Commissioner Jones Responds to Federal Government Announcement of New State Grants for Health Insurance Rate Review

by Marina Karvelas

In a press release issued today, California Insurance Commissioner Jones applauded the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services after it announced the availability of roughly $200 million in new health insurance rate review grants

Specific funding is available to support states in their efforts to stop excessive premium increases from being implemented. However, California would not be eligible for this portion of the grant because California law currently does not empower the Commissioner to reject excessive health insurance premium increases.

As discussed earlier in this blog, Commissioner Jones recently issued Guidance 1163:2 which allows the Commissioner to determine, based upon a list of factors, including a federal medical loss ratio, whether a health insurance premium rate increase is “unreasonable”.

The Commissioner however has no power to reject an "unreasonable" rate increase.  

Commissioner Jones is actively supporting legislation that would give him such power and the new federal grants gives him yet another platform to do so.

While California is eligible for some of the grant funding through this program, we would be eligible for more federal funding if California law provided the Insurance Commissioner with the authority to reject excessive premium increases. This again brings to light the need to change the law and provide the Insurance Commissioner with that authority. I am working with Assembly Member Mike Feuer to pass AB 52, which would give me the authority to reject excessive health insurance premium increases." 

We will follow AB 52 and the Commissioner's efforts to reform health insurance rate regulation.

Concerned About Excessive Rates, California Insurance Commissioner Requests Rate Filings from Medical Malpractice Carriers

By John M. LeBlanc and Jason C. Love

On February 17, 2011, California Insurance Commissioner David Jones announced in a press release that the California Department of Insurance had contacted several unnamed medical malpractice insurers to raise concerns about excessive rates and request that these insurers submit rate filings with the CDI to reduce their rates. 

California Insurance Code sections 1861.01 and 1861.05, enacted in 1988 as part of Proposition 103, specifically grants the CDI the authority to regulate the rates of certain property and casualty lines of insurance, including medical malpractice insurance. It requires these insurers to apply to the CDI for prior approval of rates and prohibits the use of excessive rates. 

The CDI noted in its press release that it has employed these provisions in the past to regulate the rates of medical malpractice insurers, including reducing rate increases. 

In contrast, the CDI specifically confirmed that it does not have the authority to reject rates from health insurers that it deems excessive or unreasonable, as health insurance is not subject to California Insurance Code sections 1861.01 and 1861.05.

In his announcement, Commissioner Jones noted that the basis for the CDI’s determination that medical malpractice rates might be excessive is the low loss ratios that these medical malpractice insurers experienced. 

In the CDI’s view, low loss ratios are an indication that premiums might be excessive and in violation of the law. 

The CDI plans to require a rate filing from those medical malpractice insurers it believes have excessive rates and review the rate filings to ensure that the rates comply with the aforementioned provisions of the California Insurance Code as well as all other applicable provisions of the law.

Guidelines for Health Insurers Requesting Rate Increase Issued by California Insurance Commissioner (SB 1163)

by Marina Karvelas

On February 4, 2011, California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones released draft guidelines for implementing SB 1163 (“Guidance 1163:2”).

SB 1163, signed by former Governor Schwarzenegger on September 30, 2010, responds to the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“PPACA”), which requires the United States Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish a process for the annual review of “unreasonable” increases in premiums for health insurance coverage.

Under the federal act, health insurers must submit to the secretary, and the relevant state, a justification for an “unreasonable” premium increase prior to implementation of the increase.

SB 1163, effective January 1, 2011, requires health insurers to file with the California Department of Managed Health Care or the California Department of Insurance detailed rate information regarding proposed premium increases and requires that the rate information be certified by an independent actuary. 

The bill authorizes the departments to review these filings and issue guidance regarding compliance. It also requires the departments to consult with each other regarding specified actions as well as post certain findings on their Internet Web sites.

In his draft guidelines (“Guidance 1163:2”), Commissioner Jones lists several factors that will be used by the Department to determine if a rate is “unreasonable.”

Under Section A: Unreasonable Rate Increases, the first factor the Department will look at is:

[t]he relationship of the projected aggregate medical loss ratio to the federal medical loss ratio standard in the market segment to which the rate applies, after accounting for any adjustments allowable under federal law.” (Guidance 1163:2, § A, p. 1.) 

The draft guidelines expressly incorporate, by reference, the interim federal regulation effective January 1, 2011, titled “Health Insurance Issuers Implementing Medical Loss Ratio Requirements Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” 45 C.F.R. §§ 158.101-158.232.

The interim federal regulation requires health insurers to spend a certain percentage of consumers’ premiums on direct care for patients and efforts to improve health care quality.

For individual and small group market insurers, this is 80% of the consumers’ premium, and for large group market insurers, it is 85% of the consumers’ premium.

If insurers fail to meet the ratio requirements, beginning in 2012, they will be required to provide a rebate to their customers by August 1 of each year.

The federal rule allows for a State to require a higher medical loss ratio than that required under the interim regulation. The interim federal regulation (pdf), published December 1, 2010, is subject to a 60-day public comment period.

Other factors identified in Commissioner Jones’ draft guidelines to determine whether a premium increase is “unreasonable” include: 

  • Whether the assumptions for the rate increase are supported by substantial evidence;
  • Whether the choice of assumptions or combination of assumptions for the rate increase is reasonable;
  • Whether the data or documentation provided is incomplete or inadequate;
  • Whether the filed rates result in premium differences between insureds within similar risk categories that either are not permissible under California law or do not reasonably correspond to differences in expected costs;
  • Whether itemized changes are substantially justified by credible experience data;
  • Rate of return for prior three years and anticipated for the following year;
  • Insurer’s employee and executive compensation;
  • Degree to which the increase exceeds rate of medical cost inflation;
  • For individual policies, compliance with 10 C.C.R. 2222.12. (Guidance 1163:2, § A, pp. 1-2.) 

In addition to Filing and Notice requirements as well as specific filing forms (Sections B and D Guidance 1163:2), the draft guidelines contain several requirements for actuarial certification. Each of the following must be included in the actuarial certification:

  • The actuary’s qualifications and independence;
  • Opinion that the proposed premium rates are “actuarially sound in the aggregate;”
  • Complete description of data, assumptions, rating factors and methods with rate calculations for each contract or policy form;
  • Statement of opinion whether the rate increase is reasonable or unreasonable, and if, the latter, the justification for the increase; a discussion of the factors listed in § A, and 10 C.C.R. § 2222.10 for individual health insurance;
  • A description of the testing performed by the actuary. (Guidance 1163:2, § C, pp. 3-4.) 

Notwithstanding the above requirements, the Insurance Commissioner currently does not have the authority under SB 1163 to reject health insurance rate increases.

In the last legislative term, Commissioner Jones (formerly an assemblyman) sponsored AB 2578, a strong insurance rate reform bill that would have given the Commissioner such authority (it failed to pass in the Senate).

The Commissioner is currently supporting another effort at such legislation.

Commissioner Jones’ draft guidelines are subject to a 7 day public comment period before they are finalized.

Originally posted to Barger & Wolen's Insurance Litigation and Regulatory Law Blog

City of San Francisco Files Lawsuit Contending State Regulators Allow Discrimination Against Women

On January 27, 2009, the city of San Francisco filed a lawsuit against the California Department of Insurance (“CDI”) contending that it allows health insurers to discriminate against women when charging premiums for health insurance. The suit alleges that the CDI, Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner and Cindy Ehnes, director of the Department of Managed Health Care, approved a system that allows the insurance companies to impose "gender rating" when pricing policies, resulting in women paying as much as 39% more for coverage than men. According to a Los Angeles Times article published on January 28, 2009, the CDI allows the practice of charging women more for health insurance than their male counterparts (i.e., “gender rating”) believing this practice to be appropriate under the existing California law.

The CDI was quoted in the article as stating that it will uphold the law, which permits health insurers to engage in gender rating when, among other things, it is based upon “objective, valid and up-to-date statistical and actuarial data.” Insurers have defended the practice of gender rating by pointing to actuarial statistics that show women are more likely to get injured or sick.