On January 11, 2023, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (“HHSâ€) renewed the COVID-19 pandemic Public Health Emergency. This will again extend the Public Health Emergency Period (the “Emergency Periodâ€) for an additional 90 days, and as a result, numerous temporary benefit plan changes will remain in effect.Â
Important DefinitionsÂ
Emergency Period | HHS issued a Public Health Emergency beginning January 27, 2020. The Emergency Period is now set to expire on April 11, 2023 (unless further extended or shortened by HHS).
HHS has indicated it will provide at least 60 days advance notice if the Emergency Period is not extended again. We should know by February 10, 2023, if this is the last extension. |
Outbreak Period | The Outbreak Period started on March 1, 2020. The end date is applied on a participant-by-participant basis. It is the earlier of 1) one year after the date the participant was eligible for relief or 2) 60 days after the announced end of the COVID-19 National Emergency. The National Emergency is set to expire after February 28, 2023, unless the President announces another continuation. |
The following summarizes benefit plan provisions directly impacted by the extension of the Emergency Period and highlights the relief concerning the ongoing Outbreak Period. Other temporary benefit plan provisions and changes allowed due to the continuing pandemic are not included.Â
It should be noted that some carriers and TPAs are beginning to take steps to address how a plan will treat COVID-19 benefit requirements once the Emergency Period ends. Options for plan sponsors include maintaining the status quo or removing or limiting coverage required while the Emergency Period is in effect.Â
Benefit Plan Changes in Effect Through the End of the Emergency PeriodÂ
- COVID-19 Testing. All group health plans must cover COVID-19 tests and other services resulting in an order for a test without cost-sharing (both in-network and out-of-network), prior authorization, or medical management and include both traditional and non-traditional care settings in which a COVID-19 test is ordered or administered.
- Over-the-Counter (“OTCâ€) COVID-19 Testing. Beginning January 15, 2022, all group health plans must cover OTC COVID-19 tests for diagnostic purposes without cost-sharing (both in-network and out-of-network), prior authorization, medical management, and without requiring medical assessment or prescription. Plans may limit the reimbursement for the purchase of OTC COVID-19 tests to eight tests per month per enrollee. Plans with established networks and direct coverage may limit the reimbursement for out-of-network OTC COVID-19 tests to up to $12 or the actual test cost if less.
- COVID-19 Vaccines. All non-grandfathered group health plans must cover COVID-19 vaccines (including the cost of administering) and related office visit costs without cost-sharing; this applies to both in-network and out-of-network providers, but a plan can implement cost-sharing after the Emergency Period expires for services provided out-of-network. COVID-19 vaccines are considered mandatory preventive care under the ACA and must be covered in-network at 100% even after the Emergency Period expires.
- Excepted Benefits and COVID-19 Testing. An Employee Assistance Program (“EAPâ€) will not be considered to provide significant medical benefits solely because it offers benefits for diagnosis and testing for COVID-19 during the Emergency Period and, therefore, will be able to maintain status as an excepted benefit.
- Expanded Telehealth and Remote Care Services. Large employers (51 or more employees) with plan years that begin before the end of the Emergency Period may offer Telehealth or other remote care services to employees (and their dependents) who are not eligible for other group health plan coverage provided by the employer.
- Summary of Benefits and Coverage (“SBCâ€) Changes. Group health plans may notify plan members of changes as soon as practicable and are not held to the 60-day advance notice requirement for changes affecting the SBC during the plan year or for the reversal of COVID-19 changes once the Emergency Period expires, provided the plan members are timely made aware of any increase or decrease in plan benefits summarized on the SBC.
- Grandfathered plans. If a grandfathered plan enhances benefits related to COVID-19 for the Emergency Period (e.g., added Telehealth or reduced or eliminated cost-sharing), the plan will not lose grandfathered status if the changes are later reversed when the Emergency Period expires.
Benefit Plan Changes in Effect Through the End of the Outbreak PeriodÂ
On an individual basis, group health plans, disability, and other employee welfare benefit plans will disregard one year from the date an individual is first eligible for relief or 60 days after the announced end of the National Emergency, whichever occurs first when determining the following:Â
- COBRA. Timeframe for the employer to provide a COBRA election notice; the 60-day election period for a qualified beneficiary to elect COBRA; the COBRA premium payment deadlines (45 days for the initial payment, the 30-day grace period for ongoing payments); the deadline to notify the plan of qualifying events or disability determinations.
- HIPAA Special Enrollment. Thirty days (60 days for Medicaid/CHIP events) to request a special enrollment right due to loss of health coverage, marriage, birth, adoption, or placement for adoption.
- ERISA Claims Deadlines. Timeframes to submit a claim and to appeal an adverse benefit determination.
For non-grandfathered medical plans, timeframes to request external review and perfect an incomplete request.- This includes claim deadlines for a health FSA or HRA during the Outbreak Period.Â
- Fiduciary Relief of Certain Notification and Disclosure Deadlines for ERISA Plans. A plan will not violate ERISA for a failure to timely furnish a notice, disclosure, or document throughout the Outbreak Period if the plan and fiduciary operate in good faith and provide the notice, disclosure, or document as soon as administratively practicable (which may include the use of electronic means such as email and text messages).Â
It should be noted that there is a retroactive application concerning COBRA, special enrollment rights for the birth of a child or adoption, and claims.Â
Employers should continue adhering to the national pandemic-related benefit changes and expanded timeframe for providing COVID-19 testing, vaccinations, and other plan requirements. State and local emergency measures may expire at different times. They could impact employee benefit plans (such as insured group health plans) and other state and local programs (such as paid leave) differently than the timeframes required under federally regulated program requirements.Â