Adoption of the Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk Adjustment Program Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act for the 2017 Benefit Year, 36456-36460 [2018-16190]
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36456
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(14) The demonstration, including
long-term performance data, supporting
the suspension of groundwater
monitoring requirements as required by
§ 257.90(g).
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■ 26. Section 257.106 is amended by
adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as
follows:
benefit years. Accordingly, HHS is
issuing this final rule to allow charges
to be collected and payments to be made
for the 2017 benefit year. We hereby
adopt the final rules set out in the
publication in the Federal Register on
March 23, 2012 and the publication in
the Federal Register on March 8, 2016.
DATES: These provisions of this final
rule are effective on July 30, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Abigail Walker, (410) 786–1725; Adam
Shaw, (410) 786–1091; Jaya Ghildiyal,
(301) 492–5149; or Adrianne Patterson,
(410) 786–0686.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
§ 257.106
I. Background
25. Section 257.105 is amended by
adding paragraph (h)(14) to read as
follows:
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§ 257.105
Recordkeeping requirements.
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Notification requirements.
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(11) Provide the demonstration
supporting the suspension of
groundwater monitoring requirements
specified under § 257.105(h)(14).
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■ 27. Section 257.107 is amended by
adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as
follows:
§ 257.107 Publicly accessible internet site
requirements.
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(h) * * *
(11) The demonstration supporting
the suspension of groundwater
monitoring requirements specified
under § 257.105(h)(14).
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[FR Doc. 2018–16262 Filed 7–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Part 153
[CMS–9920–F]
RIN 0938–AT65
Adoption of the Methodology for the
HHS-Operated Permanent Risk
Adjustment Program Under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act for
the 2017 Benefit Year
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule adopts the risk
adjustment methodology that HHS
previously established for the 2017
benefit year. In February 2018, a district
court vacated the use of statewide
average premium as a basis for the HHSoperated risk adjustment methodology
for the 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018
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SUMMARY:
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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) was enacted on March
30, 2010. These statutes are collectively
referred to as ‘‘PPACA’’ in this final
rule. Section 1343 of the PPACA
established an annual permanent risk
adjustment program under which
payments are collected from health
insurance issuers that enroll relatively
low-risk populations, and payments are
made to health insurance issuers that
enroll relatively higher-risk populations.
Consistent with section 1321(c)(1) of the
PPACA, the Secretary is responsible for
operating the risk adjustment program
on behalf of any state that elected not
to do so. For the 2017 benefit year, HHS
is responsible for operation of the risk
adjustment program in all 50 states and
the District of Columbia.
HHS sets the risk adjustment
methodology that it uses in states that
elect not to operate the program in
advance of each benefit year through a
notice-and-comment rulemaking
process with the intention that issuers
will be able to rely on the methodology
to price their plans appropriately (45
CFR 153.320; 76 FR 41930, 41932
through 41933; 81 FR 94058, 94702
(explaining the importance of setting
rules ahead of time and describing
comments supporting that practice)).
In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register
(76 FR 41929), we published a proposed
rule outlining the framework for the risk
adjustment program. We implemented
the risk adjustment program 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 proposed Federally
certified risk adjustment methodologies
for the 2014 benefit year and other
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parameters related to the risk
adjustment program (proposed 2014
Payment Notice). We published the
2014 Payment Notice final rule in the
March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
15409). In the June 19, 2013 Federal
Register (78 FR 37032), we proposed a
modification to the HHS-operated
methodology related to community
rating states. In the October 30, 2013,
Federal Register (78 FR 65046), we
finalized the proposed modification to
the HHS-operated methodology related
to community rating states. We
published a correcting amendment to
the 2014 Payment Notice final rule in
the November 6, 2013 Federal Register
(78 FR 66653) to address how an
enrollee’s age for the risk score
calculation would be determined under
the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology.
In the December 2, 2013 Federal
Register (78 FR 72321), we published a
proposed rule outlining the Federally
certified risk adjustment methodologies
for the 2015 benefit year and other
parameters related to the risk
adjustment program (proposed 2015
Payment Notice). We published the
2015 Payment Notice final rule in the
March 11, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR
13743). In the May 27, 2014 Federal
Register (79 FR 30240), the 2015 fiscal
year sequestration rate for the risk
adjustment program was announced.
In the November 26, 2014 Federal
Register (79 FR 70673), we published a
proposed rule outlining the proposed
Federally certified risk adjustment
methodologies for the 2016 benefit year
and other parameters related to the risk
adjustment program (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 Federally
certified risk adjustment methodology
for the 2017 benefit year and other
parameters related to the risk
adjustment program (proposed 2017
Payment Notice). We published the
2017 Payment Notice final rule in the
March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR
12204).
In the September 6, 2016 Federal
Register (81 FR 61455), we published a
proposed rule outlining the Federally
certified risk adjustment methodology
for the 2018 benefit year and other
parameters related to the risk
adjustment program (proposed 2018
Payment Notice). We published the
2018 Payment Notice final rule in the
December 22, 2016 Federal Register (81
FR 94058).
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In the November 2, 2017 Federal
Register (82 FR 51042), we published a
proposed rule outlining the benefit and
payment parameters for the 2019 benefit
year, and to further promote stable
premiums in the individual and small
group markets. We proposed updates to
the risk adjustment methodology and
amendments to the risk adjustment data
validation process (proposed 2019
Payment Notice). We published the
2019 Payment Notice final rule in the
April 17, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR
16930). We published a correction to the
2019 risk adjustment coefficients in the
2019 Payment Notice final rule in the
May 11, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR
21925).
distribution of those payments, which
issuers anticipated when they set
premiums for the 2017 benefit year,
could add uncertainty to the market, as
issuers are now in the process of
determining the extent of their market
participation and the rates and terms of
plans they will offer for the 2019 benefit
year.
II. Provisions of the Final Rule
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B. The New Mexico Health Connections
Court’s Order
On February 28, 2018, in a suit
brought by the health insurance issuer
New Mexico Health Connections, the
United States District Court for the
District of New Mexico (the district
court) vacated the use of statewide
average premium in the HHS-operated
risk adjustment methodology for the
2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018
benefit years. The district court
reasoned that HHS had not adequately
explained its decision to adopt a
methodology that used the statewide
average premium as the cost-scaling
factor to ensure that amounts collected
from issuers equal payments made to
issuers for the applicable benefit year,
that is, a methodology that maintains
the budget neutrality of the program for
the applicable benefit year.1 The district
court otherwise rejected New Mexico
Health Connections’ arguments. HHS’s
reconsideration motion remains
pending with the district court.
HHS recently announced the
collection and payment amounts for the
2017 benefit year as calculated under
the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology that uses the statewide
average premium.2 However, without
this administrative action (that is,
issuing this final rule), HHS would be
unable to make those collections or
distribute the payments for the 2017
benefit year, which total billions of
dollars.3 Uncertainty and delay in the
This final rule adopts the HHSoperated risk adjustment methodology
previously published at 81 FR 12204 for
the 2017 benefit year with an additional
explanation regarding the use of
statewide average premium and the
budget neutral nature of the program.
This rule does not make any changes to
the previously published HHS-operated
risk adjustment methodology for the
2017 benefit year.
The risk adjustment program provides
payments to health insurance issuers
that enroll higher risk populations, such
as those with chronic conditions,
thereby reducing incentives for issuers
to structure their plan benefit designs or
marketing strategies in order to avoid
these enrollees and lessening the
potential influence of risk selection on
the premiums that issuers charge.
Instead, issuers are expected to set rates
based on average risk and compete
based on plan features rather than
selection of healthier enrollees. The
program applies to any health insurance
issuer offering plans in the individual or
small group markets, with the exception
of grandfathered health plans, group
health insurance coverage described in
45 CFR 146.145(c), individual health
insurance coverage described in 45 CFR
148.220, and any plan determined not to
be a risk adjustment covered plan in the
applicable Federally certified risk
adjustment methodology.4 In 45 CFR
part 153, subparts A, B, D, G, and H,
HHS established standards for the
administration of the permanent risk
adjustment program. In accordance with
§ 153.320, any risk adjustment
methodology used by a state, or by HHS
on behalf of the state, must be a
Federally certified risk adjustment
methodology.
1 New Mexico Health Connections v. United
States Department of Health and Human Services
et al., No. CIV 16–0878 JB/JHR (D.N.M. 2018).
2 See, Summary Report on Permanent Risk
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year,
available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/
Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
3 See, July 7, 2018 United States District Court
Ruling Puts Risk Adjustment On Hold, available at
https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/
MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-releases/2018-Pressreleases-items/2018-07-07.html and the July 9,
2018, Summary Report on Permanent Risk
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year
https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/Summary-ReportRisk-Adjustment-2017.pdf. Also see the CMS
Memo: Implications of the Decision by United
States District Court for the District of New Mexico
on the Risk Adjustment and Related Programs (July
12, 2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/
Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/
Implications-of-the-Decision-by-United-StatesDistrict-Court-for-the-District-of-New-Mexico-onthe-Risk-Adjustment-and-Related-Programs.pdf.
4 See the definition for ‘‘risk adjustment covered
plan’’ at 45 CFR 153.20.
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As stated in the 2014 Payment Notice
final rule, the Federally certified risk
adjustment methodology developed and
used by HHS in states that elect not to
operate the program is based on the
premise that premiums for this market
should reflect the differences in plan
benefits, quality, and efficiency—not the
health status of the enrolled
population.5 HHS developed the risk
adjustment payment transfer formula
that calculates the difference between
the revenues required by a plan based
on the projected health risk of the plan’s
enrollees and the revenues that a plan
can generate for those enrollees. These
differences are then compared across
plans in the state market risk pool and
converted to a dollar amount based on
the statewide average premium. HHS
chose to use statewide average premium
and normalize the risk adjustment
transfer formula to reflect state average
factors so that each plan’s enrollment
characteristics are compared to the state
average and the total calculated
payment amounts equal total calculated
charges in each state market risk pool.
Thus, each plan in the risk pool receives
a risk adjustment payment or charge
designed to compensate for risk for a
plan with average risk in a budget
neutral manner. This approach supports
the overall goal of the risk adjustment
program to encourage issuers to rate for
the average risk in the applicable state
market risk pool, and avoids the
creation of incentives for issuers to
operate less efficiently, set higher
prices, develop benefit designs or create
marketing strategies to avoid high risk
enrollees. Such incentives could arise if
HHS used each issuer’s plan’s own
premium in the risk adjustment
payment transfer formula, instead of
statewide average premium.
As explained above, the district court
vacated the use of statewide average
premium in the HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology for the 2014
through 2018 benefit years on the
ground that HHS did not adequately
explain its decision to adopt that aspect
of the risk adjustment methodology. The
district court recognized that use of
statewide average premium maintained
the budget neutrality of the program, but
concluded that HHS had not adequately
explained the underlying decision to
adopt a methodology that kept the
program budget neutral, that is, that
ensured that amounts collected from
issuers would equal payments made to
issuers for the applicable benefit year.
Accordingly, HHS is providing
additional explanation herein.
5 See
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First, Congress designed the risk
adjustment program to be implemented
and operated by states if they choose to
do so. Nothing in section 1343 of the
PPACA requires a state to spend its own
funds on risk adjustment payments or
allows HHS to impose such a
requirement. Thus, while section 1343
may have provided leeway for states to
spend additional funding on the
program if they voluntarily chose to do
so, HHS could not have required
additional funding within the HHSoperated risk adjustment methodology.
Second, while the PPACA did not
include an explicit requirement that the
risk adjustment program be operated in
a budget-neutral manner, it also does
not proscribe designing the program in
a budget-neutral manner. In fact,
although the statutory provisions for
many other PPACA programs
appropriated or authorized amounts to
be appropriated from the U.S. Treasury,
or provided budget authority in advance
of appropriations,6 the PPACA neither
authorized nor appropriated additional
funding for risk adjustment payments
beyond the amount of charges paid in,
nor authorized HHS to obligate itself for
risk adjustment payments in excess of
charges collected.7 Indeed, unlike the
Medicare Part D statute, which
expressly authorizes the appropriation
of funds and provides budget authority
in advance of appropriations to make
Part D risk-adjusted payments, the
PPACA’s risk adjustment statute makes
no reference to additional
appropriations whatsoever.8 Because
Congress omitted from the PPACA any
provision appropriating independent
funding or creating budget authority in
advance of an appropriation for the risk
adjustment program, HHS could not—
absent another source of
appropriations—have designed the risk
adjustment program in a way that
required payments in excess of
collections consistent with binding
6 For examples of PPACA provisions
appropriating funds, see PPACA secs. 1101(g)(1),
1311(a)(1), 1322(g), 1323(c). For examples of
PPACA provisions authorizing the appropriation of
funds, see PPACA secs. 1002, 2705(f), 2706(e),
3013(c), 3015, 3504(b), 3505(a)(5), 3505(b), 3506,
3509(a)(1), 3509(b), 3509(e), 3509(f), 3509(g), 3511,
4003(a), 4003(b), 4004(j), 4101(b), 4102(a), 4102(c),
4102(d)(1)(C), 4102(d)(4), 4201(f), 4202(a)(5),
4204(b), 4206, 4302(a), 4304, 4305(a), 4305(c),
5101(h), 5102(e), 5103(a)(3), 5203, 5204, 5206(b),
5207, 5208(b), 5210, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304,
5305(a), 5306(a), 5307(a), 5309(b).
7 See 42 U.S.C. 18063.
8 Compare 42 U.S.C. 18063 (failing to specify
source of funding other than risk adjustment
charges), with 42 U.S.C. 1395w–116(c)(3)
(authorizing appropriations for Medicare Part D risk
adjusted payments); 42 U.S.C. 1395w–115(a)
(establishing ‘‘budget authority in advance of
appropriations Acts’’ for risk adjusted payments
under Medicare Part D).
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appropriations law. Thus, as a practical
matter, Congress did not give HHS
discretion to implement a program that
was not budget neutral.
Furthermore, if HHS had elected to
adopt a HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology that was contingent on
appropriations from Congress in the
annual appropriations process that
would have created uncertainty for
issuers in the amount of risk adjustment
payments they could expect. That
uncertainty would undermine one of the
central objectives of the risk adjustment
program, which is to assure issuers in
advance that they will receive risk
adjustment payments if, for the
applicable benefit year, they enroll a
high risk population compared to other
issuers in the state market risk pool. The
budget-neutral framework spreads the
costs of covering higher-risk enrollees
across issuers throughout a given state
market risk pool, thereby reducing
incentives for issuers to engage in riskavoidance techniques such as designing
or marketing their plans in ways that
tend to attract healthier individuals,
who cost less to insure. Moreover,
relying on the possibility in each year’s
budget process for appropriation of
additional funds to HHS that could be
used to supplement risk adjustment
transfers would have required HHS to
delay setting the parameters for any risk
adjustment payment proration rates
until well after the plans were in effect
for the applicable benefit year.9 Without
the adoption of a budget-neutral
framework, HHS would have needed to
assess a charge or otherwise collect
additional funds, or prorate risk
adjustment payments to balance the
calculated risk adjustment transfer
amounts. The resulting uncertainty
would have conflicted with one of the
overall goals of the risk adjustment
program—to reduce incentives for
issuers to avoid enrolling individuals
with higher than average actuarial risk.
In light of the budget-neutral
framework discussed above, HHS also
9 It has been suggested that the annual lump sum
appropriation to CMS for program management was
potentially available for risk adjustment payments.
The lump sum appropriation for each year was not
enacted until after the applicable rule announcing
the methodology to calculate payments for the
applicable benefit year. Moreover, HHS does not
believe that the lump sum is legally available for
risk adjustment payments. As the underlying
budget requests reflect, the lump sum is for program
management expenses, such as administrative costs
for various CMS programs such as Medicaid,
Medicare, the Children’s Health Insurance Program,
and the PPACA’s insurance market reforms—not for
the program payments themselves. CMS would
have elected to use the lump sum for these
important program management expenses even if
CMS had discretion to use all or part of the lump
sum for risk adjustment payments.
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chose not to use a different parameter
for the payment transfer formula under
the HHS-operated methodology, such as
each plan’s own premium, that would
not have automatically achieved
equality between risk adjustment
payments and charges in each benefit
year. As set forth in prior discussions,10
use of the plan’s own premium or some
similar parameter would have required
the application of a balancing
adjustment in light of the program’s
budget neutrality—either reducing
payments to issuers owed a payment,
increasing charges on issuers due a
charge, or splitting the difference in
some fashion between issuers owed
payments and issuers assessed charges.
Such adjustments would have impaired
the risk adjustment program’s goals,
discussed above, of encouraging issuers
to rate for the average risk in the
applicable risk pool and avoiding the
creation of incentives for issuers to
operate less efficiently, set higher
prices, develop benefit designs or create
marketing strategies to avoid higher-risk
enrollees. Use of an after-the-fact
balancing adjustment is also less
predictable for issuers than a
methodology that can be calculated in
advance of a benefit year. Such
predictability is important to serving the
risk adjustment program’s goals of
premium stabilization and reducing
issuer incentives to avoid enrolling
higher-risk populations. Additionally,
using a plan’s own premium to scale
transfers may provide additional
incentive for plans with high-risk
enrollees to increase premiums in order
to receive additional risk adjustment
payments. As noted by commenters to
the 2014 Payment Notice proposed rule,
transfers may be more volatile from year
to year and sensitive to anomalous
premiums if they were scaled to a plan’s
own premium instead of the statewide
average premium. Scaling the risk
adjustment transfers by the statewide
average premium promotes premium
stabilization by encouraging pricing to
average risk in a risk pool, and results
in a calculation of equal payments and
charges.
In the risk adjustment methodologies
applicable to the 2018 and 2019 benefit
years, HHS has adjusted statewide
average premium by reducing it by 14
percent to account for an estimated
proportion of administrative costs that
do not vary with claims. HHS is not
applying this adjustment retroactively to
the 2017 benefit year, but is instead
10 See, e.g., September 12, 2011, Risk Adjustment
Implementation Issues White Paper, available at:
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/
Downloads/riskadjustment_whitepaper_web.pdf.
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maintaining the definition of statewide
average premium previously established
for the 2017 benefit year. As discussed
above, HHS has repeatedly stressed the
importance of providing a risk
adjustment methodology in advance of
the benefit year to which it applies to
provide issuers the opportunity to price
their plans accordingly.11 To protect the
settled expectations of issuers that have
structured their pricing and offering
decisions in reliance on the previously
promulgated 2017 benefit year
methodology, this rule maintains for the
2017 benefit year the description of
statewide average premium set forth in
the 2017 Payment Notice.
Therefore, for the 2017 benefit year,
we are issuing this final rule that adopts
the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology previously established for
the 2017 benefit year in the Federal
Register publications cited above,
including use of statewide average
premium. As set forth in reports
previously issued, HHS has completed
final risk adjustment calculations for the
2017 benefit year, but has not yet
collected or paid risk adjustment
amounts to issuers of risk adjustment
covered plans. The provisions of this
final rule adopt the methodology that
applies to collection and payment of
risk adjustment amounts for the 2017
benefit year. Because this final rule does
not alter any previously announced risk
adjustment methodology, the amounts
previously calculated by HHS have not
changed by virtue of this rule’s
issuance.
HHS will begin collection of the 2017
benefit year risk adjustment charge
amounts announced in the Summary
Report on Permanent Risk Adjustment
Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year 12
through netting pursuant to 45 CFR
156.1215(b) and subsequently issuing
invoices if an amount remains
outstanding in the September 2018
monthly payment cycle. HHS will begin
making the 2017 benefit year risk
adjustment payments outlined in the
Summary Report on Permanent Risk
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017
Benefit Year as part of the October 2018
monthly payment cycle, continuing on
a monthly basis as collections are
received. Under this timeline, issuers
would receive invoices on or about
September 11–13, 2018 and payments
would begin to be made around October
22, 2018.
III. Adoption of the Methodology for the
HHS-Operated Permanent Risk
Adjustment Program Under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act
This rule adopts the final rules set out
in the publication in the March 23, 2012
Federal Register (77 FR 17220 through
17252) and publication in the March 8,
2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12204
through 12352). For the 2017 benefit
year, in states where HHS is operating
the risk adjustment program under
section 1343 of the PPACA, HHS will
use the criteria and methods as
specified in the publication in the
March 23, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR
17220 through 17252) and publication
in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register
(81 FR 12204 through 12352).
11 See 76 FR 41930, 41932–33. Also see 81 FR
94058, 94702.
12 https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/SummaryReport-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
13 The risk adjustment methodology for those
benefit years was published at the February 27,
2015 Federal Register (80 FR 10749) and the March
8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12203).
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IV. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
and Delay in Effective Date
Under the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 553), a notice of
proposed rulemaking and an
opportunity for public comment are
generally required before issuing a
regulation. We also ordinarily provide a
30-day delay in the effective date of the
provisions of a rule in accordance with
the APA (5 U.S.C. 553(d)), unless the
rule is a major rule and subject to the
60-day delayed effective date required
by the Congressional Review Act (5
U.S.C. 801(a)(3)). However, these
procedures can be waived if the agency,
for good cause, finds that notice and
public comment and delay in effective
date are impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to public interest and
incorporates a statement of the finding
and its reasons in the rule issued. See
5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3); 5 U.S.C. 808(2).
HHS has determined that issuing this
rule in proposed form, such that it
would not become effective until after
public comments are submitted,
considered, and responded to in a final
rule, would be impracticable,
unnecessary, and contrary to the public
interest. As discussed above, immediate
administrative action is imperative to
maintain the stability and predictability
in the individual and small group
insurance markets. It is also consistent
with settled expectations in that this
rule adopts the risk adjustment
methodology previously established for
the 2017 benefit year.13 Under normal
operations, risk adjustment invoices for
the 2017 benefit year would be issued
beginning in August 2018 and risk
adjustment payments for the 2017
benefit year would be made beginning
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36459
in the September 2018 monthly
payment cycle. Accordingly, it is now
less than 2 months until risk adjustment
payments for the 2017 benefit year,
expected to total $5.2 billion, are due to
begin. Immediate action is also
necessary to maintain issuer confidence
in the HHS-operated risk adjustment
program. Issuers have already accounted
for expected risk adjustment transfers in
their rates for the 2017 benefit year and
uncompensated payments for the 2017
benefit year could lead to higher
premiums in future benefit years as
issuers incorporate a risk premium into
their rates. Issuers file rates for the 2019
benefit year in the summer of 2018, and
if a projected $5.2 billion in risk
adjustment payments is unavailable or
there is uncertainty as to whether
payments for the 2018 benefit year will
be made, there is a serious risk issuers
will substantially increase 2019
premiums to account for the
uncompensated risk associated with
high-risk enrollees. Consumers enrolled
in certain plans could see a significant
premium increase, which could make
coverage in those plans particularly
unaffordable for unsubsidized enrollees.
Furthermore, issuers are currently
making decisions on whether to offer
qualified health plans (QHPs) through
the Exchanges for the 2019 benefit year,
and, for the Federally-facilitated
Exchange (FFE), this decision must be
made before the August 2018 deadline
to finalize QHP agreements. In states
with limited Exchange options, a QHP
issuer exit would restrict consumer
choice, and put additional upward
pressure on Exchange premiums,
thereby increasing the cost of coverage
for unsubsidized individuals and
federal spending for premium tax
credits. The combination of these effects
could lead to significant, involuntary
coverage losses in certain state market
risk pools.
Additionally, HHS’s failure to make
timely risk adjustment payments could
impact the solvency of plans providing
coverage to sicker (and costlier) than
average enrollees that require the influx
of risk adjustment payments to continue
operations. When state regulators
determine issuer solvency, any
uncertainty surrounding risk adjustment
transfers jeopardizes regulators’ ability
to make decisions that protect
consumers and support the long-term
health of insurance markets. Therefore,
HHS has determined that delaying the
effective date of the use of statewide
average premium in the payment
transfer calculation under the HHSoperated risk adjustment methodology
for the 2017 benefit year to allow for
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
proposed rulemaking and comment is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest because consumers would be
negatively impacted by premium
changes should risk adjustment
payments be interrupted or confidence
in the program undermined.
There is also good cause to proceed
without notice and comment for the
additional reason that such procedures
are unnecessary here. HHS has received
and considered comments in issuing the
2014 through 2017 Payment Notices. In
each of these rulemaking processes,
parties had the opportunity to comment
on HHS’s use of statewide average
premium in the payment transfer
formula under the HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology. Because this
final rule adopts the same HHS-operated
risk adjustment methodology issued in
the 2017 Payment Notice final rule, the
comments received in those
rulemakings are sufficiently current to
indicate a lack of necessity to engage in
further notice and comment. In the 2014
Payment Notice final rule, we received
a number of comments in support of our
proposal to use the statewide average
premium as the basis for risk adjustment
transfers. In subsequent benefit year
rulemakings, some commenters
expressed a desire for HHS to use a
plan’s own premium. HHS addressed
those comments by reiterating that we
had considered the use of a plan’s own
premium instead of the statewide
average premium and chose to use
statewide average premium. As this
approach supports the overall goal of
the risk adjustment program to
encourage issuers to rate for the average
risk in the applicable state market risk
pool, and avoids the creation of
incentives for issuers to operate less
efficiently, set higher prices, develop
benefit designs or create marketing
strategies to avoid high risk enrollees.
V. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
information collection requirements,
that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or
third-party disclosure requirements.
Consequently, there is no need for
review by the Office of Management and
Budget under the authority of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule adopts the HHSoperated risk adjustment methodology
for the 2017 benefit year set forth in the
2017 Payment Notice final rule to
ensure that the risk adjustment program
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:02 Jul 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
works as intended to protect consumers
from the effects of adverse selection and
premium increases due to issuer
uncertainty. The Premium Stabilization
Rule and previous Payment Notices
noted above provided detail on the
implementation of the risk adjustment
program, including the specific
parameters applicable for the 2017
benefit year.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact 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 1102(b) of the Social
Security Act, 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), the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2), and
Executive Order 13771 on Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs. 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). A regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) must be prepared for major rules
with economically significant effects
($100 million or more in any one year).
OMB has determined that this final
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. In addition, for
the reasons noted above, OMB has
determined that this is a major rule
under the Congressional Review Act.
This final rule offers a further
explanation on budget neutrality and
the use of statewide average premium in
the risk adjustment payment transfer
formula when HHS is operating the
permanent risk adjustment program
established in section 1343 of the
PPACA on behalf of a state for the 2017
benefit year. We note that we previously
estimated transfers associated with the
risk adjustment program in the Premium
Stabilization Rule and the 2017
Payment Notice, and that the provisions
of this final rule do not change the risk
adjustment transfers previously
estimated under the HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology established in
those final rules. The approximate risk
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
adjustment transfers for the 2017 benefit
year are $5.179 billion. As such, we also
adopt the RIA in the 2017 Payment
Notice proposed and final rules.
Dated: July 23, 2018.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Dated: July 24, 2018.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2018–16190 Filed 7–25–18; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 1
[MD Docket Nos. 18–175; FCC 18–65]
Assessment and Collection of
Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2018
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final action.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) makes decisions
involving submarine cables,
international bearer circuits, and the
calculation of cable television
subscribers.
SUMMARY:
This final action is effective
August 29, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Roland Helvajian, Office of Managing
Director at (202) 418–0444.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s FY 2018
Report and Order (FY 2018 Report and
Order), FCC 18–65, MD Docket No. 18–
175 adopted on May 21, 2018 and
released on May 22, 2018. The full text
of this document is available for
inspection and copying during normal
business hours in the FCC Reference
Center, 445 12th Street SW, Room CY–
A257, Portals II, Washington, DC 20554,
and may also be purchased from the
Commission’s copy contractor, BCPI,
Inc., Portals II, 445 12th Street SW,
Room CY–B402, Washington, DC 20554.
Customers may contact BCPI, Inc. via
their website, https://www.bcpi.com, or
call 1–800–378–3160. This document is
available in alternative formats
(computer diskette, large print, audio
record, and braille). Persons with
disabilities who need documents in
these formats may contact the FCC by
email: FCC504@fcc.gov or phone: 202–
418–0530 or TTY: 202–418–0432.
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\30JYR1.SGM
30JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 146 (Monday, July 30, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36456-36460]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-16190]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
45 CFR Part 153
[CMS-9920-F]
RIN 0938-AT65
Adoption of the Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk
Adjustment Program Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
for the 2017 Benefit Year
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule adopts the risk adjustment methodology that
HHS previously established for the 2017 benefit year. In February 2018,
a district court vacated the use of statewide average premium as a
basis for the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2014,
2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 benefit years. Accordingly, HHS is issuing
this final rule to allow charges to be collected and payments to be
made for the 2017 benefit year. We hereby adopt the final rules set out
in the publication in the Federal Register on March 23, 2012 and the
publication in the Federal Register on March 8, 2016.
DATES: These provisions of this final rule are effective on July 30,
2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Abigail Walker, (410) 786-1725; Adam
Shaw, (410) 786-1091; Jaya Ghildiyal, (301) 492-5149; or Adrianne
Patterson, (410) 786-0686.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. 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) was enacted on March 30,
2010. These statutes are collectively referred to as ``PPACA'' in this
final rule. Section 1343 of the PPACA established an annual permanent
risk adjustment program under which payments are collected from health
insurance issuers that enroll relatively low-risk populations, and
payments are made to health insurance issuers that enroll relatively
higher-risk populations. Consistent with section 1321(c)(1) of the
PPACA, the Secretary is responsible for operating the risk adjustment
program on behalf of any state that elected not to do so. For the 2017
benefit year, HHS is responsible for operation of the risk adjustment
program in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
HHS sets the risk adjustment methodology that it uses in states
that elect not to operate the program in advance of each benefit year
through a notice-and-comment rulemaking process with the intention that
issuers will be able to rely on the methodology to price their plans
appropriately (45 CFR 153.320; 76 FR 41930, 41932 through 41933; 81 FR
94058, 94702 (explaining the importance of setting rules ahead of time
and describing comments supporting that practice)).
In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 41929), we published a
proposed rule outlining the framework for the risk adjustment program.
We implemented the risk adjustment program 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 proposed Federally
certified risk adjustment methodologies for the 2014 benefit year and
other parameters related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2014
Payment Notice). We published the 2014 Payment Notice final rule in the
March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 15409). In the June 19, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 37032), we proposed a modification to the HHS-
operated methodology related to community rating states. In the October
30, 2013, Federal Register (78 FR 65046), we finalized the proposed
modification to the HHS-operated methodology related to community
rating states. We published a correcting amendment to the 2014 Payment
Notice final rule in the November 6, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
66653) to address how an enrollee's age for the risk score calculation
would be determined under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology.
In the December 2, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 72321), we
published a proposed rule outlining the Federally certified risk
adjustment methodologies for the 2015 benefit year and other parameters
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2015 Payment Notice).
We published the 2015 Payment Notice final rule in the March 11, 2014
Federal Register (79 FR 13743). In the May 27, 2014 Federal Register
(79 FR 30240), the 2015 fiscal year sequestration rate for the risk
adjustment program was announced.
In the November 26, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR 70673), we
published a proposed rule outlining the proposed Federally certified
risk adjustment methodologies for the 2016 benefit year and other
parameters related to the risk adjustment program (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 Federally certified risk
adjustment methodology for the 2017 benefit year and other parameters
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2017 Payment Notice).
We published the 2017 Payment Notice final rule in the March 8, 2016
Federal Register (81 FR 12204).
In the September 6, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 61455), we
published a proposed rule outlining the Federally certified risk
adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year and other parameters
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2018 Payment Notice).
We published the 2018 Payment Notice final rule in the December 22,
2016 Federal Register (81 FR 94058).
[[Page 36457]]
In the November 2, 2017 Federal Register (82 FR 51042), we
published a proposed rule outlining the benefit and payment parameters
for the 2019 benefit year, and to further promote stable premiums in
the individual and small group markets. We proposed updates to the risk
adjustment methodology and amendments to the risk adjustment data
validation process (proposed 2019 Payment Notice). We published the
2019 Payment Notice final rule in the April 17, 2018 Federal Register
(83 FR 16930). We published a correction to the 2019 risk adjustment
coefficients in the 2019 Payment Notice final rule in the May 11, 2018
Federal Register (83 FR 21925).
B. The New Mexico Health Connections Court's Order
On February 28, 2018, in a suit brought by the health insurance
issuer New Mexico Health Connections, the United States District Court
for the District of New Mexico (the district court) vacated the use of
statewide average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology for the 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 benefit years. The
district court reasoned that HHS had not adequately explained its
decision to adopt a methodology that used the statewide average premium
as the cost-scaling factor to ensure that amounts collected from
issuers equal payments made to issuers for the applicable benefit year,
that is, a methodology that maintains the budget neutrality of the
program for the applicable benefit year.\1\ The district court
otherwise rejected New Mexico Health Connections' arguments. HHS's
reconsideration motion remains pending with the district court.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ New Mexico Health Connections v. United States Department of
Health and Human Services et al., No. CIV 16-0878 JB/JHR (D.N.M.
2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HHS recently announced the collection and payment amounts for the
2017 benefit year as calculated under the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology that uses the statewide average premium.\2\ However,
without this administrative action (that is, issuing this final rule),
HHS would be unable to make those collections or distribute the
payments for the 2017 benefit year, which total billions of dollars.\3\
Uncertainty and delay in the distribution of those payments, which
issuers anticipated when they set premiums for the 2017 benefit year,
could add uncertainty to the market, as issuers are now in the process
of determining the extent of their market participation and the rates
and terms of plans they will offer for the 2019 benefit year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See, Summary Report on Permanent Risk Adjustment Transfers
for the 2017 Benefit Year, available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
\3\ See, July 7, 2018 United States District Court Ruling Puts
Risk Adjustment On Hold, available at https://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-releases/2018-Press-releases-items/2018-07-07.html and the July 9, 2018, Summary Report on Permanent Risk
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
Also see the CMS Memo: Implications of the Decision by United States
District Court for the District of New Mexico on the Risk Adjustment
and Related Programs (July 12, 2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/Implications-of-the-Decision-by-United-States-District-Court-for-the-District-of-New-Mexico-on-the-Risk-Adjustment-and-Related-Programs.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Provisions of the Final Rule
This final rule adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology
previously published at 81 FR 12204 for the 2017 benefit year with an
additional explanation regarding the use of statewide average premium
and the budget neutral nature of the program. This rule does not make
any changes to the previously published HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology for the 2017 benefit year.
The risk adjustment program provides payments to health insurance
issuers that enroll higher risk populations, such as those with chronic
conditions, thereby reducing incentives for issuers to structure their
plan benefit designs or marketing strategies in order to avoid these
enrollees and lessening the potential influence of risk selection on
the premiums that issuers charge. Instead, issuers are expected to set
rates based on average risk and compete based on plan features rather
than selection of healthier enrollees. The program applies to any
health insurance issuer offering plans in the individual or small group
markets, with the exception of grandfathered health plans, group health
insurance coverage described in 45 CFR 146.145(c), individual health
insurance coverage described in 45 CFR 148.220, and any plan determined
not to be a risk adjustment covered plan in the applicable Federally
certified risk adjustment methodology.\4\ In 45 CFR part 153, subparts
A, B, D, G, and H, HHS established standards for the administration of
the permanent risk adjustment program. In accordance with Sec.
153.320, any risk adjustment methodology used by a state, or by HHS on
behalf of the state, must be a Federally certified risk adjustment
methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See the definition for ``risk adjustment covered plan'' at
45 CFR 153.20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated in the 2014 Payment Notice final rule, the Federally
certified risk adjustment methodology developed and used by HHS in
states that elect not to operate the program is based on the premise
that premiums for this market should reflect the differences in plan
benefits, quality, and efficiency--not the health status of the
enrolled population.\5\ HHS developed the risk adjustment payment
transfer formula that calculates the difference between the revenues
required by a plan based on the projected health risk of the plan's
enrollees and the revenues that a plan can generate for those
enrollees. These differences are then compared across plans in the
state market risk pool and converted to a dollar amount based on the
statewide average premium. HHS chose to use statewide average premium
and normalize the risk adjustment transfer formula to reflect state
average factors so that each plan's enrollment characteristics are
compared to the state average and the total calculated payment amounts
equal total calculated charges in each state market risk pool. Thus,
each plan in the risk pool receives a risk adjustment payment or charge
designed to compensate for risk for a plan with average risk in a
budget neutral manner. This approach supports the overall goal of the
risk adjustment program to encourage issuers to rate for the average
risk in the applicable state market risk pool, and avoids the creation
of incentives for issuers to operate less efficiently, set higher
prices, develop benefit designs or create marketing strategies to avoid
high risk enrollees. Such incentives could arise if HHS used each
issuer's plan's own premium in the risk adjustment payment transfer
formula, instead of statewide average premium.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See 78 FR 15409 at 15417.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained above, the district court vacated the use of statewide
average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the
2014 through 2018 benefit years on the ground that HHS did not
adequately explain its decision to adopt that aspect of the risk
adjustment methodology. The district court recognized that use of
statewide average premium maintained the budget neutrality of the
program, but concluded that HHS had not adequately explained the
underlying decision to adopt a methodology that kept the program budget
neutral, that is, that ensured that amounts collected from issuers
would equal payments made to issuers for the applicable benefit year.
Accordingly, HHS is providing additional explanation herein.
[[Page 36458]]
First, Congress designed the risk adjustment program to be
implemented and operated by states if they choose to do so. Nothing in
section 1343 of the PPACA requires a state to spend its own funds on
risk adjustment payments or allows HHS to impose such a requirement.
Thus, while section 1343 may have provided leeway for states to spend
additional funding on the program if they voluntarily chose to do so,
HHS could not have required additional funding within the HHS-operated
risk adjustment methodology.
Second, while the PPACA did not include an explicit requirement
that the risk adjustment program be operated in a budget-neutral
manner, it also does not proscribe designing the program in a budget-
neutral manner. In fact, although the statutory provisions for many
other PPACA programs appropriated or authorized amounts to be
appropriated from the U.S. Treasury, or provided budget authority in
advance of appropriations,\6\ the PPACA neither authorized nor
appropriated additional funding for risk adjustment payments beyond the
amount of charges paid in, nor authorized HHS to obligate itself for
risk adjustment payments in excess of charges collected.\7\ Indeed,
unlike the Medicare Part D statute, which expressly authorizes the
appropriation of funds and provides budget authority in advance of
appropriations to make Part D risk-adjusted payments, the PPACA's risk
adjustment statute makes no reference to additional appropriations
whatsoever.\8\ Because Congress omitted from the PPACA any provision
appropriating independent funding or creating budget authority in
advance of an appropriation for the risk adjustment program, HHS could
not--absent another source of appropriations--have designed the risk
adjustment program in a way that required payments in excess of
collections consistent with binding appropriations law. Thus, as a
practical matter, Congress did not give HHS discretion to implement a
program that was not budget neutral.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ For examples of PPACA provisions appropriating funds, see
PPACA secs. 1101(g)(1), 1311(a)(1), 1322(g), 1323(c). For examples
of PPACA provisions authorizing the appropriation of funds, see
PPACA secs. 1002, 2705(f), 2706(e), 3013(c), 3015, 3504(b),
3505(a)(5), 3505(b), 3506, 3509(a)(1), 3509(b), 3509(e), 3509(f),
3509(g), 3511, 4003(a), 4003(b), 4004(j), 4101(b), 4102(a), 4102(c),
4102(d)(1)(C), 4102(d)(4), 4201(f), 4202(a)(5), 4204(b), 4206,
4302(a), 4304, 4305(a), 4305(c), 5101(h), 5102(e), 5103(a)(3), 5203,
5204, 5206(b), 5207, 5208(b), 5210, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304, 5305(a),
5306(a), 5307(a), 5309(b).
\7\ See 42 U.S.C. 18063.
\8\ Compare 42 U.S.C. 18063 (failing to specify source of
funding other than risk adjustment charges), with 42 U.S.C. 1395w-
116(c)(3) (authorizing appropriations for Medicare Part D risk
adjusted payments); 42 U.S.C. 1395w-115(a) (establishing ``budget
authority in advance of appropriations Acts'' for risk adjusted
payments under Medicare Part D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, if HHS had elected to adopt a HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology that was contingent on appropriations from
Congress in the annual appropriations process that would have created
uncertainty for issuers in the amount of risk adjustment payments they
could expect. That uncertainty would undermine one of the central
objectives of the risk adjustment program, which is to assure issuers
in advance that they will receive risk adjustment payments if, for the
applicable benefit year, they enroll a high risk population compared to
other issuers in the state market risk pool. The budget-neutral
framework spreads the costs of covering higher-risk enrollees across
issuers throughout a given state market risk pool, thereby reducing
incentives for issuers to engage in risk-avoidance techniques such as
designing or marketing their plans in ways that tend to attract
healthier individuals, who cost less to insure. Moreover, relying on
the possibility in each year's budget process for appropriation of
additional funds to HHS that could be used to supplement risk
adjustment transfers would have required HHS to delay setting the
parameters for any risk adjustment payment proration rates until well
after the plans were in effect for the applicable benefit year.\9\
Without the adoption of a budget-neutral framework, HHS would have
needed to assess a charge or otherwise collect additional funds, or
prorate risk adjustment payments to balance the calculated risk
adjustment transfer amounts. The resulting uncertainty would have
conflicted with one of the overall goals of the risk adjustment
program--to reduce incentives for issuers to avoid enrolling
individuals with higher than average actuarial risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ It has been suggested that the annual lump sum appropriation
to CMS for program management was potentially available for risk
adjustment payments. The lump sum appropriation for each year was
not enacted until after the applicable rule announcing the
methodology to calculate payments for the applicable benefit year.
Moreover, HHS does not believe that the lump sum is legally
available for risk adjustment payments. As the underlying budget
requests reflect, the lump sum is for program management expenses,
such as administrative costs for various CMS programs such as
Medicaid, Medicare, the Children's Health Insurance Program, and the
PPACA's insurance market reforms--not for the program payments
themselves. CMS would have elected to use the lump sum for these
important program management expenses even if CMS had discretion to
use all or part of the lump sum for risk adjustment payments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of the budget-neutral framework discussed above, HHS also
chose not to use a different parameter for the payment transfer formula
under the HHS-operated methodology, such as each plan's own premium,
that would not have automatically achieved equality between risk
adjustment payments and charges in each benefit year. As set forth in
prior discussions,\10\ use of the plan's own premium or some similar
parameter would have required the application of a balancing adjustment
in light of the program's budget neutrality--either reducing payments
to issuers owed a payment, increasing charges on issuers due a charge,
or splitting the difference in some fashion between issuers owed
payments and issuers assessed charges. Such adjustments would have
impaired the risk adjustment program's goals, discussed above, of
encouraging issuers to rate for the average risk in the applicable risk
pool and avoiding the creation of incentives for issuers to operate
less efficiently, set higher prices, develop benefit designs or create
marketing strategies to avoid higher-risk enrollees. Use of an after-
the-fact balancing adjustment is also less predictable for issuers than
a methodology that can be calculated in advance of a benefit year. Such
predictability is important to serving the risk adjustment program's
goals of premium stabilization and reducing issuer incentives to avoid
enrolling higher-risk populations. Additionally, using a plan's own
premium to scale transfers may provide additional incentive for plans
with high-risk enrollees to increase premiums in order to receive
additional risk adjustment payments. As noted by commenters to the 2014
Payment Notice proposed rule, transfers may be more volatile from year
to year and sensitive to anomalous premiums if they were scaled to a
plan's own premium instead of the statewide average premium. Scaling
the risk adjustment transfers by the statewide average premium promotes
premium stabilization by encouraging pricing to average risk in a risk
pool, and results in a calculation of equal payments and charges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See, e.g., September 12, 2011, Risk Adjustment
Implementation Issues White Paper, available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/riskadjustment_whitepaper_web.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the risk adjustment methodologies applicable to the 2018 and
2019 benefit years, HHS has adjusted statewide average premium by
reducing it by 14 percent to account for an estimated proportion of
administrative costs that do not vary with claims. HHS is not applying
this adjustment retroactively to the 2017 benefit year, but is instead
[[Page 36459]]
maintaining the definition of statewide average premium previously
established for the 2017 benefit year. As discussed above, HHS has
repeatedly stressed the importance of providing a risk adjustment
methodology in advance of the benefit year to which it applies to
provide issuers the opportunity to price their plans accordingly.\11\
To protect the settled expectations of issuers that have structured
their pricing and offering decisions in reliance on the previously
promulgated 2017 benefit year methodology, this rule maintains for the
2017 benefit year the description of statewide average premium set
forth in the 2017 Payment Notice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 76 FR 41930, 41932-33. Also see 81 FR 94058, 94702.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, for the 2017 benefit year, we are issuing this final
rule that adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology
previously established for the 2017 benefit year in the Federal
Register publications cited above, including use of statewide average
premium. As set forth in reports previously issued, HHS has completed
final risk adjustment calculations for the 2017 benefit year, but has
not yet collected or paid risk adjustment amounts to issuers of risk
adjustment covered plans. The provisions of this final rule adopt the
methodology that applies to collection and payment of risk adjustment
amounts for the 2017 benefit year. Because this final rule does not
alter any previously announced risk adjustment methodology, the amounts
previously calculated by HHS have not changed by virtue of this rule's
issuance.
HHS will begin collection of the 2017 benefit year risk adjustment
charge amounts announced in the Summary Report on Permanent Risk
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year \12\ through netting
pursuant to 45 CFR 156.1215(b) and subsequently issuing invoices if an
amount remains outstanding in the September 2018 monthly payment cycle.
HHS will begin making the 2017 benefit year risk adjustment payments
outlined in the Summary Report on Permanent Risk Adjustment Transfers
for the 2017 Benefit Year as part of the October 2018 monthly payment
cycle, continuing on a monthly basis as collections are received. Under
this timeline, issuers would receive invoices on or about September 11-
13, 2018 and payments would begin to be made around October 22, 2018.
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\12\ https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
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III. Adoption of the Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk
Adjustment Program Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
This rule adopts the final rules set out in the publication in the
March 23, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252) and
publication in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12204 through
12352). For the 2017 benefit year, in states where HHS is operating the
risk adjustment program under section 1343 of the PPACA, HHS will use
the criteria and methods as specified in the publication in the March
23, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252) and publication
in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12204 through 12352).
IV. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking and Delay in Effective Date
Under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 553), a
notice of proposed rulemaking and an opportunity for public comment are
generally required before issuing a regulation. We also ordinarily
provide a 30-day delay in the effective date of the provisions of a
rule in accordance with the APA (5 U.S.C. 553(d)), unless the rule is a
major rule and subject to the 60-day delayed effective date required by
the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801(a)(3)). However, these
procedures can be waived if the agency, for good cause, finds that
notice and public comment and delay in effective date are
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to public interest and
incorporates a statement of the finding and its reasons in the rule
issued. See 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3); 5 U.S.C. 808(2).
HHS has determined that issuing this rule in proposed form, such
that it would not become effective until after public comments are
submitted, considered, and responded to in a final rule, would be
impracticable, unnecessary, and contrary to the public interest. As
discussed above, immediate administrative action is imperative to
maintain the stability and predictability in the individual and small
group insurance markets. It is also consistent with settled
expectations in that this rule adopts the risk adjustment methodology
previously established for the 2017 benefit year.\13\ Under normal
operations, risk adjustment invoices for the 2017 benefit year would be
issued beginning in August 2018 and risk adjustment payments for the
2017 benefit year would be made beginning in the September 2018 monthly
payment cycle. Accordingly, it is now less than 2 months until risk
adjustment payments for the 2017 benefit year, expected to total $5.2
billion, are due to begin. Immediate action is also necessary to
maintain issuer confidence in the HHS-operated risk adjustment program.
Issuers have already accounted for expected risk adjustment transfers
in their rates for the 2017 benefit year and uncompensated payments for
the 2017 benefit year could lead to higher premiums in future benefit
years as issuers incorporate a risk premium into their rates. Issuers
file rates for the 2019 benefit year in the summer of 2018, and if a
projected $5.2 billion in risk adjustment payments is unavailable or
there is uncertainty as to whether payments for the 2018 benefit year
will be made, there is a serious risk issuers will substantially
increase 2019 premiums to account for the uncompensated risk associated
with high-risk enrollees. Consumers enrolled in certain plans could see
a significant premium increase, which could make coverage in those
plans particularly unaffordable for unsubsidized enrollees.
Furthermore, issuers are currently making decisions on whether to offer
qualified health plans (QHPs) through the Exchanges for the 2019
benefit year, and, for the Federally-facilitated Exchange (FFE), this
decision must be made before the August 2018 deadline to finalize QHP
agreements. In states with limited Exchange options, a QHP issuer exit
would restrict consumer choice, and put additional upward pressure on
Exchange premiums, thereby increasing the cost of coverage for
unsubsidized individuals and federal spending for premium tax credits.
The combination of these effects could lead to significant, involuntary
coverage losses in certain state market risk pools.
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\13\ The risk adjustment methodology for those benefit years was
published at the February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 10749)
and the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12203).
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Additionally, HHS's failure to make timely risk adjustment payments
could impact the solvency of plans providing coverage to sicker (and
costlier) than average enrollees that require the influx of risk
adjustment payments to continue operations. When state regulators
determine issuer solvency, any uncertainty surrounding risk adjustment
transfers jeopardizes regulators' ability to make decisions that
protect consumers and support the long-term health of insurance
markets. Therefore, HHS has determined that delaying the effective date
of the use of statewide average premium in the payment transfer
calculation under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the
2017 benefit year to allow for
[[Page 36460]]
proposed rulemaking and comment is impracticable and contrary to the
public interest because consumers would be negatively impacted by
premium changes should risk adjustment payments be interrupted or
confidence in the program undermined.
There is also good cause to proceed without notice and comment for
the additional reason that such procedures are unnecessary here. HHS
has received and considered comments in issuing the 2014 through 2017
Payment Notices. In each of these rulemaking processes, parties had the
opportunity to comment on HHS's use of statewide average premium in the
payment transfer formula under the HHS-operated risk adjustment
methodology. Because this final rule adopts the same HHS-operated risk
adjustment methodology issued in the 2017 Payment Notice final rule,
the comments received in those rulemakings are sufficiently current to
indicate a lack of necessity to engage in further notice and comment.
In the 2014 Payment Notice final rule, we received a number of comments
in support of our proposal to use the statewide average premium as the
basis for risk adjustment transfers. In subsequent benefit year
rulemakings, some commenters expressed a desire for HHS to use a plan's
own premium. HHS addressed those comments by reiterating that we had
considered the use of a plan's own premium instead of the statewide
average premium and chose to use statewide average premium. As this
approach supports the overall goal of the risk adjustment program to
encourage issuers to rate for the average risk in the applicable state
market risk pool, and avoids the creation of incentives for issuers to
operate less efficiently, set higher prices, develop benefit designs or
create marketing strategies to avoid high risk enrollees.
V. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection requirements,
that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or third-party disclosure
requirements. Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office
of Management and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology
for the 2017 benefit year set forth in the 2017 Payment Notice final
rule to ensure that the risk adjustment program works as intended to
protect consumers from the effects of adverse selection and premium
increases due to issuer uncertainty. The Premium Stabilization Rule and
previous Payment Notices noted above provided detail on the
implementation of the risk adjustment program, including the specific
parameters applicable for the 2017 benefit year.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact 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 1102(b) of the Social Security Act,
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), the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2), and Executive
Order 13771 on Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs.
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). A regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more in any one year).
OMB has determined that this final 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. In addition, for the reasons noted above, OMB has
determined that this is a major rule under the Congressional Review
Act.
This final rule offers a further explanation on budget neutrality
and the use of statewide average premium in the risk adjustment payment
transfer formula when HHS is operating the permanent risk adjustment
program established in section 1343 of the PPACA on behalf of a state
for the 2017 benefit year. We note that we previously estimated
transfers associated with the risk adjustment program in the Premium
Stabilization Rule and the 2017 Payment Notice, and that the provisions
of this final rule do not change the risk adjustment transfers
previously estimated under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology
established in those final rules. The approximate risk adjustment
transfers for the 2017 benefit year are $5.179 billion. As such, we
also adopt the RIA in the 2017 Payment Notice proposed and final rules.
Dated: July 23, 2018.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Dated: July 24, 2018.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2018-16190 Filed 7-25-18; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P