HHS Proposes Data Collection Rule to Define Essential Health Benefits

HHS has issued a proposed rule to establish data collection standards necessary for defining essential health benefits in small-group and individual insurance market plans, called for in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The rule outlines the data to be collected from issuers to support establishing essential benefits, including treatment limitations, drug coverage and plan enrollment.

Additionally, HHS proposes that the National Committee for Quality Assurance and URAC, a non-profit group that accredits quality measures in healthcare organizations, function as accreditation bodies for each state's proposed essential health benefits package. NCQA and URAC would approve health plans for a state health insurance exchanges.   

HHS issued a bulletin in December discussing the benchmark approach it would take to defining essential health benefits.

Under HHS' proposal, an individual state is free to select an existing health plan to set a benchmark for items and services included in its essential health benefits package.

More Articles on Health Exchanges:

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Health Insurance Exchanges in Jeopardy if the Supreme Court Strikes Down PPACA
Majority of Individual Health Plans Fall Below Minimum Requirement of PPACA


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