The
Departments of Labor, Treasury, and Health and Human Services (the Departments)
have recently published final regulations related to when limited scope dental
and vision benefits and employee assistance programs (EAPs) qualify as excepted
benefits not subject to certain requirements that otherwise apply to group
health plans. These group health plan requirements were primarily established
under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the
Affordable Care Act and, along with certain other consumer health protection
laws applicable to group health plans, (collectively, the Acts) are found in
the Public Health Services Act (PHSA), the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) (collectively, the Statutes).
As such, the Departments must work together to draft regulatory guidance that
impacts the operation of the group health plan requirements under the Acts.
Background
The
Acts set forth significant guidance that impacts both the operation and
coverage requirements for group health plans. If a plan is considered a group
health plan under the Acts, then generally the requirements are mandated. These
requirements include HIPAA’s portability provisions and the ACA’s coverage and
benefit provisions.
In
creating these health plan requirements, however, the Acts allow for certain
plans which technically meet the broad definition of a group health plan to be
exempt from complying with the mandated group health plan requirements of the
Acts. As such, the applicable Statutes designated the following four categories
of excepted benefits:
- Benefits that are generally not considered health coverage (such as auto insurance, accidental death and dismemberment benefits or workers compensation coverage);
- Limited excepted benefits which are excepted based on meeting certain requirements (such as limited scope vision or dental coverage, long term care benefits or nursing home care);
- Non-coordinated excepted benefits (such as cancer coverage or fixed indemnity plans); and
- Supplemental excepted benefits that are offered as a separate policy and supplemental to Medicare, Armed Forces coverage or (in very limited circumstances) group health coverage (such as a Medicare Supplemental Plan).
The
recently published final regulations, which finalize proposed regulations from
2013, provide guidance related to certain types of the limited excepted benefit
coverage described in item 2 above. The final regulations specifically address
how to establish limited scope dental and vision benefits and employee assistance
program requirements that qualify as excepted from the group health plan
mandates under the Acts.
The
Final Regulations
Under
the regulations originally promulgated under HIPAA, vision and dental benefits
were considered excepted if they were limited in scope and were either (1)
provided under a separate insurance policy or (2) otherwise not an integral
part of a group health plan. Under these HIPAA rules, an employer self-insured
dental or vision plan could only qualify as excepted under the second “not an
integral part” prong, since by definition self-insured plans are not offered
under an insurance policy. The original HIPAA regulations also required that to
be considered not an integral part of a group health plan, the participants
must have the right to elect to opt out of coverage for the dental or vision
plan. Finally, the HIPAA regulations required that if an individual elected
coverage under the dental or vision plan, an additional premium must be paid by
the individual for that coverage. Employers had many complaints about this
additional premium requirement including that it treated fully insured dental
and vision plans and self-insured dental and vision plans differently and that in
some cases it cost more to collect the additional premium than was being
collected.
Under both the 2013 proposed
regulations and the final regulations, for a dental or vision plan to be an
excepted benefit plan, the requirement that participants must pay an additional
premium amount has been removed. The agencies justify this change on the basis of the
employer complaints and the risk that these limited scope dental and vision
plans might impact an individual’s eligibility for a subsidy if such a person
enrolled in a medical plan through a Health Insurance Marketplace under the
ACA.
As
well, the agencies clarified that the limited scope dental and vision do not
have to be offered alongside a separate employer offer of medical coverage to
meet the “not an integral part of a group health plan” requirement. The final
regulations indicate that this requirement is met if the participant may
decline the dental or vision coverage or if the claims are administered under a
separate contract.
As
an extra bonus, the agencies, while not directly addressing long term care
benefits in the regulations do state in the preamble to the final regulations
that because such benefits are also subject to the “not an integral part of a
group health plan” requirement to qualify as an excepted benefit, that the
guidance in the final regulations also apply to long term care benefits.
Employee
Assistance Programs
Employers
who offer EAPs generally design them to provide a wide variety of benefits to
address personal, social and financial situations that might otherwise
adversely affect employees’ work and health. Such benefits may include referral
services for counseling, and/or short term counseling for mental health issues,
concierge services and financial or legal counseling. EAPS are often provided
to all employees for no charge using third party vendors. If an EAP provides
referral services only, with no group health plan component, then the
applicable group health plan mandates will not apply to it. However, to the
extent an EAP provides medical care, it would qualify as group health coverage
subject to Acts mandated group health plan requirements unless it qualifies as
an excepted benefit under the regulations.
Under
the 2013 Proposed Regulations an EAP was considered an excepted benefit if it
met four criteria:
- no significant benefits in the nature of medical care;
- not coordinated with benefits under another group health plan so that; no need to exhaust EAP before using the group health plan benefits no need to elect group health plan for coverage under the EAP benefits under the EAP must not be financed by another group health plan
- no employee premiums are required for the EAP; and
- no cost sharing under the EAP.
The
final regulations make one small change to these proposed regulation
requirements. The final regulations
remove the requirement under the second criteria above that the EAP not be
financed by another group health plan. As well, the preamble to the final
regulations does provide a bit of guidance around what may or may not qualify
as significant benefits in the nature of medical care, a topic that has been
the source of many questions.
Summary
The
final regulations and the preamble there to help bring some clarity to
establishing limited scope dental and vision coverage and EAPs that qualify as
excepted benefits. While there are still some areas that could benefit from
additional guidance, the agencies provide some much needed clarity in the
issues that are addressed.
Source: Employee
Benefit Adviser
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