Florida Administrative Code
69 - DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL SERVICES
69O - OIR - Insurance Regulation
Chapter 69O-191 - HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATIONS
Section 69O-191.055 - Actuarial Memorandum and Definitions
Universal Citation: FL Admin Code R 69O-191.055
Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1)
(a) In
order for a rate filing to be reviewed properly by the Office, the actuarial
memorandum required by subparagraph
69O-191.054(2)(a)
2., F.A.C., shall contain the items listed in subsection (2), below, for a new
product filing, a rate revision or justification of existing rates.
(b)
1.
Pricing assumptions shall reflect assumptions based on sound actuarial
principles reflecting actual anticipated experience. Pricing assumptions shall
be based on the HMO experience to the degree credible.
2. All such items shall be adequately
justified by supporting data. In reviewing these assumptions, the Office will
use, as an initial point of reference, comparisons of the assumptions with
those from similar products of the same HMO, similar products of other HMO's
and independent studies.
3. New
forms shall include a rate and benefit comparison to other similar forms of the
HMO. The HMO shall demonstrate that the premium rate schedules represent an
actuarially sound relationship between the forms and between benefit options
within forms.
4. Rate revision
filings shall clearly list and justify all rating factors and methods proposed
to be changed.
(c) All
filings reviewed under Rules
69O-191.054 through
69O-191.055, F.A.C., shall be
reviewed in accordance with sound actuarial principles and, except where the
context plainly does not involve an actuarial determination, all adverbs in
these rules such as "properly" and "appropriately" shall be construed in light
of those principles.
(2) Note that the numbers preceding the item names refer to the descriptions in subsection (3), below.
(a) Item 1. Scope and
Purpose of Filing.
(b) Item 2.
Description of Benefits.
(c) Item
3. Morbidity.
(d) Item 4.
Retention.
(e) Item 5. Rate
Classes.
(f) Item 6. Area
Factors.
(g) Item 7. Premium
Modalization Rules.
(h) Item 8.
Trend Assumption - Medical and Insurance.
(i) Item 9. Minimum Required Loss Ratio for
the Form.
(j) Item 10. Anticipated
Loss Ratio for the Form.
(k) Item
11. Experience on the Contract Form.
(l) Item 12. History of Rate
Adjustments.
(m) Item 13. Number of
Subscribers.
(n) Item 14. Proposed
Effective Date.
(o) Item 15.
Actuarial Certification.
(3) Descriptions.
(a) For new filings, for rate revisions, and
for justification of existing rates, the assumptions presented shall be those
that are appropriate at the time of the filing.
(b) The descriptions, by item number, of the
terms listed above in subsection (2), follow:
1. Scope and Purpose of Filing: This section
shall specify whether this is a new filing, a rate revision, or a rate
justification, the reason for the revision shall be stated.
2. Description of Benefits: This section
shall include a brief description of the benefits provided by the policy,
including a schedule of benefits and applicable co-payments.
3. Morbidity: This section shall describe the
morbidity basis for the form, including the source or sources used. Any
substantive adjustments from either the source or earlier assumptions shall be
explained. For new plans or forms, a PMPM (per member per month) development
shall be provided. Utilization or claim cost assumption differences from other
plans or prior filings shall be explained and justified.
4. Retention: This section shall include a
brief description of any expense assumptions used. Components of expenses
include, where applicable for the type of contract, per contract and percentage
of premium expense for acquisition, maintenance, commissions, contingency, and
risk margins. These must be provided separately for each contract year. This
section shall provide the reason and basis for any differences in retention
between groups issued coverage under the same form.
5. Rate Classes: This section shall state all
the attributes upon which the rates vary. Rate classifications may include but
not necessarily be limited to age, sex, subscriber type (single, couple or
family), industry, effective date, charges or discounts for group size, riders,
co-payments, limitations on benefits, retention and any rate guarantees for
extended period. This section shall indicate the issue age range of the
form.
6. Area Factors: This section
shall include a brief description for any area factors used, and an explanation
and justification of any changes since the last filing. The area factors and
definitions must also be displayed, including a definition of which counties
are included in each area. Area factors shall reflect the relative cost
differences between the areas.
7.
Premium Modalization Rules: This section shall display the modalization factors
and fees as applicable. For premium modes other than monthly, the level of the
fees and factors shall be adequately justified by supporting data.
8. Trend Assumptions: This section must
describe the trend assumptions used in pricing. These assumptions must be
appropriate for the specific HMO, product design, benefit configuration, and
time period. Any and all factors affecting the projection of future claims must
be presented. In no case will trend be approved for rating periods in excess of
one year. The trend assumptions shall be presented under two categories:
Medical and Insurance.
a. Medical Trend is the
combined effect of medical provider price increases, utilization changes,
medical cost shifting, and new medical procedures and technology.
b. Insurance Trend is the combined effect of
underwriting wearoff, antiselection resulting from rate increases and
discontinuance of new sales. Medical Trend must be determined or assumed before
insurance trend can be determined.
c. In determining medical trend, the HMO
shall use credible data and make appropriate adjustments to claims data to
isolate the effects of medical trend only. This shall not include the effects
of underwriting wearoff, aging, changes to claim costs due to changes in
demographics, contract coverages, geographic distribution, or
reinsurance.
d. An HMO without
fully credible data may, at its option, use an annual medical trend assumption
not to exceed the values in subsection
69O-149.003(7),
F.A.C., for the medical trend assumption without providing explicit trend
justification.
9. Minimum
Required Loss Ratio for the Form: This section shall provide the loss ratio
standard for the form as approved in the original or subsequent filing for the
form.
10. Anticipated Loss Ratio
for the Form:
a. This section shall provide
the anticipated loss ratio for the form.
b. For individual contracts, this section
shall also include the proposed, if applicable, and the currently approved
durational loss ratio tables, i.e., the table of percentages of expected claims
divided by expected premiums by contract duration, for the form. For new
filings or requests to change the durational table, the actuary shall explain
and justify the underwriting impact and the resulting durational loss ratio
pattern. Applying pricing persistency and interest assumptions, the durational
loss ratio table shall develop the loss ratio standard for the form.
c. The anticipated loss ratio may not be
reduced from the loss ratio in the prior approved filing without approval. The
target loss ratio for an individual or group policy form may be increased
through a justification of the proposed change. The target loss ratio for an
individual or group policy form may be reduced upon demonstration and
justification of an increase in administrative costs, but may not be reduced to
less than the minimum required standard for the policy form in Rule
69O-149.005, F.A.C. The proposed
decrease due to administrative costs cannot be more than 0.5% per
year.
11. Experience on
the Contract Form.
a. Past Experience: This
section shall display the actual experience on the form. Experience from
inception-to-date (or the last three years for group coverages) shall be
displayed. For each calendar year, and for individual contracts each contract
year, the following information shall be displayed:
(I) Calendar Year;
(II) Earned premium;
(III) Paid claims, including
capitation;
(IV) Paid loss ratio
(=III/II);
(V) Change in claim
liability and reserve, updating as actual runoff develops;
(VI) Incurred claims (=III+V);
(VII) Incurred loss ratio (=VI/II);
(VIII) Expected claims;
(IX) Expected loss ratio
(=VIII/II);
(X) Actual to expected
ratio (=VI/VIII or =VII/IX).
b. Future periods:
(I) This section shall be the basis and
demonstration that the proposed rate change is in compliance with the standards
of this rule.
(II) This section
shall provide the anticipated experience over the rating period, and shall
provide the method, formulas and assumptions used in determining the projected
values from the experience period used.
(III) The experience period shall be the most
current available 12-month period. The experience period data used shall be the
earned premium restated to the current manual rate basis for the entire
experience period, i.e., removing the impact of adjustments to the actual
earned premium due to the impact of rate limits, experience rating or retention
differences from the target loss ratio and indifferent of the anniversary dates
of the underlying contracts. The HMO shall also provide the actual experience
over the rating period.
(IV) The
HMO shall indicate how the experience period data has been adjusted for large
nonrecurring claims, reinsurance recoveries, coordination of benefits and
subrogation, benefit changes or other actuarial consideration that affect the
determination of anticipated claims.
(V) Alternatively, the HMO may choose to
develop the proposed rate without the use of premiums by basing its analysis on
projected claim PMPM divided by the target loss
ratio.
12.
History of Rate Adjustments: This section shall list the approval dates and
average percentage rate adjustments in Florida by county or rating region, from
inception.
13. Number of
Subscribers: This section shall report the number of Florida subscribers who
will be affected by the proposed rate revision.
14. Proposed Effective Date: This section
shall state the proposed effective date and method of the proposed rate
revision implementation. Rate changes may occur only on contract
renewal.
15. Actuarial
Certification: A signed certification by a qualified actuary that to the best
of the actuary's knowledge and judgment:
a.
The rates are neither inadequate nor excessive nor unfairly
discriminatory,
b. The rates are
appropriate for the classes of risks for which they have been
computed,
c. The entire rate filing
is in compliance with the applicable laws of the State of Florida and with the
rules of the Office of Insurance Regulation, and complies with Actuarial
Standard of Practice No. 8, "Regulatory Filings for Rates and Financial
Projections for Health Plans," as adopted by the Actuarial Standards Board,
January, 1989, and Actuarial Standard of Practice No. 16 "Actuarial Practice
concerning Health Maintenance Organizations and Other Managed-Care Health
Plans," as adopted by the Actuarial Standards Board, July, 1990, which
standards are hereby adopted and incorporated by reference. A copy of the
standard may be obtained from the Bureau of Life & Health Forms and Rates,
Division of Insurer Services, Office of Insurance Regulation, Larson Building,
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0328.
d. If
the actuary is unable to provide such an opinion, a detailed explanation and
reason for any qualification shall be provided as part of the
certification.
e. In providing the
actuarial opinion and certification, the actuary shall consider actuarial
standards of practice and the qualification standards for prescribed statements
of actuarial opinion.
(4) Definitions.
(a) Actual to expected ratio:
1. This is the ratio of actual incurred
claims divided by expected claims. This is equivalent to the actual loss ratio
divided by the expected loss ratio.
2. For projected periods, the actual to
expected ratio is the ratio of the projected claims divided by the expected
claims.
(b) Anticipated
loss ratio: The present value of future benefits divided by the present value
of future premiums computed over the entire future lifetime of the contract
form. For group insurance, this is over the rating period and alternatively
referred to as "target loss ratio."
(c) Credible Data:
1. If a contract form has 2,000 or more
subscribers in force, then full (100%) credibility is given to the experience;
if fewer than 500 subscribers are in force, then zero (0%) credibility is
given. Linear interpolation is used for in force amounts between 500 and
2,000.
2. For group contract forms,
the numbers in this definition refer to group subscribers.
3. Medical trend shall be used for the
non-credible portion of the analysis.
(d) Earned premiums: The portion of the total
premium paid which is attributable to the period of coverage elapsed. This
includes all modal loadings, fees, or charges that are required to be paid for
coverage under a contract.
(e)
Expected claims:
1. The actual earned premium,
or for projected periods the projected premium, times the applicable contract
durational loss ratio from the approved durational loss ratio table which was
in effect for the time period covered by the premiums. For group contract, the
durational loss ratio is the target loss ratio.
2. For group policies, this reflects the
aggregation of the actual target loss ratio for the group; i.e., reflecting
actual different retention loads by group, and not the assumed aggregate target
loss ratio for the form.
(f) Expected loss ratio: This is the ratio of
expected claims divided by earned premium.
(g) Group HMO Contract Form: This means any
insurance provided by a group master contract issued to any entity.
(h) Group Size: For Group HMO Contract Forms,
the group size is the average number of subscribers per employer.
(i) Incurred claims: Incurred claims are
claims occurring within a fixed period, whether or not paid during the same
period, under the terms of the contract form.
1. Claims include scheduled benefit payments,
capitation payments, reimbursement benefit payments, or services provided by a
provider or through a provider network for medical, dental, vision, disability,
and similar health benefits.
2.
Claims do not include state assessments, taxes, HMO expenses, or any expense
incurred by the HMO for the cost of adjusting and settling a claim, including
the review, qualification, oversight, management or monitoring of a claim or
incentives or compensation to providers for other than the provision of health
care services.
3. An HMO may, at
its discretion, include costs that are demonstrated to reduce claims, such as a
fraud intervention program or case management costs, which are identified in
each filing, and are demonstrated to reduce claims costs and do not result in
increasing the experience period loss ratio by more than 5
percent.
(j) New Policy
Form: This means a policy form that is proposed for approval to the Office and
has no contracts issued or in force.
(k) Policy Form: This means either a single
policy form or any collection of policy forms that have been combined for
rating purposes. A collection once combined continues to be combined.
(l) Premium Schedule: This is the collection
of rates to be charged, and encompasses base rates and any modifying
factors.
(m) Rate Revision: This is
any change to be the premium schedule being charged.
(n) Renewal: This is the date 12 months after
the original effective date of the contract and each subsequent anniversary
period. This does not prevent a group contract purchaser from requesting a
specific rating period or change the anniversary date of the
contract.
(o) Qualified Actuary: A
Qualified Actuary is one who is a member of the Society of Actuaries or the
American Academy of Actuaries and who is experienced in the development of
rating methodologies for HMO's.
Rulemaking Authority 641.31, 641.36 FS. Law Implemented 641.22(2), 641.31(2), (3) FS.
New 10-8-96, Amended 4-20-98, 8-15-02, 1-19-03, Formerly 4-191.055, Amended 1-3-21.
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