N.H. Code Admin. R. Ins 1904.03 - Definitions
As used in this rule, these words and terms have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
(a) "Allowable Expense", except as set forth
below or where a statute requires a different definition, means:
(1) Any health care expense, including
coinsurance or copayments and without reduction for any applicable deductible,
that is covered in full or in part by any of the plans covering the
person;
(2) If a plan is advised by
a covered person that all plans covering the person are high-deductible health
plans and the person intends to contribute to a health savings account
established in accordance with Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, the primary high-deductible health plan's deductible is not an allowable
expense, except for any health care expense incurred that may not be subject to
the deductible as described in Section 223(c)(2)(C) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986;
(3) An expense or a
portion of an expense that is not covered by any of the plans is not an
allowable expense;
(4) Any expense
that a provider by law or in accordance with a contractual agreement is
prohibited from charging a covered person is not an allowable
expense;
(5) The following are
examples of expenses that are not allowable expenses:
a. If a person is confined in a private
hospital room, the difference between the cost of a semi-private room in the
hospital and the private room is not an allowable expense, unless one of the
plans provides coverage for private hospital room expenses;
b. If a person is covered by 2 or more plans
that compute their benefit payments on the basis of usual and customary fees or
relative value schedule reimbursement or other similar reimbursement
methodology, any amount charged by the provider in excess of the highest
reimbursement amount for a specified benefit is not an allowable
expense;
c. If a person is covered
by 2 or more plans that provide benefits or services on the basis of negotiated
fees, any amount in excess of the highest of the negotiated fees is not an
allowable expense; and
d. If a
person is covered by one plan that calculates its benefits or services on the
basis of usual and customary fees or relative value schedule reimbursement or
other similar reimbursement methodology and another plan that provides its
benefits or services on the basis of negotiated fees, the primary plan's
payment arrangement shall be the allowable expenses for all plans. However, if
the provider has contracted with the secondary plan to provide the benefit or
service for a specific negotiated fee or payment amount that is different than
the primary plan's payment arrangement and if the provider's contract permits,
that negotiated fee or payment shall be the allowable expense used by the
secondary plan to determine its benefits;
(6) The definition of "allowable expense" may
exclude certain types of coverage or benefits such as dental care, vision care,
prescription drug or hearing aids. A plan that limits the application of COB to
certain coverages or benefits may limit the definition of allowable expense in
its contract to expenses that are similar to the expenses that it provides.
When COB is restricted to specific coverages or benefits in a contract, the
definition of allowable expense shall include similar expenses to which COB
applies;
(7) When a plan provides
benefits in the form of services, the reasonable cash value of each service
will be considered an allowable expense and a benefit paid;
(8) The amount of the reduction may be
excluded from allowable expense when a covered person's benefits are reduced
under a primary plan:
a. Because the covered
person does not comply with the plan provisions concerning second surgical
opinions or precertification of admissions or services; or
b. Because the covered person has a lower
benefit because the covered person did not use a preferred provider.
(b) "Birthday" means
only the month and day in a calendar year and does not include the year in
which the individual is born.
(c)
"Claim" means a request that benefits of a plan be provided or paid. The
benefits claimed may be in the form of:
(1)
Services (including supplies);
(2)
Payment for all or a portion of the expenses incurred;
(3) A combination of (1) and (2) above;
or
(4) An
indemnification.
(d)
"Closed panel plan" means a plan that provides health benefits to covered
persons primarily in the form of services through a panel of providers that
have contracted with or are employed by the plan, and that excludes benefits
for services provided by other providers, except in cases of emergency or
referral by a panel member.
(e)
"Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985" or "COBRA" means
coverage provided under a right of continuation pursuant to federal
law.
(f) "Coordination of Benefits"
or "COB" means a provision establishing an order in which plans pay their
claims, and permitting secondary plans to reduce their benefits so that the
combined benefits of all plans do not exceed total allowable
expenses.
(g) "Custodial Parent"
means:
(1) The parent awarded custody of a
child by a court decree; or
(2) In
the absence of a court decree, the parent with whom the child resides more than
one half of the calendar year without regard to any temporary
visitation.
(h)
"Group-type Contract" means:
a. A contract
that is not available to the general public and is obtained and maintained only
because of membership in or a connection with a particular organization or
group, including blanket coverage; and
b. "Group-type contract" does not include an
individually underwritten and issued guaranteed renewable policy even if the
policy is purchased through payroll deduction at a premium savings to the
insured since the insured would have the right to maintain or renew the policy
independently of continued employment with the employer.
(i) "High-deductible Health Plan" means the
meaning given the term under Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended by the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act
of 2003.
(j) "Hospital Indemnity
Benefits" means:
a. Benefits not related to
expenses incurred; and
b. "Hospital
indemnity benefits" does not include reimbursement-type benefits even if they
are designed or administered to give the insured the right to elect
indemnity-type benefits at the time of claim.
(k) "Plan" means:
a. A form of coverage with which coordination
is allowed. Separate parts of a plan for members of a group that are provided
through alternative contracts that are intended to be part of a coordinated
package of benefits are considered one plan and there is not COB among the
separate parts of the plan.
b. If a
plan coordinates benefits, its contract shall state the types of coverage that
will be considered in applying the COB provision of that contract. Whether the
contract uses the term "plan" or some other term such as "program", the
contractual definition may be no broader than the definition of "plan" in this
subsection. The definition of "plan" in the model COB provision in Appendix A
is an example.
c. "Plan" includes:
1. Group and nongroup insurance contracts and
subscriber contracts;
2. Uninsured
arrangements of group or group-type coverage;
3. Group and nongroup coverage through closed
panel plans;
4. Group-type
contracts;
5. The medical care
components of long-term care contracts, such as skilled nursing care;
6. The medical benefits coverage in
automobile "no fault" or "personal injury protection" (PIP) type contracts, not
including medical payments coverage, also known as Part B in the personal
automobile policy or med pay; and
7. Medicare or other governmental benefits,
as permitted by law, except as provided in d. 8. below. That part of the
definition of plan may be limited to the hospital, medical and surgical
benefits of the governmental program; and
d. "Plan" does not include:
1. Hospital indemnity coverage or benefits or
other fixed indemnity coverage;
2.
Accident only coverage;
3.
Specified disease or specified accident coverage;
4. Limited benefits health coverage, as
defined in
Ins
1901.06(l);
5. School accident-type coverages that cover
students for accidents only, including athletic injuries, either on a 24 hour
basis or on a "to and from school" basis;
6. Medical payments coverage in a personal
automobile policy, also known as Part B or med pay;
7. Benefits provided in long-term care
insurance policies for non-medical services, for example, personal care, adult
day care, homemaker services, assistance with activities of daily living,
respite care and custodial care or for contracts that pay a fixed daily benefit
without regard to expenses incurred or the receipt of services;
8. Medicare supplement policies;
9. A state plan under Medicaid; or
10. A governmental plan, which, by law,
provides benefits that are in excess of those of any private insurance plan or
other non-governmental plan.
(l) "Policyholder" means the primary insured
named in a nongroup insurance policy.
(m) "Primary plan" means a plan whose
benefits for a person's health care coverage must be determined without taking
the existence of any other plan into consideration. A plan is a primary plan
if:
(1) The plan either has no order of
benefit determination rules, or its rules differ from those permitted by this
rule; or
(2) All plans that cover
the person use the order of benefit determination rules required by this rule,
and under those rules the plan determines its benefits first.
(n) "Secondary plan" means a plan
that is not a primary plan.
Notes
#3164, eff 12-24-85; ss by #4287, eff 7-1-87; ss by #5656, eff 7-1-93; ss by #7017, INTERIM, eff 7-1-99, EXPIRED: 10-29-99
New. #8402, eff 8-1-05; ss by #10371, eff 8-1-13
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