Actuary Role in Self-Insurance Flashcards
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
ERISA (Definition, Purpose)
- Definition = Federal law that establishes minimum standards for pension/health plans
- Purpose = Protect EE benefit plan participants and their beneficiaries
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
ERISA Key Provisions
- Reporting and Disclosure Requirements (SPD, Annual Summary Report)
- Requires every plan to have named fiduciary
- Admin and Enforcement Provision
- Claims Review
- Savings Clause = state regulates health insurers
- Nondiscrimination (Cannot favor highly-compensated EEs)
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
COBRA
Allows health plan participants to continue coverage they might otherwise lose
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
HIPAA
- Improve portability and continuity of group/individual health insurance
- Combat fraud, waste, and abuse
- Promote use of medical savings account
- Improved access to LTC coverage
- Simplify administration of health insurance
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Post-ERISA Regulations (List)
- COBRA
- HIPAA
- Newborns and Mothers Health Protection Act
- Women’s Health and Cancer Rights Act
- Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act
- ACA
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
ACA Regulations
- ER Coverage Mandates
- Cadillac Tax
- Coverage Minimums
- Essential Health Benefits
- Minimum Actuarial Value (60%)
- Annual member cost-sharing limits
- Dependent coverage up to age 26
- Prohibits lifetime and annual limits
- Maximum waiting period = 90 days
- Preexisting condition exclusions prohibited
- Standard disclosure tools
- Limits rescissions (only with fraud or intentional misrepresentation)
- Value limits to wellness programs
- No cost-sharing for preventive services
- Emergency service - No PA needed, equal copays
- Appeals notice and disclosure requirements
- Extend Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act
- Guaranteed issue and renewability
- Extend nondiscrimination rules
- Rating variations
- 3:1 on age
- Premium rating area
- Family composition
- 1.5:1 on tobacco use
- Medical Loss Ratio Standards
- 85% for large group
- 80% for small group/individual
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Advantages of Self-Insurance
- Cost Savings
- Lower premium taxes
- Elimination of state-mandated benefits
- Avoidance of health insurer fee
- Removal of insurer risk charges
- Capture favorable claims experience
- Flexibility to design benefit plans that meet their needs
- Immediately reap benefits of wellness/dx programs
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Disadvantages of Self-Insurance
- Unpredictability of claims (amount, timing)
- Budgeting (hard to predict cost/utilization)
- Unfavorable experience can stress ER cash flow
- Exposed to other risks
- Fiduciary
- Legal
- Reputational
- Operational
- Fully insured plans are easier to understand and have known expense
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Regulation of Non-ERISA Plans
Mostly consist of church employee plans
- Non-ERISA Fully Insured = subject to state insurance regulations
- Non-ERISA Self-Insured = regulated by CMS
- Not subject to COBRA
- Subject to parts of ERISA
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Regulation of Stop Loss Insurance
State regulators have authority over SLI, but not over self-insured plans
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Causes of Variability in Lag Between Incurred and Paid Claims
- Type of Claim (Med vs. Rx)
- Complexity of Claim
- Complex = review
- Lag may cause claim not to be covered by SLI
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Steps to Establish Self-Insured Rates
- Request data from TPA
- Review data
- Develop projections with projections for: plan changes, large claims, admin fees, SLI
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Typical Projection Methodology
- Determine how many years of historical experience to use
- Make credibility adjustments
- Dampen effect of particularly large claims on the projection (pooling, SLI)
- Complete paid claims
- Convert to PMPM basis
- Adjust for plan changes
- Adjust for in=network/OON shifts
- Apply trend
- Convert PMPM to PEPM
- Add fixed fees (admin, SLI)
- Compare new rates to current rates
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Reserving Considerations
ER needs actuarial assistance when developing IBNR estimates and reserves
Actuary Role in Self-Insurance
Financial Risks that Plan Sponsors Need to Manage
- Natural Claim Volatility
- Catastrophic Events
- Drivers of Cash Flow Volatility
- Benefit plan design
- Dx
- Hospital contracts
- Third party liability
- Newly Self-Insured Plans = claim payments start small and ramp up, build reserve