer (at an hourly labor cost of approximately $78)
approximately 12 hours to develop the pipe-delimited file for reporting
the discrepancy, based on the technical specifications published by
HHS, and to submit the discrepancy file to HHS through the electronic
file transfer system. Therefore, we estimate that the total burden for
each issuer would be approximately 18 hours with an equivalent cost of
$1,404. Therefore, assuming that no more than 120 issuers would submit
a discrepancy, we estimate a total aggregate annual burden of
approximately 2,160 hours with an equivalent cost of $168,480 for
issuers as a result of these requirements. We will revise the
information collection currently approved under OMB Control Number
0938-1266 with a December 31, 2017 expiration date to account for this
additional burden.
L. ICRs Regarding Administrative Appeals (Sec. 156.1220)
In 45 CFR 156.1220, we established an administrative appeals
process to address any issues or errors for advance payment of the
premium tax credit, advance payment and reconciliation of cost-sharing
reductions, FFE user fees, and the premium stabilization programs, as
well as any assessment of a default risk adjustment charge under Sec.
153.740(b). We propose revising Sec. 156.1220 to also address
administrative appeals relating to the risk adjustment data validation
process.
Under Sec. 153.630(d), an issuer may appeal the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate.
We propose to amend Sec. 153.630(d) by clarifying the process by which
an issuer can appeal the findings of a second validation audit or the
calculation of a risk score error rate. We propose requiring issuers to
use the administrative appeals process set forth in Sec. 156.1220.
Under Sec. 156.1220(a), we propose to clarify that an issuer may
file a request for reconsideration under this section to contest a
processing error by HHS,
[[Page 61520]]
HHS's incorrect application of the relevant methodology, or HHS's
mathematical error with respect to the findings of a second validation
audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate.
While the hours involved in a request for reconsideration might
vary, for purposes of this burden estimate we estimate that it would
take a business operations specialist 1 hour (at an hourly labor cost
of $78) to make the comparison and submit a request for reconsideration
to HHS. We estimate that 9 issuers, representing approximately 1
percent of issuers of risk adjustment covered plans, subject to risk
adjustment data validation, would submit a request for reconsideration,
resulting in a total aggregate annual burden of 9 hours with an
equivalent cost of approximately $702.
M. ICR Regarding Medical Loss Ratio (Sec. 158.240)
We are proposing to amend Sec. 158.240 to allow issuers the option
of limiting the total rebate payable over the course of a 3-year period
with respect to a given calendar year. We anticipate that implementing
this proposal would require minor changes to the MLR annual reporting
form and we may revise the information collection currently approved
under OMB Control Number 0938-1164 to reflect the proposed policy.
However, only a small number of issuers would elect the option of
additional reporting and we do not expect that the proposed policy
would increase the burden.
TABLE 16--Annual Reporting, Recordkeeping and Disclosure Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hourly
Burden per Total labor cost Total labor
Regulation Section OMB Number of Responses response annual of cost of Total cost
Control No. respondents (hours) burden reporting reporting ($)
(hours) ($) ($)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 153.630 Risk Adjustment Data Validation.. 0938-1155 825 82,500 0.5 41,250 72 2,970,000 2,970,000
Sec. 153.630(d) Discrepancy Reporting 0938-1155 825 1650 4 6,600 78 514,800 514,800
Processes for Risk Adjustment Data Validation..
Sec. Sec. 155.220, 156.265 Differential NEW 160 160 2 320 96.82 30,982 30,982
Display of Standardized Options................
Sec. 156.430(h) Discrepancy Reporting for cost- 0938-1266 120 1 18 2,160 78 168,480 168,480
sharing reduction reconciliation...............
Sec. 156.1220 Administrative Appeals.......... NEW 9 9 1 9 68 702 702
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... ........... 1,114 84,320 25.5 50,339 392.82 3,684,964 3,684,964
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: There are no capital/maintenance costs associated with the information collection requirements contained in this rule; therefore, we have removed
the associated column from Table 16.
V. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public comments we normally receive
on Federal Register documents, we are not able to acknowledge or
respond to them individually. We will consider all comments we receive
by the date and time specified in the DATES section of this proposed
rule, and, when we proceed with a subsequent document, we will respond
to the comments in the preamble to that document.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This rule proposes standards related to the risk adjustment program
for the 2017 and 2018 benefit years, as well as certain modifications
to the program that will protect against the potential effects of
adverse selection. The Premium Stabilization Rule and previous Payment
Notices provided detail on the implementation of this program,
including the specific parameters for the 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017
benefit years applicable to this program. This rule proposes additional
standards related to enrollment and eligibility, consumer assistance
tools and programs of an Exchange, web-brokers, cost-sharing
parameters, qualified health plans, network adequacy, stand-alone
dental plans, guaranteed renewability, the rate review program, the
medical loss ratio program, the Small Business Health Options Program,
and FFE user fees. These proposed standards represent incremental
amendments that are intended to continue to strengthen the Exchanges,
improve the stability of the market, and enhance the choices available
to consumers, while supporting consumers' ability to make informed
choices when purchasing health insurance.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (March 22, 1995, Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
rules with economically significant effects ($100 million or more in
any 1 year).
[[Page 61521]]
OMB has determined that this proposed rule is ``economically
significant'' within the meaning of section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order
12866, because it is likely to have an annual effect of $100 million in
any 1 year. Accordingly, we have prepared an RIA that presents the
costs and benefits of this proposed rule.
Although it is difficult to discuss the wide-ranging effects of
these provisions in isolation, the overarching goal of the premium
stabilization, market standards, and Exchange-related provisions and
policies in the Affordable Care Act is to make affordable health
insurance available to individuals who do not have access to affordable
employer-sponsored coverage. The provisions within this proposed rule
are integral to the goal of expanding coverage. For example, the risk
adjustment program helps prevent risk selection and decrease the risk
of financial loss that health insurance issuers might otherwise expect
in 2018 and Exchange financial assistance helps low- and moderate-
income consumers and American Indians/Alaska Natives purchase health
insurance. The combined impacts of these provisions affect the private
sector, issuers, and consumers, through increased access to health care
services, decreased uncompensated care, lower premiums, and increased
plan transparency. Through the reduction in financial uncertainty for
issuers and increased affordability for consumers, these provisions are
expected to increase access to affordable health coverage.
HHS anticipates that the provisions of this proposed rule will help
further HHS's goal of ensuring that all consumers have access to
quality, affordable health care and are able to make informed choices,
that Exchanges operate smoothly, that the risk adjustment program works
as intended, and that SHOPs are provided flexibility. Affected entities
such as QHP issuers would incur costs to comply with the proposed
provisions. In accordance with Executive Order 12866, HHS believes that
the benefits of this regulatory action justify the costs.
C. Impact Estimates of the Payment Notice Provisions and Accounting
Table
In accordance with OMB Circular A-4, Table 17 depicts an accounting
statement summarizing HHS's assessment of the benefits, costs, and
transfers associated with this regulatory action.
This proposed rule implements standards for programs that will have
a number of effects, including providing consumers with affordable
health insurance coverage, reducing the impact of adverse selection,
and stabilizing premiums in the individual and small group health
insurance markets and in an Exchange. We are unable to quantify certain
benefits of this proposed rule--such as improved health outcomes and
longevity due to continuous quality improvement, and increased
insurance enrollment--and certain costs--such as the cost of providing
additional medical services to newly-enrolled individuals. The effects
in Table 17 reflect qualitative impacts and estimated direct monetary
costs and transfers resulting from the provisions of this proposed
rule. The annualized monetized costs described in Table 17 reflect
direct administrative costs to health insurance issuers and web-brokers
as a result of the proposed provisions, and include administrative
costs related to requirements that are estimated in the Collection of
Information section of this proposed rule. The annual monetized
transfers described in Table 17 include costs associated with the risk
adjustment user fee paid to HHS by issuers, and a decrease in MLR
rebates to consumers. For 2018, we are proposing to collect a total of
$35 million in risk adjustment user fees or $1.32 per enrollee per year
from risk adjustment issuers, an increase from $24 million in benefit
year 2017 when we established a $1.56 per-enrollee-per-year risk
adjustment user fee amount. As in 2017, the risk adjustment user fee
contract costs for 2018 include costs for risk adjustment data
validation; however, we expect increased enrollment in 2018 HHS risk
adjustment covered plans, which decreases the per enrollee amount.
The annual monetized transfers described in Table 17 include a
decrease in MLR rebates to consumers.
TABLE 17--Accounting Table
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits:
Qualitative:
Increased enrollment in the individual market leading to improved access to health care for the
previously uninsured, especially individuals with medical conditions, which will result in improved health
and protection from the risk of catastrophic medical expenditures..........................................
Improved transparency and shopping experience for consumers due to new, updated standardized
options and their differential display; and protections relating to direct enrollment......................
Provide adequate time to newly qualified employees to make informed decisions regarding their
coverage in the SHOP.......................................................................................
Ensure plan choice, allowing individuals to find coverage that fit their needs.....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs: Estimate Year Discount Period
(million) dollar rate covered
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized ($/year)................... $3.68 2016 7 2017-2021
3.68 2016 3 2017-2021
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs reflect administrative costs incurred by issuers and web-brokers to comply with provisions in this final
rule.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers: Estimate Year Discount Period
(million) dollar rate covered
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized ($/year)................... $22.2 2016 7 2017-2021
22.6 2016 3 2017-2021
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers include risk adjustment user fees for 2018-2021 (assuming that they remain the same during
this time period), which are transfers from health insurance issuers to the Federal government; and a reduction
in total rebate payments by issuers which is a transfer from enrollees to shareholders or nonprofit
stakeholders in individual, small and large group markets, resulting from adjustment in MLR methodology.
Qualitative:
More accurate risk adjustment charges and payments due to change in risk adjustment methodology....
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 61522]]
This RIA expands upon the impact analyses of previous rules and
utilizes the Congressional Budget Office's (CBO) analysis of the
Affordable Care Act's impact on Federal spending, revenue collection,
and insurance enrollment. The temporary risk corridors program and the
transitional reinsurance program end after the benefit year 2016.
Therefore, the costs associated with those programs are not included in
Tables 17 or 18 for fiscal years 2019-2021. Table 18 summarizes the
effects of the risk adjustment program on the Federal budget from
fiscal years 2017 through 2021, with the additional, societal effects
of this proposed rule discussed in this RIA. We do not expect the
provisions of this proposed rule to significantly alter CBO's estimates
of the budget impact of the premium stabilization programs that are
described in Table 18. We note that transfers associated with the risk
adjustment and reinsurance programs were previously estimated in the
Premium Stabilization Rule; therefore, to avoid double-counting, we do
not include them in the accounting statement for this proposed rule
(Table 18).
Table 18--Estimated Federal Government Outlays and Receipts for the Risk Adjustment, Reinsurance, and Risk Corridors Programs From Fiscal Year 2017-2021
[In billions of dollars]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2017-2021
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Risk Adjustment, Reinsurance, and Risk Corridors Program 10 8 8 9 9 44
Payments...............................................
Risk Adjustment, Reinsurance, and Risk Corridors Program 11 7 8 9 9 44
Collections *..........................................
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note 1: Risk adjustment program payments and receipts lag by one quarter. Receipt will fully offset payments over time.
Note 2: The CBO score reflects an additional $2 million in collections in FY 2015 that are outlaid in the FY 2016-FY 2020 timeframe. CBO does not expect
a shortfall in these programs.
Source: Congressional Budget Office. Federal Subsidies for Health Insurance Coverage for People Under Age 65: Tables From CBO's March 2016 Baseline
https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/51298-2016-03-HealthInsurance.pdf.
1. Fair Health Insurance Premiums
The proposed regulations would amend Sec. 147.102(d) to create
multiple child age bands rather than a single age band for all
individuals aged 0 through 20. Establishing single-year age bands
starting at age 15 is likely to result in small annual increases in
premiums for children age 15 to 20, which would help mitigate large
premium increases attributable to age due to the transition from child
to adult age rating.
2. Guaranteed Renewability
This proposed rule would specify the circumstances in which the
discontinuation of all coverage currently offered by an issuer in a
market in a State would not be considered a market withdrawal subject
to the 5-year ban on market re-entry. We believe this proposal is
generally consistent with State regulation of health insurance and
therefore would not have a material impact on issuers or enrollees.
These changes would benefit consumers since imposing the 5-year ban on
market re-entry in these situations could result in disruption for
consumers and reduced competition in some markets.
3. Risk Adjustment
The risk adjustment program is a program created by the Affordable
Care Act in which States, or HHS on behalf of States, collects charges
from health insurance issuers that attract lower-risk populations in
order to use those funds to provide payments to health insurance
issuers that attract higher-risk populations, such as those with
chronic conditions, thereby reducing incentives for issuers to avoid
higher-risk enrollees. We established standards for the administration
of the risk adjustment program, in subparts D and G of part 45 of the
CFR. The proposed modifications to the risk adjustment model aims to
improve the methodology and would result in more accurate risk
adjustment charges and payments and mitigate any residual incentive for
risk selection.
A State approved or conditionally approved by the Secretary to
operate an Exchange may establish a risk adjustment program, or have
HHS do so on its behalf. As described in the 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017
Payment Notices, if HHS operates risk adjustment on behalf of a State,
it will fund its risk adjustment program operations by assessing a risk
adjustment user fee on issuers of risk adjustment covered plans. For
the 2018 benefit year, we estimate that the total cost for HHS to
operate the risk adjustment program on behalf of States for 2018 will
be approximately $35 million, and that the risk adjustment user fee
would be approximately $1.32 per enrollee per year. The risk adjustment
user fee contract costs for 2018 include costs related to 2018 risk
adjustment data validation, and are higher than the 2017 contract costs
as the result of some contracts that were rebid.
4. SHOP
The SHOPs facilitate the enrollment of eligible employees of
eligible small employers into small group market health insurance
plans. A qualitative analysis of the costs and benefits of establishing
a SHOP was included in the RIA published in conjunction with the
Exchange Establishment Rule.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Available at https://cciio.cms.gov/resources/files/Files2/03162012/hie3r-ria-032012.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Sec. 155.230(d)(2), we propose requiring SHOPs to make
electronic notices the default method of sending SHOP notices to
employers and employees, unless otherwise required by State or Federal
law. Electronic notices would provide a more cost effective way for
SHOPs to distribute required notices and should decrease the SHOP's
costs for notifications.
In Sec. 155.725(g), we propose changes to the enrollment process
for newly qualified employees. We believe the proposed amendments would
provide newly qualified employees with adequate time to make informed
decisions regarding their coverage and are likely to have a negligible
impact on plan premiums and would ensure that employers do not exceed
the waiting period limits under Sec. 147.116.
5. Direct Enrollment--Standardized Options Differential Display and
Privacy/Security and Oversight
We did not require QHP issuers or web-brokers to adhere to
differential display requirements of standardized options when using a
non-Exchange Web site to facilitate enrollment in a QHP through an
Exchange for the 2017 plan year, but we noted that we would consider
whether to propose such a standard in the future. We now propose to
amend Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i) by adding
[[Page 61523]]
new paragraph (c)(3)(i)(H) to require web-brokers to differentially
display standardized options consistent with the approach adopted by
HHS, unless a deviation is approved by HHS and to amend Sec.
156.265(b)(3) by adding new paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to likewise require
QHP issuers that conduct direct enrollment to differentially display
standardized options in such manner approved by HHS. Requiring web-
brokers and QHP issuers using the direct enrollment pathway to make
changes to their respective QHP display systems may result a slight
increase in administrative costs but would help further our goal of
ensuring that all consumers have access to quality and affordable
health care and are able to make informed choices.
In Sec. Sec. 155.220, 156.265, and 156.1230, we propose
requirements for web-brokers and issuers related to the direct
enrollment process that would provide consumer protections and ensure
that consumers have necessary information to select coverage that would
best fit their needs. Web-brokers and issuers would incur
administrative costs to comply with these requirements.
6. Eligibility and Enrollment Provisions
In Sec. 155.400, we propose to provide Exchanges with the
discretion to allow issuers experiencing billing or enrollment problems
due to high volume or technical errors to implement a reasonable
extension of the binder payment deadlines in Sec. 155.400(e)(1). This
proposal aims to retain consumers on the Exchange and to mitigate the
problems associated with issuers receiving high-volumes of enrollments
in a short timeframe. There would be no added cost to issuers who
choose to implement the optional binder payment extensions, while
ensuring that they would not lose enrollees who have not paid their
binder payments simply because they did not receive their bills due to
a processing backlog or a technical error. Consumers would benefit by
having a reasonable amount of time to pay their binder payments, which
should prevent coverage cancellations due to enrollment irregularities
which are not the fault of the consumer.
In Sec. 155.420, we propose to codify several special enrollment
periods that are already provided through the Exchange. By codifying
these, we seek to ensure that these existing special enrollment periods
are applied consistently across Exchanges, and to provide both issuers
and consumers with greater certainty in how these special enrollment
periods are applied. We believe that this certainty would contribute to
greater stability in the market, and in the use of these special
enrollment periods, specifically.
We propose to amend Sec. 155.430(b)(2)(iii) to require that when
an issuer seeks termination of a QHP on an Exchange via a rescission
for fraud or misrepresentation of material fact under Sec. 147.128, it
must first demonstrate, to the reasonable satisfaction of the Exchange,
that the basis for the rescission is appropriate, if the Exchange
requires such a demonstration. This would not restrict issuers' ability
to rescind coverage when an individual or a party working on behalf of
an individual fraudulently enrolls in coverage, while protecting
consumers whose verification and enrollment conform to FFE and SBE-FP
rules and guidance.
7. Standardized Options
We are proposing new standardized options for 2018, which are
updated versions of the ones finalized in the 2017 Payment Notice. As
in 2017, offering standardized options will be voluntary for QHP
issuers in 2018. In keeping with the methodology used to design
standardized options in 2017, we designed the proposed 2018
standardized plans based on the median cost-sharing features of the
most popular 2016 QHPs, based on enrollment to ensure minimal market
disruption and impact on premiums. For 2018, we are proposing
additional standardized options at each metal level and plan variation
with the goal of having at least one option at each metal level that
would comply with every State's respective cost-sharing laws as
applicable. Each applicable State would have one standardized option at
each metal level and plan variation that issuers would then be able to
choose to offer. In the 2017 Payment Notice, we attempted to estimate
the potential impact that the introduction of standardized options
would have on premiums established by QHPs. As we previously estimated,
we do not anticipate that standardized options would impact 2018 plan
premiums significantly. Rather, the proposed options would allow each
applicable State to have a set of standardized options that most
closely reflects QHPs in the State while meeting any State cost-sharing
mandates. This policy should continue to improve simplicity and
transparency for consumers during the shopping experience. To the
extent it facilitates consumer shopping, it could put modest downward
pressure on premiums.
8. User Fees
To support the operation of FFEs, we require in Sec. 156.50(c)
that a participating issuer offering a plan through an FFE must remit a
user fee to HHS each month equal to the product of the monthly user fee
rate specified in the annual HHS notice of benefit and payment
parameters for the applicable benefit year and the monthly premium
charged by the issuer for each policy under the plan where enrollment
is through an FFE. In this proposed rule, for the 2018 benefit year, we
propose a monthly FFE user fee rate equal to 3.5 percent and, for a
State-based Exchange that relies on the Federal platform, 3.0 percent
of the monthly premium. We had estimated the user fee transfers in the
2017 Payment Notice and there are no additional incremental charges. To
avoid double-counting, we do not include the user fee costs in the
accounting statement for this rule (Table 17). For the user fee charges
assessed on issuers in the FFE and State-based Exchanges using the
Federal platform, we intend to seek an exception to OMB Circular No. A-
25R, which requires that the user fee charge be sufficient to recover
the full cost to the Federal government of providing the special
benefit. We seek this exception to ensure that the FFE can support many
of the goals of the Affordable Care Act, including improving the health
of the population, reducing health care costs, and providing access to
health coverage as advanced by Sec. 156.50(d).
9. Levels of Coverage
At Sec. 156.140, we propose to change the de minimis range of
bronze plans under certain circumstances. We believe that this policy
would not be disruptive to the current bronze plan market as it would
allow more bronze plans the flexibility in creating plan designs within
the increased de minimis range, as well as allow more options for
issuers to leave 2017 cost-sharing structures unchanged. We also
believe this policy would allow issuers to continue to offer a range of
bronze plans as the AV Calculator is updated in future years, which is
good for consumers. Plans are not required to utilize this proposed
option, and we do not anticipate any significant impact on average
bronze plan premiums from this proposed policy.
10. Provisions Related to Cost Sharing
The Affordable Care Act provides for the reduction or elimination
of cost sharing for certain eligible individuals enrolled in QHPs
offered through the Exchanges. This assistance will help
[[Page 61524]]
many low- and moderate-income individuals and families obtain health
insurance--for many people, cost sharing is a barrier to obtaining
needed health care.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ Brook, Robert H., John E. Ware, William H. Rogers, Emmett
B. Keeler, Allyson Ross Davies, Cathy D. Sherbourne, George A.
Goldberg, Kathleen N. Lohr, Patricia Camp and Joseph P. Newhouse.
The Effect of Coinsurance on the Health of Adults: Results from the
RAND Health Insurance Experiment. Santa Monica, CA: RAND
Corporation, 1984. Available at: https://www.rand.org/pubs/reports/R3055.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We set forth in this proposed rule the reductions in the maximum
annual limitation on cost sharing for silver plan variations.
Consistent with our analysis in previous Payment Notices, we developed
three model silver level QHPs and analyzed the impact on their AVs of
the reductions described in the Affordable Care Act to the estimated
2018 maximum annual limitation on cost sharing for self only coverage
$7,350. We do not believe these changes would result in a significant
economic impact. Therefore, we do not believe the provisions related to
cost-sharing reductions in this proposed rule would have an impact on
the program established by and described in the 2015, 2016, and 2017
Payment Notices.
We also proposed the premium adjustment percentage for the 2018
benefit year. Section 156.130(e) provides that the premium adjustment
percentage is the percentage (if any) by which the average per capita
premium for health insurance coverage for the preceding calendar year
exceeds such average per capita premium for health insurance for 2013.
The annual premium adjustment percentage sets the rate of increase for
three parameters detailed in the Affordable Care Act: The annual
limitation on cost sharing (defined at Sec. 156.130(a)), the required
contribution percentage used to determine eligibility for certain
exemptions under section 5000A of the Code, and the assessable payments
under sections 4980H(a) and 4980H(b). We believe that the proposed 2018
premium adjustment percentage of 16.17303196 percent is well within the
parameters used in the modeling of the Affordable Care Act, and we do
not expect that these proposed provisions would alter CBO's March 2015
baseline estimates of the budget impact.
11. Qualified Health Plan Minimum Standards
In Sec. 156.200(c), we propose to specify that, to satisfy the
requirements in these sections, QHPs must be offered through the
applicable Exchange at both the silver and gold coverage levels
throughout each service area in which the issuer applying for
certification offers coverage through the Exchange. Since most issuers
are already following these requirements, it is unlikely that there
would be any impact on premiums, while ensuring continued plan choice
for consumers.
In the 2017 Payment Notice, we finalized a network breadth policy
through which we would categorize networks based on their relative
size, in addition to other policies. We seek comment regarding how this
should apply to ``integrated plans,'' such as staff model HMOs. We
expect the policy would continue to improve transparency for consumers
and the shopping experience.
Proposed Sec. 156.272 would establish as a condition of
certification that QHP issuers must make their QHPs available for
enrollment through the Exchanges for the duration of the timeframe for
which the plan was certified, unless a basis for suppression under
Sec. 156.815 applies. QHP issuers in FFEs and FF-SHOPs that do not
comply with this requirement could be subject to CMPs or a two-year
ban. This would raise costs or burdens on issuers, who could be forced
to remain on the Exchange or face a 2-year ban or CMPs in certain
situations. However, we do not believe that violations of the proposed
requirement of full year participation under Sec. 156.272 are
happening on a wide scale, which minimizes any potential impact.
12. Medical Loss Ratio
In this proposed rule, we propose to amend Sec. 158.121 to align
with the requirement that, beginning in 2014, issuers must offer non-
grandfathered coverage for a consecutive 12-month period and enable
more issuers to defer reporting of the experience of new business in
the MLR calculation. In general, deferring reporting of new business
effectively enables new and rapidly growing issuers to use a 4-year,
rather than a 3-year average MLR. This in turn increases the likelihood
that low MLRs in the initial years will be offset by higher MLRs in
later years and that only a portion of the rebates generated by the
experience of initial years will ultimately be paid. Deferring
reporting of new business also eliminates the rebate payment following
the first year and instead spreads it over the following 3 years (that
is, includes the rebate attributable to year 1 with rebates payable for
years 2 through 4). Based on data from the 2013 and 2014 MLR reporting
years, we estimate that allowing issuers to defer experience of newly
sold policies with full 12 months of experience when 50 percent or more
of an issuer's earned premium comes from such policies could reduce
total rebate payments from issuers to consumers over a 4-year period by
up to a total of $11.6 million.
We additionally propose to amend Sec. 158.240 to allow issuers the
option of limiting the total rebate payable over the course of a 3-year
period with respect to a given calendar year, as well as to clarify
references to single-year and preliminary MLRs in Sec. 158.232. We
estimate no impact from the proposed clarifications to Sec. 158.232
because these clarifications are intended to simplify reporting for
purposes of calculating the rebate limit proposed in Sec. 158.240 and
do not change the manner in which issuers currently calculate the
credibility adjustment. Because the proposed amendments to Sec.
158.240 generally would only impact new and rapidly growing established
issuers whose MLRs initially fall below the standard and increase in
subsequent years, the magnitude of the impact of the proposed limit on
the rebate liability would depend on how issuers' enrollment and MLRs
change in 2015 and later. Because the majority of new issuers have
expanded or intend to expand into new markets in 2014 or later, the
2014 and earlier MLR reports, which are the only data source available
at this time, are an insufficient source of data on the types of
issuers that would be impacted by this proposal. In addition,
significant reporting differences exist between 2011-13 and 2014 and
later MLR data, and some rebates that were paid for 2014 are likely to
be outliers and may therefore exaggerate estimates. Consequently, while
we expect the proposal to decrease the amount of rebates paid by new
and rapidly growing issuers to consumers, we are not able to estimate
the magnitude of the decrease with a high degree of certainty.
D. Regulatory Alternatives Considered
In developing the policies contained in this proposed rule, we
considered numerous alternatives to the presented proposals. Below we
discuss the key regulatory alternatives that we considered.
For the proposals in parts 146, 147 and 148, we considered not
changing our interpretation of what constitutes a market withdrawal
when an issuer transfers all of its products to a related issuer or
replaces all of its products with new products with changes that exceed
the scope of a uniform modification of coverage. However, this approach
could result in fewer product offerings, as issuers would be obligated
[[Page 61525]]
to leave the market due to the 5-year prohibition on issuing coverage
after discontinuing all coverage in a market. This approach could also
unnecessarily restrict issuer corporate structuring transactions,
reduce market competition and consumer choice, and conflict with
States' approaches.
For the proposals in part 147, we considered not changing the
uniform child age band. This approach would have maintained the use of
a single age band for rating purposes for all individuals age 0 through
20. We determined that creating multiple child age bands more
accurately reflects the health risk of children and minimizes the
increase in premium attributable to age when an individual attains age
21.
For the proposals in part 153, we considered various approaches to
addressing partial year enrollment in the risk adjustment model,
including separate models by enrollment duration, and interaction
factors of enrollment duration combined with high- and medium-cost
conditions. However, based on commenter feedback to the March 31, 2016
White Paper and our analysis of MarketScan[supreg] data, HHS determined
that the enrollment duration additive factors are preferred and will
best address partial year enrollees in the short term.
We considered four different hybrid models for the inclusion of
prescription drugs in the HHS risk adjustment methodology: An
imputation only model, a prescription drug-dominant model, a flexible
model, and a severity only model. Commenters to the White Paper
suggested that we use the imputation only model or the flexible model,
with constraints to prevent an issuer from being compensated less for
recording prescription drug utilization for an enrollee. We have
imposed constraints on the flexible model so that the coefficients for
the drug terms are greater than zero, preventing such a situation. We
are adding two severity-only drug-diagnosis pairs on top of ten
imputation/severity drug-diagnosis pairs.
We considered a threshold of $1 million and a coinsurance rate of
80 percent for the proposed high-cost enrollee pool in the risk
adjustment proposal, which was supported by commenters to the White
Paper. However, many more commenters suggested that the high-cost
enrollee pool could be subject to gaming among issuers and would not
incentivize cost containment efforts. Therefore, we are proposing a
higher threshold of $2 million and a 60 percent coinsurance rate for
the high-cost enrollee pool in the risk adjustment model. We also
considered a PMPM adjustment to the transfer formula for this high-cost
enrollee pool, but we are proposing a percent of per member per month
premium adjustment to the transfer formula, to better align with the
transfer formula's adjustment at the billable member month premiums.
We considered using only 2014 MarketScan[supreg] data for 2018
recalibration. However, commenters to the White Paper preferred to
continue using the three-year blended approach. Commenters also
supported issuing final coefficients in guidance, which we have
proposed to do and are seeking comment on the timing of those final
coefficients.
We considered alternative methodologies to recalibrating the 2019
risk adjustment model using EDGE summary level data instead of enrollee
level data, as was proposed by one commenter to the White Paper.
However, using EDGE summary level data would not enhance the existing
risk adjustment models, as the model specifications would need to be
known to create the models, and thus would prevent exploratory research
and other types of analyses required for research, development and
refinement of the risk adjustment models for their continuous
improvement. Further, if summary level data were used, quality checks
could not be performed on the input data, and additional improvements
to address partial year enrollment could not be explored.
For the proposals regarding standardized options, we considered
taking no action in designing additional plans per metal level to
account for State cost-sharing laws. However, without this proposed
change, issuers in States with conflicting cost-sharing laws would not
be able to offer standardized options. We believe that it is important
for issuers in each State in which an FFE or SBE-FP operates to have
the choice to offer standardized options. We also considered designing
a set of standardized plans for each State. However, HHS currently
lacks the resources to propose this option.
For the proposal at Sec. 155.205(c)(2)(iii), we considered
requiring QHP issuers and web-brokers subject to the rule to look only
to the LEP populations in the State where the entity is registered or
licensed, such as through an issuer's Health Insurance Oversight System
(HIOS) ID, when identifying the languages in which taglines must be
provided under the rule. However, we believe that using such a
definition would not recognize that many insurance companies use a
common technology platform for their issuers across multiple States,
and would pose difficult operational challenges for many such entities
without significantly improving access.
For the proposal at Sec. Sec. 155.220 and 156.265, we considered
not requiring differential display of standardized options by web-
brokers or QHP issuers. However, this would have made it less likely
that consumers using a non-Exchange Web site would be aware of the
standardized options available. We believe that the requirement for
differential display of standardized options will help consumers using
non-Exchange Web sites more easily compare and choose amongst the
available plans. We note that we would not require the manner of
differentiation to be identical to the one adopted for displaying
standardized options on HealthCare.gov, and issuers are not required to
offer, and consumers are not required to purchase, standardized
options.
For proposals at Sec. 155.400, we considered alternatives to our
proposal to allow issuers the option to extend binder payment deadlines
when issuers experience volume-related backlogs or technical errors
that make it difficult for enrollees to pay their binder payments on
time. For example, we considered relying on ad hoc solutions, such as
extensions or remedies resembling reinstatements, when problems arise.
We believed, however, that codifying the proposed optional extensions
will give issuers and consumers alike more certainty and provide for
better remedies when consumers experience difficulties during the
enrollment process.
For the proposals at Sec. 155.420, we considered not codifying the
existing special enrollment periods for consumers who are or were a
victim of domestic abuse or spousal abandonment and need to enroll in
coverage apart from his or her abuser or abandoner, have been
determined ineligible for Medicaid or CHIP, have been impacted by a
material plan or benefit display error, or have resolved a citizenship
or immigration inconsistency post-expiration, all currently provided
through guidance. We also considered not standardizing the availability
of the special enrollment period for Indians to non-Indian dependents
enrolling at the same time as the Indian. However, we believe that
codifying these special enrollment periods provides needed permanence
and clarity for these special enrollment periods. This is important to
ensure that they continue to be available, are equitably applied across
Exchanges, and that consumers, assisters, issuers, and other
stakeholders
[[Page 61526]]
have a common understanding of the parameters and coverage effective
dates associated with each of these special enrollment periods. In this
rule, we seek to ensure transparency, stability, and appropriate
utilization of special enrollment periods by codifying certain special
enrollment periods that we have made available in prior guidance. After
weighing our options, we determined that codifying these currently
available special enrollment periods is in the best interest of
consumers and other Exchange stakeholders.
We considered alternatives to amending Sec. 155.430 in order to
protect consumers from having their coverage rescinded for reasons the
FFE does not consider reasonable, such as rescissions based on
allegations of fraud, despite the disputed information having been
verified by the FFE during the enrollment process. One alternative was
to issue guidance that would explain to issuers that rescissions based
on claims of fraud arising from information provided to and verified by
the FFE would not be permissible. Another alternative considered was to
work with issuers to prevent rescissions considered unreasonable by the
FFE, but to decline to pursue rulemaking. After considering all
options, we chose to amend Sec. 155.430(b)(2)(iii) in order to provide
more consumer protection.
For the proposals related to SHOPs, we considered maintaining
several provisions for the SHOPs. Specifically, we considered
maintaining the current requirements at Sec. 155.725(g)(1) and (2),
which provide that an employee who becomes a qualified employee outside
of the initial or annual open enrollment period must have an enrollment
period beginning on the first day of becoming a qualified employee, and
require the effective date of coverage to generally be determined in
accordance with Sec. 155.725(h). Similarly, we considered maintaining
the current requirements at Sec. 155.230(d)(2), which require paper
notices to be the default option for SHOPs, so that employers and
employees must opt into electronic notices. Finally, we considered
maintaining existing requirements in State-based Exchanges using the
Federal platform for SHOP eligibility, enrollment, or premium
aggregation functions. However, we decided to propose the policies in
this proposed rule in order to ensure that employers do not exceed the
waiting period limits under Sec. 147.116, to provide SHOPs with more
cost-effective alternatives to sending notices, to ensure efficient
SHOP operations, and to minimize the potential customization costs that
could be associated with permitting State-based Exchanges to use the
Federal platform for SHOP functions.
We considered alternative proposals for increasing the de minimis
range for bronze plans. We considered simply increasing the de minimis
range for bronze plans to extend above 62 percentage points without
requiring that plans include certain plan design features in order to
qualify for the extended de minimis range. This option could give
issuers, and as a result consumers, more flexibility and choice with
regards to bronze plan designs. However, we believe that the proposed
policy better ensures that bronze plans are not less generous than
catastrophic plans.
For the proposals at Sec. 156.200(c)(1), we propose to specify
that, to satisfy the requirements in that section, QHPs must be offered
through an Exchange at both the silver and gold coverage levels
throughout each service area in which the issuer offers coverage
through the Exchange. We could have opted not to specify this in
regulation; however, issuers could have misinterpreted the policy and
not offered a silver and gold plan in the applicable service areas.
This could result in fewer silver and gold plans available for
consumers to select, and thus less choice for consumers. It also could
complicate the calculation of the APTC for an individual market
consumer. By revising our regulation, we ensure that consumers have an
adequate choice of QHPs at different coverage levels to select from and
that we are able to calculate APTC for all eligible individual market
consumers.
For the proposals at Sec. 156.272 to require issuer participation
for the entirety of the period for which the plan was certified, we
considered taking no action. However, we are concerned that inaction
could result in limited access for qualified individuals and qualified
employees outside of open enrollment periods.
For the proposed changes to Sec. 156.290, we considered not making
any changes. However, that could have led to enrollees in plans that
are not certified for a subsequent, consecutive certification cycle not
knowing as soon as possible that they may have to choose another plan
during the annual open enrollment period.
For the proposals in part 158, we considered an alternative
proposal for addressing the impact of MLR and rebate calculation on new
and rapidly growing issuers. Specifically, we considered allowing new
and rapidly growing issuers to include in the MLR calculation rebates
they paid within the first 2 years of entering or expanding in a State
market, which would be similar to how the 3-year average calculation
was phased in for all issuers when the MLR requirements were first
implemented. However, in contrast to the initial years of
implementation of the MLR requirements, when all issuers had to
calculate their first two MLRs using only 1 or 2 years of data,
presently, as described in more detail in the preamble to this proposed
rule, only a small subset of issuers are affected by the 3-year
averaging in a manner that merits an adjustment. We note that inclusion
of rebates paid for prior years in the MLR calculation for the current
year is generally not appropriate for established and certain new
issuers, as it would distort the 3-year average and effectively lower
the MLR standards required by section 2718 of the PHS Act. Therefore,
the prior year rebate approach would need to be limited to only the new
and growing issuers that are adversely affected by the 3-year
averaging. In practice, it would be extremely challenging to define
enrollment or premium levels, growth rates, and patterns in year-over-
year changes in MLRs that would appropriately distinguish new and
growing issuers that are disadvantaged by the 3-year averaging from
issuers that merely experience ordinary enrollment fluctuations or
otherwise would gain an unfair advantage by being able to include prior
year rebates in their MLR calculation. Because the proposed approach of
limiting the total rebate liability payable with respect to a given
calendar year is designed to only benefit new and rapidly growing
issuers who are negatively impacted by the 3-year averaging, we believe
that the proposed approach is a more effective and objective way to
reduce barriers to entry and promote competition in health insurance
markets while at the same time preserving the protections promised to
consumers by the law.
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.) requires
agencies to prepare an initial regulatory flexibility analysis to
describe the impact of the proposed rule on small entities, unless the
head of the agency can certify that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The RFA generally defines a ``small entity'' as: (1) A proprietary firm
meeting the size standards of the Small Business Administration (SBA);
(2) a not-for-profit organization that is not dominant in its field; or
(3) a small government jurisdiction with a population of less than
50,000. States and individuals are
[[Page 61527]]
not included in the definition of ``small entity.'' HHS uses a change
in revenues of more than 3 to 5 percent as its measure of significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In this proposed rule, we propose standards for the risk adjustment
program, which are intended to stabilize premiums as insurance market
reforms are implemented and Exchanges facilitate increased enrollment.
Because we believe that insurance firms offering comprehensive health
insurance policies generally exceed the size thresholds for ``small
entities'' established by the SBA, we do not believe that an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis is required for such firms.
For purposes of the RFA, we expect the following types of entities
to be affected by this proposed rule:
Health insurance issuers.
Group health plans.
We believe that health insurance issuers and group health plans
would be classified under the North American Industry Classification
System code 524114 (Direct Health and Medical Insurance Carriers).
According to SBA size standards, entities with average annual receipts
of $38.5 million or less would be considered small entities for these
North American Industry Classification System codes. Issuers could
possibly be classified in 621491 (HMO Medical Centers) and, if this is
the case, the SBA size standard would be $32.5 million or less.
Based on data from MLR annual report submissions for the 2014 MLR
reporting year, approximately 118 out of 525 issuers of health
insurance coverage nationwide had total premium revenue of $38.5
million or less. This estimate may overstate the actual number of small
health insurance companies that may be affected, since almost 80
percent of these small companies belong to larger holding groups, and
many if not all of these small companies are likely to have non-health
lines of business that would result in their revenues exceeding $38.5
million. Only nine of these 118 potentially small entities, all of them
part of larger holding groups, are estimated to experience a decrease
in the rebate amount under the proposed amendments to the MLR
provisions of this proposed rule in part 158. Therefore, we do not
expect the proposed provisions of this rule regarding MLR to affect a
substantial number of small entities.
In this proposed rule, we proposed standards for employers that
choose to participate in a SHOP Exchange. The SHOPs generally are
limited by statute to employers with at least one but not more than 50
employees, unless a State opts to provide that employers with 1 to 100
employees are ``small employers.'' For this reason, we expect that many
employers who would be affected by the proposals would meet the SBA
standard for small entities. We do not believe that the proposals
impose requirements on employers offering health insurance through a
SHOP that are more restrictive than the current requirements on small
businesses offering employer sponsored insurance. We believe the
processes that we have established for SHOP eligibility and enrollment
constitute the minimum amount of requirements necessary to implement
the SHOP program and accomplish our policy goals, and that no
appropriate regulatory alternatives could be developed to further
lessen the compliance burden.
F. Unfunded Mandates
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take
certain other actions before issuing a proposed rule that includes any
Federal mandate that may result in expenditures in any 1 year by State,
local, or Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. In 2016, that threshold is approximately $146 million.
Although we have not been able to quantify all costs, the combined
administrative cost and user fee impact on State, local, or Tribal
governments and the private sector may be above the threshold. Earlier
portions of this RIA constitute our UMRA analysis.
G. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates a proposed rule that imposes
substantial direct costs on State and local governments, preempts State
law, or otherwise has Federalism implications. Because States have
flexibility in designing their Exchanges and Exchange-related programs,
State decisions will ultimately influence both administrative expenses
and overall premiums. States are not required to establish an Exchange
or risk adjustment program. For States that elected to operate an
Exchange or, risk adjustment program, much of the initial cost of
creating these programs were funded by Exchange Planning and
Establishment Grants. After establishment, Exchanges must be
financially self-sustaining, with revenue sources at the discretion of
the State. Current State Exchanges charge user fees to issuers.
In HHS's view, while this proposed rule would not impose
substantial direct requirement costs on State and local governments,
this regulation has Federalism implications due to direct effects on
the distribution of power and responsibilities among the State and
Federal governments relating to determining standards relating to
health insurance that is offered in the individual and small group
markets. However, HHS anticipates that the Federalism implications (if
any) are substantially mitigated because under the statute and our
proposals, States have choices regarding the structure, governance, and
operations of their Exchanges and risk adjustment program. For example,
our proposals relating to binder payment rules and termination of
coverage are intended to provide State Exchanges with significant
flexibility. Additionally, the Affordable Care Act does not require
States to establish these programs; if a State elects not to establish
any of these programs or is not approved to do so, HHS must establish
and operate the programs in that State. Additionally, States have the
option to establish and operate their own SHOP without also
establishing and operating their own individual market Exchange. Our
proposals requiring SBE-FPs to establish requirements that are
consistent with certain Federal requirements when using the Federal
platform for certain SHOP functions would not apply should the State
decide not to use the Federal platform for these SHOP functions.
In compliance with the requirement of Executive Order 13132 that
agencies examine closely any policies that may have Federalism
implications or limit the policy making discretion of the States, HHS
has engaged in efforts to consult with and work cooperatively with
affected States, including participating in conference calls with and
attending conferences of the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners, and consulting with State insurance officials on an
individual basis.
While developing this proposed rule, HHS has attempted to balance
the States' interests in regulating health insurance issuers, and
Congress' intent to provide access to Affordable Insurance Exchanges
for consumers in every State. By doing so, it is HHS's view that we
have complied with the requirements of Executive Order 13132.
States will continue to license, monitor, and regulate agents and
brokers, both inside and outside of Exchanges. All State laws related
to
[[Page 61528]]
agents and brokers, including State laws related to appointments,
contractual relationships with issuers, licensing, marketing, conduct,
and fraud will continue to apply.
H. Congressional Review Act
This proposed rule is subject to the Congressional Review Act
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801, et seq.), which specifies that before a rule can
take effect, the Federal agency promulgating the rule shall submit to
each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General a report
containing a copy of the rule along with other specified information,
and has been transmitted to Congress and the Comptroller for review.
List of Subjects
45 CFR Parts 144, 146, and 147
Health care, Health insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
45 CFR Part 148
Administrative practice and procedure, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 153
Administrative practice and procedure, Health care, Health
insurance, Health records, Organization and functions (Government
agencies), Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 154
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 155
Administrative practice and procedure, Advertising, Brokers,
Conflict of interest, Consumer protection, Grant administration, Grant
programs--health, Health care, Health insurance, Health maintenance
organizations (HMO), Health records, Hospitals, Indians, Individuals
with disabilities, Intergovernmental relations, Loan programs--health,
Medicaid, Organization and functions (Government agencies), Public
assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Technical assistance, Women and youth.
45 CFR Part 156
Administrative practice and procedure, Advertising, American
Indian/Alaska Natives, Conflict of interest, Consumer protection, Cost-
sharing reductions, Grant programs--health, Grants administration,
Health care, Health insurance, Health maintenance organization (HMO),
Health records, Hospitals, Individuals with disabilities, Loan
programs--health, Medicaid, Organization and functions (Government
agencies), Public assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, State and local governments, Sunshine Act, Technical
assistance, Women, Youth.
45 CFR Part 157
Employee benefit plans, Health insurance, Health maintenance
organizations (HMO), Health records, Hospitals, Indians, Individuals
with disabilities, Medicaid, Organization and functions (Government
agencies), Public assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Technical assistance, Women and youth.
45 CFR Part 158
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Health care, Health
insurance, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Health
and Human Services proposes to amend 45 CFR parts 144, 146, 147, 148,
153, 154, 155, 156, 157 and 158 as set forth below.
PART 144--REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE
0
1. The authority citation for part 144 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791, and 2792 of the
Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg-63, 300gg-
91, and 300gg-92.
0
2. Section 144.103 is amended by revising the introductory text of the
definition of ``plan'' and by revising the definition of ``product'' to
read as follows:
Sec. 144.103 Definitions.
* * * * *
Plan means, with respect to a product, the pairing of the health
insurance coverage benefits under the product with a particular cost-
sharing structure, provider network, and service area. The product
comprises all plans offered with those characteristics and the
combination of the service areas for all plans offered within a product
constitutes the total service area of the product. With respect to a
plan that has been modified at the time of coverage renewal consistent
with Sec. 147.106 of this subchapter--
* * * * *
Product means a discrete package of health insurance coverage
benefits that are offered using a particular product network type (such
as health maintenance organization, preferred provider organization,
exclusive provider organization, point of service, or indemnity) within
a service area. In the case of a product that has been modified,
transferred, or replaced, the new product will be considered to be the
same as the modified, transferred, or replaced product when the changes
to the modified, transferred, or replaced product meet the standards of
Sec. 146.152(f), Sec. 147.106(e), or Sec. 148.122(g) of this
subchapter (relating to uniform modification of coverage), as
applicable.
* * * * *
PART 146--REQUIREMENTS FOR THE GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE MARKET
0
3. The authority citation for part 146 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 2702 through 2705, 2711 through 2723, 2791,
and 2792 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg-1 through 300gg-5, 300gg-11
through 300gg-23, 300gg-91, and 300gg-92).
0
4. Section 146.152 is amended by adding paragraph (d)(3) and revising
paragraph (f)(3)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 146.152 Guaranteed renewability of coverage for employers in the
group market.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (d), subject to applicable State
law, an issuer is not considered to have discontinued offering all
health insurance coverage in a market if--
(i) The issuer or a member of the issuer's controlled group
continues to offer and make available in the applicable market in the
State at least one product of the issuer that is considered to be the
same product as a product the issuer had been offering (as defined in
Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter). For purposes of this section, the
term controlled group means a group of two or more persons that is
treated as a single employer under section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or
414(o) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and make available at least one
product in the applicable market in the State, even if such product is
not considered to be the same product as a product the issuer had been
offering (as defined in Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter), provided the
issuer subjects that product to the rate review requirements under part
154 of this title (to the extent otherwise
[[Page 61529]]
applicable to coverage of the same type and in the same market) as if
that part applied to that product, and reasonably identifies a
discontinued product that corresponds to the new product for purposes
of such rate review.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same health insurance issuer
(within the meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the PHS Act), or a member
of the issuer's controlled group (as defined in paragraph (d) of this
section);
* * * * *
PART 147--HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE GROUP AND
INDIVIDUAL HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETS
0
5. The authority citation for part 147 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791, and 2792 of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg-63, 300gg-
91, and 300gg-92), as amended.
0
6. Section 147.102 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (e) to
read as follows:
Sec. 147.102 Fair health insurance premiums.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Child age bands. (i) A single age band for individuals age 0
through 14.
(ii) One-year age bands for individuals age 15 through 20.
* * * * *
(e) Uniform age rating curves. Each State may establish a uniform
age rating curve in the individual or small group market, or both
markets, for rating purposes under paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this
section. If a State does not establish a uniform age rating curve or
provide information on such age curve in accordance with Sec. 147.103,
a default uniform age rating curve specified in guidance by the
Secretary to reflect market patterns in the individual and small group
markets will apply in that State that takes into account the rating
variation permitted for age under State law.
* * * * *
0
7. Section 147. 104 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 147.104 Guaranteed availability of coverage.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Limited open enrollment periods. A health insurance issuer in
the individual market must provide a limited open enrollment period for
the events described in Sec. 155.420(d) of this subchapter, excluding
Sec. Sec. 155.420(d)(3) of this subchapter (concerning citizenship
status), 155.420(d)(8) of this subchapter (concerning Indians),
155.420(d)(9) of this subchapter (concerning exceptional
circumstances), and 155.420(d)(13) of this subchapter (concerning
eligibility for insurance affordability programs or enrollment in the
Exchange).
* * * * *
0
8. Section 147.106 is amended by adding paragraph (d)(3) and revising
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 147.106 Guaranteed renewability of coverage.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (d), subject to applicable State
law, an issuer is not considered to have discontinued offering all
health insurance coverage in a market if--
(i) The issuer or a member of the issuer's controlled group
continues to offer and make available in the applicable market in the
State at least one product of the issuer that is considered to be the
same product as a product the issuer had been offering (as defined in
Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter). For purposes of this section, the
term controlled group means a group of two or more persons that is
treated as a single employer under section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or
414(o) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and make available at least one
product in the applicable market in the State, even if such product is
not considered to be the same product as a product the issuer had been
offering (as defined in Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter), provided the
issuer subjects that product to the rate review requirements under part
154 of this title (to the extent otherwise applicable to coverage of
the same type and in the same market) as if that part applied to that
product, and reasonably identifies a discontinued product that
corresponds to the new product for purposes of such rate review.
(e) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same health insurance issuer
(within the meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the PHS Act) or member of
the issuer's controlled group (as defined in paragraph (d) of this
section);
* * * * *
PART 148--REQUIREMENTS FOR THE INDIVIDUAL HEALTH INSURANCE MARKET
0
9. The authority citation for part 148 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 2701 through 2763, 2791 and 2792 of the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg-63, 300gg-91, and
300gg-92), as amended.
0
10. Section 148.122 is amended by adding paragraph (e)(4) and revising
paragraph (g)(3)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 148.122 Guaranteed renewability of individual health insurance
coverage.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(4) For purposes of this paragraph (e), subject to applicable State
law, an issuer is not considered to have discontinued offering all
health insurance coverage in a market if--
(i) The issuer or a member of the issuer's controlled group
continues to offer and make available in the applicable market in the
State at least one product of the issuer that is considered to be the
same product as a product the issuer had been offering (as defined in
Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter). For purposes of this section, the
term controlled group means a group of two or more persons that is
treated as a single employer under section 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), or
414(o) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended; or
(ii) The issuer continues to offer and make available at least one
product in the applicable market in the State, even if such product is
not considered to be the same product as a product the issuer had been
offering (as defined in Sec. 144.103 of this subchapter), provided the
issuer subjects that product to the rate review requirements under part
154 of this title (to the extent otherwise applicable to coverage of
the same type and in the same market) as if that part applied to that
product, and reasonably identifies a discontinued product that
corresponds to the new product for purposes of such rate review.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The product is offered by the same health insurance issuer
(within the meaning of section 2791(b)(2) of the PHS Act) or member of
the issuer's controlled group (as defined in paragraph (e) of this
section);
* * * * *
[[Page 61530]]
PART 153--STANDARDS RELATED TO REINSURANCE, RISK CORRIDORS, AND
RISK ADJUSTMENT UNDER THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
0
11. The authority citation for part 153 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1311, 1321, 1341-1343, Pub. L. 111-148, 24
Stat. 119.
Sec. 153.20 [Amended]
0
12. Section 153.20 is amended by removing the definition of ``Large
employer''.
0
13. Section 153.320 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and
(b)(1)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 153.320 Federally certified risk adjustment methodology.
(a) * * *
(1) The risk adjustment methodology is developed by HHS and
published in advance of the benefit year in rulemaking; or
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Draft factors to be employed in the model, including but not
limited to demographic factors, diagnostic factors, and utilization
factors, if any, the dataset(s) to be used to calculate final
coefficients, and the date by which final coefficients will be released
in guidance;
* * * * *
0
14. Section 153.610 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 153.610 Risk adjustment issuer requirements.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) Remit to HHS an amount equal to the product of its monthly
billable enrollment in the risk adjustment covered plan multiplied by
the per-enrollee-per-month risk adjustment user fee specified in the
annual HHS notice of benefit and payment parameters for the applicable
benefit year.
0
15. Section 153.630 is amended by--
0
a. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(7)(iii) and (iv) as paragraphs
(b)(7)(iv) and (v), respectively;
0
b. Adding a new paragraph (b)(7)(iii); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (d).
The addition and revision read as follows:
Sec. 153.630 Data validation requirements when HHS operates risk
adjustment.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(7) * * *
(iii) Beginning in the 2018 benefit year, validating enrollee
health status through review of all relevant paid pharmacy claims;
* * * * *
(d) Risk adjustment data validation disputes and appeals. (1)
Within 15 calendar days of notification of the initial validation audit
sample determined by HHS, in the manner set forth by HHS, an issuer
must confirm the sample or file a discrepancy report to dispute the
initial validation audit sample determined by HHS.
(2) Within 30 calendar days of notification of the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate,
in the manner set forth by HHS, an issuer must confirm the audit or
error rate, or file a discrepancy report to dispute the findings of a
second validation audit or the calculation of a risk score error rate
as result of risk adjustment data validation.
(3) An issuer may appeal the findings of a second validation audit
or the calculation of a risk score error rate as result of risk
adjustment data validation, under the process set forth in Sec.
156.1220 of this subchapter.
* * * * *
PART 154--HEALTH INSURANCE ISSUER RATE INCREASES: DISCLOSURE AND
REVIEW REQUIREMENTS
0
16. The authority citation for part 154 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Section 2794 of the Public Health Service Act (42
U.S.C. 300gg-94).
0
17. Section 154.102 is amended by revising the definition of
``product'' to read as follows:
Sec. 154.102 Definitions.
* * * * *
Product means a package of health insurance coverage benefits with
a discrete set of rating and pricing methodologies offered in a State.
The term product includes any product that is discontinued and newly
filed within a 12-month period when the changes to the product meet the
standards of Sec. 147.106(e)(2) or (3) of this subchapter (relating to
uniform modification of coverage).
* * * * *
PART 155--EXCHANGE ESTABLISHMENT STANDARDS AND OTHER RELATED
STANDARDS UNDER THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
0
18. The authority citation for part 155 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care Act, sections 1301,
1302, 1303, 1304, 1311, 1312, 1313, 1321, 1322, 1331, 1332, 1334,
1402, 1411, 1412, 1413, Pub. L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 119 (42 U.S.C.
18021-18024, 18031-18033, 18041-18042, 18051, 18054, 18071, and
18081-18083).
0
19. Section 155.20 is amended by revising the definition of
``standardized option'' to read as follows:
Sec. 155.20 Definitions.
* * * * *
Standardized option means a QHP offered for sale through an
individual market Exchange that either--
(1) Has a standardized cost-sharing structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking; or
(2) Is a high deductible health plan with a standardized cost-
sharing structure specified by HHS in rulemaking or in HHS guidance
issued solely to modify the cost-sharing structure specified by HHS in
rulemaking to the extent necessary to align with high deductible health
plan requirements under section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended, and HHS actuarial value requirements.
* * * * *
0
20. Section 155.200 is amended by adding paragraph (f)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 155.200 Functions of an Exchange.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(4) A State Exchange on the Federal platform that utilizes the
Federal platform for certain SHOP functions, as set forth in paragraphs
(f)(4)(i) through (vii), must--
(i) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP eligibility,
enrollment, or premium aggregation functions, establish standard
processes for premium calculation, premium payment, and premium
collection that are consistent with the requirements applicable in a
Federally-facilitated SHOP under Sec. 155.705(b)(4);
(ii) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment or
premium aggregation functions, require its QHP issuers to make any
changes to rates in accordance with the timeline applicable in a
Federally-facilitated SHOP under Sec. 155.705(b)(6)(i)(A);
(iii) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions, establish minimum participation rate requirements and
calculation methodologies that are consistent with those applicable in
a Federally-facilitated SHOP under Sec. 155.705(b)(10);
(iv) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment or
premium aggregation functions, establish employer contribution
methodologies that are consistent with the
[[Page 61531]]
methodologies applicable in a Federally-facilitated SHOP under Sec.
155.705(b)(11)(ii);
(v) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions, establish annual employee open enrollment period
requirements that are consistent with Sec. 155.725(e)(2);
(vi) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP enrollment
functions, establish effective dates of coverage for an initial group
enrollment or a group renewal that are consistent with the effective
dates of coverage applicable in a Federally-facilitated SHOP under
Sec. 155.725(h)(2); and
(vii) If utilizing the Federal platform for SHOP eligibility,
enrollment, or premium aggregation functions, establish policies for
the termination of SHOP coverage or enrollment that are consistent with
the requirements applicable in a Federally-facilitated SHOP under Sec.
155.735.
0
21. Section 155.205 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(A)
and (B) to read as follows:
Sec. 155.205 Consumer assistance tools and programs of an Exchange.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) * * *
(A) For Exchanges and QHP issuers, beginning no later than the
first day of the individual market open enrollment period for the 2017
benefit year, this standard also includes taglines on Web site content
and any document that is critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care services through a QHP for qualified
individuals, applicants, qualified employers, qualified employees, or
enrollees. A document is deemed to be critical for obtaining health
insurance coverage or access to health care services through a QHP if
it is required to be provided by law or regulation to a qualified
individual, applicant, qualified employer, qualified employee, or
enrollee. Such taglines must indicate the availability of language
services in at least the top 15 languages spoken by the limited English
proficient population of the relevant State or States, as determined in
guidance published by the Secretary. If an Exchange is operated by an
entity operating multiple Exchanges, or relies on an eligibility or
enrollment platform that is relied on by multiple Exchanges, the
Exchange may aggregate the limited English proficient populations
across all the States served by the entity that operates the Exchange
or its eligibility or enrollment platform to determine the top 15
languages required for taglines. A QHP issuer may aggregate the limited
English proficient populations across all States served by the health
insurance issuers within the issuer's controlled group (as defined
under Sec. 147.106(d)(3)(i) of this subchapter), whether or not those
health insurance issuers offer plans through the Exchange in each of
those States, to determine the top 15 languages required for taglines.
Exchanges and QHP issuers may satisfy tagline requirements with respect
to Web site content if they post a Web link prominently on their home
page that directs individuals to the full text of the taglines
indicating how individuals may obtain language assistance services, and
if they also include taglines on any critical standalone document
linked to or embedded in the Web site.
(B) For an agent or broker subject to Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i),
beginning on the first day of the individual market open enrollment
period for the 2017 benefit year, or when such entity has been
registered with the Exchange for at least 1 year, whichever is later,
this standard also includes taglines on Web site content and any
document that is critical for obtaining health insurance coverage or
access to health care services through a QHP for qualified individuals,
applicants, qualified employers, qualified employees, or enrollees. A
document is deemed to be critical for obtaining health insurance
coverage or access to health care services through a QHP if it is
required to be provided by law or regulation to a qualified individual,
applicant, qualified employer, qualified employee, or enrollee. Such
taglines must indicate the availability of language services in at
least the top 15 languages spoken by the limited English proficient
population of the relevant State or States, as determined in guidance
published by the Secretary. An agent or broker subject to Sec.
155.220(c)(3)(i) that is licensed in and serving multiple States may
aggregate the limited English populations in the States it serves to
determine the top 15 languages required for taglines. An agent or
broker subject to Sec. 155.220(c)(3)(i) may satisfy tagline
requirements with respect to Web site content if it posts a Web link
prominently on its home page that directs individuals to the full text
of the taglines indicating how individuals may obtain language
assistance services, and if it also includes taglines on any critical
standalone document linked to or embedded in the Web site.
* * * * *
0
22. Section 155.220 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (c)(3)(i)(E);
0
b. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (c)(3)(i)(F);
0
c. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (c)(3)(i)(G) and adding
``; and'' in its place;
0
d. Adding paragraphs (c)(3)(i)(H) through (M);
0
e. Revising paragraphs (c)(4)(i)(E); and
0
f. Revising paragraph (j)(2)(i).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 155.220 Ability of States to permit agents and brokers to assist
qualified individuals, qualified employers, or qualified employees
enrolling in QHPs.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3)(i) * * *
(E) Maintain audit trails and records in an electronic format for a
minimum of ten years and cooperate with any audit under this section;
* * * * *
(H) Differentially display all standardized options in accordance
with the requirements under Sec. 155.205(b)(1) in a manner consistent
with that adopted by HHS for display on the Federally-facilitated
Exchange Web site, unless HHS approves a deviation;
(I) Prominently display information provided by HHS pertaining to a
consumer's eligibility for advance payments of the premium tax credit
or cost-sharing reductions;
(J) Allow the consumer to select an amount for advance payments of
the premium tax credit, if applicable, and make related attestations in
accordance with Sec. 155.310(d)(2);
(K) Support post-enrollment activities necessary for the consumer
to effectuate his or her coverage or resolve issues related to his or
her enrollment, including discrepancies related to eligibility;
(L) Demonstrate operational readiness and compliance with
applicable requirements prior to the agent or broker's Internet Web
site being used to complete the QHP selection; and
(M) HHS may immediately suspend the agent or broker's ability to
transact information with the Exchange if HHS discovers circumstances
that pose unacceptable risk to Exchange operations or Exchange
information technology systems until the incident or breach is remedied
or sufficiently mitigated to HHS's satisfaction.
* * * * *
(4)(i) * * *
(E) Report to HHS and applicable State departments of insurance any
potential material breach of the standards in paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section, or the agreement entered into under Sec. 155.260(b), by
the agent or
[[Page 61532]]
broker accessing the Internet Web site, should it become aware of any
such potential breach. An agent or broker that provides access to its
Web site or ability to transact information with HHS to another agent
or broker Web site is responsible for ensuring that the other agent's
or broker's Web site is in compliance with this section; and
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(2)(i) Provide consumers with correct information, without omission
of material fact, regarding the Federally-facilitated Exchanges, QHPs
offered through the Federally-facilitated Exchanges, and insurance
affordability programs, and refrain from marketing or conduct that is
misleading (including by having a direct enrollment Web site that HHS
determines could mislead a consumer into believing they are visiting
HealthCare.gov), coercive, or discriminates based on race, color,
national origin, disability, age, sex, gender identity, or sexual
orientation;
* * * * *
0
23. Section 155.230 is amended by revising paragraph (d)(2) and adding
paragraph (d)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 155.230 General standards for Exchange notices.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(2) Unless otherwise required by Federal or State law, the SHOP
must provide required notices electronically or, if an employer or
employee elects, through standard mail. If notices are provided
electronically, the SHOP must comply with the requirements for
electronic notices in 42 CFR 435.918(b)(2) through (5) for the employer
or employee.
(3) In the event that an individual market Exchange or SHOP is
unable to send select required notices electronically due to technical
limitations, it may instead send these notices through standard mail,
even if an election has been made to receive such notices
electronically.
0
24. Section 155.330 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1)(ii),
(e)(2)(i) introductory text, and (g)(1) and adding paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 155.330 Eligibility redetermination during a benefit year.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) For an enrollee on whose behalf advance payments of the
premium tax credit or cost-sharing reductions are being provided,
eligibility determinations for or enrollment in Medicare, Medicaid,
CHIP, or the Basic Health Program, if a Basic Health Program is
operating in the service area of the Exchange.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this section, if
the Exchange identifies updated information regarding death, in
accordance with paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, or regarding any
factor of eligibility not regarding income, family size, or family
composition, or tax filing status, the Exchange must--
* * * * *
(iii) If the Exchange identifies updated information that the tax
filer for the enrollee's household or the tax filer's spouse did not
comply with the requirements described in Sec. 155.305(f)(4), the
Exchange when redetermining and providing notification of eligibility
for advance payments of the premium tax credit must:
(A) Follow the procedures specified in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this
section;
(B) Follow the procedures in guidance published by the Secretary;
or
(C) Follow alternative procedures approved by the Secretary based
on a showing by the Exchange that the alternative procedures would
facilitate continued enrollment in coverage with financial assistance
for which the enrollee remains eligible, provide appropriate
information about the process to the enrollee (including regarding any
action by the enrollee necessary to obtain the most accurate
redetermination of eligibility), and provide adequate program integrity
protections and safeguards for Federal tax information under section
6103 of the Internal Revenue Code with respect to the confidentiality,
disclosure, maintenance, or use of such information.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) When an eligibility redetermination in accordance with this
section results in a change in the amount of advance payments of the
premium tax credit for the benefit year, the Exchange must:
(i) Recalculate the amount of advance payments of the premium tax
credit in such a manner as to account for any advance payments already
made on behalf of the tax filer for the benefit year for which
information is available to the Exchange, such that the recalculated
advance payment amount is projected to result in total advance payments
for the benefit year that correspond to the tax filer's total projected
premium tax credit for the benefit year, calculated in accordance with
26 CFR 1.36B-3 (or, if less than zero, be set at zero); or
(ii) For benefit years through 2023, recalculate advance payments
of the premium tax credit using an alternate method that has been
approved by the Secretary.
* * * * *
0
25. Section 155.400 is amended by adding paragraph (e)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 155.400 Enrollment of qualified individuals into QHPs.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(2) Premium payment deadline extension. Exchanges may, and the
Federally-facilitated Exchange will, allow issuers experiencing billing
or enrollment problems due to high volume or technical errors to
implement a reasonable extension of the binder payment deadlines in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
* * * * *
0
26. Section 155.420 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (b)(2)(iii), (d)(1)(i) and (iii), and (d)(8);
0
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (d)(10) and adding a
semicolon in its place; and
0
c. Adding paragraphs (d)(10), (11), (12), and (13).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 155.420 Special enrollment periods.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) In the case of a qualified individual or enrollee eligible
for a special enrollment period as described in paragraph (d)(4), (5),
(9), (11), (12), or (13) of this section, the Exchange must ensure that
coverage is effective on an appropriate date based on the circumstances
of the special enrollment period.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Loses minimum essential coverage. The date of the loss of
coverage is the last day the consumer would have coverage under his or
her previous plan or coverage;
* * * * *
(iii) Loses pregnancy-related coverage described under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and (a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX)). The date of the loss of
coverage is the last day the consumer would have pregnancy-related
coverage; or
* * * * *
[[Page 61533]]
(8) The qualified individual--
(i) Who gains or maintains status as an Indian, as defined by
section 4 of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, may enroll in a
QHP or change from one QHP to another one time per month; or
(ii) Who is or becomes a dependent of an Indian, as defined by
section 4 of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act and is enrolled or
is enrolling in a QHP through an Exchange on the same application as
the Indian, may change from one QHP to another one time per month, at
the same time as the Indian;
* * * * *
(10) A qualified individual or enrollee--
(i) Is a victim of domestic abuse or spousal abandonment, as
defined by 26 CFR 1.36B-2T, as amended, including a dependent or
unmarried victim within a household, is enrolled in minimum essential
coverage and seeks to enroll in coverage separate from the perpetrator
of the abuse or abandonment; or
(ii) Is a dependent of a victim of domestic abuse or spousal
abandonment, on the same application as the victim, may enroll in
coverage at the same time as the victim;
(11) A qualified individual or dependent--
(i) Applies for coverage on the Exchange during the annual open
enrollment period or due to a qualifying life event, is assessed by the
Exchange as potentially eligible for Medicaid or the Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP), and is determined ineligible for Medicaid or
CHIP by the State Medicaid or CHIP agency either after open enrollment
has ended or more than 60 days after the qualifying event; or
(ii) Applies for coverage at the State Medicaid or CHIP agency
during the annual open enrollment period, and is determined ineligible
for Medicaid or CHIP after open enrollment has ended;
(12) The qualified individual or enrollee, or his or her dependent,
adequately demonstrates to the Exchange that a material error related
to plan benefits, service area, or premium influenced the qualified
individual's or enrollee's decision to purchase a QHP; or
(13) At the option of the Exchange, the qualified individual
provides satisfactory documentary evidence to verify his or her
eligibility for an insurance affordability program or enrollment in a
qualified health plan through the Exchange following termination of
Exchange enrollment due to a failure to verify such status within the
time period specified in Sec. 155.315 or is under 100 percent of the
Federal poverty level and did not enroll in coverage while waiting for
HHS to verify his or her citizenship, status as a national, or lawful
presence.
* * * * *
0
27. Section 155.430 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2)(iii) to
read as follows:
Sec. 155.430 Termination of Exchange enrollment or coverage.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) The enrollee's coverage is rescinded in accordance with Sec.
147.128 of this subchapter, after a QHP issuer demonstrates, to the
reasonable satisfaction of the Exchange, if required by the Exchange,
that the rescission is appropriate;
* * * * *
0
28. Section 155.505 is amended by adding paragraph (h) to read as
follows:
Sec. 155.505 General eligibility appeals requirements.
* * * * *
(h) Electronic requirements. If the Exchange appeals entity cannot
fulfill the electronic requirements of subparts C, D, F, and H of this
part related to acceptance of telephone- or Internet-based appeal
requests, the provision of appeals notices electronically, or the
secure electronic transfer of eligibility and appeal records between
appeals entities and Exchanges or Medicaid or CHIP agencies, the
Exchange appeals entity may fulfill those requirements that it cannot
fulfill electronically using a secure and expedient paper-based
process.
0
29. Section 155.555 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 155.555 Employer appeals process.
* * * * *
(b) Exchange employer appeals process. An Exchange may establish an
employer appeals process in accordance with the requirements of this
section and Sec. Sec. 155.505(f) through (h) and 155.510(a)(1) and (2)
and (c). Where an Exchange has not established an employer appeals
process, HHS will provide an employer appeals process that meets the
requirements of this section and Sec. Sec. 155.505(f) through (h) and
155.510(a)(1) and (2) and (c).
* * * * *
0
30. Section 155.725 is amended by revising paragraphs (g)(1) and (2)
and (j)(2)(i) and adding paragraph (g)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 155.725 Enrollment periods under SHOP.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) The SHOP must provide an employee who becomes a qualified
employee outside of the initial or annual open enrollment period with a
30-day enrollment period beginning on the date the qualified employer
notifies the SHOP about the newly qualified employee. Qualified
employers must notify the SHOP about a newly qualified employee on or
before the thirtieth day after the day that the employee becomes
eligible for coverage.
(2) The effective date of coverage for a QHP selection received by
the SHOP from a newly qualified employee is the first day of the month
following plan selection, unless the employee is subject to a waiting
period consistent with Sec. 147.116 of this subchapter and paragraph
(g)(3) of this section, in which case the effective date will be on the
first day of the month following the end of the waiting period, but in
no case may the effective date fail to comply with Sec. 147.116 of
this subchapter. If a newly qualified employee's waiting period ends on
the first day of a month and the employee has already made a plan
selection by that date, coverage must take effect on that date. If a
newly qualified employee makes a plan selection on the first day of a
month and any applicable waiting period has ended by that date,
coverage must be effective on that date. If a qualified employer with
variable hour employees makes regularly having a specified number of
hours of service per period, or working full-time, a condition of
employee eligibility for coverage offered through a SHOP, any
measurement period that the qualified employer elects to use under
Sec. 147.116(c)(3)(i) to determine whether an employee meets the
applicable eligibility conditions with respect to coverage offered
through the SHOP must not exceed 10 months, beginning on any date
between the employee's start date and the first day of the first
calendar month following the employee's start date.
(3) Waiting periods in a SHOP are calculated beginning on the date
the employee becomes eligible for coverage, regardless of when a
qualified employer notifies the SHOP about the newly qualified
employee, and must not exceed 60 days in length. Waiting periods in a
Federally-facilitated SHOP or a State-based SHOP that uses the Federal
platform for SHOP eligibility or enrollment functions must be 0, 15,
30, 45 or 60 days in length.
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Experiences an event described in Sec. 155.420(d)(1) (other
than paragraph
[[Page 61534]]
(d)(1)(ii)), or experiences an event described in Sec. 155.420(d)(2),
(4), (5), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), or (12);
* * * * *
0
31. Section 155.740 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 155.740 SHOP employer and employee eligibility appeals
requirements.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) The appeals entity must conduct appeals in accordance with the
requirements established in this section and Sec. Sec. 155.505(e)
through (h) and 155.510(a)(1) and (2) and (c).
* * * * *
0
32. Section 155.1090 is added to subpart K to read as follows:
Sec. 155.1090 Request for reconsideration.
(a) Request for reconsideration of denial of certification specific
to a Federally-facilitated Exchange--(1) Request for reconsideration.
The Federally-facilitated Exchanges will permit an issuer that has
submitted a complete application to a Federally-facilitated Exchange
for certification of a health plan as a QHP and is denied certification
to request reconsideration of such action.
(2) Form and manner of request. An issuer submitting a request for
reconsideration under paragraph (a)(1) of this section must submit a
written request for reconsideration to HHS, in the form and manner
specified by HHS, within 7 calendar days of the date of the written
notice of denial of certification. The issuer must include any and all
documentation the issuer wishes to provide in support of its request
with its request for reconsideration.
(3) HHS reconsideration decision. HHS will provide the issuer with
a written notice of the reconsideration decision. The decision will
constitute HHS's final determination.
(b) [Reserved]
PART 156--HEALTH INSURANCE ISSUER STANDARDS UNDER THE AFFORDABLE
CARE ACT, INCLUDING STANDARDS RELATED TO EXCHANGES
0
33. The authority citation for part 156 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care Act, sections 1301-
1304, 1311-1313, 1321-1322, 1324, 1334, 1342-1343, 1401-1402, Pub.
L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 119 (42 U.S.C. 18021-18024, 18031-18032,
18041-18042, 18044, 18054, 18061, 18063, 18071, 18082, 26 U.S.C.
36B, and 31 U.S.C. 9701).
0
34. Section 156.80 is amended by revising paragraph (d)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.80 Single risk pool.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) In general. A health insurance issuer must establish an index
rate that is effective January 1 of each calendar year for a State
market described in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section.
(i) The index rate must be based on the total combined claims costs
for providing essential health benefits within the single risk pool of
that State market.
(ii) The index rate must be adjusted on a market-wide basis for the
State based on the total expected market-wide payments and charges
under the risk adjustment program and Exchange user fees (expected to
be remitted under Sec. 156.50(b) or (c) and (d) as applicable plus the
dollar amount under Sec. 156.50(d)(3)(i) and (ii) expected to be
credited against user fees payable for that State market).
(iii) The index rate must be calibrated on a market-wide basis to
correspond to an age rating factor of 1.0, a geographic rating factor
of 1.0, and a tobacco use rating factor of 1.0, in a manner specified
by the Secretary in guidance.
(iv) The premium rate for all of the health insurance issuer's
plans in the relevant State market must use the applicable market-wide
adjusted index rate, subject only to the plan-level adjustments
permitted in paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
* * * * *
0
35. Section 156.140 is amended by revising paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.140 Levels of coverage.
* * * * *
(c) De minimis variation. The allowable variation in the AV of a
health plan that does not result in a material difference in the true
dollar value of the health plan is 2 percentage points,
except if a health plan under paragraph (b)(1) of this section (a
bronze health plan) either covers and pays for at least one major
service, other than preventive services, before the deductible or meets
the requirements to be a high deductible high plan within the meaning
of 26 U.S.C. 223(c)(2), in which case the allowable variation in AV for
such plan is -2 percentage points and +5 percentage points.
0
36. Section 156.200 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.200 QHP issuer participation standards.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) At least one QHP in the silver coverage level and at least one
QHP in the gold coverage level as described in Sec. 156.140 throughout
each service area in which it offers coverage through the Exchange;
and,
* * * * *
0
37. Section 156.235 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and
(b)(2)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 156.235 Essential community providers.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The network includes as participating practitioners at least a
minimum percentage, as specified by HHS, of available essential
community providers in each plan's service area. Multiple providers at
a single location will count as a single essential community provider
toward both the available essential community providers in the plan's
service area and the issuer's satisfaction of the essential community
provider participation standard; and
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The number of its providers that are located in Health
Professional Shortage Areas or five-digit zip codes in which 30 percent
or more of the population falls below 200 percent of the Federal
Poverty Line satisfies a minimum percentage, specified by HHS, of
available essential community providers in the plan's service area.
Multiple providers at a single location will count as a single
essential community provider toward both the available essential
community providers in the plan's service area and the issuer's
satisfaction of the essential community provider participation
standard; and
* * * * *
0
38. Section 156.265 is amended by:
0
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (b)(3)(ii);
0
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (b)(3)(iii) and adding
``; and'' in its place; and
0
c. Adding paragraph (b)(3)(iv).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 156.265 Enrollment process for qualified individuals.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(iv) Differentially display all standardized options in accordance
with the requirements under Sec. 155.205(b)(1) of this subchapter in a
manner consistent with that adopted by HHS for display on the
Federally-
[[Page 61535]]
facilitated Exchange Web site, unless HHS approves a deviation.
* * * * *
0
39. Section 156.272 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 156.272 Issuer participation for full plan year.
(a) An issuer offering a QHP through an individual market Exchange
must make the QHP available for enrollment through the Exchange for the
full plan year for which the plan was certified, including to eligible
enrollees during limited open enrollment periods, unless a basis for
suppression applies under Sec. 156.815.
(b) Unless a basis for suppression under section 156.815 applies,
an issuer offering a QHP through a SHOP must make the QHP available for
enrollment through the SHOP for the full plan year for which the QHP
was certified.
(c) An issuer offering a QHP through a Federally-facilitated
Exchange or a Federally-facilitated SHOP that does not comply with
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section may, at the discretion of HHS, be
precluded from offering QHPs in a Federally-facilitated Exchange or
Federally-facilitated SHOP for up to the two succeeding plan years.
0
40. Section 156.290 is amended by revising the section heading and
paragraphs (a) introductory text and (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 156.290 Non-certification and decertification of QHPs.
(a) Non-certification for a subsequent, consecutive certification
cycle. If a QHP issuer elects not to seek certification for a
subsequent, consecutive certification cycle with the Exchange, the QHP
issuer, at a minimum, must--
* * * * *
(b) Notice of QHP non-certification for a subsequent, consecutive
certification cycle. (1) If a QHP issuer elects not to seek
certification for a subsequent, consecutive certification cycle with
the Exchange for its QHP, the QHP issuer must provide written notice to
each enrollee.
(2) If a QHP issuer is denied certification for a subsequent,
consecutive certification cycle by the Exchange, it must provide
written notice to each enrollee within 30 days of the Exchange's denial
of certification.
* * * * *
0
41. Section 156.350 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.350 Eligibility and enrollment standards for Qualified
Health Plan issuers on State-based Exchanges on the Federal platform.
(a) * * *
(2) Section 156.285(c)(5) and (c)(8)(iii) regarding the enrollment
process for SHOP; and
* * * * *
0
42. Section 156.430 is amended by adding paragraph (h) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.430 Payment for cost-sharing reductions.
* * * * *
(h) Reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance
payments discrepancies and appeals. (1) If an issuer reports a
discrepancy and seeks to dispute the notification of the amount of
reconciliation of the cost-sharing reduction portion of advance
payments, it must report the discrepancy to HHS within 30 calendar days
of notification of the amount of reconciliation of the cost-sharing
reduction portion of advance payments as described in paragraph (e) of
this section, in the manner set forth by HHS.
(2) An issuer may appeal the amount of reconciliation of the cost-
sharing reduction portion of advance payments, under the process set
forth in Sec. 156.1220.
0
43. Section 156.715 is amended by adding paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 156.715 Compliance reviews of QHP issuer in Federally-
facilitated Exchanges.
* * * * *
(f) Failure to comply. A QHP issuer that fails to comply with a
compliance review under this section may be subject to enforcement
remedies under subpart I of this part.
0
44. Section 156.1220 is amended by--
0
a. Removing the word ``or'' at the end of paragraph (a)(1)(v);
0
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (a)(1)(vi) and adding
``; or'' in its place;
0
c. Adding paragraph (a)(1)(vii) and (viii); and
0
d. Revising paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3)(ii), and (a)(4)(ii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 156.1220 Administrative appeals.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) The findings of a second validation audit as a result of risk
adjustment data validation with respect to risk adjustment data for the
2016 benefit year and beyond; or
(viii) The calculation of a risk score error rate as a result of
risk adjustment data validation with respect to risk adjustment data
for the 2016 benefit year and beyond.
(2) Materiality threshold. Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, an issuer may file a request for reconsideration under this
section only if the amount in dispute under paragraph (a)(1)(i) through
(viii) of this section, as applicable, is equal to or exceeds 1 percent
of the applicable payment or charge listed in that paragraph (a)(1)(i)
through (viii) payable to or due from the issuer for the benefit year,
or $10,000, whichever is less.
(3) * * *
(ii) For a risk adjustment payment or charge, including an
assessment of risk adjustment user fees, the findings of a second
validation audit, or the calculation of a risk score error rate as a
result of risk adjustment data validation, within 30 calendar days of
the date of the notification under Sec. 153.310(e) of this subchapter;
* * * * *
(4) * * *
(ii) Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a
reconsideration with respect to a processing error by HHS, HHS's
incorrect application of the relevant methodology, or HHS's
mathematical error may be requested only if, to the extent the issue
could have been previously identified, the issuer notified HHS of the
dispute through the applicable process for reporting a discrepancy set
forth in Sec. Sec. 153.630(d)(2), 153.710(d)(2), and 156.430(h)(1) of
this subchapter, it was so identified and remains unresolved.
* * * * *
0
45. Section 156.1230 is amended by adding paragraphs (b)(1), (2), and
(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 156.1230 Direct enrollment with the QHP issuer in a manner
considered to be through the Exchange.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) HHS may immediately suspend the QHP issuer's ability to
transact information with the Exchange if HHS discovers circumstances
that pose unacceptable risk to Exchange operations or Exchange
information technology systems until the incident or breach is remedied
or sufficiently mitigated to HHS's satisfaction.
(2) The QHP issuer must demonstrate operational readiness and
compliance with applicable requirements prior to the QHP issuer's
Internet Web site being used to complete a QHP selection.
(3) The QHP issuer must provide consumers with correct information,
without omission of material fact, regarding the Federally-facilitated
Exchanges, QHPs offered through the Federally-facilitated Exchanges,
and insurance affordability programs, and refrain from marketing or
conduct that is misleading (including by having a direct enrollment Web
site that HHS
[[Page 61536]]
determines could mislead a consumer into believing they are visiting
HealthCare.gov), coercive, or discriminates based on race, color,
national origin, disability, age, sex, gender identity, or sexual
orientation.
0
46. Section 156.1256 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 156.1256 Other notices.
As directed by a Federally-facilitated Exchange, a health insurance
issuer that is offering QHP coverage through a Federally-facilitated
Exchange or a State-based Exchange on the Federal platform must notify
its enrollees of material plan or benefit display errors and the
enrollees' eligibility for a special enrollment period, included in
Sec. 155.420(d)(12) of this subchapter, within 30 calendar days after
being notified by a Federally-facilitated Exchange that the error has
been fixed, if directed to do so by a Federally-facilitated Exchange.
PART 157--EMPLOYER INTERACTIONS WITH EXCHANGES AND SHOP
PARTICIPATION
0
47. The authority citation for part 157 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Title I of the Affordable Care Act, Sections 1311,
1312, 1321, 1411, 1412, Pub. L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 199.
0
48. Section 157.205 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 157.205 Qualified employer participation in a SHOP.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(1) Newly eligible dependents and, on or before the thirtieth day
after the day that the employee becomes eligible for coverage, newly
qualified employees; and
* * * * *
PART 158--ISSUER USE OF PREMIUM REVENUE: REPORTING AND REBATE
REQUIREMENTS
0
49. The authority citation for part 158 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Section 2718 of the Public Health Service Act (42
U.S.C. 300gg-18), as amended.
0
50. Section 158.121 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 158.121 Newer experience.
If, for any aggregation as defined in Sec. 158.120, 50 percent or
more of the total earned premium for an MLR reporting year is
attributable to policies newly issued in that MLR reporting year, then
the experience of these policies may be excluded from the report
required under Sec. 158.110 for that same MLR reporting year. If an
issuer chooses to defer reporting of newer business as provided in this
section, then the excluded experience must be added to the experience
reported in the following MLR reporting year.
0
51. Section 158.232 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1) and (2)
and (e)(1) and (2) and adding paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 158.232 Calculating the credibility adjustment.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Each year in the aggregation included experience of at least
1,000 life-years; and
(2) The issuer's preliminary MLR, as defined under paragraph (f) of
this section, for each year in the aggregation was below the applicable
MLR standard, as established under Sec. Sec. 158.210 and 158.211.
(e) * * *
(1) Each year in the aggregation included experience of at least
1,000 life-years; and
(2) The issuer's preliminary MLR, as defined under paragraph (f) of
this section, for each year in the aggregation was below the applicable
MLR standard, as established under Sec. Sec. 158.210 and 158.211.
(f) Preliminary MLR. Preliminary MLR means the ratio of the
numerator, as defined in Sec. 158.221(b) and calculated as of March
31st of the year following the year for which the MLR report required
in Sec. 158.110 is being submitted, to the denominator, as defined in
Sec. 158.221(c), calculated using only a single year of experience,
and without applying any credibility adjustment.
0
52. Section 158.240 is amended by--
0
a. Revising paragraph (c)(1);
0
b. Redesignating paragraphs (d) and (e) as paragraphs (e) and (f),
respectively; and
0
c. Adding a new paragraph (d).
The revision and addition read as follows:
Sec. 158.240 Rebating premium if the applicable medical loss ratio
standard is not met.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) For each MLR reporting year, an issuer must rebate to the
enrollee, subject to paragraph (d) of this section, the total amount of
premium revenue, as defined in Sec. 158.130, received by the issuer
from the enrollee, after subtracting Federal and State taxes and
licensing and regulatory fees as provided in Sec. Sec. 158.161(a) and
158.162(a)(1) and (b)(1), and after accounting for payments or receipts
for risk adjustment, risk corridors, and reinsurance as provided in
Sec. 158.130(b)(5), multiplied by the difference between the MLR
required by Sec. 158.210 or Sec. 158.211, and the issuer's MLR as
calculated under Sec. 158.221.
* * * * *
(d) Limitation on total rebate payable for each year in the
aggregation. For any State and market, an issuer may elect to limit the
amount of rebate payable for the MLR reporting year to the issuer's
total outstanding rebate liability with respect to all years included
in the aggregation. If an issuer elects this option, the outstanding
rebate liability with respect to a specific year in the aggregation
must be calculated by multiplying the denominator with respect to that
year, as defined in Sec. 158.221(c), by the difference between the MLR
required by Sec. 158.210 or Sec. 158.211 for the MLR reporting year,
and the sum of the issuer's preliminary MLR for that year, as defined
under Sec. 158.232(f), and the credibility adjustment applicable to
the current MLR reporting year. The outstanding rebate liability with
respect to a specific year must be reduced by any rebate payments
applied against it in prior MLR reporting years. A rebate paid for an
MLR reporting year must be applied first to reduce the outstanding
rebate liability with respect to the earliest year in the aggregation.
* * * * *
Dated: August 11, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Dated: August 24, 2016.
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2016-20896 Filed 8-29-16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P