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               ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2548

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State of Washington      54th Legislature     1996 Regular Session

 

By House Committee on Health Care (originally sponsored by Representatives Dyer, Morris and L. Thomas)

 

Read first time 02/02/96. 

 

Establishing minimum loss ratios for health care service contractors and disability insurers.


    AN ACT Relating to establishing minimum loss ratios for health care service contractors and disability insurers; adding a new section to chapter 48.44 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 48.21 RCW; and adding new sections to chapter 48.20 RCW.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 1.  A new section is added to chapter 48.44 RCW to read as follows:

    (1) The anticipated loss ratio shall be deemed reasonable in relation to the amount charged provided the anticipated loss ratio is at least:

    (a) Sixty-five percent for individual subscriber contract forms;

    (b) Seventy percent for franchise plan contract forms; and

    (c) Eighty percent for group contract forms.

    (2) With the approval of the commissioner, contract, rider, and endorsement forms that provide substantially similar coverage may be combined for the purpose of determining the anticipated loss ratio.

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 2.  A new section is added to chapter 48.21 RCW to read as follows:

    The following standards and requirements apply to group and blanket disability insurance policy forms and manual rates:

    (1) Specified disease group insurance shall generate at least a seventy-five percent loss ratio regardless of the size of the group.

    (2) Group disability insurance, other than specified disease insurance, as to which the insureds pay all or substantially all of the premium shall generate loss ratios no lower than those set forth in the following table.

 

Number of Certificate Holders               Minimum Overall

at Issue, Renewal, or Rerating                        Loss Ratio

 

           9 or less                            60%

           10 to 24                             65%

           25 to 49                             70%

           50 to 99                             75%

           100 or more                          80%

 

    (3) Group disability policy forms, other than for specified disease insurance, for issue to single employers insuring less than one hundred lives shall generate loss ratios no lower than those set forth in subsection (2) of this section for groups of the same size.

    (4) The calculating period may vary with the benefit and premium provisions.  The company may be required to demonstrate the reasonableness of the calculating period chosen by the actuary responsible for the premium calculations.

    (5) A request for a rate increase submitted at the end of the calculating period shall include a comparison of the actual to the expected loss ratios and shall employ any accumulation of reserves in the determination of rates for the selected calculating period and account for the maintenance of such reserves for future needs.  The request for the rate increase shall be further documented by the expected loss ratio for the new calculating period.

    (6) A request for a rate increase submitted during the calculating period shall include a comparison of the actual to the expected loss ratios, a demonstration of any contributions to or support from the reserves, and shall account for the maintenance of such reserves for future needs.  If the experience justifies a premium increase it shall be deemed that the calculating period has prematurely been brought to an end.  The rate increase shall further be documented by the expected loss ratio for the next calculating period.

    (7) The commissioner may approve a series of two or three smaller rate increases in lieu of one larger increase.  These should be calculated to reduce the lapses and antiselection that often result from large rate increases.  A demonstration of such calculations, whether for a single rate increase or a series of smaller rate increases, satisfactory to the commissioner, shall be attached to the filing.

    (8) Companies shall review their experience periodically and file appropriate rate revisions in a timely manner to reduce the necessity of later filing of exceptionally large rate increases.

    (9) The definitions in section 5 of this act and the provisions in section 4 of this act apply to this section.

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 3.  A new section is added to chapter 48.20 RCW to read as follows:

    The following standards and requirements apply to individual disability insurance forms:

    (1) The overall loss ratio shall be deemed reasonable in relation to the premiums if the overall loss ratio is at least sixty percent over a calculating period chosen by the insurer and satisfactory to the commissioner.

    (2) The calculating period may vary with the benefit and renewal provisions.  The company may be required to demonstrate the reasonableness of the calculating period chosen by the actuary responsible for the premium calculations.  A brief explanation of the selected calculating period shall accompany the filing.

    (3) Policy forms, the benefits of which are particularly exposed to the effects of inflation and whose premium income may be particularly vulnerable to an eroding persistency and other similar forces, shall use a relatively short calculating period reflecting the uncertainties of estimating the risks involved.  Policy forms based on more dependable statistics may employ a longer calculating period.  The calculating period may be the lifetime of the contract for guaranteed renewable and noncancellable policy forms if such forms provide benefits that are supported by reliable statistics and that are protected from inflationary or eroding forces by such factors as fixed dollar coverages, inside benefit limits, or the inherent nature of the benefits.  The calculating period may be as short as one year for coverages that are based on statistics of minimal reliability or that are highly exposed to inflation.

    (4) A request for a rate increase to be effective at the end of the calculating period shall include a comparison of the actual to the expected loss ratios, shall employ any accumulation of reserves in the determination of rates for the new calculating period, and shall account for the maintenance of such reserves for future needs.  The request for the rate increase shall be further documented by the expected loss ratio for the new calculating period.

    (5) A request for a rate increase submitted during the calculating period shall include a comparison of the actual to the expected loss ratios, a demonstration of any contributions to and support from the reserves, and shall account for the maintenance of such reserves for future needs.  If the experience justifies a premium increase it shall be deemed that the calculating period has prematurely been brought to an end.  The rate increase shall further be documented by the expected loss ratio for the next calculating period.

    (6) The commissioner may approve a series of two or three smaller rate increases in lieu of one large increase.  These should be calculated to reduce lapses and anti-selection that often result from large rate increases.  A demonstration of such calculations, whether for a single rate increase or for a series of smaller rate increases, satisfactory to the commissioner, shall be attached to the filing.

    (7) Companies shall review their experience periodically and file appropriate rate revisions in a timely manner to reduce the necessity of later filing of exceptionally large rate increases.

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 4.  A new section is added to chapter 48.20 RCW to read as follows:

    Sections 2 and 3 of this act apply to all insurers and to every disability insurance policy form filed for approval in this state after the effective date of this act, except:

    (1) Additional indemnity and premium waiver forms for use only in conjunction with life insurance policies;

    (2) Medicare supplement policy forms that are regulated by chapter 48.66 RCW;

    (3) Credit insurance policy forms issued pursuant to chapter 48.34 RCW;

    (4) Group policy forms other than:

    (a) Specified disease policy forms;

    (b) Policy forms, other than loss of income forms, as to which all or substantially all of the premium is paid by the individuals insured thereunder;

    (c) Policy forms, other than loss of income forms, for issue to single employers insuring less than one hundred employees;

    (5) Policy forms filed by health care service contractors or health maintenance organizations;

    (6) Policy forms initially approved, including subsequent requests for rate increases and modifications of rate manuals.

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 5.  A new section is added to chapter 48.20 RCW to read as follows:

    (1) The "expected loss ratio" is a prospective calculation and shall be calculated as the projected "benefits incurred" divided by the projected "premiums earned" and shall be based on the actuary's best projections of the future experience within the "calculating period."

    (2) The "actual loss ratio" is a retrospective calculation and shall be calculated as the "benefits incurred" divided by the "premiums earned," both measured from the beginning of the "calculating period" to the date of the loss ratio calculations.

    (3) The "overall loss ratio" shall be calculated as the "benefits incurred" divided by the "premiums earned" over the entire "calculating period" and may involve both retrospective and prospective data.

    (4) The "calculating period" is the time span over which the actuary expects the premium rates, whether level or increasing, to remain adequate in accordance with his or her best estimate of future experience and during which the actuary does not expect to request a rate increase.

    (5) The "benefits incurred" is the "claims incurred" plus any increase, or less any decrease, in the "reserves."

    (6) The "claims incurred" means:

    (a) Claims paid during the accounting period; plus

    (b) The change in the liability for claims that have been reported but not paid; plus

    (c) The change in the liability for claims that have not been reported but which may reasonably be expected.

    The "claims incurred" does not include expenses incurred in processing the claims, home office or field overhead, acquisition and selling costs, taxes or other expenses, contributions to surplus, or profit.

    (7) The "reserves," as referred to in sections 2 and 3 of this act include:

    (a) Active life disability reserves;

    (b) Additional reserves whether for a specific liability purpose or not;

    (c) Contingency reserves;

    (d) Reserves for select morbidity experience; and

    (e) Increased reserves that may be required by the commissioner.

    (8) The "premiums earned" means the premiums, less experience credits, refunds, or dividends, applicable to an accounting period whether received before, during, or after such period.

    (9) Renewal provisions are defined as follows:

    (a) "Guaranteed renewable" means renewal cannot be declined by the insurance company for any reason, but the insurance company can revise rates on a class basis.

    (b) "Noncancellable" means renewal cannot be declined nor can rates be revised by the insurance company.

 


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