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Life Events Impact Health Benefit
Needs……
Most individuals go through a number of
life events that affect their health benefit needs and the choices they
make. There are several important federal laws that affect your benefits
under a job-based health plan. Below is a list of life events and a
brief description of federal laws that may protect your rights when
these events occur.
Make the Right Health Benefit Decisions
When You Get Married
The Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) offers special enrollment rights for
employees and spouses that allow them to enroll in a group health plan
upon marriage and provides protections for individuals who have
preexisting conditions or might suffer discrimination on the basis of
health status when they switch plans.
ERISA Disclosure Provisions provide
individuals with rights to important information concerning benefits
under their own or spouse’s group health plan.
Protect Your Rights When You Have or
Adopt a Baby
HIPAA prohibits preexisting
condition exclusions from being applied to pregnancy, regardless of
whether the mother had previous health coverage. In addition, HIPAA does
not permit preexisting condition exclusions to be applied to newborns
and adopted children who enroll within 30 days of birth or adoption.
HIPAA also offers special
enrollment rights for employees, spouses and new dependents allowing
them to enroll in a group health plan upon birth, adoption, or placement
for adoption.
ERISA Claims Procedures help ensure
timely and fair review of maternity and other claims under group health
plans.
The Newborns’ and Mothers’ Health
Protection Act includes important new protections for mothers and their
newborn children with regard to the lengths of hospital stays following
the birth of a child.
Keep Health Coverage After a Job Change
HIPAA protects individuals who have
preexisting conditions, helping them to keep coverage for those
conditions or get coverage for them in no more than 12 or 18 months
through limits on the length of preexisting condition exclusions. HIPAA
also helps individuals who might suffer discrimination in health
coverage on the basis of health status when they change jobs.
COBRA generally requires that most
group health plans of employers with at least 20 employees offer
employees and their dependents the opportunity to continue their health
plan coverage for limited periods of time when the employee loses his or
her job or has a reduction in hours that would result in a loss of
coverage.
Make Sure Your Loved Ones Have Good Health
Care
ERISA permits a parent to obtain a
court order to provide coverage for children under the noncustodial
parent’s health plan (called a qualified medical child support order).
ERISA Disclosure Provisions help to
ensure that individuals covered by group health plans receive clear
information about their rights, benefits, and obligations under the
plan, including information about COBRA continuation coverage, access to
urgent or specialized care, and composition of physician and other
provider networks.
HIPAA includes protections for
newborns and adopted children with preexisting conditions. Specifically,
HIPAA does not permit a preexisting condition exclusion to be applied to
a newborn or adopted child who enrolls within 30 days of birth or
adoption.
ERISA Claims Procedures help ensure
timely and fair review of plan denials of claims.
Keep Coverage When a Marriage Ends
HIPAA offers special enrollment
rights, generally allowing employees and dependents who were covered
under a spouse’s plan to obtain coverage under the employee’s plan upon
divorce or legal separation, if they are otherwise eligible.
COBRA generally requires that group
health plans of employers with at least 20 employees offer spouses and
dependent children the opportunity to continue their health care
coverage for limited periods of time in the event of the spouse’s legal
separation or divorce from the employee covered by the plan.
Secure the Right Care in Your Later
Years
HIPAA offers protections for
individuals who have preexisting conditions, helping them to keep
coverage for those conditions or get coverage in no more than 12 or 18
months through limits on preexisting condition exclusions.
HIPAA includes protections to help
ensure individuals are not excluded from coverage under their group
health plan or charged a higher premium based on health status.
COBRA generally requires that group
health plans of employers with at least 20 employees offer employees and
their dependents the opportunity to continue their health plan coverage
for limited periods of time when the employee loses his or her job due
to retirement.
ERISA Claims Procedures help ensure
fair and timely appeals process for covered individuals.
ERISA Disclosure Provisions require
that group health plan disclosure material furnished to plan
participants and beneficiaries must contain information about
specialists in the plan network and the plan’s rules for accessing
specialty care.
ERISA Disclosure Provisions also
require that plan disclosure material must describe the ability of the
employer to reduce plan benefits or terminate the plan.
This fact sheet has been developed by the
U.S. Department of Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration,
Washington, DC 20210. It will be made available in alternate formats
upon request: Voice phone: 202.693.8664; Text telephone: 202.501.3911.
In addition, the information in this fact sheet constitutes a small
entity compliance guide for purposes of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.
Reference
http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/newsroom/fshealthycy.html
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