Website SurveySmall Employer Health Insurance(February 2009) Texas law allows insurance companies to sell a wide array of small employer health care coverage plans and packages. The variety of options can make finding the right employee health plan challenging, but it can also mean you’ll find a plan to better suit your and your employees’ needs. When choosing a health plan for your small business, it pays to shop around. The term “small employer” as it relates to insurance in Texas means a business with two to 50 eligible employees. The law provides these businesses added protections, including a 15 percent annual cap on rate increases related to health factors, a guarantee that carriers cannot arbitrarily discontinue coverage, and a provision that allows small employers to pool their purchasing clout to negotiate lower insurance rates. For employees of small businesses, the law provides several ways to maintain benefits after leaving a job and limits the waiting period before a health plan will cover pre-existing conditions. Beyond these requirements, small-employer carriers may offer a wide variety of plans, with virtually any combination of features and benefits. Small-Employer Coverage EligibilityTexas businesses with two to 50 eligible employees may obtain small-employer coverage from an insurance company or a health maintenance organization (HMO). Eligible employees are those who usually work at least 30 hours per week; are not temporary, part-time, or seasonal; and are not already covered by another group health plan. Sole proprietors, partners, and independent contractors are also eligible employees if they are included as employees under a small employer’s coverage. A business’ owners count toward the employee total. The number of eligible employees – not total employees – determines whether a business is a small employer under Texas insurance law. For example, if your business has 60 total employees, it could still qualify if six of the workers are part-time and four have coverage through some other source, such as a spouse’s health plan. If you decide to offer a health plan to your employees, you must make it equally available to all of your eligible employees and their dependents. At least 75 percent of a small employer’s eligible employees must participate in the health plan for the employer to obtain coverage. Carriers must always “round down” when calculating the number of eligible employees. For example, a five-employee group would achieve 75 percent participation if three eligible employees participate. Seventy-five percent of five is 3.75 and 3.75 rounded down is three. However, in the case of a business with only two eligible employees, the law requires 100 percent participation. A husband and wife working in a business count as two separate employees. Neither of the employees is eligible for coverage as a dependent of the other. If you provide a health plan, state regulations and a federal law called COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) allows employees to maintain benefits for a period of time after separation from the job. It is your legal responsibility to inform employees of their rights to continue coverage. Former employees who choose to continue their coverage through COBRA or state continuation must pay the full cost of the plan. You are not obligated to contribute toward their premiums, even if you previously paid a share. Ask your carrier about your responsibilities regarding COBRA. Types of PlansHealth plans are classified as either “state-mandated plans” or “consumer choice plans.” A state-mandated plan provides certain required minimum features and coverages. A consumer choice plan is any plan developed by a carrier that excludes some state-mandated benefits. You will generally have a lower premium for consumer choice plans. Although consumer choice plans are sometimes called “standard plans,” the coverages provided are not “standardized.” Each carrier’s consumer choice plan may be different, and a carrier may offer several different consumer choice plans. Consumer choice plans cannot exclude the following state-mandated coverages:
Consumer choice plans may vary depending on the type of carrier offering the plan. For example, HMO consumer choice plans must pay for 20 outpatient mental health visits per enrollee per year, but that’s not a requirement in indemnity (or insurance company-offered) plans. In addition, unlike insurance company plans, HMO consumer choice plans must include basic health care services, such as inpatient, outpatient, and preventative services. Carriers may offer optional benefits that vary widely from plan to plan. When presenting prospective policyholders or contract holders with a consumer choice plan, carriers must include a written disclosure that lists the state-mandated coverages that are not provided. The policy or evidence of coverage must also include additional disclosures. Following is a table comparing the differences between state-mandated benefits and consumer choice benefits for both indemnity plans and HMOs: State-Mandated vs. Consumer Choice Plan BenefitsNote: Benefits labeled “Yes” must be included as part of the plan. Benefits labeled “No” are not required. Benefits labeled “Offer” must be offered, but you may decline any or all of them.
Who Pays and How Much?The law doesn’t require employers to contribute toward health benefit plan premiums. However, many carriers require employers to pay at least 50 percent of the plan’s premiums. Employers may choose to pay a higher percentage than the carrier requires. The carrier must offer dependent coverage to all eligible employees. Generally, employers are not required to contribute toward the cost of dependent coverage. If the employer doesn’t contribute, employees may have to pay all or some of these costs themselves. Premiums may increase at each renewal term, largely due to rising health care costs and possibly as a result of employee claims experience. Texas law caps small-employer rate increases due to health factors – such as the amount of employee claims experience – at 15 percent per year. Insurers cannot require businesses to purchase additional lines of insurance, such as life insurance or disability insurance, as a condition of the sale of a health plan. Employee Signup and Pre-Existing Condition Waiting PeriodsNew employees must be given at least 31 days from their start date to enroll in a plan. After this time, they may be required to wait up to one year for the next “open enrollment period” to join. Carriers must offer a 31-day open enrollment period annually. You can choose to make employees who enroll in a plan wait up to 90 days before being eligible for benefits. The carrier may not charge you or the employee a premium during this period. Carriers may require participants to wait a certain amount of time before receiving coverage for pre-existing medical conditions. In general, plans have different rules for pre-existing conditions. Plans using the open-enrollment requirement cannot make new members wait more than one year before covering their pre-existing conditions. New enrollees who were continuously covered for 12 months by a previous plan also do not have a pre-existing condition waiting period, as long as no more than 63 days passed between the ending date of the old coverage and the effective date of the new coverage. This means the new plan would immediately cover the employee’s pre-existing conditions. Employees with fewer than 12 months of coverage under a previous plan receive “credit” toward the pre-existing condition waiting period on a month-for-month basis. For the previous coverage to be considered “creditable,” it must have been in effect in the 12 months prior to the start of the new coverage. For example, an employee covered for three months any time in the year prior would receive three months’ credit and would thus have to wait only nine months before pre-existing conditions are covered. A small employer carrier cannot refuse to provide health coverage for your employees because of employee illnesses or pre-existing conditions. Carriers are also prohibited from using health-related factors – such as employees’ prior claims experience or conditions caused by violent family situations – to decide whether to provide coverage. How Small Employer Plan Premiums are CalculatedThe rates for any given small employer plan are not solely determined by the benefits and deductibles of the plan itself. Certain objective “case characteristics” and any health status-related factors of your employees may also be components in determining the premium rate for the small employer group. Carriers can use some or all of these five “case characteristics:”
The rating process for a small-employer group can be described as a two-step process. First, a carrier determines a premium rate based on case characteristics and plan design, but without regard to health status-related factors. This produces the baseline price of the policy. Second, the carrier may adjust the rate to reflect health status-related factors of the group. This adjustment must apply uniformly to all members of the group and may not exceed 67 percent of the baseline price of the policy. Shopping for CoverageBecause premiums, deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance levels can vary widely from plan to plan, it pays to shop around. When shopping for coverage, keep these guidelines in mind:
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