H-0756.1 _______________________________________________
HOUSE BILL 1536
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 54th Legislature 1995 Regular Session
By Representative Dyer
Read first time 01/30/95. Referred to Committee on Health Care.
AN ACT Relating to the long-term care partnership program; and amending RCW 48.85.010, 48.85.020, 48.85.030, 48.85.040, and 48.85.050.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1. RCW 48.85.010 and 1993 c 492 s 458 are each amended to read as follows:
The department of
social and health services shall ((from July 1, 1993, to July 1, 1998)),
in conjunction with the office of the insurance commissioner, coordinate a
((pilot)) long-term care insurance program entitled the
Washington long-term care partnership, whereby private insurance and medicaid
funds shall be used to finance long-term care. ((This program must allow
for the exclusion of an individual's assets, as approved by the federal health
care financing administration, in a determination of the individual's
eligibility for medicaid; the amount of any medicaid payment; or any subsequent
recovery by the state for a payment for medicaid services to the extent such
assets are protected by a long-term care insurance policy or contract governed
by chapter 48.84 RCW and meeting the criteria prescribed in this chapter.))
For individuals purchasing a long-term care insurance policy or contract
governed by chapter 48.84 RCW and meeting the criteria prescribed in this
chapter, and any other terms as specified by the office of the insurance
commissioner and the department of social and health services, this program
shall allow for the exclusion of some or all of the individual's assets in
determination of medicaid eligibility as approved by the federal health care
financing administration.
Sec. 2. RCW 48.85.020 and 1993 c 492 s 459 are each amended to read as follows:
The department of
social and health services shall seek approval and a waiver of appropriate
federal medicaid regulations to allow the protection of an individual's assets
as provided in this chapter. The department shall adopt all rules necessary to
implement the Washington long-term care partnership program, which rules shall
permit the exclusion of all or some of an individual's assets in a
manner specified by the office of the insurance commissioner and the department
of social and health services in a determination of medicaid eligibility to
the extent that private long-term care insurance provides payment or benefits
for services ((that medicaid would approve or cover for medicaid recipients)).
Sec. 3. RCW 48.85.030 and 1993 c 492 s 460 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The insurance commissioner shall adopt rules defining the criteria that long-term care insurance policies must meet to satisfy the requirements of this chapter. The rules shall provide that all long-term care insurance policies purchased for the purposes of this chapter:
(a) Be guaranteed renewable;
(b) Provide coverage
for ((home and community-based services and)) nursing home care;
(c) Provide optional coverage for home and community-based services;
(d) Provide automatic compounded inflation protection or similar coverage to protect the policyholder from future increases in the cost of long-term care;
(((d))) (e)
Not require prior hospitalization or confinement in a nursing home as a
prerequisite to receiving long-term care benefits; and
(((e))) (f)
Contain at least a six-month grace period that permits reinstatement of the
policy or contract retroactive to the date of termination if the policy or
contract holder's nonpayment of premiums arose as a result of a cognitive
impairment suffered by the policy or contract holder as certified by a
physician.
(2) Insurers offering long-term care policies for the purposes of this chapter shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the insurance commissioner that they:
(a) Have procedures to provide notice to each purchaser of the long-term care consumer education program;
(b) Offer case management services;
(c) Have procedures that provide for the keeping of individual policy records and procedures for the explanation of coverage and benefits identifying those payments or services available under the policy that meet the purposes of this chapter;
(d) Agree to provide
the insurance commissioner, on or before September 1 of each year, an annual
report containing ((the following)) information((:
(i) The number of policies
issued and of the policies issued, that number sorted by issue age;
(ii) To the extent
possible, the financial circumstance of the individuals covered by such
policies;
(iii) The total
number of claims paid; and
(iv) Of the number
of claims paid, the number paid for nursing home care, for home care services,
and community-based services)) derived
from the long-term care partnership long-term care insurance uniform data set
as specified by the office of the insurance commissioner.
Sec. 4. RCW 48.85.040 and 1993 c 492 s 461 are each amended to read as follows:
The insurance commissioner, in conjunction with the department of social and health services and members of the long-term care insurance industry, shall develop a consumer education program designed to educate consumers as to the need for long-term care, methods for financing long-term care, the availability of long-term care insurance, and the availability and eligibility requirements of the asset protection program provided under this chapter.
Sec. 5. RCW 48.85.050 and 1993 c 492 s 462 are each amended to read as follows:
By January 1 of each year until 1998, the insurance commissioner, in conjunction with the department of social and health services, shall report to the legislature on the progress of the asset protection program. The report shall include:
(1) The success of the agencies in implementing the program;
(2) The number of insurers offering long-term care policies meeting the criteria for asset protection;
(3) The number, age, and financial circumstances of individuals purchasing long-term care policies meeting the criteria for asset protection;
(4) The number of individuals seeking consumer information services;
(5) The extent and type of benefits paid by insurers offering policies meeting the criteria for asset protection;
(6) Estimates of the impact of the program on present and future medicaid expenditures;
(7) The cost-effectiveness of the program; and
(8) A determination regarding the appropriateness of continuing the program.
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