['Employee Benefits']
['Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act']
12/05/2023
...
(a) General requirements. The report required in §158.110 must include direct claims paid to or received by providers, including under capitation contracts with physicians, whose services are covered by the policy for clinical services or supplies covered by the policy. In addition, the report must include claim reserves associated with claims incurred during the MLR reporting year, the change in contract reserves, reserves for contingent benefits and the medical claim portion of lawsuits, and any incurred experience rating refunds. Reimbursement for clinical services, as defined in this section, is referred to as “incurred claims.” All components of and adjustments to incurred claims, with the exception of contract reserves, must be calculated based on claims incurred only during the MLR reporting year and paid through March 31st of the following year. Contract reserves must be calculated as of December 31st of the applicable year.
(1) If there are any group conversion charges for a health plan, the conversion charges must be subtracted from the incurred claims for the aggregation that includes the conversion policies and this same amount must be added to the incurred claims for the aggregation that provides coverage that is intended to be replaced by the conversion policies.
(2) Incurred claims must include the current year’s unpaid claims reserves, including claims reported in the process of adjustment, percentage withholds from payments made to contracted providers, claims that are recoverable for anticipated coordination of benefits (COB), and claim recoveries received as a result of subrogation.
(3) Incurred claims must include claims incurred but not reported based on past experience, and modified to reflect current conditions such as changes in exposure, claim frequency or severity.
(4) Incurred claims must include changes in other claims-related reserves.
(5) Incurred claims must include incurred experience rating refunds and exclude rebates paid as required by §158.240 based upon prior MLR reporting year experience.
(b) Adjustments to incurred claims.
(1) Adjustments that must be deducted from incurred claims:
(i) Prescription drug rebates received by the issuer.
(ii) Overpayment recoveries received from providers.
(iii) Cost-sharing reduction payments received by the issuer to the extent not reimbursed to the provider furnishing the item or service.
(2) Adjustments that must be included in incurred claims:
(i) Market stabilization payments or receipts by issuers that are directly tied to claims incurred and other claims based or census based assessments.
(ii) State subsidies based on a stop-loss payment methodology.
(iii) The amount of incentive and bonus payments made to providers.
(iv) The amount of claims payments recovered through fraud reduction efforts not to exceed the amount of fraud reduction expenses.
(3) Adjustments that must not be included in incurred claims:
(i) Amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary network savings.
(ii) Amounts paid to third party vendors for network development, administrative fees, claims processing, and utilization management. For example, if an issuer contracts with a behavioral health, chiropractic network, or high technology radiology vendor, or a pharmacy benefit manager, and the vendor reimburses the provider at one amount but bills the issuer a higher amount to cover its network development, utilization management costs, and profits, then the amount that exceeds the reimbursement to the provider must not be included in incurred claims.
(iii) Amounts paid, including amounts paid to a provider, for professional or administrative services that do not represent compensation or reimbursement for covered services provided to an enrollee. For example, medical record copying costs, attorneys’ fees, subrogation vendor fees, compensation to paraprofessionals, janitors, quality assurance analysts, administrative supervisors, secretaries to medical personnel and medical record clerks must not be included in incurred claims.
(iv) Amounts paid to a provider for services that do not represent reimbursement for covered services provided to an enrollee and are directly covered by a student administrative health fee.
(4) Adjustments that must be either included in or deducted from incurred claims:
(i) Payment to and from unsubsidized State programs designed to address distribution of health risks across issuers via charges to low risk issuers that are distributed to high risk issuers must be included in or deducted from incurred claims, as applicable.
(ii) Receipts related to the transitional reinsurance program and net payments or receipts related to the risk adjustment and risk corridors programs (calculated using an adjustment percentage, as described in §153.500 of this subchapter, equal to zero percent) under sections 1341, 1342, and 1343 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 42 U.S.C. 18061, 18062, 18063.
(5) Other adjustments to incurred claims:
(i) Affiliated issuers that offer group coverage at a blended rate may choose whether to make an adjustment to each affiliate's incurred claims and activities to improve health care quality, to reflect the experience of the issuer with respect to the employer as a whole, according to an objective formula that must be defined by the issuer prior to January 1 of the MLR reporting year, so as to result in each affiliate having the same ratio of incurred claims to earned premium for that employer group for the MLR reporting year as the ratio of incurred claims to earned premium calculated for the employer group in the aggregate.
(ii) [Reserved]
[75 FR 74923 Dec. 1, 2010; 75 FR 82278 Dec. 30, 2010; 77 FR 16469, March 21, 2012; 77 FR 28790, May 16, 2012; 78 FR 15539, March 11, 2013; 79 FR 13842, March 11, 2014; 80 FR 10876, Feb. 27, 2015]
READ MORESHOW LESS
['Employee Benefits']
['Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act']
Load More
J. J. Keller is the trusted source for DOT / Transportation, OSHA / Workplace Safety, Human Resources, Construction Safety and Hazmat / Hazardous Materials regulation compliance products and services. J. J. Keller helps you increase safety awareness, reduce risk, follow best practices, improve safety training, and stay current with changing regulations.
Copyright 2024 J. J. Keller & Associate, Inc. For re-use options please contact copyright@jjkeller.com or call 800-558-5011.