Can a Group Health Plan Limit My Coverage for Pre-existing Health Conditions?

We regret that, because of a loss of financial support, this website no longer provides current information. As a result, the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute cannot warrant the accuracy or adequacy of the information or materials on this site. If you are interested in supporting the work of the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute, please contact us at (202) 687-0880. Thank you.

When you first enroll in a group health plan, the employer or insurance company may ask if you have any pre-existing conditions. Or, if you make a claim during the first year of coverage, the plan may look back to see whether it was for such a condition. If so, it may try to exclude coverage for services related to that condition for a certain length of time. However, federal and state laws protect you by placing limits on these pre-existing condition exclusion periods under group health plans. In some cases your protections will vary, depending on the type of group health plan you belong to.

· A group health plan can count as pre-existing conditions only those conditions for which you actually received (or were recommended to receive) a diagnosis, treatment or medical advice within the 6 months immediately before you joined that plan. This period is known as the look back period.

· Group health plans cannot apply a pre-existing condition exclusion period for pregnancy, newborns, newly adopted children, children placed for adoption, or genetic information.

· Group health plans can exclude coverage for pre-existing conditions only for a limited time. The maximum exclusion period depends on the type of group health plan you are joining. If you are joining a fully insured group health plan in California, the maximum exclusion period is 6 months. If you are joining a self-insured group health plan, the maximum exclusion period is 12 months. You will receive credit toward your pre-existing condition exclusion period for any previous continuous coverage.

· If you enroll late in your group health plan (after you are hired and not during a regular or special enrollment period), you may have a longer pre-existing condition exclusion period. If you are a late enrollee self-insured group health plan, you may face a pre-existing condition exclusion period up to 18 months. A late enrollee of fully insured group plan may face a pre-existing exclusion period up to 12 months.

· Group health plans that impose pre-existing condition exclusion periods must give you credit for any previous continuous creditable coverage that you’ve had. Most types of private and government sponsored health coverage are considered creditable coverage.

What is creditable coverage?

Most health insurance counts as creditable coverage, including:

Children’s Health Insurance Program               Medicare

Federal Employees Health Benefits(FEHBP)       Military health coverage
Foreign National Coverage                                  (CHAMPUS, TRICARE)

Group health plan (including COBRA)               State high-risk pools

Indian Health Service                                   Student health insurance
Individual health insurance                            VA coverage
Medicaid

In most cases, you should get a certificate of creditable coverage when you leave a health plan. You also can request certificates at other times. If you cannot get one, you can submit other proof of prior coverage, such as old health plan ID cards or statements from your doctor showing bills paid by your health insurance plan.

· Coverage usually counts as continuous if it is not interrupted by a break of 63 days or more in a row. However, in California, if you lost access to coverage because of a job loss or because your employer no longer sponsored or offered a plan, a fully insured group health plan must give you credit your prior coverage, if it is not interrupted by a break of more than 180 days, instead of 63 days.

What is continuous coverage?

You can get continuous coverage under one plan, or under several plans, as long as you don’t have a lapse of 63 or more consecutive days.

Take Art, who has diabetes. Ajax Company covered him under its group health plan for 9 months, but he decided to quit and lost his health coverage. Then, 45 days later, Art found a new job at Beta Corporation and had health coverage for 9 more months. Art changed jobs again. His new company, Charter, has a health plan that covers care for diabetes but excludes pre-existing conditions for 12 months. Charter must cover Art’s diabetes care immediately, because his 18 months of prior continuous coverage are credited against the 12-month exclusion.

Now consider a slightly different situation. Assume Art was uninsured for 90 days between his jobs at Ajax and Beta. In this case, Charter will credit coverage only under Beta’s plan toward the 12-month pre-existing condition exclusion period. Charter’s plan will begin paying for Art’s diabetes care in 3 months (1 year minus 9 months). Art does not get credit for his coverage at Ajax since he had a break of more than 63 consecutive days.

· In determining continuous coverage, employer-imposed waiting periods and HMO affiliation periods do not count as a break in coverage. If your new plan imposes a pre-existing condition exclusion period, you can credit time under your prior continuous coverage toward it. If your employer requires a waiting period, the pre-existing condition exclusion period begins on the first day of the waiting period. HMOs that require an affiliation period cannot exclude coverage for pre-existing conditions.

· Your protections may differ if you move to a group health plan that offers more benefits than your old one did. Some group plans can look back to determine whether your previous health plan covered prescription drugs, mental health, substance abuse, dental care, or vision care. If you did not have continuous coverage for one or more of these categories of benefits, your new group health plan may impose a pre-existing condition exclusion period for that category. Group plans that use this method of crediting prior coverage must use it for everyone and must disclose this to you when you enroll. In California, fully insured group plans cannot use this method of crediting prior coverage.

Even if coverage is continuous, there may be an exclusion for certain benefits

Sue needs prescription medication to control her blood pressure. She had 2 years of continuous coverage under her employer’s group health plan, which did not cover prescription drugs. Sue changes jobs, and her new employer’s self-insured plan does cover prescription drugs. However, because her prior policy did not, the new plan refuses to cover her blood pressure medicine for 6 months.

Question: Is this permitted?

Answer: Yes. However, the plan must pay for covered doctor visits, hospital care, and other services for Sue’s high blood pressure. It also must pay for covered prescription drugs she needs for other conditions that were not pre-existing.

· No pre-existing condition exclusion period can be applied without appropriate notice. Your group health plan must inform you, in writing, if it intends to impose such a period. Also, if needed, it must help you get a certificate of creditable coverage from your old health plan.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button