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Health Care Plans

I am considering offering my employees a group health care plan. What options do I have?

There are three typical types of plans that are offered by employers. These are:

  1. Indemnity Plans. This type of plan allows an employee to pick her own doctors without restriction. These plans, like the others below, often have deductibles and copays. Depending on the level of coverage, this type of plan is usually the most costly.
  2. Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs). This type of plan offers a network of hospitals and doctors to provide coverage to employees at an established rate.
  3. Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs). This is the most limited of the options. Normally, an employee has a primary care physician that serves as a gatekeeper. Employees are not allowed to seek services outside the network.

What happens to my health care insurance if I change jobs?

In the past, it is likely that you were left without insurance. However, in 1996, the federal government passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The intent of this law is to make sure you do not lose benefits while you may be in transition or between jobs.

HIPAA also provides that group health care insurance at your new job:

Further, HIPAA may also give you a right to purchase individual coverage if you have no group health care insurance available and have exhausted COBRA or other continuation coverage.

What preexisting conditions may be excluded from coverage under my new employer's health care plan?

A preexisting condition is a condition or illness that you had prior to coming to a new employer.

The only preexisting conditions that may be excluded under HIPAA are those for which medical advice, diagnosis, care or treatment was recommended or received within the 6-month period before your first day of coverage in the new plan.

I am changing jobs and am 6 months pregnant. Do I qualify for health care insurance with my new employer?

Under HIPAA, pregnancy may not be considered a preexisting condition. Therefore, you cannot be denied maternity coverage if the new plan provides for these benefits.

How do I prove that I had health care coverage with my old employer?

Your former employer's group health plan or insurance company is required to provide you with a statement certifying that you had coverage. You should have received it automatically when you received your COBRA paperwork. Under the law, you have up to 2 years from the time your coverage ended to request a certificate of credibility coverage.

Why would I need such a certificate?

HIPAA deals with health care portability. In essence, this means the ability to move your coverage from one employer to the other. Under the rules, you get credit for your previous coverage that occurred without a break of 63 days or more. This 63-day break can be extended if you elected COBRA.

I have just been diagnosed with a chronic heart condition. Can I lose my coverage or be charged more under my employer's health care plan?

Your company's health insurer or health plan provider may not establish rules for eligibility, or continuation of coverage for any person in the plan based on health status related factors. These include:

Plans are expected to charge the same premiums for those similarly situated.

Then why do smokers have to pay more than nonsmokers for coverage?

Though it appears to be in violation to do so, HIPAA provides an exception to the above in the case of a bona fide wellness program. To qualify:

I was hired after "open enrollment." Do I have to pass a physical to enroll in my employer's health care plan?

No. You do not have to take a physical in order to be eligible for coverage.

TIP: More information is provided regarding other HIPAA issues at the U.S. Department of Labor's Web sites. The addresses are: www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq_hipaa_ND.html and www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq_consumer_hipaa.html.

Employee Retirement Income Security Act (Erisa)

ERISA is a law established to set uniform minimum standards to ensure that employee benefit plans are set up and maintained in a fair and financially prudent manner. Employee benefit plans include pension and welfare benefit plans. The rules require that the persons or entities that manage and control the funds do the following:

Sound daunting? These rules essentially say that the plans: (1) have to be for the benefit of the employees, (2) must follow the law, (3) have to tell the employees what they have in the plans, and (4) must act in a nondiscriminatory manner.

Why should I offer a retirement plan to my employees?

Offering retirement benefits is critical to stay competitive in the labor market. These plans help build loyalty and create an incentive for an employee to stay with an organization. Many of us will spend as much as a quarter of our lives in retirement. It is essential that employees start making plans early in their careers.

What types of plans typically fall under ERISA regulation?

In general, there are two types of plans:

Defined Benefit Plans. This type of plan sets a fixed preestablished benefit for the employees. It is typically tied to employee's earnings, length of service or both. It is the company's responsibility to ensure that the plan is adequately funded so that the money is there when the employee retires. Because of the costs, these types of plans are used less frequently than they had been in the past.

Defined Contribution Plans. There are a number of different plans that fall within this group. They include: