Rate Regulation Bill Applicable to Health Care Service Plans and Health Insurers Passed by California Assembly

By John M. LeBlanc and Jason C. Love

On June 1, 2011, the California State Assembly passed AB 52, which was initially introduced in December 2010.

Beginning January 1, 2012, the bill would require health care service plans and health insurers in California to obtain prior approval from the Department of Managed Health Care or the Department of Insurance for all proposed rate increases.

Under the proposed legislation, the Department of Managed Health Care and the Department of Insurance would be prohibited from approving any rate or rate change that is excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory. 

In addition, the bill calls for an examination by the Department of Managed Health Care and the Department of Insurance of all rate increases that become effective between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2011, to ensure that those rates are not excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory, and to order the refund of any payments made pursuant to any such rate.

The bill must still be approved by the California Senate and signed into law by the Governor in order to become legally operative.

Originally posted on Barger & Wolen's Life, Health and Disability Insurance Law Blog.

Guidelines for Health Insurers Requesting Rate Increase Issued by California Insurance Commissioner (SB 1163)

On February 4, 2011, California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones released draft guidelines for implementing SB 1163 (“Guidance 1163:2”).

SB 1163, signed by former Governor Schwarzenegger on September 30, 2010, responds to the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“PPACA”), which requires the United States Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish a process for the annual review of “unreasonable” increases in premiums for health insurance coverage.

Under the federal act, health insurers must submit to the secretary, and the relevant state, a justification for an “unreasonable” premium increase prior to implementation of the increase.

SB 1163, effective January 1, 2011, requires health insurers to file with the California Department of Managed Health Care or the California Department of Insurance detailed rate information regarding proposed premium increases and requires that the rate information be certified by an independent actuary. 

The bill authorizes the departments to review these filings and issue guidance regarding compliance. It also requires the departments to consult with each other regarding specified actions as well as post certain findings on their Internet Web sites.

In his draft guidelines (“Guidance 1163:2”), Commissioner Jones lists several factors that will be used by the Department to determine if a rate is “unreasonable.”

Under Section A: Unreasonable Rate Increases, the first factor the Department will look at is:

[t]he relationship of the projected aggregate medical loss ratio to the federal medical loss ratio standard in the market segment to which the rate applies, after accounting for any adjustments allowable under federal law.” (Guidance 1163:2, § A, p. 1.) 

The draft guidelines expressly incorporate, by reference, the interim federal regulation effective January 1, 2011, titled “Health Insurance Issuers Implementing Medical Loss Ratio Requirements Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” 45 C.F.R. §§ 158.101-158.232.

The interim federal regulation requires health insurers to spend a certain percentage of consumers’ premiums on direct care for patients and efforts to improve health care quality.

For individual and small group market insurers, this is 80% of the consumers’ premium, and for large group market insurers, it is 85% of the consumers’ premium.

If insurers fail to meet the ratio requirements, beginning in 2012, they will be required to provide a rebate to their customers by August 1 of each year.

The federal rule allows for a State to require a higher medical loss ratio than that required under the interim regulation. The interim federal regulation (pdf), published December 1, 2010, is subject to a 60-day public comment period.

Other factors identified in Commissioner Jones’ draft guidelines to determine whether a premium increase is “unreasonable” include: 

  • Whether the assumptions for the rate increase are supported by substantial evidence;
  • Whether the choice of assumptions or combination of assumptions for the rate increase is reasonable;
  • Whether the data or documentation provided is incomplete or inadequate;
  • Whether the filed rates result in premium differences between insureds within similar risk categories that either are not permissible under California law or do not reasonably correspond to differences in expected costs;
  • Whether itemized changes are substantially justified by credible experience data;
  • Rate of return for prior three years and anticipated for the following year;
  • Insurer’s employee and executive compensation;
  • Degree to which the increase exceeds rate of medical cost inflation;
  • For individual policies, compliance with 10 C.C.R. 2222.12. (Guidance 1163:2, § A, pp. 1-2.) 

In addition to Filing and Notice requirements as well as specific filing forms (Sections B and D Guidance 1163:2), the draft guidelines contain several requirements for actuarial certification. Each of the following must be included in the actuarial certification:

  • The actuary’s qualifications and independence;
  • Opinion that the proposed premium rates are “actuarially sound in the aggregate;”
  • Complete description of data, assumptions, rating factors and methods with rate calculations for each contract or policy form;
  • Statement of opinion whether the rate increase is reasonable or unreasonable, and if, the latter, the justification for the increase; a discussion of the factors listed in § A, and 10 C.C.R. § 2222.10 for individual health insurance;
  • A description of the testing performed by the actuary. (Guidance 1163:2, § C, pp. 3-4.) 

Notwithstanding the above requirements, the Insurance Commissioner currently does not have the authority under SB 1163 to reject health insurance rate increases.

In the last legislative term, Commissioner Jones (formerly an assemblyman) sponsored AB 2578, a strong insurance rate reform bill that would have given the Commissioner such authority (it failed to pass in the Senate).

The Commissioner is currently supporting another effort at such legislation.

Commissioner Jones’ draft guidelines are subject to a 7 day public comment period before they are finalized.

AB 2578: Proposition 103 Coming to Managed Health Care?

by Richard De La Mora

Having unsuccessfully urged Congress to impose a national freeze on health insurance rates, Harvey Rosenfield has refocused his efforts on the California legislature and AB 2578.

Who is Harvey Rosenfield? He is, in his own words, the “author of California’s landmark property-casualty insurance rate regulation Proposition 103 – recognized as the most successful rate regulation in the country.” In fact, AB 2578, which cleared Assembly Health Committee earlier this week, includes the following provisions modeled closely on Proposition 103:

  • A prohibition on the use or approval of rates that are “excessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory”;
  • A right for consumer advocates to request a hearing on a rate application, and a requirement that a hearing be granted whenever the rate increase sought exceeds 7%.

Finally, Mr. Rosenfield has made sure that he and his friends in the consumer advocacy industry are taken care of by advocating a provision requiring health plans to pay the consumer advocacy fees associated with fighting the health plan’s rate application.    

We have seen this played out before, as our firm has represented property-casualty insurers in administrative and judicial matters involving insurance rates regulated under Proposition 103 since 1989.

While property-casualty insurers have had plenty of time to adjust to the dictates of rate regulation, health plans will face a steep learning curve if AB 2578 becomes law. 

We are hopeful that this legislation will not become law. Even if it does, AB 2578 will likely face legal challenges and hurdles as did Proposition 103.

From our experience, we learned some of those challenges will be more successful than others. Nevertheless, if rate regulation comes to pass, a company’s goals can still be achieved provided that it has a complete understanding of the proposed regulatory system, plans ahead, has input into the development of regulations, and prepares itself for life after the system is implemented.

Barger & Wolen will continue to keep our clients and friends apprised on new issues pertaining to AB 2578 via the firm’s Insurance Litigation & Regulatory Law Blog and the Life, Health & Disability Law Blog. If you would like to be notified about upcoming events and seminars pertaining to AB 2578 and other issues, please subscribe to our blog via the RSS feed or add your e-mail in the left column.