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Employer Responsibilities
under Federal Health Care Legislation: COBRA and HIPAA
What is COBRA?
COBRA is an acronym for the Consolidated
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, a federally regulated
law that gives employees and their eligible dependents the opportunity
to remain in their employer's group coverage when they would otherwise
lose coverage because of certain qualifying events (see COBRA
Events immediately below). COBRA coverage is available for
limited time periods (see Duration of COBRA
Coverage) and the member must pay the full cost of the coverage
plus an administrative fee. The member and/or dependent can increase
or decrease their level of coverage; for example, the member can
add dependents or elect coverage he or she did not have before.
Initial COBRA and
HIPAA Notice to New Enrollees
The employer is required by federal
regulation to notify all employees and dependents enrolling in
their health plan of the provisions of the federal Consolidated
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA) and the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) (as
well as the Mental Health Parity Act
and the Newborns' and Mothers' Health
Protection Act).
The COBRA and HIPAA notifications
are intended to inform employees of their rights and obligations
under the federal law and must be distributed to all new employees
and their dependents. The initial COBRA
notification and HIPAA
notification must be addressed to the employee and dependents
and mailed to the address furnished by the employee, within 90
days of enrollment. The employer must keep a record of the notification.
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COBRA
Events
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Continuation of
group coverage under COBRA is available if an employee or any
covered dependents would otherwise lose coverage as a result
of any of the following events: |
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- Employee's termination of
employment (except for gross misconduct);
- Death
of the member;
- Employee's reduction in work
hours;
- Employee takes a leave of
absence;
- Divorce or legal separation
(makes spouse ineligible for further active coverage);
- Dependent child ineligibility
(marriage, attaining age 23, or no longer living at home);
- Employee elects Medicare as
primary coverage
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Note: Persons
who lose coverage due to one of the reasons listed above are
known as "qualified beneficiaries." |
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The Cost of
Coverage
If a "qualified
beneficiary" ( the person who loses coverage) chooses to
purchase COBRA benefits, he or she will pay 100 percent of the
cost of the coverage plus a two percent charge for administrative
costs.
The cost of the "qualified
beneficiary's" COBRA coverage (COBRA rate) depends not only
on the "plan" (e.g., NJ PLUS, Traditional, etc.) and
the "contract level" (e.g., Single only, Member and
Spouse, etc.), but also on the employer's prescription
drug coverage:
- If the employer has a freestanding
prescription drug plan, either through the SHBP or independently,
then prescription drugs are not eligible under the health
plan.
- If the employer does not have
a freestanding prescription drug plan, then eligible prescription
drug claims can be processed through the NJ PLUS, Traditional,
or HMO plan.
As
a result, the rates are different for the two sets of members.
For the rate chart option
below, the term "WITH a Prescription Drug Plan"
means that the employer has a freestanding drug plan and such
claims are not eligible under SHBP health coverage. The term "WITHOUT
a Prescription Drug Plan" means that the employer does
not have a freestanding drug plan and such claims are eligible
under SHBP health coverage.
For 2005, there are
also two sets of State COBRA rates, depending upon the bargaining
unit under which the State employee works:
- State employees who are subject
to plan revisions
- State employees
who are not subject to plan revisions
The State has a prescription
drug plan available to all employees qualifying for SHBP coverage;
prescription drug benefits are not available through the health
plans for any State enrollment.
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COBRA
Forms
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COBRA
Application with Notice from Employer and Instructions: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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Duration
of COBRA Coverage Following a COBRA Event
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COBRA coverage may be purchased
for up to 18 months if an eligible employee or eligible
dependents (called "COBRA subscribers" or "COBRA
qualified beneficiaries") become eligible because of:
- Termination of employment
- A reduction in hours,
or
- A leave of absence.
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Coverage may be extended up
to 11 additional months, for a total of 29 months,
if the COBRA subscriber has a Social Security Administration
approved disability (under Title II or XVI of the Social
Security Act) for a condition that existed when he or she
enrolled in COBRA or began within the first 60 days of COBRA
coverage. Coverage will cease either at the end of COBRA
eligibility or when the subscriber obtains Medicare coverage,
whichever comes first.
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COBRA coverage may be purchased
by a dependent for up to 36 months if he or she
becomes eligible because of:
- Death
- Divorce
- Legal separation of the
employee who participates in group coverage under an employer's
plan
- Dependent marriage
- Dependent attaining age
23
- Dependent moving out of
the household, or;
- The election of Medicare
as primary coverage by the covered employee.
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If a second qualifying event
occurs during the 18-month period following the date of
any employee's termination or reduction in hours, the beneficiary
of that second qualifying event will be entitled to a total
of 36 months of continued coverage. The period will be measured
from the date of the loss of coverage caused by the first
qualifying event.
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Time spent on any leave
other than federal or State Family Leave taken prior
to COBRA enrollment must be subtracted from the COBRA eligibility
period.
For example: An employee
is out on a personal leave beyond nine months. Nine months
of personal leave would be subtracted from the 18 months
of COBRA eligibility leaving the COBRA subscriber with
only nine months of COBRA eligibility.
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Federal law requires that
active employees terminate their employers' COBRA medical
coverage if they choose Medicare as their primary coverage.
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COBRA Member
Rights
While participating in COBRA coverage,
a qualified individual has the same right to coverage as all active
employees. That means a COBRA subscriber has the right to add
or drop dependents from coverage just as active employees may,
and can add optional coverage during the annual Open Enrollment
period.
A former employee or dependent who
elected to enroll under COBRA has the same opportunity to enroll
in any other SHBP coverage offered by the former employer during
the SHBP Open Enrollment period (as long as the employee or dependent
was eligible for that coverage when first enrolling in COBRA).
For State employees, eligible coverage would include a SHBP medical
plan, dental plan, and the State Prescription Drug Program. However,
all COBRA benefits will end no later than the original COBRA termination
date. The addition of a benefit during the Open Enrollment does
not extend the maximum COBRA coverage period.
All COBRA subscribers receive Open
Enrollment information, mailed directly to the address on file
with the SHBP, prior to the start of the Open Enrollment period.
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COBRA Termination
COBRA coverage through the SHBP will
terminate when any of the following situations occur:
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The eligibility period expires;
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The COBRA subscriber fails to
pay premiums in a timely manner;
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The COBRA subscriber becomes
covered under Medicare (affects health insurance coverage
only, does not affect dental, prescription or vision care
coverage) after COBRA coverage is elected;
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The COBRA subscriber becomes
covered under another group plan as either the member or the
dependent (unless that plan has a preexisting condition clause)*;
or
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The employer (or former employer)
no longer provides SHBP coverage to any of its employees.
In this case, the employer will provide the employees the
opportunity to continue coverage through the new health benefits
provider.
*If, after a COBRA subscriber
enrolls in COBRA, he or she obtains new coverage which has a preexisting
condition clause, the employee may continue under COBRA and pay
for coverage of the condition excluded by the preexisting conditions
clause. The employee will have to provide information about the
preexisting condition clause to the COBRA administrator and only
the preexisting condition will be covered. The employee can continue
the COBRA coverage to its normal end date or when the preexisting
condition clause ends, whichever comes first.
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COBRA NotificationGeneral
The COBRA law requires employers
to:
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Notify the employee and dependents
of the COBRA provisions when the employee and dependents
are first enrolled;
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Notify the employee, the spouse,
and children of their right to purchase continued coverage
when the employer becomes aware of a COBRA event that causes
a loss of coverage;
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Send the COBRA
Notification Letter and a COBRA Application (follow
this link for a listing of COBRA forms) within 14 calendar
days of receiving notice that a qualifying event has occurred,
and;
- Maintain records documenting
the employer's compliance with the COBRA law.
COBRA Notification for New
Employees
Employers are required by the federal
COBRA law to notify the employee and dependents of the COBRA provisions
when the employee and dependents are first enrolled in the
State Health Benefits Program. The COBRA
Notification Letter is intended to inform employees of
their rights and obligations under this federal law. The COBRA
Notification Letter must be distributed to all new employees
and their dependents enrolling in the SHBP within 90 days of enrollment.
The initial COBRA notification letter must be addressed to the
employee and dependents and mailed to the address furnished by
the employee. The employer must keep a record of the notification.
COBRA Notification after a COBRA
Event
The employer is required by federal
regulation to notify the employee, spouse or domestic partner,
and/or dependents of their rights to purchase continued health
coverage within 14 days of receiving notice that there
has been a COBRA qualifying event that causes a loss of coverage.
It is, however, the employee's
responsibility to notify the employer of a COBRA
qualifying event (divorce, child losing dependent status)
within 60 days of the event. If the employee does not inform the
employer of the change in status with the 60 period, the employee
may forfeit the dependent's right to COBRA.
A COBRA SHBP application form, with
instructions, and a rate chart should be sent with the
COBRA notice. The notice will give the date when coverage
will end and the period of time over which coverage may be extended.
The employer must maintain records documenting compliance with
the COBRA law
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COBRA
Forms
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COBRA
Application with Notice from Employer and Instructions: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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COBRA
Benefits Continuation Schedule with Rate Chart for: |
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The Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS) and COBRA Continuation of Coverage
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, has created a Web site for COBRA continuation
of coverage as it applies to group health plans sponsored by state
and local governmental employers (Title XXII of the Public Health
Service Act; 42 U.S.C. 300bb-1 through 300bb-8). The Web site
is designed to assist qualified beneficiaries, state and local
governmental employers, and group health plan administrators in
understanding their rights and responsibilities with respect to
public sector COBRA continuation coverage. The Web Site may be
directly accessed at: www.cms.hhs.gov/hipaa/hipaa1/cobra/faq.asp
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What is HIPAA?
The Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) is a federal law that includes
important new protections for millions of working Americans and
their families who have preexisting medical conditions, or might
suffer discrimination in health coverage based on a factor that
relates to an individual's health.
The federal Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act requires health plans, such as the SHBP,
to maintain the privacy of any personal information relating to
its members' physical or mental health. (See the Notice
of Privacy Practices to Enrollees in the New Jersey State Health
Benefits Program below.)
HIPAA contains several provisions
that affect the State Health Benefits Program and its participating
employers. The SHBP has implemented several actions to comply
with the requirements of HIPAA:
- Providing a Notice
of Privacy Practices to Enrollees in the New Jersey
State Health Benefits Program, describing how
medical information about employees enrolled in the
SHBP may be used and disclosed and how the employees
themselves can get access to this information.
- Providing a Participant
Authorization Form, enabling SHBP enrollees
to specify what protected health information the SHBP
may use and disclose, and to whom and for what purpose
it may disclosed, as well as the period of time during
which the use/disclosure may occur.
- Providing employers with
the required notice of compliance form, Notice
to State Health Benefits Program Participants,
to be distributed to all newly enrolled employees and
their family members;
- Establishing procedures
to provide departing employees with a Certification
of Coverage (COC) form, which verifies group
health plan enrollment and termination dates upon the
employee's termination;
- Amending SHBP rules to
comply with HIPAA coverage requirements;
- Filing exemptions to the
provisions of the mental health parity requirement with
the federal Health Care Financing Administration for
the Traditional and NJ PLUS Plans. This means that the
maximum annual and lifetime dollar limits for mental
health benefits under the Traditional Plan and NJ PLUS
will not change, with the exception of biologically
based mental illness in accordance with HIPAA procedures
for the Traditional Plan and NJ PLUS.
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SHBP
Participating Employers' Requirements
The employer is required by federal
regulation to notify all newly enrolling employees and their family
members of the SHBP's compliance with federal health insurance
regulations. The employer should include the Notice
to State Health Benefits Program Participants about
compliance with federal health insurance requirements with the
COBRA mailing to all new employees.
The employer also is required by
federal regulation to provide employees and their dependents who
lose their health benefit coverage with evidence of prior health
coverage. The Certificate
of Group Health Plan Coverage is a requirement of
HIPAA and must be completed by human resource, benefit, or payroll
offices of all SHBP participating Local and State employers. This
form is intended to credit the employee and/or dependents with
the period of time they were covered under the SHBP plan. This
credit of coverage can be used to fulfill any preexisting condition
exclusion provisions that may exist in a new health plan. The
longest preexisting condition period under HIPAA is 18 months;
therefore, if the participants are covered by a SHBP plan for
at least 18 months, that is all that needs to be reported on the
Certificate of Group Health Plan Coverage.
HIPAA
Forms:
HIPAA:
Request for Certificate of Health Coverage
HIPAA:
Certificate of Group Health Plan Coverage with Instructions
HIPAA:
Notice of Privacy Practices to Enrollees in the New Jersey SHBP
HIPAA:
Participant Authorization Form
Other Federal Health Insurance
Requirements
Employers must also inform new enrollees
about two additional federal health insurance requirements: The
Mental Health Parity Act of 1996, and the Newborns'
and Mothers' Health Protection Act of 1996.
Mental Health Parity Act
Mental Health Parity Act of 1996
The Newborns' and Mothers' Health Protection Act of 1996
The Mental Health Parity Act of
1996 requires that the dollar limitations on mental health
benefits are not lower than those of medical or surgical benefits.
All SHBP health plans meet or exceed the federal requirements,
with the exception of mental health parity for the Traditional
Plan and NJ PLUS.
The State Health Benefits Commission
has filed an exemption from the mental health parity requirement
with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for
calendar year 2004 and is expected to file an exemption for calendar
year 2005. As a result, the maximum annual and lifetime dollar
limits for mental health benefits under the Traditional Plan and
NJ PLUS will not change, with an exception for biologically-based
mental illness. Maximum annual and lifetime dollar limits for
mental health benefits are outlined in the Traditional Plan and
NJ PLUS Member Handbooks and the SHBP Summary Program Description.
Newborns' and Mothers' Health
Protection Act
The Newborns' and Mothers' Health
Protection Act of 1996 requires that health plans provide
a minimum level of coverage for newborns and mothers, generally
48 hours for a vaginal delivery and 96 hours for a cesarean delivery.
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