Medical Loss Ratio Deadline Extended For Two States

Iowa and Kentucky late Friday joined the list of states granted extra time for health insurers to meet rules requiring at least 80 percent of revenue on medical care. North Dakota鈥檚 request was rejected.

That brings to five the number of state by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

Photo by Leo Reynolds via Flickr

The health care overhaul law requires insurers selling policies to individuals or small businesses to spend at least 80 percent of premium revenue on medical care or quality improvements, starting this year. Those that don鈥檛 must issue rebates to policyholders. The that most of a policyholders’ premium should be spent on medical care, leaving the rest for administrative costs, profits, advertising, broker commissions and executive pay.

But states can ask for leniency if they can show that meeting that 80 percent spending target might cause insurers to pull out of markets or limit sales of policies sold to individuals. Maine, Nevada and New Hampshire had previously been granted waivers.聽 Still waiting on their requests: Florida, Louisiana, Georgia, Kansas, Indiana and the territory of Guam.

In a sent聽Friday, federal regulators told Iowa regulators that their original request 鈥渆xceeds that which is necessary鈥 to prevent destabilization.”聽 Nonetheless,聽three of the state鈥檚 seven major insurers were below the target and might leave the market without an adjustment, the regulators said, in granting the state a waiver that would allow insurers to meet a 67 percent target this year, a 75 percent target in 2012 and 80 percent in 2013.聽 The state had requested 60 percent this year, building to 75 percent by 2013.

In Kentucky, regulators sought a 65 percent target, building to 75 percent by 2013.聽 However, the state鈥檚 major insurer was unlikely to leave the market, HHS said, leaving only three smaller ones at risk. It granted a 75 percent target for this year, going to 80 percent in 2012.

North Dakota regulators did not show聽a 鈥渞easonable likelihood鈥 that the 80 percent target would be a problem, so the request was rejected.

The spending requirement, called the “,” applies to all health plans, except those offered by self-insured employers, such as聽companies with thousands of employees. However, the exceptions sought by the states would affect only individual policies bought by people who don鈥檛 get coverage through their jobs.聽 Nationwide, more than 18 million Americans purchase their own policies.

Up to 9 million Americans with individual policies and in group plans could be eligible for rebates, according to government estimates.

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