Getting The Most From Your Health Insurance
Learn about these important laws and make
your health insurance benefits work for you.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the majority of Americans --
84.4% -- are covered by some form of health insurance, mostly
through a current or former employer or union. Simply having
coverage is not enough, however. In order to get the most from your
health insurance coverage, you must know what legal rights and
protections you have.
There are a number of federal laws that govern your health
insurance. These laws address everything from interruptions in
coverage to coverage for newborn babies to mental health coverage.
Read on to learn more about any of the following laws.
- The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, which helps
people keep their group health insurance coverage even after losing
or leaving a job.
- The Newborns' and Mothers' Health Protection Act, which
protects women and their newborns from being prematurely released
from the hospital after childbirth.
- The Mental Health Parity Act, which prohibits health plans and
insurers from providing less coverage for mental disorders.
- The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which,
among other things, protects people who suffer from what the
insurance industry calls "pre-existing conditions."
- The Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act, which governs how your health insurance company treats women who suffer from breast cancer.
The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
If you have just lost or left your job, this law -- commonly
called COBRA -- will help you and your family keep your group
health coverage while you make the transition to a new plan.
COBRA requires most employers to offer employees and their families
the opportunity for a temporary extension of health coverage under
certain circumstances -- such as job loss, job transition, job
reduction, divorce, or death of the covered employee -- after which
their health plan coverage would ordinarily end. These instances
are called "qualifying events," and the extension can last anywhere
from 18 months to 36 months, depending on the situation.
- If the reason that you are losing coverage is because you quit
your job, because your employer reduced your hours, or because your
employer terminated your employment (for reasons other than "gross
misconduct"), you can continue coverage for yourself, your spouse,
and your dependent children for a period of 18 months.
- If you were covered under your spouse's health plan and are
losing that coverage because of divorce, separation, or the death
of your spouse, you can continue coverage for you and your
dependent children for a period of 36 months.
- If you were covered under a parent's health plan and are losing that coverage because you are no longer a dependent of your parent, you can continue coverage for yourself for a period of 36 months.
Unfortunately for your pocketbook, COBRA is not free
coverage.Those wholose their coverage because of an involuntary
termination of employment (their own or that of a spouse or parent)
may be eligible for a partial subsidy of the cost (see New COBRA
Rules: Stimulus Package Subsidizes Continued Health Insurance);
everyone else has to paythe full cost ofcontinued coverage
themselves. Still, COBRA ensures that you will pay for that
coverage under the group rate that was paid by your employer, which
might be less than individual rates.
You, your employer, and your health plan all have responsibilities
under the law. For example, the plan must inform you generally
about your rights under COBRA. Employers must notify the plan of an
employee's death, termination of employment, or reduction in hours.
The employee or covered family member must notify the plan of a
divorce, legal separation, or disability. The employee or covered
family member must also notify the plan when a child loses
dependent status. If you want to continue coverage under COBRA, you
have 60 days from the date when your employer-paid coverage would
end to notify the plan that you want to continue coverage.
The Newborns' and Mothers' Health Protection Act
This Act, signed into law in 1996 and effective for group health
plans since 1998, protects a woman and her newborn child from being
prematurely released from the hospital after childbirth. It
guarantees that a woman and her newborn baby will be allowed to
stay in the hospital for at least 48 hours after a vaginal delivery
or 96 hours after a cesarean delivery.
A mother can leave the hospital after a shorter length of time only
if she and her attending healthcare provider -- such as a physician
or a nurse midwife -- agree that the shorter stay is sufficient.
However, the law prohibits health plans and insurers from giving
the mother or the provider any incentives (either positive or
negative) that might encourage a shorter stay.
The Mental Health Parity Act
This law seeks to end the practice by health plans and insurers
of providing less coverage for mental disorders than they do for
physical disorders. Data from the federal Bureau of Labor
Statistics indicate that, prior to the Act, approximately 90% of
policies offered fewer benefits for mental health than for physical
health. Indeed, the typical caps for mental illness coverage were
$5,000 per year and $50,000 over the course of a lifetime. These
caps may seem high until you compare them to the caps for physical
disorders: no caps per year and $1 million over the course of a
lifetime.
One key limitation of the Act is that it applies only to health
plans and insurers that cover mental disorders in the first place.
It does not mandate coverage for mental disorders where none is
provided. Another limitation is that the law does not cover
businesses with 50 or fewer employees.
An additional limitation is that the Act covers only mental
illness; it does not cover treatment for substance abuse or
chemical dependency. Because the law is about parity, and not about
mandating coverage for mental illness, the law does not define
mental illness. Rather, the law applies to "mental health services"
as the term is used by the individual health plans. Whatever mental
health services the plan covers, it must cover at the same level as
physical health services.
Critics of the Mental Health Parity Act have argued that it has too
many loopholes and too many exclusions to truly end the practice of
providing less coverage for mental health than for physical health.
Fortunately, many states have passed their own parity laws, many of
which provide broader protection. To learn whether your state has a
more comprehensive law, visit insure.com at www.insure.com/health/mentalstate.html.*
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
provides a range of protection to millions of working Americans who
have some sort of health-related condition or characteristic that
makes them vulnerable to exclusions, limitations, and
discrimination in group healthcare coverage. HIPAA applies mainly
to employer-based health coverage. Therefore, if you get your
health insurance through your employer, and if you have what is
called a "pre-existing condition" (see below) or some other
health-related characteristic that makes you "undesirable" in the
eyes of an insurance company, you should get to know HIPAA so that
you can use it to protect yourself and your family.
A pre-existing condition is a condition for which you received
medical advice, diagnosis, care, or treatment in the six months
prior to enrolling in your current health plan. Cancer and high
blood pressure are common pre-existing conditions. For example, you
may have received treatment for breast cancer in June, and enrolled
in a new group health plan in July. Prior to this Act, you faced
the possibility that your new health plan would not cover your
breast cancer treatment for several years -- or at all -- simply
because you received treatment for it previously.
The intent of HIPAA is to turn the tables on health plans and
insurance companies by limiting the ways in which they can exclude
coverage of such conditions:
- Pregnancy is no longer considered a pre-existing condition.
Therefore, if you are pregnant and want to switch group health
plans, you can do so without risking a break in your coverage. But
be careful: There are some large loopholes in this protection.
HIPAA applies only to women who switch from one group health plan
to another. Therefore, if you had no coverage and then obtained
group coverage through a new job after you got pregnant, your
pregnancy may not be covered or you may have to wait for a period
of time before it gets covered. (Ironically, this waiting period
may last longer than your pregnancy.) Similarly, if you had
individual coverage and then switched to either group coverage or
to another individual plan after you got pregnant, your pregnancy
may not be covered at all or for a specified period of time.
- Health plans and insurers cannot apply the pre-existing
condition exclusion to newborns or to children younger than 18 who
are adopted or who are put up for adoption so long as the newborn
or the child entered the health plan within 30 days of birth,
adoption or placement for adoption.
- Genetic information may not be treated as a preexisting
condition in the absence of a diagnosis. If your coverage is
through an insurance company or offered through a health
maintenance organization, state law may provide additional
protections.
- The Act places a six-month "look back" limit on identifying
pre-existing conditions. This means that if you have a condition
for which you received medical advice, diagnosis, care, or
treatment longer than six months prior to enrolling in your new
plan, that condition is not pre-existing and cannot be excluded
from coverage on that basis.
- If you do have a pre-existing condition and you have group
health insurance, you face shorter pre-existing condition exclusion
periods than you would have faced prior to HIPAA. In other words,
you can get covered for your condition faster than before. The
maximum exclusion period is generally 12 months from the date on
which you enrolled in the plan.
- If you switch from one group health plan to another as the result of a job change, you will not face new pre-existing condition exclusions so long as there is no more than a 63-day break in your health coverage. This enables you to switch jobs despite your health status without fear that you will lose coverage for certain conditions.
In addition to protecting you from exclusions based on
pre-existing conditions, HIPAA also protects you from
discrimination based on health-related characteristics. The Act
prohibits health plans and insurers from excluding you from
coverage or charging you more for coverage because of your health
status.
Finally, HIPAA requires health care providers, including doctors
and hospitals, to improve their efforts to keep your medical
records and health information confidential.
The Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act of 1998
If you are a woman who must have a mastectomy due to breast cancer or another medical condition, this law places some requirements on how your group health plan, insurance company, or health maintenance organization must treat you. Under the Act, you are entitled to:
- reconstruction of the breast on which the mastectomy was performed;
- reconstruction of your other breast to produce symmetrical appearance; and
- prostheses and treatment of physical complications at all stages of the mastectomy, including lymphedemas.
The Women's Health Act applies only to plans that already
provide medical and surgical benefits with respect to a mastectomy.
If your plan does not provide such benefits, then it is not covered
by this Act and you are not entitled to the Act's
protections.
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Want More Information? |
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To learn more about important federal laws affecting your health insurance benefits, visit the U.S. Department of Labor website at www.dol.gov.* |
* Links to external sites are provided
solely as a courtesy to our members.
Copyright 2010 Nolo



