New York Codes, Rules and Regulations
Title 11 - INSURANCE
Chapter XIV - Individual And Small Group Health Insurance
Part 361 - Establishment And Operation Of Market Stabilization Mechanisms For Individual And Small Group Health Insurance And Medicare Supplement Insurance
Section 361.1 - Preamble
Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) Chapter 501 of the Laws of 1992 requires that the superintendent promulgate regulations regarding the orderly implementation of open enrollment and community-rating of policies issued to small groups and individuals pursuant to sections 3231 and 4317 of the Insurance Law. Such regulations are to include provisions designed to encourage insurers to remain in or enter the small group or individual health insurance markets, provisions designed to promote an insurance marketplace where premiums do not unduly fluctuate, insurers and HMOs are reasonably protected against unexpected significant shifts in the number of persons insured, and other market stability features deemed appropriate by the superintendent.
(b) Prior to enactment of sections 3231 and 4317 of the Insurance Law there was some concern that the open enrollment process would expose insurers and HMOs to financial losses due to the enrollment of persons for coverage who are very ill or have a history of poor health, and whose cost of health care would be higher than the amounts assumed in the establishment of premium rates. Insurers which encountered these situations, or feared they might encounter them, might cease their participation in either the small group health insurance or individual health insurance markets, or both. HMOs, which are required to participate in those markets, might suffer ruinous losses. In order to avoid those results the Legislature enacted section 3233 of the Insurance Law which explicitly requires that these regulations include market stability and other provisions designed to encourage insurers to remain in or enter those markets, and to protect all insurers and HMOs in those markets from extreme losses due to open enrollment.
(c) Chapter 501 was designed to cause insurers and HMOs to compete with each other in the small group and individual health insurance markets on the basis of administrative efficiency, customer satisfaction, the ability to manage care and cost-effective provider agreements, rather than on the basis of avoiding or terminating coverage of persons whose health care costs are high. In order to implement the statutory intent that insurers and HMOs be prevented from avoiding high cost persons in order to obtain a marketplace advantage over their competitors, the market stability provisions need to include all insurers and HMOs participating in the individual and small group health insurance markets. If the mechanism were voluntary, insurers and HMOs which did not cover a proportionate share of high cost persons would naturally decline to participate and thus continue to reap benefits from not covering a proportionate share of high cost persons.
(d) The purpose of this regulation is to establish a market stabilization process which achieves the following goals:
(e) The market stabilization process intended to be implemented by the sections below includes two components.
(f) The market stabilization process is based on reasonably available data and factors that account for a significant portion of the cost differences among insurers and HMOs due to demographics and high cost medical conditions, but they are not expected to account for all differences among insurers and HMOs. A more precise adjustment process would require a marked increase in administrative effort, yielding marginal improvement in results. Cost variations among insurers and HMOs based on operational efficiency, ability to manage health care costs and patient care, as well as administration of health insurance policy provisions, are not intended to be neutralized and indeed are encouraged.