Fact Sheet: Keeping the Health Plan You Have:
The Affordable Care Act and “Grandfathered”
Health Plans
The Affordable
Care Act gives American families and businesses
more control over their health care by providing
greater benefits and protections for family
members and employees. It also provides the
stability, and also the flexibility, that
families and businesses need to make the choices
that work best for them.
During the
health reform debate, President Obama made clear
to Americans that “if you like your health plan,
you can keep it.” He emphasized that there is
nothing in the new law that would force them to
change plans or doctors. Today, the Departments
of Health and Human Services, Labor, and
Treasury issued a new regulation for health
coverage in place on March 23, 2010 that makes
good on that promise by:
- Protecting
the ability of individuals and businesses to
keep their current plan;
- Providing
important consumer protections that give
Americans – rather than insurance companies
– control over their own health care.
- Providing
stability and flexibility to insurers and
businesses that offer insurance coverage as
the nation transitions to a more competitive
marketplace in 2014 where businesses and
consumers will have more affordable choices
through Exchanges.
The rule
announced today preserves the ability of the
American people to keep their current plan if
they like it, while providing new benefits, by
minimizing market disruption and putting us on a
glide path toward the competitive,
patient-centered market of the future. While it
requires all health plans to provide important
new benefits to consumers, it allows plans that
existed on March 23, 2010 to innovate and
contain costs by allowing insurers and employers
to make routine changes without losing
grandfather status. Plans will lose their
“grandfather” status if they choose to
significantly cut benefits or increase
out-of-pocket spending for consumers – and
consumers in plans that make such changes will
gain new consumer protections.
Most of the 133
million Americans with employer-sponsored health
insurance through large employers will maintain
the coverage they have today. Large
employer-based plans already offer most of the
comprehensive benefits and consumer protections
that the Affordable Care Act will provide to all
Americans this year – such as preventing
lifetime limits on coverage – and in the future.
People who work
in smaller firms – which change insurers more
often due to annual fluctuations in premiums –
and people who purchase their own insurance in
the individual market– a group that frequently
changes coverage – will enjoy all of the
benefits of the Affordable Care Act when they
choose a new plan. These Americans also will
benefit from the new competitive Exchanges that
will be established in 2014 to offer individuals
and workers in small businesses with greater
choice of plans at more affordable rates – the
same choice of plans as members of Congress.
Protecting
Patients’ Rights in All Plans
All health plans
– whether or not they are grandfathered plans –
must provide certain benefits to their customers
for plan years starting on or after September
23, 2010 including:
- No lifetime
limits on coverage for all plans;
- No
rescissions of coverage when people get sick
and have previously made an unintentional
mistake on their application;
- Extension
of parents’ coverage to
young adults under 26 years old; and the
For the vast
majority of Americans who get their health
insurance through employers, additional benefits
will be offered, irrespective of whether their
plan is grandfathered, including:
- No coverage
exclusions for children with pre-existing
conditions; and
- No
“restricted” annual limits (e.g., annual
dollar-amount limits on coverage below
standards to be set in future regulations).
Additional
Consumer Protections Apply to Non-Grandfathered
Plans
Grandfathered
health plans will be able to make routine
changes to their policies and maintain their
status. These routine changes include cost
adjustments to keep pace with medical inflation,
adding new benefits, making modest adjustments
to existing benefits, voluntarily adopting new
consumer protections under the new law, or
making changes to comply with State or other
Federal laws. Premium changes are not taken
into account when determining whether or not a
plan is grandfathered.
Plans will lose
their grandfathered status if they choose to
make significant changes that reduce benefits or
increase costs to consumers. If a plan loses
its grandfathered status, then consumers in
these plans will gain additional new benefits
including:
- Coverage of
recommended prevention services with no cost
sharing; and
- Patient
protections such as guaranteed access to
OB-GYNs and pediatricians.
Under the
Affordable Care Act, these requirements are
applicable to all new plans, and existing plans
that choose to make the following changes that
would cause them to lose their grandfathered
status.
Compared to
their polices in effect on March 23, 2010,
grandfathered plans:
- Cannot
Significantly Cut or Reduce Benefits.
For example, if a plan decides to no longer
cover care for people with diabetes, cystic
fibrosis or HIV/AIDS.
- Cannot
Raise Co-Insurance Charges.
Typically, co-insurance requires a patient
to pay a fixed percentage of a charge (for
example, 20% of a hospital bill).
Grandfathered plans cannot increase this
percentage.
- Cannot
Significantly Raise Co-Payment
Charges. Frequently, plans require
patients to pay a fixed-dollar amount for
doctor’s office visits and other services.
Compared with the copayments in effect on
March 23, 2010, grandfathered plans will be
able to increase those co-pays by no more
than the greater of $5 (adjusted annually
for medical inflation) or a percentage equal
to medical inflation plus 15 percentage
points. For example, if a plan raises its
copayment from $30 to $50 over the next 2
years, it will lose its grandfathered
status.
- Cannot
Significantly Raise Deductibles. Many
plans require patients to pay the first
bills they receive each year (for example,
the first $500, $1,000, or $1,500 a year).
Compared with the deductible required as of
March 23, 2010, grandfathered plans can only
increase these deductibles by a percentage
equal to medical inflation plus 15
percentage points. In recent years, medical
costs have risen an average of 4-to-5% so
this formula would allow deductibles to go
up, for example, by 19-20% between 2010 and
2011, or by 23-25% between 2010 and 2012.
For a family with a $1,000 annual
deductible, this would mean if they had a
hike of $190 or $200 from 2010 to 2011,
their plan could then increase the
deductible again by another $50 the
following year.
- Cannot
Significantly Lower Employer Contributions.
Many employers pay a portion of their
employees’ premium for insurance and this is
usually deducted from their paychecks.
Grandfathered plans cannot decrease the
percent of premiums the employer pays by
more than 5 percentage points (for example,
decrease their own share and increase the
workers’ share of premium from 15% to 25%).
- Cannot
Add or Tighten an Annual Limit on What the
Insurer Pays. Some insurers cap the
amount that they will pay for covered
services each year. If they want to retain
their status as grandfathered plans, plans
cannot tighten any annual dollar limit in
place as of March 23, 2010. Moreover, plans
that do not have an annual dollar limit
cannot add a new one unless they are
replacing a lifetime dollar limit with an
annual dollar limit that is at least as high
as the lifetime limit (which is more
protective of high-cost enrollees).
- Cannot
Change Insurance Companies. If an
employer decides to buy insurance for its
workers from a different insurance company,
this new insurer will not be considered a
grandfathered plan. This does not
apply when employers that provide their own
insurance to their workers switch plan
administrators or to collective bargaining
agreements.
Protecting
Against Abuse of Grandfathered Health Plan
Status
To prevent
health plans from using the grandfather rule to
avoid providing important consumer protections,
the regulation provides for:
- Promoting
transparency by requiring a plan to disclose
to consumers every time it distributes
materials whether the plan believes that it
is a grandfathered plan and therefore is not
subject to some of the additional consumer
protections of the Affordable Care Act.
This allows consumers to understand the
benefits of staying in a grandfathered plan
or switching to a new plan. The plan must
also provide contact information for
enrollees to have their questions and
complaints addressed;
- Revoking a
plan’s grandfathered status if it forces
consumers to switch to another grandfathered
plan that, compared to the current plan, has
less benefits or higher cost sharing as a
means of avoiding new consumer protections;
or
- Revoking a
plan’s grandfathered status if it is bought
by or merges with another plan simply to
avoid complying with the law.
Projected
Impact on Consumers and Plans
Large
Employer Plans
The 133 million
Americans with employer-sponsored health
insurance through large employers (100 or more
workers) —who make up the vast majority of those
with private health insurance today—will not see
major changes to their coverage as a result of
this regulation. This regulation affirms that
most of these plans will remain grandfathered –
more than three-quarters of firms in 2011 –
based on the way they changed cost sharing from
2008-2009. Most of these plans already offer
the patient protections applied to grandfathered
plans such as no pre-existing condition
exclusions for children and no rescissions of
coverage when a person gets sick. In addition,
they are likely to already give their workers
and families protections like a choice of OB-GYN
and pediatrician and access to emergency rooms
in other states without prior authorization.
Based on past patterns of behavior, it is
expected that large employers will continue to
make adjustments to the health plans they offer
from year to year so that, by the time the
health insurance Exchanges are established in
2014, fewer – but still most – large employer
plans will have grandfather status. However,
the assumed market changes depend on the choices
large employers make in the future.
Small
Business Plans
The roughly 43
million people insured through small businesses
will likely transition from their current plan
to one with the new protections over the next
few years. Small plans tend to make substantial
changes to cost sharing, employer contributions,
and health insurance issuers more frequently
than large plans. As such, we estimate that 70%
of plans will be grandfathered in the first
year, but depending on the choices these
employers make, this could drop to about
one-third over several years. To help sustain
small business coverage, the Affordable Care Act
also includes a tax credit for up to 35% of
their premium contributions.
Individual
Health Market
The 17 million
people who are covered in the individual health
insurance market, where switching of plans and
substantial changes in coverage are common, will
receive the new protections of the Affordable
Care Act sooner rather than later. Roughly 40
percent to two-thirds of people in individual
market policies change plans within a year.
Given this “churn,” the transition for the 17
million people in this market will be swift. In
the short run, individuals whose plan changes
and is no longer grandfathered will gain access
to free preventive services, protections against
restricted annual limits, and patient
protections such as improved access to emergency
rooms. These Americans also will benefit from
the Health Insurance Exchanges that will be
established in 2014 to offer individuals and
workers in small businesses a much greater
choice of plans at more affordable rates.
People in
Special Types of Health Plans
Fully-insured
health plans subject to collective bargaining
agreements will be able to maintain their
grandfathered status until their agreement
terminates. After that point, they are subject
to the same rules as other health plans; in
other words, they will lose their grandfathered
status if they make any of the substantial
changes described above. Retiree-only and
“excepted health plans” such as dental plans,
long-term care insurance, or Medigap, are exempt
from the Affordable Care Act insurance reforms.
Projections
of Employer Plans Remaining Grandfathered,
2011-2013
There is
considerable uncertainty about what choices
employers will make over the next few years as
the market prepares for the establishment of the
competitive Exchanges and other market reforms
such as new consumer protections, middle-class
tax credits and other steps to expand
affordabilty and choice for millions more
Americans. This rule estimates the likely
decisions of employers based on assumptions and
extrapolations of recent market behavior,
including the decisions by employers to change
their health plans in 2008 and 2009. The table
below depicts the results of this analysis:
|
Type of
Plan |
Enrollees |
Employer
Plans Remaining Grandfathered |
Explanation |
|
|
2011 |
2013 |
|
|
Allowable
Percent Change in Co-Payments from 2010 |
Medical
inflation* (4%) + 15% = 19% |
Medical
inflation* (4%3 = 12%) + 15%
= 27% |
Deductibles, copayments can increase
faster than medical inflation over time |
|
Large
Employer |
133 million |
Low: 87%
remain grandfathered
Mid-range:
82% remain grandfathered
High:
71% remain grandfathered |
Low: 66%
remain grandfathered
Mid-range:
55% remain grandfathered
High:
36% remain grandfathered |
Large plans
are more stable and often self-insured.
Regulation
permits plans to make routine changes
needed to keep premium growth in check. |
| Small
Employer |
43 million |
Low:
80% remain grandfathered
Mid-range:
70% remain grandfathered
High:
58% remain grandfathered |
Low:
51% remain grandfathered
Mid-range:
34% remain grandfathered
High:
20% remain grandfathered |
Small
businesses typically buy commercial
insurance and frequently make changes in
insurers and coverage.
Limited
purchasing power and high overhead often
force a trade-off between dramatic
changes in benefits and cost sharing and
affordable premiums. |
* Assumes
medical inflation at 4%
The “low”
percentage is based on the mid-range percentages
plus plans that could stay grandfathered with
small premium changes.
The “mid-range”
percentage is based on assumptions of the number
of plans that would lose their grandfathered
status if they made changes consistent with the
changes that they made in 2008 and 2009 that
would not lead to premium increases.
The “high”
percentage assumes that some plans would not be
able to make the adjustments to employer premium
contribution they would need to keep premiums
the same while keeping their other cost-sharing
parameters within the grandfathering rules. The
estimates in this case assume these plans will
choose to relinquish their grandfathered status
instead.
Choices in
2014 and Subsequent Years
In 2014, small
businesses and individuals who purchase
insurance on their own will gain access to the
competitive market Exchanges. These Exchanges
will offer individuals and workers in small
businesses with a much greater choice of plans
at more affordable rates – the same choice as
members of Congress. In fact, the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) has estimated that, on an
apples-to-apples basis, premiums will be 14- 20
percent lower than they would be under current
law in 2016 due to competition, lower insurance
overhead, and increased pooling and purchasing
power. Small businesses also will have more
affordable options. CBO has estimated that a
family policy for small businesses would be
available in the Exchanges at a premium that is
$4,000 lower than under current law in 2016.
These reduced
premiums do not take into account the tax
credits available to small businesses and
middle-class families to help make insurance
affordable. These additional new choices may
further lower the likelihood that small
businesses workers will remain in grandfathered
health plans. Consumers insured through large
employers are more likely to remain in
grandfathered plans in 2014 and beyond.
Read the Press
Release at:
http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2010pres/06/20100614c.html.
Read the
Questions and Answers on the Regulation at
http://www.healthreform.gov/about/grandfathering.html.
You can view the
regulation at:
http://www.federalregister.gov/OFRUpload/OFRData/2010-14488_PI.pdf.
|