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Understanding Health Insurance Terminology in Colorado
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| When shopping for health care plans, it is important to understand some of the basic terminology. This glossary contains the most common terminology associated with Colorado health care plans. View a sample Colorado health insurance plan description by clicking here. Use the glossary as a guide. Access the Colorado Health Insurance blog here. |
DEFINITIONS OF TERMS
For Health Care Plans in Colorado
In February 2002, the Federal
Government’s Interdepartmental Committee on Employment-based Health Insurance
Surveys approved the following set of definitions for use in Federal surveys
collecting employer-based health insurance data. The BLS National Compensation Survey
currently uses these definitions in its data collection procedures and publications.
These definitions will be periodically reviewed and updated by the Committee.
Types of Health Care Provider Arrangements
Health Care Plans and Systems
Insurance Resources
General Colorado Health Insurance Terms
ASO
(Administrative Services Only) – An arrangement in which an employer
hires athird party to deliver
administrative services to the employer such as claims processingand billing; the employer bears
the risk for claims.This is common in self-insured
health care plans.
Association
Health Plans –
This term is sometimes used loosely to refer to any health plan sponsored by an
association. It also has a precise definition under theHealth Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 that exempts from certain requirements insurers
that sell insurance to small employers only through association health plans that
meet the definition.
Coinsurance - A form of
medical cost sharing in a health insurance plan that requires aninsured person to pay a stated
percentage of medical expenses after the deductibleamount, if any, was paid. Once any deductible amount and
coinsurance are paid, the insurer is responsiblefor the rest of the reimbursement
for covered benefits up to allowed charges: theindividual could also be
responsible for any charges in excess of what the insurerdetermines to be “usual,
customary and reasonable”.Coinsurance rates may differ if
services are received from an approved provider(i.e., a provider with whom the
insurer has a contract or an agreement specifyingpayment levels and other contract
requirements) or if received by providers noton the approved list.In addition to overall
coinsurance rates, rates may also differ for different typesof services.
Copayment - A form of
medical cost sharing in a health insurance plan that requires aninsured person to pay a fixed
dollar amount when a medical service is received. Theinsurer is responsible for the
rest of the reimbursement. There may be separate copayments
for different services. Some plans require that a
deductible first be met for some specific servicesbefore a copayment applies.
Deductible - A fixed dollar
amount during the benefit period - usually a year - that aninsured person pays before the
insurer starts to make payments for covered medicalservices. Plans may have both per
individual and family deductibles. Some plans may have separate
deductibles for specific services. For example, aplan may have a hospitalization
deductible per admission. Deductibles may differ if
services are received from an approved provider or if received from providers not on
the approved list.
Flexible
spending accounts or arrangements (FSA) - Accounts offered and administered by employers that
provide a way for employees to set aside, out of their paycheck, pretax dollars to pay
for the employee’s share of insurance premiums or medical expenses not covered by
the employer’s health plan. The employer may also make contributions to an FSA.
Typically, benefits or cash must be used within the given benefit year or the employee
loses the money. Flexible spending accounts can also be provided to cover childcare
expenses, but those accounts must be established separately from medical FSAs.
Flexible
benefits plan (Cafeteria plan) (IRS 125 Plan) – A benefit
program under Section 125 of the Internal
Revenue Code that offers employees a choice between permissible taxable benefits,
including cash, and nontaxable benefits such as life and health insurance, vacations,
retirement plans and child care. Although a common core of benefits may be required, the
employee can determine how his or her remaining benefit dollars are to be allocated for
each type of benefit from the total amount promised by the employer. Sometimes employee
contributions may be made for additional coverage.
Fully insured
plan -
A plan where the employer contracts with another organization to assume financial responsibility
for the enrollees’ medical claims and for all incurred administrative costs.
Gatekeeper - Under some
health insurance arrangements, a gatekeeper is responsible for the administration of the patient’s
treatment; the gatekeeper coordinates and authorizes all medical services, laboratory
studies, specialty referrals and hospitalizations.
Group purchasing
arrangement –
Any of a wide array of arrangements in which two or more small employers purchase
health insurance collectively, often through a common intermediary who acts on their
collective behalf. Such arrangements may go by many different names, including
cooperatives, alliances, or business groups on health. They differ from one another along a
number of dimensions, including governance, functions and status under federal and
State laws. Some are set up or chartered by States while others are entirely private
enterprises. Some centralize more of the purchasing functions than others, including functions
such as risk pooling, price negotiation, choice of health plans offered to employees, and
various administrative tasks. Depending on their functions, they may be subject to
different State and/or federal rules. For example, they may be regulated as Multiple
Employer Welfare Arrangements (MEWAs).
Health Care
Plans and Systems
Indemnity plan - A type of
medical plan that reimburses the patient and/or provider as expenses are incurred.
Conventional
indemnity plan - An
indemnity that allows the participant the choice of any provider without effect on
reimbursement. These plans reimburse the patient and/or provider as expenses are
incurred.
Preferred
provider organization (PPO) plan - An indemnity plan where coverage is provided to participants
through a network of selected health care providers (such as hospitals and physicians). The
enrollees may go outside the network, but would incur larger costs in the form of
higher deductibles, higher coinsurance rates, or nondiscounted charges from the providers.
Exclusive
provider organization (EPO) plan - A more restrictive type of preferred provider organization plan under
which employees must use providers from the specified network of physicians
and hospitals to receive coverage; there is no coverage for care received from a
non-network provider except in an emergency situation.
Health
Maintenance Organization (HMO) - A health care system that assumes both the financial risks associated
with providing comprehensive medical services (insurance and service risk) and
the responsibility for health care delivery in a particular geographic area to HMO
members, usually in return for a fixed, prepaid fee. Financial risk may be shared
with the providers participating in the HMO.
Group Model HMO - An HMO that
contracts with a single multi-specialty medical group to provide care to
the HMO’s membership. The group practice may work exclusively with the HMO,
or it may provide services to non-HMO patients as well. The HMO pays
the medical group a negotiated, per capita rate, which the group distributes among
its physicians, usually on a salaried basis.
Staff Model HMO - A type of
closed-panel HMO (where patients can receive services only through a limited
number of providers) in which physicians are employees of the HMO. The
physicians see patients in the HMO’s own facilities.
Network Model
HMO -
An HMO model that contracts with multiple physician groups to provide services to HMO
members; may involve large single and multispecialty groups. The physician groups may
provide services to both HMO and non-HMO plan participants.
Individual
Practice Association (IPA) HMO- A type of health care provider organization composed of a group
of independent practicing physicians who maintain their own offices and
band together for the purpose of contracting their services to HMOs. An IPA may
contract with and provide services to both HMO and non-HMO plan participants.
Point-of-service
(POS) plan -
A POS plan is an "HMO/PPO" hybrid; sometimes referred to as an
"open-ended" HMO when offered by an HMO. POS plans resemble HMOs for in-network services.
Services received outside of the network are usually reimbursed in a manner similar to
conventional indemnity plans (e.g., provider reimbursement based on a fee
schedule or usual, customary and reasonable charges).
Physician-hospital
organization (PHO) -
Alliances between physicians and hospitals to help providers attain
market share, improve bargaining power and reduce administrative costs. These
entities sell their services to managed care organizations or directly to employers.
Managed care
plans -
Managed care plans generally provide comprehensive health services to their members, and
offer financial incentives for patients to use the providers who belong to the plan. Examples
of managed care plans include: Health maintenance organizations
(HMOs), Preferred provider organizations
(PPOs), Exclusive provider organizations
(EPOs), and Point of service plans (POSs).
Managed care
provisions -
Features within health plans that provide insurers with a way to manage the cost, use and
quality of health care services received by group members. Examples of managed care
provisions include:
Preadmission
certification -
An authorization for hospital admission given by a health care provider to a group
member prior to their hospitalization. Failure to obtain a preadmission
certification in non-emergency situations reduces or eliminates the health care
provider’s obligation to pay for services rendered.
Utilization
review -
The process of reviewing the appropriateness and quality of care provided to patients.
Utilization review may take place before, during, or after the services are rendered.
Preadmission
testing -
A requirement designed to encourage patients to obtain necessary diagnostic services on
an outpatient basis prior to non-emergency hospital admission. The testing
is designed to reduce the length of a hospital stay.
Non-emergency
weekend admission restriction - A requirement that imposes limits on reimbursement to
patients for non-emergency weekend hospital admissions.
Second surgical
opinion -
A cost-management strategy that encourages or requires patients to obtain the
opinion of another doctor after a physician has recommended that a non-emergency
or elective surgery be performed. Programs may be voluntary or mandatory in
that reimbursement is reduced or denied if the participant does not obtain the
second opinion. Plans usually require that such opinions be obtained from
board-certified specialists with no personal or financial interest in the
outcome.
Maximum plan
dollar limit -
The maximum amount payable by the insurer for covered expenses for the insured and each
covered dependent while covered under the health plan. Plans can have a yearly and/or a
lifetime maximum dollar limit. The most typical of maximums is a
lifetime amount of $1 million per individual.
Maximum
out-of-pocket expense - The maximum dollar amount a group member is required to pay out of pocket
during a year. Until this maximum is met, the plan and group member shares in the cost
of covered expenses. After the maximum is reached, the insurance carrier pays all
covered expenses, often up to a lifetime maximum. (See previous definition.)
Medical savings
accounts (MSA) – Savings
accounts designated for out-of-pocket medical expenses. In an MSA,
employers and individuals are allowed to contribute to a savings account on a pre-tax
basis and carry over the unused funds at the end of the year. One major difference between a
Flexible Spending Account (FSA) and a Medical Savings Account (MSA) is the
ability under an MSA to carry over the unused funds for use in a future year, instead of
losing unused funds at the end of the year. Most MSAs allow unused balances and
earnings to accumulate. Unlike FSAs, most MSAs are combined with a high deductible
or catastrophic health insurance plan.
Minimum Premium
Plan (MPP) –
A plan where the employer and the insurer agree that the employer will be responsible
for paying all claims up to an agreed-upon aggregate level, with the insurer
responsible for the excess. The insurer usually is also responsible for processing claims and
administrative services.
Multiple
Employer Welfare Arrangement (MEWA) – MEWA is a technical term under federal law that
encompasses essentially any arrangement not maintained pursuant to a collective bargaining
agreement (other than a State-licensed insurance company or HMO) that provides health
insurance benefits to the employees of two or more private employers. Some MEWAs are sponsored by
associations that are local, specific to a trade or industry, and exist for business
purposes other than providing health insurance. Such MEWAs most often are regulated as
employee health benefit plans under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974 (ERISA), although States generally also retain the right to regulate them, much
the way States regulate insurance companies. They can be funded through tax-exempt
trusts known as Voluntary Employees Beneficiary Associations (VEBAs) and they can
and often do use these trusts to self-insure rather than to purchase insurance
policies. Other MEWAs are sponsored by
Chambers of Commerce or similar organizations of relatively unrelated employers.
These MEWAs are not considered to be health plans under ERISA. Instead, each
participating employer’s plan is regulated separately under ERISA. States are free to
regulate the MEWAs themselves. These MEWAs tend to serve as vehicles for
participating employers to buy insurance policies from Statelicensed insurance companies or HMOs. They
do not tend to self-insure.
Multi-employer
health plan –
Generally, an employee health benefit plan maintained pursuant to a collective
bargaining agreement that includes employees of two or more employers. These plans are also
known as Taft-Hartley plans or jointly-administered plans. They are subject to
federal but not State law (although States may regulate any insurance policies that they
buy). They often self-insure.
Premium - Agreed upon
fees paid for coverage of medical benefits for a defined benefit period. Premiums can be paid by
employers, unions, employees, or shared by both the insured individual and the plan
sponsor.
Premium
equivalent -
For self-insured plans, the cost per covered employee, or the amount the firm would expect to
reflect the cost of claims paid, administrative costs, and stop-loss premiums.
Primary care
physician (PCP) -
A physician who serves as a group member's primary contact within the health plan.
In a managed care plan, the primary care physician provides basic medical services,
coordinates and, if required by the plan, authorizes referrals to specialists and
hospitals.
Reinsurance – The acceptance
by one or more insurers, called reinsurers or assuming companies, of a portion
of the risk underwritten by another insurer that has contracted with an employer for the entire
coverage.
Self-insured
plan –
A plan offered by employers who directly assume the major cost of health insurance for their
employees. Some self-insured plans bear the entire risk. Other self-insured employers insure
against large claims by purchasing stop-loss coverage. Some self-insured employers
contract with insurance carriers or third party administrators for claims processing and other
administrative services; other self-insured plans are selfadministered. Minimum Premium Plans (MPP) are
included in the self-insured health plan category. All types of plans
(Conventional Indemnity, PPO, EPO, HMO, POS, and PHOs) can be financed on a
self-insured basis. Employers may offer both self-insured and fully insured plans to their
employees.
Stop-loss
coverage –
A form of reinsurance for self-insured employers that limits the amount the employers will have to
pay for each person’s health care (individual limit) or for the total expenses of the
employer (group limit).
Third party
administrator (TPA) –
An individual or firm hired by an employer to handle claims processing, pay
providers, and manage other functions related to the operation of health insurance.
The TPA is not the policyholder or the insurer.
Types of healthcare provider arrangements
Exclusive
providers -
Enrollees must go to providers associated with the plan for all non-emergency care in order for
the costs to be covered.
Any providers - Enrollees may
go to providers of their choice with no cost incentives to use a particular subset of
providers.
Mixture of
providers -
Enrollees may go to any provider but there is a cost incentive to use a particular subset of
providers.
Usual,
customary, and reasonable (UCR) charges - Conventional indemnity plans operate based on usual,
customary, and reasonable (UCR) charges. UCR charges mean that the charge is the provider’s
usual fee for a service that does not exceed the customary fee in that geographic area, and
is reasonable based on the circumstances. Instead of UCR charges, PPO plans often
operate based on a negotiated (fixed) schedule of fees that recognize charges for covered
services up to a negotiated fixed dollar amount.
REFERENCE
SOURCES
Survey definitions from:
The National Compensation Survey
definitions (BLS),
The Medical Expenditure Panel
Survey definitions (AHRQ), and
The National Employer Health
Insurance Survey definitions (NCHS).
Definitions from other Federal
agencies and surveys, such as:
The Current Population Survey
(BLS/Census)
ERISA-related definitions (from
PWBA)
Glossaries and informational
papers from websites such as:
OPM’s Federal Employees Health
Benefit Plans (glossary and specific plan booklets),
Blue Cross / Blue Shield ,
The National Center for Policy
Analysis, and
The Health Insurance Association
of America.
Publications such as:
Employee Benefit Plans: A
Glossary of Terms, Ninth Edition 1997, Judith A. Sankey- editor, International Foundation
of Employee Benefit Plans. "Fundamentals of Employee
Benefit Programs, Fourth addition"
"Managed Care Plans and
Managed Care Features: Data from the EBS to the NCS", Cathy A. Baker and Iris S. Díaz,
Compensation and Working Conditions, Spring 2001
EBRI Notes Vol. 16, no. 7, July
1995 HIAA Source Book Personal communications with staff from some of the
data sources cited above.

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