SB-1150, As Passed Senate, November 4, 2004
SUBSTITUTE FOR
SENATE BILL NO. 1150
A bill to amend 1956 PA 218, entitled
"The insurance code of 1956,"
by amending sections 3515, 3519, 3523, 3529, 3533, 3569, and 3571
(MCL 500.3515, 500.3519, 500.3523, 500.3529, 500.3533, 500.3569,
and 500.3571), sections 3515 and 3519 as amended by 2002 PA 621,
sections 3523 and 3529 as amended by 2002 PA 304, and sections
3533, 3569, and 3571 as added by 2000 PA 252.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
1 Sec. 3515. (1) A health maintenance organization may
2 provide additional health maintenance services or any other
3 related health care service or treatment not required under this
4 chapter.
5 (2) A health maintenance organization may have health
6 maintenance contracts
with deductibles. A For specific health
7 maintenance services, a health maintenance organization may have
1 health maintenance
contracts with that require copayments,
2 that are required for
specific health maintenance services.
3 Copayments for
services required under section 3501(b) stated
as
4 dollar amounts for the cost of covered services, and coinsurance,
5 stated as percentages for the cost of covered services.
6 Coinsurance for basic health services and copayments for
7 inpatient hospital services and facility-based outpatient
8 surgical services,
excluding deductibles, shall be nominal,
9 shall not exceed 50% of a health maintenance organization's
10 reimbursement to an affiliated provider for providing the service
11 to an enrollee , and
shall not be based on the provider's
12 standard charge for the service.
13 (3) An enrollee's aggregate out-of-pocket costs for
14 coinsurance for basic health services and an enrollee's aggregate
15 out-of-pocket costs for copayments for inpatient hospital
16 services and facility-based outpatient surgical services shall
17 not exceed $5,000.00 per year for an individual covered under a
18 health maintenance contract and $10,000.00 per year for a family
19 covered under a health maintenance contract. The maximum
20 coinsurance and copayment out-of-pocket costs shall be adjusted
21 annually to the greater of the following:
22 (a) By March 31 each year in accordance with the annual
23 average percentage change in the consumer price index for all
24 urban consumers in the United States city average for medical
25 care for the 12-month period ending the preceding December 31, as
26 reported by the United States department of labor, bureau of
27 labor statistics, and as certified by the commissioner.
Senate Bill No. 1150 as amended October 6, 2004
1 (b) The maximum annual out-of-pocket expenses for a high
2 deductible health plan under section 223 of the internal revenue
3 code, 26 USC 223, as certified by the commissioner.
4 (4) Upon petition by a health maintenance organization to the
5 commissioner, the maximum coinsurance and co-payment
6 out-of-pocket costs under subsection (3) shall be adjusted to an
7 amount warranted by current market conditions. Within 90 days
8 after the date of the petition, the commissioner shall make the
9 adjustment or reject the adjustment as not being warranted by
10 current market conditions. As used in this subsection:
11 (a) "Current market conditions" includes higher coinsurances
12 and co-payments being used in the same or similar products
13 marketed by other health insurers.
14 (b) "Health insurer" means a <<health maintenance organization,
15 nonprofit health care corporation, or commercial insurer regulated by the
16 insurance laws of this state and providing any form of health insurance
17 or coverage.
18 >>
19 (5) A health maintenance organization may have health
20 maintenance contracts under section 3533 with separate
21 out-of-pocket costs for services performed by nonaffiliated
22 providers that do not exceed 2 times the out-of-pocket costs
23 under subsection (3) or (4) for services performed by affiliated
24 providers. A health maintenance organization shall not have
25 separate out-of-pocket costs under this subsection for emergency
26 services or for services performed by nonaffiliated providers
27 that are authorized by the health maintenance organization.
1 (6) A health maintenance organization shall not require
2 contributions be made to
a deductible for preventative
3 preventive health care services. As used in this subsection,
4 "preventative "preventive health care services"
means services
5 designated to maintain an individual in optimum health and to
6 prevent unnecessary injury, illness, or disability.
7 (7) (3) A
health maintenance organization may accept from
8 governmental agencies and from private persons payments covering
9 any part of the cost of health maintenance contracts.
10 Sec. 3519. (1) A health maintenance organization contract
11 and the contract's rates,
including any deductibles, and
12 copayments, and coinsurances, between the organization and its
13 subscribers shall be fair, sound, and reasonable in relation to
14 the services provided, and the procedures for offering and
15 terminating contracts shall not be unfairly discriminatory.
16 (2) A health maintenance organization contract and the
17 contract's rates shall not discriminate on the basis of race,
18 color, creed, national origin, residence within the approved
19 service area of the health maintenance organization, lawful
20 occupation, sex, handicap, or marital status, except that marital
21 status may be used to classify individuals or risks for the
22 purpose of insuring family units. The commissioner may approve a
23 rate differential based on sex, age, residence, disability,
24 marital status, or lawful occupation, if the differential is
25 supported by sound actuarial principles, a reasonable
26 classification system, and is related to the actual and credible
27 loss statistics or reasonably anticipated experience for new
1 coverages.
2 (3) All health maintenance organization contracts shall
3 include, at a minimum, basic health services.
4 Sec. 3523. (1) A health maintenance contract shall be filed
5 with and approved by the commissioner.
6 (2) A health maintenance contract shall include any approved
7 riders, amendments, and the enrollment application.
8 (3) In addition to the provisions of this act that apply to
9 an expense-incurred hospital, medical, or surgical policy or
10 certificate, a health maintenance contract shall include all of
11 the following:
12 (a) Name and address of the organization.
13 (b) Definitions of terms subject to interpretation.
14 (c) The effective date and duration of coverage.
15 (d) The conditions of eligibility.
16 (e) A statement of responsibility for payments.
17 (f) A description of specific benefits and services available
18 under the contract within the service area, with respective
19 copayments, coinsurances, and deductibles.
20 (g) A description of emergency and out-of-area services.
21 (h) A specific description of any limitation, exclusion, and
22 exception, including any preexisting condition limitation,
23 grouped together with captions in boldfaced type.
24 (i) Covenants that address confidentiality, an enrollee's
25 right to choose or change the primary care physician or other
26 providers, availability and accessibility of services, and any
27 rights of the enrollee to inspect and review his or her medical
1 records.
2 (j) Covenants of the subscriber shall address all of the
3 following subjects:
4 (i) Timely payment.
5 (ii) Nonassignment of benefits.
6 (iii) Truth in application and statements.
7 (iv) Notification of change in address.
8 (v) Theft of membership identification.
9 (k) A statement of responsibilities and rights regarding the
10 grievance procedure.
11 (l) A statement regarding subrogation and coordination of
12 benefits provisions, including any responsibility of the enrollee
13 to cooperate.
14 (m) A statement regarding conversion rights.
15 (n) Provisions for adding new family members or other
16 acquired dependents, including conversion of individual contracts
17 to family contracts and family contracts to individual contracts,
18 and the time constraints imposed.
19 (o) Provisions for grace periods for late payment.
20 (p) A description of any specific terms under which the
21 health maintenance organization or the subscriber can terminate
22 the contract.
23 (q) A statement of the nonassignability of the contract.
24 Sec. 3529. (1) A health maintenance organization may
25 contract with or employ health professionals on the basis of
26 cost, quality, availability of services to the membership,
27 conformity to the administrative procedures of the health
1 maintenance organization, and other factors relevant to delivery
2 of economical, quality care, but shall not discriminate solely on
3 the basis of the class of health professionals to which the
4 health professional belongs.
5 (2) A health maintenance organization shall enter into
6 contracts with providers through which health care services are
7 usually provided to enrollees under the health maintenance
8 organization plan.
9 (3) An affiliated provider contract shall prohibit the
10 provider from seeking payment from the enrollee for services
11 provided pursuant to the provider contract, except that the
12 contract may allow affiliated providers to collect copayments,
13 coinsurances, and deductibles directly from enrollees.
14 (4) An affiliated provider contract shall contain provisions
15 assuring all of the following:
16 (a) The provider meets applicable licensure or certification
17 requirements.
18 (b) Appropriate access by the health maintenance organization
19 to records or reports concerning services to its enrollees.
20 (c) The provider cooperates with the health maintenance
21 organization's quality assurance activities.
22 (5) The commissioner may waive the contract requirement under
23 subsection (2) if a health maintenance organization has
24 demonstrated that it is unable to obtain a contract and
25 accessibility to patient care would not be compromised. When 10%
26 or more of a health maintenance organization's elective inpatient
27 admissions, or projected admissions for a new health maintenance
1 organization, occur in hospitals with which the health
2 maintenance organization does not have contracts or agreements
3 that protect enrollees from liability for authorized admissions
4 and services, the health maintenance organization may be required
5 to maintain a hospital reserve fund equal to 3 months' projected
6 claims from such hospitals.
7 (6) A health maintenance organization shall submit to the
8 commissioner for approval standard contract formats proposed for
9 use with its affiliated providers and any substantive changes to
10 those contracts. The contract format or change is considered
11 approved 30 days after filing unless approved or disapproved
12 within the 30 days. As used in this subsection, "substantive
13 changes to contract formats" means a change to a provider
14 contract that alters the method of payment to a provider, alters
15 the risk assumed by each party to the contract, or affects a
16 provision required by law.
17 (7) A health maintenance organization or applicant shall
18 provide evidence that it has employed, or has executed
19 affiliation contracts with, a sufficient number of providers to
20 enable it to deliver the health maintenance services it proposes
21 to offer.
22 Sec. 3533. (1) A health maintenance organization may offer
23 prudent purchaser contracts to groups or individuals and in
24 conjunction with those contracts a health maintenance
25 organization may pay or may reimburse enrollees, or may contract
26 with another entity to pay or reimburse enrollees, for
27 unauthorized services or for services by nonaffiliated providers
1 in accordance with the terms of the contract and subject to
2 copayments, coinsurances, deductibles, or other financial
3 penalties designed to encourage enrollees to obtain services from
4 the organization's providers.
5 (2) Prudent purchaser contracts and the rates charged for
6 them are subject to the same regulatory requirements as health
7 maintenance contracts. The rates charged by an organization for
8 coverage under contracts issued under this section shall not be
9 unreasonably lower than what is necessary to meet the expenses of
10 the organization for providing this coverage and shall not have
11 an anticompetitive effect or result in predatory pricing in
12 relation to prudent purchaser agreement coverages offered by
13 other organizations.
14 (3) A health maintenance organization shall not issue prudent
15 purchaser contracts unless it is in full compliance with the
16 requirements for adequate working capital, statutory deposits,
17 and reserves as provided in this chapter and it is not operating
18 under any limitation to its authorization to do business in this
19 state.
20 (4) A health maintenance organization shall maintain
21 financial records for its prudent purchaser contracts and
22 activities in a form separate or separable from the financial
23 records of other operations and activities carried on by the
24 organization.
25 Sec. 3569. (1) Except as provided in section 3515(2), (3),
26 (4), and (5), a health maintenance organization shall assume full
27 financial risk on a prospective basis for the provision of health
1 maintenance services. However, the organization may do any of
2 the following:
3 (a) Require an affiliated provider to assume financial risk
4 under the terms of its contract.
5 (b) Obtain insurance.
6 (c) Make other arrangements for the cost of providing to an
7 enrollee health maintenance services the aggregate value of which
8 is more than $5,000.00 in a year for that enrollee.
9 (2) If the health maintenance organization requires an
10 affiliated provider to assume financial risk under the terms of
11 its contract, the contract shall require both of the following:
12 (a) The health maintenance organization to pay the affiliated
13 provider, including a subcontracted provider, directly or through
14 a licensed third party administrator for health maintenance
15 services provided to its enrollees.
16 (b) The health maintenance organization to keep all pooled
17 funds and withhold amounts and account for them on its financial
18 books and records and reconcile them at year end in accordance
19 with the written agreement between the affiliated provider and
20 the health maintenance organization.
21 (3) As used in this section, "requiring an affiliated
22 provider to assume financial risk" means a transaction whereby a
23 portion of the chance of loss, including expenses incurred,
24 related to the delivery of health maintenance services is shared
25 with an affiliated provider in return for a consideration. These
26 transactions include, but are not limited to, full or partial
27 capitation agreements, withholds, risk corridors, and indemnity
1 agreements.
2 Sec. 3571. A health maintenance organization is not
3 precluded from meeting the
requirements of, receiving moneys
4 money from, and enrolling
beneficiaries or recipients of ,
5 state and federal health programs. A health maintenance
6 organization that participates in a state or federal health
7 program shall meet the solvency and financial requirements of
8 this act but is not required to offer benefits or services that
9 exceed the requirements of the state or federal health program.
10 This section does not apply to state employee or federal employee
11 health programs.