CONNECTICUT: A
jointly held public hearing of the Public Health and Insurance and
Real Estate Committees was scheduled for this week on two new health
care bills. The first bill would establish the SustiNet Plan
Authority, a quasi-public agency empowered to implement a public
health care option. The SustiNet Plan is a health insurance program
that consists of coordinated individual health insurance plans that
provide health insurance products to state employees, Medicaid
enrollees, HUSKY Plan, Part A and Part B enrollees, HUSKY Plus
enrollees, municipalities, municipal-related employers, nonprofit
employers, small employers, other employers, and individuals in
Connecticut. The Authority is authorized, but not required, to begin
offering SustiNet coverage to employees and retirees of non-state
public employers, municipal-related employers, small employers, and
nonprofit employers after January 1, 2012. Beginning on January
1, 2014, SustiNet will offer coverage to individuals and employers.
Among other things, the bill directs the Authority to implement
primary care case management and patient-centered medical homes for
all SustiNet Plan members, establish a pay-for-performance system,
and establish procedures to prevent
The Committees also will
hear testimony on a bill to establish the Connecticut Health
Insurance Exchange pursuant to PPACA. The exchange would be a
quasi-public agency offering qualified health plans to individuals
and qualified employers by January 1, 2014. The bill would
establish a 13-member board of directors to manage the exchange. The
exchange would have the authority to review the rate of premium
growth within and outside the exchange in order to develop
recommendations on whether to continue limiting qualified employer
status to small employers. It also would have the authority to charge
assessments or user fees to health carriers to generate funding
necessary to support the operations of the exchange. The bill directs
the exchange board to report to the legislature by January 1, 2012 on
whether to establish two separate exchanges, one for the individual
market and one for the small employer market, or to establish a
single exchange; whether to merge the individual and small employer
health insurance markets; whether to revise the definition of "small
employer" from not more than 50 employees to not more than 100;
and whether to allow large employers to participate in the exchange
beginning in 2017.
IDAHO: Draft legislation
is circulating that would prohibit insurance companies and managed
care organizations from refusing to contract with qualified providers
solely because the provider: is not a member of a group, network or
any other organization of providers contracting with the insurance
company; or does not offer all of the services obtained through the
group, network or organization of providers contracting with the
insurance company. However, the provider may be required to comply
with the practice standards and quality requirements of the contract
specific to the services contracted. The bill generally is intended
to impact insurers and managed care organizations. It does not
contain an exclusion or exception for HIPAA-excepted benefits. As
yet, the bill has not found a sponsor and has not been "introduced."
While there remains a possibility that the bill could be introduced
before the deadline for committee bill introductions, it is
considered unlikely.
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