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The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA), effective July 1, 1997, provides certain
protections for people who have preexisting medical
conditions. A preexisting condition is any
medical condition that a person has before being
enrolled in an insurance plan.
This law helps protect your health insurance benefits
by:
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limiting exclusion periods for preexisting
conditions;
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lowering your chances of losing your existing
coverage or of being discriminated against
because of your health;
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providing protections for you when you change
jobs;
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allowing you and your dependents special
enrollment rights under your employer's health
plan under certain circumstances;
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providing you guaranteed access to individual
coverage through the Illinois Comprehensive
Health Insurance Plan (ICHIP) if you lose your
employer's plan and have no other coverage
available;
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guaranteeing renewability of individual health
insurance coverage.
Preexisting Conditions
HIPAA limits the time you can be denied coverage for a
preexisting condition under your employer's health
insurance plan. Under HIPAA, an employer health
insurance plan can deny coverage for a preexisting
condition only if the employee or dependent is
diagnosed, receives care or treatment, or has care or
treatment recommended in the 6 months before the
enrollment date. Note: Pregnancy cannot be denied as
a preexisting condition by an employer's insurer.
In addition, preexisting conditions cannot be applied to
newborns, adopted children under age 18 or a child under
age 18 placed for adoption as long as the child become
covered under the health plan within 30 days of birth,
adoption or placement for adoption, and provided the
child does not incur a subsequent 63-day or longer break
in coverage.
The length of time coverage can be denied for a
preexisting condition under HIPAA is limited to no
longer than 12 months (18 months if you are a late
enrollee). This time can be reduced or eliminated if you
were covered by previous health insurance (which
qualifies under HIPAA as creditable coverage) and
if there was not a break in coverage between the plans
of 63 days or more.
You must enroll in the employer's health plan when first
eligible; you may not be allowed to do so at a
later date. If you are allowed to enroll at a
later date, you will be considered a late enrollee and
you may be subject to the 18 month preexisting waiting
period. Note: There are special enrollment provisions
which allow you to enroll later under certain
circumstances which will be discussed later in this Fact
Sheet.
Whenever you obtain health insurance coverage through an
employer group, you should submit a "Certificate of
Creditable Coverage" for each plan under which you were
previously covered. Creditable coverage includes most
health coverages, including COBRA, a health insurance
policy or an HMO, Medicaid, Medicare, the Indian Health
Service, TRICARE, the Peace Corps, a state high-risk
pool (ICHIP) or a state or local governmental public
health plan. You should receive a "Certificate of
Creditable Coverage" whenever you lose health coverage
for any reason. If you do not receive one, you may
request it from the insurer. If you are unable to obtain
a "Certificate of Creditable Coverage," the new employer
sponsored health insurance plan should accept other
proof of coverage such as pay stubs showing payroll
deductions or canceled premium checks.
The new plan will give you credit for the time you were
covered under previous health plans so that if you had
at least 12 months of creditable coverage without a
significant break (63 days or more in a row), no
preexisting condition exclusion can be applied to your
new coverage.
Note: CREDITABLE COVERAGE DOES NOT APPLY when you buy
INDIVIDUAL HEALTH INSURANCE, with the EXCEPTION of HIPAA
CHIP. If you buy individual health insurance, you will
be required to meet specified time requirements (up to
24 months) prior to benefits being paid for preexisting
conditions.
Example 1: You were covered by an employer
group plan for two years before leaving your job. You
acquired coverage under your new employer's group plan;
however, there was a break between the two plans of 45
days during which you had no health insurance. Since the
break in coverage did not exceed 63 days, the new
insurer must credit you for two years of coverage and
cannot apply a preexisting condition limitation.
Example 2: You were covered by an employer
group for 7 months before leaving your job. You acquired
new coverage under your new employer within ten days of
losing your old plan. The new plan must credit 7 months
to the preexisting condition limitation, leaving you a
maximum of 5 months during which those conditions may be
limited or denied.
Example 3: You were covered by an employer
group for three years, at which time you lost your job
and insurance coverage. You did not get a new job or
insurance until 6 months later. Since you had a break in
coverage which exceeded 63 days, preexisting condition
limitations may be applied under the new plan.
Protection Against Losing Existing Coverage
HIPAA defines a "group" as an employer group of two or
more employees. Under the law, all employer groups must
have the option of renewing coverage with the insurer
and coverage can only be canceled in certain instances.
HIPAA defines a "small employer group" as a group of
2-50 employees. An insurer cannot refuse to sell to
small employers (if the insurer sells small group
coverage) and must cover all employees and dependents,
regardless of health conditions, who are eligible under
a small employer's plan.
Protections Provided When Changing Jobs
As stated earlier, preexisting condition exclusion
periods are now limited under the new law. This allows
workers to change jobs without being penalized for
existing health conditions by their new employer
sponsored health insurance plan. When you change jobs,
you must be allowed to enroll in the employer sponsored
health plan, regardless of your health conditions, if
you enroll when first eligible.
It is important to note that HIPAA does not require
employers to offer health insurance to employees. Your
new employer may not provide health insurance coverage
at all, or the benefits may differ from your previous
employer's plan.
Your new employer may have a waiting period before
benefits begin; however, this waiting period is not
considered a break in coverage when determining
continuous coverage.
The cost of health insurance may also vary from employer
to employer. HIPAA does not set any cost guidelines for
premiums. However, you cannot be charged more than other
members of your group because of health conditions.
Special Enrollment
Insurers are required to provide for special enrollment
periods during which certain individuals are allowed to
enroll in the plan even if they did not enroll when
first eligible.
If you did not enroll in your employer's health plan
when you were first eligible because you were covered
under other insurance, you may enroll under a special
enrollment period if you lose the other coverage. You
and your eligible dependents must be allowed to enroll
if you apply within thirty days after loss of the other
coverage.
You may also enroll under a special enrollment period if
you get married, have a baby, adopt a child or have a
child placed with you for adoption. You, your spouse,
and your dependent (through birth, adoption or placement
for adoption) may be added to coverage under special
enrollment if you apply within thirty days of the
marriage, birth, adoption or placement for adoption.
Guarantee Access to Coverage When You Lose Group
Coverage (HIPAA CHIP)
If you lose your group coverage, including expiration of
your COBRA or Illinois Continuation Coverage, and you
have no other coverage available, you may apply to the
Illinois Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan (ICHIP).
ICHIP offers the HIPAA CHIP plan for individuals who
have lost their group coverage and cannot obtain other
health insurance coverage through a group or individual
policy. HIPAA CHIP has no preexisting condition
exclusions.
To be eligible for HIPAA CHIP, you must:
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be a resident of Illinois;
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have at least 18 months of creditable coverage;
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have most recent creditable coverage provided under
a group plan, governmental employee plan or church
plan;
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not have a lapse in coverage of more than 90 days
since you lost your group plan, governmental
employee plan or church plan;
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not be eligible for coverage under a group plan,
Medicare Part A or B, or Medicaid;
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not have committed or attempted to commit fraud in
obtaining insurance or benefits;
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have exhausted continuation coverage under COBRA or
Illinois continuation, if such coverage was
available.
For more information about ICHIP, call (866) 851-2751.
Renewability Of Individual Health Insurance
For individuals covered by an individual health
insurance policy, HIPAA prohibits an insurer from
canceling or nonrenewing the coverage. An insurer may
only nonrenew or discontinue an individual health policy
for (1) nonpayment of premiums; (2) fraud; (3)
termination of all its individual coverage in the
market; or (4) loss of membership by the individual in
an association under which the coverage was purchased.
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